Point by point, brushstroke by brushstroke, a picture emerged this week of just how ugly things are for Australia.
Senate estimates further revealed how deeply corrupt this government is, and how entirely indifferent it is to basic integrity.
The Australian Sports Commission misled a Senate committee over the crucial issues of changes made to the rorted grants program after caretaker mode kicked in on April 11 last year.
Ex-minister Bridget McKenzie then re-emerged to deny knowing anything about the changes. Which is deeply problematic, because not merely were the changes made after the government went into caretaker mode, but she was the legal decision maker, for a set of rorted grants the legality of which is already under serious question.
Who made the changes? Good luck finding out. This government doesn’t have a flash record when it comes to dodgy documents. And it’s no use asking the Australian Federal Police (AFP), which didn’t bother interviewing either Clover Moore or Angus Taylor about the use by the latter of a fictitious document to attack the former.
Meantime Attorney-General Christian Porter revealed he doesn’t even know the basics of anti-corruption bodies, with his own departmental staff forced to contradict him. No wonder there’s no sign of the national integrity body first mooted in 2018.
There’s also no sign of much of the money that Scott Morrison — beset by accusations he was just a marketing man and not a leader — promised in response to the bushfire crisis. Either appropriated money isn’t rolling out anywhere near fast enough, or the money is purely “notional”.
Hard right-wing government backbenchers like Amanda Stoker and Connie Fierravanti-Wells also revealed just how extraordinarily thin-skinned the government is when they angrily objected to discussions about a key threat identified by ASIO — right-wing terrorism. Their problem? They didn’t like the term “right-wing”.
A corrupt government, protected by a partisan AFP, that can’t even allow discussion of a major terror threat without descending into self-interested histrionics.
In a way, what we got from Treasury Secretary Steven Kennedy was even more worrying. Kennedy’s remarks to Senate estimates yesterday mainly attracted attention for his indication that coronavirus would slice 0.5% off growth in this quarter and might end up having some impact on the June quarter as well. Full marks for honesty.
But Kennedy also stated that “the economy is quite solid and travelling quite well”, a staggering statement from the man notionally in charge of the government’s economic policymaking.
Let’s quickly run through current economic data: growth slowed to 0.5% in the December quarter, with government spending and iron ore the only things propping up growth. Households were already bunkered down before the bushfires, and business investment is falling.
One of the few areas outside mining where investment is growing, renewable energy generation, has been smashed by the government’s lack of a climate policy. There’s a major productivity crisis. Wages have stagnated since 2013. And all of that while interest rates have been at record lows even before the RBA cut rates last year, and while the government has pumped tens of billions of dollars of stimulus into the economy via deficits over the last decade.
If Kennedy thinks that is “travelling quite well” then what nightmare would qualify for “in trouble”? How much can we trust Treasury when it offers statements like that?
The government’s narrative, of course, is that the reason the surplus it claimed to have already delivered has vanished, and the reason the economy will grind to a halt and perhaps even enter recession, is because of the virus.
But as a direct result of government decisions, the economy was already comatose in 2019, meaning the slowdown from the virus will be significantly worse, and more prolonged, than it would have been if the government had displayed the sort of economic leadership the Reserve Bank and the business sector have been calling for for over a year.
As a result, the Reserve Bank had to use up half of its remaining ammunition this week in an effort to short-circuit the collapse in consumer and investor confidence on display on stockmarkets and in the aisles of supermarkets.
And still we wait for the government’s fiscal response to the crisis, which won’t appear until next week, six weeks after the World Health Organisation declared an emergency. Ministers appear to spend as much time backgrounding journalists on what will be in the package as they do actually preparing it.
As with the “notional” bushfire funding, how much will actually reach businesses, and how quickly?
Meantime, the crisis, and the panic, spreads. The smell of fear is so great it is almost masking the stench of corruption coming from Canberra.
Basic integrity doesn’t apply to the Morrison Government because God chose it.
Does anyone recall those heady days when we thought the Abbott govt was bad?
The latest info from McKenzie should be a chapter titled When Thieves Fall Out.
Let’s not think that calling out corruption necessarily has much to do with ending corruption. When I was a foreign student in Indonesia in the 1970s the press criticised corruption and the government allowed that because it was nominally against corruption. But actual effective action against corruption didn’t happen until the presidency of Jono Widodo. Now we have open, blatant and unashamed corruption in Australia without consequences for the perpetrators. It’s established and people will go to jail for fighting against it.
Joko Widodo. Sorry, I need to watch my predictive spelling better.
A second whole Comment (and now a third) on this thread is necessary because this site’s functionality does not provide for editing by the poster (even for a 5-min time-limit).
For years, Australia has gone “tsk tsk” when looking at the political corruption in PNG, where MPs get slush funds to spend in their communities in order to win votes.
Turns out, the PNG MPs were just ahead of Australia by a couple of decades, but we’re doing our best to catch up.
The breathtaking arrogance and sense of entitlement of what they think they should be able to get away with is staggering – starting from the snout of this rotten carp.
Has there ever been rorting of the public purse on the scale that this mob has perpetrated, to buy votes, curry favour and benefit their mates? From :-
* The $13 billion M-DBA;
* The $3 billion Urban Congestion Fund;
* $150 million Female Facilities and Water Safety Stream (FFWSS) and
* the Morrison-McKenzie Sprorts ‘R Us.
The right likes to mitigate their Limited News Party’s economic self-philandering by saying “they all do it”, but that’s BS on this scale.
Then Scotty From Marketing wants to involve his god in it – wearing his idea of Christianity on his sleeve?
And the AFP is on board as well.
Dealing with COVID-19 is a marketing chore rather than a humanitarian mission for this government.