Nelson Mail

PMannounce­s robodebt inquiry

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Prime Minister Anthony Albanese has unveiled a royal commission into the controvers­ial robodebt scheme.

The automated matching of tax and Centrelink data to raise debts against welfare recipients for money the coalition government claimed to have overpaid was ruled unlawful in 2019.

But the Morrison government has never detailed who was accountabl­e for the scheme and which ministers knew of its problems.

The royal commission was a major election commitment by the Albanese government, and is expected to cost A$30 million (NZ$33.5m).

The commission will headed be former Queensland Supreme Court chief justice Catherine Holmes, and its final report will be delivered to the governorge­neral by April 18, 2023.

Albanese said key lessons needed to be learnt following the controvers­ial scheme.

‘‘It is vital so that we get to the bottom of how robodebt came about so that we can ensure that it can never ever happen again,’’ he told reporters in Sydney yesterday.

‘‘We know that almost 400,000 Australian­s fell victim to this cruel system. A human tragedy with very real consequenc­es for its victims.’’

The royal commission will look at the establishm­ent, design and implementa­tion of the scheme, who was responsibl­e for it, why they considered robodebt necessary, and any concerns raised regarding the legality and fairness.

As well, it will examine the handling of concerns raised about the scheme, including adverse decisions made by the Administra­tive Appeals Tribunal.

And the terms of reference will cover the outcomes of the scheme, including the harm to vulnerable individual­s and the total financial cost to government, as well as measures needed to prevent similar failures.

Albanese dismissed criticism the commission would be an opportunit­y to attack the former government, saying there was a human cost to the scheme.

‘‘People lost their lives. Every single one of my local constituen­ts, and every member of parliament can tell stories like this,’’ he said. ‘‘Those people who were most vulnerable were the least likely to go to their local member, to have the confidence to do that. And that’s why we need to get to the heart of why this occurred.’’

Robodebt was set up in 2015 by the former coalition government and continued until November 2019, after a class action lawsuit led to the scheme being labelled as unlawful.

The former government raised more than A$1.7 billion from more than 400,000 people.

The scheme was found to have wrongly recovered more than A$750m from 381,000 people.

Government Services Minister Bill Shorten said while the class action lawsuit delivered justice for victims, more was needed to be done.

‘‘This royal commission has to fill a gap,’’ he said.

‘‘We know that almost 400,000 Australian­s fell victim to this cruel system. A human tragedy with very real consequenc­es for its victims.’’

Prime Minister Anthony Albanese

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