Wayward spending
FORMER health minister Sussan Ley’s self-inflicted travails are relatively unsurprising. Over the past two decades, indulgent spending has undone the careers of too many politicians to detail here.
John Howard took office in 1996 promising new heights of ministerial integrity, in the form of a tough code of conduct. His ambitions were cruelled within a year as he was forced to sack three ministers, each of whom had contributed to the “travel rorts” scandal.
In the same year, disgraced independent senator Mal Colston faced 28 charges of defrauding the Commonwealth by allegedly misusing his travel allowance. The prosecution was only dropped because his failing health meant he was unlikely to be fit enough for a trial.
The great surprise is that neither main party in the years since has been able to exercise enough restraint over its members to prevent similar abuses. Politicians from both sides have been tempted to use taxpayers’ money to pay for personal trips or to further personal ends.
Most (though likely not all) of those who cross the line are caught, because parliamentarians’ spending details are published by default.
The question begs: if public registers of parliamentarians’ expenses and interests allow us to scrutinise and, eventually find, the free riders among them, what of the vastly greater number of officials whose expenses face almost no scrutiny?
Senior public servants control most government spending. They decide which businesses are invited to tender for government work; they sit on assessment panels for contracts and jobs.It’s inevitable that this lack of transparency encourages indulgences, and worse.
Most senior public servants are upstanding and deserving of respect; indeed, some sacrifice a more luxurious lifestyle to work in government.
Others, however, will succumb to temptation. More public scrutiny would go a long way towards reducing the number of those who do.