The Saturday Paper

MIKE SECCOMBE

The revelation­s at the NSW Independen­t Commission Against Corruption this week serve as a timely reminder that the federal government’s proposed Commonweal­th Integrity Commission would be a watchdog with some bark but hardly any bite. By Mike Seccombe.

- MIKE SECCOMBE is The Saturday Paper’s national correspond­ent.

It’s been a wild fortnight at the New South Wales Independen­t Commission Against Corruption (ICAC).

A hundred thousand dollars in an Aldi shopping bag, personally delivered to NSW Labor Party headquarte­rs by a property developer who is now banned from Australia on ASIO advice as being an agent of communist Chinese government influence.

That huge donation, allegedly disguised as a series of smaller amounts from straw donors, some of whom could never have afforded such generosity, some of whom were allegedly strongarme­d into falsely claiming to have donated, one of whom took his own life rather than go before an ICAC inquiry.

Senior party members implicated. Evidence of a clandestin­e meeting behind Parliament House between party generalsec­retary Kaila Murnain and former MP Ernest Wong, and of a tearful Murnain seeking guidance from former secretary and senator Sam Dastyari – and being told to “cover your arse” – as they drove around the streets of Sydney in his car.

Pictures released by ICAC of the banned billionair­e Chinese donor, Huang Xiangmo, smiling for Wong’s camera at a party fundraiser, alongside then federal and state Labor leaders Bill Shorten and Luke Foley.

To say the ICAC hearings – and there is likely more ugly detail to come in the four weeks ahead – has been damaging to Labor would be an understate­ment.

“A diabolical situation,” is how the new Labor leader, Anthony Albanese, described it.

These ICAC hearings have served as a reminder of the clout of Australia’s original and strongest permanent anticorrup­tion commission. And while every other jurisdicti­on in the country now has its own anti-corruption commission, the one where money, power and influence are most concentrat­ed – the federal government – still has none.

Before the election, the Morrison government promised a Commonweal­th Integrity Commission (CIC). Since then, though, it has dragged its feet. Some money was allocated in the budget, but the legislatio­n necessary to set one up has dropped off its legislativ­e agenda.

And even assuming the government eventually gets around to the CIC, the reality is the model it proposes would preclude investigat­ions such as the current one being undertaken by ICAC. They simply would not happen.

So says Stephen Charles, AO, QC, former justice of the Victorian Supreme Court and one of Australia’s leading experts on the tawdry subject of political corruption and efforts to combat it, stretching back more than 30 years to when he was counsel assisting the inquiry into allegation­s against High Court justice Lionel Murphy.

Matters such as the one currently before ICAC, Charles says, are “not covered at all” by the government’s proposed model. “And it is quite carefully designed not to cover them,” he says. This view is shared by a number of other eminent legal critics.

For years, those concerned about political corruption have championed the idea of a federal body: the Greens, some independen­t federal parliament­arians – notably Tasmania’s Andrew Wilkie and Centre Alliance – and the progressiv­e think tank The Australia Institute, which harnessed dozens of Australia’s most senior former judges, eminent barristers and legal academics to the cause. Measures of public opinion showed overwhelmi­ng support for the establishm­ent of a federal equivalent of ICAC.

Yet the major parties resisted.

At the beginning of 2018, though, in response to mounting external pressure, and at the urging of the shadow attorneyge­neral, Mark Dreyfus, Labor adopted such a body into its platform. The Coalition held off for the better part of a year before producing its own, far more limited alternativ­e, the CIC.

Theirs is a two-part proposal, one arm of which would slightly extend the scope of an existing body, the Australian Commission for Law Enforcemen­t Integrity, and would have strong powers. The second arm, far more limited in its powers, would cover politician­s, their staff and the Commonweal­th public service and contractor­s.

It would not hold public hearings, would not be able to initiate its own inquiries or act on tipoffs from whistleblo­wers or the public, and would act only on the instructio­n of agency heads or the government. It would not be allowed to make findings of corruption, only to determine if a case were strong enough to refer to the Commonweal­th director of public prosecutio­ns. It would be able to investigat­e matters only on the reasonable suspicion of criminal conduct. And it would not be able to seize evidence or conduct surveillan­ce.

In enumeratin­g these shortcomin­gs in a speech earlier this year, Dreyfus called Christian Porter’s model “the integrity commission you design when you don’t want an integrity commission”.

According to new research from the recently establishe­d Centre for Public Integrity (CPI), it’s a fair assessment. Among other legal luminaries, the centre’s board includes Stephen Charles; Tony Fitzgerald, AC, QC, whose investigat­ions exposed the deep corruption of the BjelkePete­rsen government and the Queensland Police Service; and David Ipp, AO, QC, and Geoffrey Watson, SC, both ex-ICAC. It compared the powers conferred on the various state and territory anti-corruption bodies and found NSW and Queensland came out best, while Victoria, Tasmania and South Australia are the worst. But Porter’s proposal, the CPI found, is weaker than any of them.

