In its dissection of how Nationals minister Bridget McKenzie and her office essentially directed funds from the Community Sport Infrastructure Program to the Coalition’s re-election strategy, the Australian National Audit Office (ANAO) has crunched the numbers from every possible angle.
It is authoritative in its assessment that “the award of funding reflected the approach documented by the minister’s office of focusing on ‘marginal’ electorates held by the Coalition as well as those electorates held by other parties or independent members that were to be ‘targeted’ by the Coalition at the 2019 election”.
It also lays out the maths to prove it.
Government grants programs, typically, come with guidelines that tell applicants — and taxpayers — not just what to apply for and when (although the deadline requirement was overridden by McKenzie’s office) but the criteria against which they’ll be judged to ensure taxpayers get value for money.
One of the ways the ANAO is able to show how blatantly McKenzie’s office rorted the program for partisan purposes is by using the Australian Sports Commission’s independent assessment of the applications using the criteria identified in its guidelines — an assessment that McKenzie’s office specifically blocked the commission from sending to it.
Comparing the commission’s assessment to what McKenzie approved for funding provides a stark contrast, which the ANAO renders in graphical form:
Projects that were independently assessed at 90 or above out of a maximum 100 score by the commission were overlooked in favour of programs that ranked below 60, even below 50. One project (the ANAO doesn’t identify individual grants) that only scored 40, and which had been submitted after the closing date, but which McKenzie’s office demanded be included, was funded ahead of dozens of projects that scored more than twice that.
And it got worse as McKenzie’s office became bolder in their rorting. As the rounds went by, the “projects funded versus projects assessed” graph shifted to the left on the scale of quality assessment. By round three, scores of applications assessed above 70 were routinely ignored in favour of projects below 50.
McKenzie’s staff tried to defend themselves to the ANAO by offering a breakdown of funding by electorates that showed Labor electorates did comparatively well. But this ignores that they were targeting marginal Labor electorates, which along with marginal Coalition and independent-held electorates (like Rebekha Sharkie’s Mayo, where the whole rort came to light) did much better than others.
The ANAO rips the argument to shreds, noting:
There were 417 applications that were approved for funding with assessment scores below the threshold that would have applied if decisions had reflected the assessed merit of the competing eligible applications. The significant majority of these applications (71% of the number of applications and 74% of the funding) were in Coalition electorates or ‘targeted’ electorates.
The emphasis on seats targeted by the Coalition election campaign meant that safe Coalition seats also missed out. “Projects located in Safe and Fairly Safe Coalition-held electorates received 14% less funding than if funding had been awarded on the basis of assessed merit,” the ANAO explains.
In contrast, “‘target’ projects that were located in electorates held by the Australian Labor Party received a similar amount to what they would have received had funding been awarded on the basis of assessed merit”.
Even so, it looks as though partisan rancour still drove McKenzie’s staff: “nine of the ten electorates that received the least funding were held by Labor”.
Figures, graphs, comparisons, breakdowns — the ANAO shows with mathematical certainty how a minister and a pack of political staffers abused $100 million in taxpayer funds to get themselves re-elected.
When’s ICAC coming ?
What part of “SACK HER – as a prelude to sacking this entire government” is incomprehensible to the Australian voting public. A despicable record of dishonesty!
This article confirms what I have long said about Ros Kelly’s “Sports Rort Affair”. In her case, it was incompetence which brought her undone, as there were no records to justify the (supposed) favouring of ALP electorates with grants funding. My view has always been that if that had been the case, that is that there was a corruption of the process, there would have been records presented to justify why grants were made. Instead, Kelly could only refer verbally to the “great big white board”.
In this latest case, all the records seem to be there to provide justification for what was a partisan exercise. However, the Audit Office has found the Sports Commission records which show what should have happened.
Whilst referring to the Kelly affair and the big white board one must patently clear that Kelly resigned.
Nobody seems to be taking any notice of the fact that the funding for this grant system went from $20,000,000 to $100,000,000 10 days before an election was called.
Did the “caretaker period” not apply to this money and grants, or were they all approved prior to the government going into Caretaker mode, that is in the 10 days running up to the election? How was that achieved?
There is definitely rotten about this affair and it is not as simple as a Minister misusing her power.
I feel the chill fingers of the smiling man in the pub with a beer in his hand, needing traction in the electorates and having all these wonderful grants to hand out.
It is a pity with the benefit of hindsight to have not just kept $80,000,000 of the sporting grants and bought the fire fighting planes
It’s not even hindsight Ratty. They were told this summer was going to be bad. The former emergency leaders from around the country were trying to talk to them but couldn’t get a hearing while their own Departmental people were warning them and not being heard. I don’t begrudge the expenditure on sporting facilities but feel very sorry for all the applicants who wasted time and effort trying to fulfill the publicly stated criteria only to find that the Minister was applying her own secret criteria. I wonder how many of those cheated applicants are also volunteer firies?
Roll out the barrel …… Bridget “Miss Piggy” McKenzie for “Miss Porker 2019”?
…….. As you sow, sow shall you reap.
Seems the Nationals have found a “worthy” successor to Barnaby.