Malta Independent

Australia to make posts public to avoid repeat of power grab

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An inquiry into a former Australian prime minister secretly appointing himself to multiple ministries recommende­d Friday that all such appointmen­ts be made public in the future to preserve trust in government.

Prime Minister Anthony Albanese said he would recommend his Cabinet accept all of the retired judge ‘s recommenda­tions at a meeting next week.

Albanese ordered the inquiry in August after revelation­s that his predecesso­r Prime Minister Scott Morrison had taken the unpreceden­ted steps of appointing himself to five ministeria­l roles between March 2020 and May 2021, usually without the knowledge of the existing minister.

The extraordin­ary power grab came to light after Morrison’s conservati­ve coalition was voted out of office in May after nine years in power.

His unpreceden­ted moves are seen as part of a wider trend in Australian politics to concentrat­e power within a leader’s office at the expense of the British Westminste­r tradition of delegating responsibi­lities among ministers.

Albanese blamed a culture of secrecy within the former government for its leader’s extraordin­ary accumulati­on of personal power.

“We’re shining sunlight on a shadow government that preferred to operate in darkness, a government that operated in a cult of secrecy and a culture of coverup which arrogantly dismissed scrutiny from the Parliament and the public as a mere inconvenie­nce,” Albanese told reporters.

“The actions of the former prime minister were extraordi

nary, they were unpreceden­ted and they were wrong,” Albanese added.

Retired High Court Justice Virginia Bell in her inquiry recommende­d laws be created to require public notices of ministeria­l appointmen­ts be published as well as the divisions of ministeria­l responsibi­lities.

Morrison cooperated with the inquiry through his lawyers but did not personally give evidence.

Morrison, who is now an opposition lawmaker, maintains that he gave himself the portfolios of health, finance, treasury, resources and home affairs as an emergency measure made necessary by the coronaviru­s pandemic.

Morrison said his awareness of issues surroundin­g national security and national interest as prime minister had been broader than that of any individual minister or Bell’s inquiry.

“A prime minister, I sought to exercise my responsibi­lities in a manner that would best advance and protect Australia’s national interests and the welfare of the Australian people,” Morrison said in a statement on Friday.

“This was done during a time of significan­t challenge not seen since the Second World War and the Great Depression,” Morrison added.

Bell found that making Morrison a duplicate minister was unnecessar­y because an acting minister could be appointed within minutes of the original minister becoming incapacita­ted by COVID-19.

Bell found the reason Morrison appointed himself to most portfolios was his concern that “an incumbent minister might exercise his or her statutory powers in a manner with which Mr. Morrison didn’t agree.”

His only use of the secret powers had nothing to do with the pandemic. He overturned a decision by former Resources Minister Keith Pitt to approve a contentiou­s gas drilling project near the north Sydney coast that would have harmed his government’s reelection chances.

Asset Energy, a company behind the project, is fighting Morrison’s decision in the Federal Court.

Asset accuses Morrison of bias and failing to provide procedural fairness when he blocked the project in March, court documents show.

Albanese on Friday declined to comment on Morrison’s decision because the matter was before the courts.

Bell found Morrison also wanted former Treasurer Josh Frydenberg’s power to block foreign investment­s in Australia that were not in the national interest and former Home Affairs

Minister Karen Andrews’ power to cancel the citizenshi­p of dual national extremists.

Morrison also considered giving himself a sixth ministeria­l portfolio — for the department of agricultur­e, water and environmen­t — but did not proceed with the appointmen­t, Bell reported. His reasons for not proceeding were not explained.

Bell found that there had been no delineatio­n of responsibi­lities among the multiple ministers and there had been a risk of conflict if two ministers wanted to exercise the same power in different ways. Department bosses had been unaware that they were answerable to more than a single minister.

Frydenberg, who had been Morrison’s deputy leader of Liberal Party, was voted out of office at the May election without knowing the prime minister had also been a second treasurer.

Frydenberg described Morrison taking on the treasury portfolio as “extreme overreach,” in an interview published by Fairfax Media on Friday.

Bell found the secrecy around Morrison’s appointmen­ts was “apt to undermine public confidence in government” and “corrosive of trust in government.”

Opposition leader Peter Dutton has previously said his and Morrison’s Liberal Party would support legislatio­n that would prevent a repeat of such a secret accumulati­on of power.

Albanese’s center-left Labor Party came to power at the last election with promises of more government transparen­cy and accountabi­lity.

A bill to create a National AntiCorrup­tion Commission, a watchdog to investigat­e serious or systemic corruption within the public sector, passed the House of Representa­tives on Thursday and is expected to pass the Senate next week.

 ?? ?? Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese. Photo: AP
Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese. Photo: AP
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