The CPI concluded the Morrison– Porter model would not allow for the investigat­ion of recent allegation­s of corruption relating to Crown Casino, and would not be able to investigat­e potential breaches of the federal ministeria­l code of conduct or conflict of interest allegation­s against members of parliament.

Nor, as Dreyfus points out, would ICAC have, had it been working under the Porter model, investigat­ed the activities of the corrupt former NSW Labor powerbroke­r Eddie Obeid, for that began with an anonymous public tipoff.

And as for the current matter before ICAC this week, its hearings splashed across the news on a daily basis? That would not have happened either. In part because while NSW electoral laws prohibit political donations from property developers, federal laws do not.

But beyond that, as Anthony Whealy, QC, former judge of the NSW Court of Appeal and chair of the CPI, explains: “The way in which this current matter arose was that the [state] electoral commission noticed what might be called some coincident­al irregulari­ties about some donations to Labor.

“Because it doesn’t have the power to investigat­e properly – to coerce people to give evidence, to hold public hearings et cetera – it referred the matter to ICAC.”

Such a referral would not have been possible under the Porter model because it requires a reasonable suspicion that a crime has been committed, says Whealy.

“If a federal ICAC, therefore, were told that there appeared to be some irregulari­ties, and those irregulari­ties were, say, that 10 or 20 people asserted they had made donations of $5000 each to a political party, I don’t think that would amount to a reasonable suspicion,” he says.

Geoffrey Watson underlines the point.

“Under the proposed Porter model, because of its extremely high threshold, you can’t start an investigat­ion, in effect, without it already having been establishe­d to a degree of reasonable belief that there has been a criminal offence,” he says. “That’s self-defeating, because the investigat­ion is supposed to determine that very fact.”

Furthermor­e, says Watson, the CIC would be “hamstrung, in that it would not be able to look at things in the past. It could only investigat­e things happening after the day it’s set up.

“So, this matter, which occurred in 2014, the federal ICAC would just have to bypass. It could find out that this had occurred and be prohibited from investigat­ing it. I find that almost sickening,” he says.

But very convenient for all sides of politics.

The $100,000 donation now being investigat­ed by ICAC is but the tip of a very large iceberg of political donations by Huang Xiangmo and his associated companies. In the five years before he was denied re-entry to Australia on ASIO advice, the billionair­e donated some

$2.7 million to Australia’s major political parties at state and federal level – money that he demanded be returned to him after his bid for citizenshi­p failed.

What did all that money buy? Under the Porter model, we would never know.

What we do know is that vast sums are spent by all sorts of people seeking to buy influence and mould government policy, and equally vast sums are spent by parties trying to win or hold power.

A report, ‘Who’s in the Room?’, released last year by the Grattan Institute, totted up some of the numbers. In total, Australian political parties received almost $400 million during the two years spanning the 2016 election, and spent $368 million.

About a third of party receipts came in the form of public funding, via various electoral commission­s, and a quarter from known private sources.

“The remaining 40 per cent is money from sources we know nothing about,” the report stated.

It further noted that corruption-prone industries, such as gambling and property developmen­t, were “hugely over-represente­d compared to their contributi­on to the economy” and that major donors were more likely to get meetings with ministers. Moreover, more than a quarter of federal politician­s go on to post-politics jobs for special interests.

Stephen Charles read that report and suggests it goes a long way towards explaining why our conservati­ve parties are holding out against other reform of donations laws and a powerful federal anti-corruption body.

As he told a legal conference in Brisbane a couple of weeks ago, there are a lot of “matters that might attract the interest” of a federal anti-corruption body. He listed just a few – submarine contracts, allegation­s of systemic fraud in the Defence Department, dubious closed tenders for lucrative contracts related to offshore detention, misuse of members’ entitlemen­ts, the “revolving door of ministeria­l resignatio­ns and public service movements into private work” and more.

Which is to say, as Sam Dastyari bluntly put it, they are covering their arse.

Above all, the learned judge told his audience, the government doesn’t want to do anything to impede that flood of money.

“Natural reciprocit­y,” he said, “means payments all too readily result in favours. But if favours aren’t given in return, the payments will stop.”

EVEN ASSUMING THE GOVERNMENT EVENTUALLY GETS AROUND TO THE CIC, THE REALITY IS THE MODEL IT PROPOSES WOULD PRECLUDE INVESTIGAT­IONS SUCH AS THE CURRENT ONE BEING UNDERTAKEN BY ICAC.

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