The ABC is normally quick to respond to attacks on itself and its staff made by other media outlets.
It has an entire web page dedicated to “correcting the record”. When Dr Norman Swan was criticised for his coverage of the pandemic, the ABC released a long statement defending him.
An Australian attack on the ABC’s investigative reporting team drew a lengthy rebuke. An item on the ABC’s search engine optimisation practices elicited a monster 900-word response by ABC News communications lead Sally Jackson (coincidentally herself a former Australian media journalist). There are also media releases correcting claims by other media figures.
But the ABC has fallen strangely silent recently as The Australian has attacked journalist Emma Alberici — including publishing confidential information about her employment.
Alberici has been a regular punching bag for News Corp publications, The Australian Financial Review and senior Coalition figures for years. The government and its media cheerleaders launched an onslaught in 2018 after she published an excellent, detailed analysis of company tax payments, one that survived multiple attempts, including by the ABC, to discredit it.
That piece prompted fury from business figures whose companies were exposed as failing to pay tax and prompted phone calls by prime minister Malcolm Turnbull to friend and then-ABC chair Justin Milne. Milne, later to resign amid suggestions of sexual harassment, demanded then-managing director Michelle Guthrie fire Alberici because “they hate her”. Turnbull’s chief media adviser during the controversy was former senior ABC journalist — and one of Alberici’s predecessors as economics correspondent — Mark Simkin.
Turnbull’s dislike of Alberici was said to go back further, to her handling of a 2013 election debate over the NBN.
In recent weeks, however, the constant targeting of the journalist by News Corp and the AFR has shifted as the ABC has embarked on a round of redundancies. The Australian has repeatedly run details about Alberici’s employment status that can only have come from within the ABC — and which seem to breach basic requirements of staff confidentiality.
On June 25, The Australian reported not merely that Alberici had been targeted for redundancy by the ABC — which was widely known after the ABC announced its latest round of redundancies the previous day — but that “the ABC will undertake a ‘process of consultation’ with her, in which it will consult Alberici ‘on positions that fit with her skills set … she may move to another area, such as the ABC news channel’ ”.
On July 20, Nick Tabakoff speculated Alberici could become a “shock jock”. Last week he reported her “redundancy is understood to have been reaffirmed” and “prospects of a radio redeployment occurring have faded”, though evidence there ever was a “radio redeployment” outside Tabakoff’s head is hard to find. This week Alberici is being reported as having refused an ABC News channel offer.
The message from the leaks and their reporting is clear: the ABC has done its darnedest to find a role for Alberici (to the extent that reading an autocue for the handful of viewers who watch the ABC news channel is a role) but, sadly, can’t find one she will deign to accept.
In contrast to the ABC’s regular output of corrections and refutations, there hasn’t been a single “Correcting the Record” response, of even modest length.
In most corporations and public sector agencies, staffing matters are confidential. Workplace privacy principles limit what third parties can receive information about staff and when. Usually, not even colleagues are supposed to know about matters pertaining to issues like remuneration, conflict management, performance management and redundancy.
The ABC knows this: it famously caused difficulties for itself over the years by refusing to reveal the salaries of high-profile staff to parliamentary committees.
Alberici, however, appears to be an exception. Either confidential information about Alberici’s employment is being widely shared within the corporation, and being fed to another outlet, or those who hold such information close within senior management and ABC HR are themselves leaking it.
The ABC disputes that information is being leaked about Alberici.
“Confidential information relating to potential redundancies has not been disclosed and no one in ABC management has commented in any way,” a spokesperson told Crikey. “Under the [ABC] enterprise agreement (EA), information regarding potentially redundant positions is included in the proposals for change, which are made available to all staff.”
While it is correct that Alberici’s position, along with other positions proposed for redundancy, was identified to staff as being made redundant on June 24, that doesn’t address how personal information specific to her own redundancy process such as potential other roles and consultations about her “skill set” was also shared in accordance with the corporation’s EA.
“Employees are consulted on how to respond to media speculation,” the ABC added.
Alberici has resisted being forced out of the ABC, adding to her 2018 sin in the eye of executives of upsetting the Coalition and business with her journalism, and refusing to back down over it.
It’s worth recalling how extraordinary the attacks by the government were on Alberici over an article that, far from being “riddled with errors”, as critics claimed, was forensic. Since the election of the current government in 2013, the tradition of ministers only communicating with the ABC via correspondence with the chair — a tradition observed, with trivial exceptions, by Coalition ministers like Richard Alston and Helen Coonan, and Labor’s Stephen Conroy, has been trashed. Under the current government, prime ministers and ministers feel free to complain directly to ABC executives.
Remarkably, there has been no pushback from the ABC on this breach. Disturbingly, complaints from the prime minister’s office have been sent straight to the ABC director of news, Gaven Morris, for his personal actioning.
Such complaints have traditionally been handled at arm’s length.
Then chair and managing director Donald McDonald and Russell Balding, and minister Richard Alston, were all scrupulous in keeping the enormous controversy over Alston’s 2003 complaints about the ABC’s Iraq War coverage confined to minister-chair correspondence and the ABC’s independent complaints handling processes. Under more recent management, Morris appears to take a different approach that is far more responsive to the Coalition.
In one of the articles speculating about Alberici’s redundancy, The Australian journalist mocked her for her lack of work as the ABC’s chief economics correspondent, the role she was moved to after the axing of the long-running Lateline current affairs program, which has left a major hole in the ABC’s current affairs coverage.
However, Crikey understands ABC management and editors have acted to prevent, or refused to publish, Alberici’s work in the economics role.
Sources within the corporation say management has effectively blocked the economics route for her, prompting Alberici to make herself useful elsewhere, including on Foreign Correspondent and on Sydney radio.
Alberici declined to respond to questions and directed Crikey to her lawyers, who did not return calls.
Given how cowed ABC news and current affairs has become in recent years, the treatment meted out to Alberici, beyond the breach of staff confidentiality, seems designed to send a signal to ABC journalists: upset the Coalition, and defend your journalism, and you’ll be the subject of a public campaign designed to portray you in an unflattering light — including to any future employers in what is left of Australia’s media.
At a time when Australian journalism is under existential threat, it’s a grim signal of how the ABC will approach the challenge of providing public interest journalism that holds the powerful to account.
If an ‘handful’ of people watch ABC News channel, what is your description of the number of people who watch Today, Sunrise, the Blot Report or the Parrot’s Droppings? I suppose they’re just a middle finger?
Emma’s incisive journalism, particularly on the economics front is already sorely being missed. Her treatment is shameful. Doesn’t look like Ita likes the strong, resilient and intelligent types either.
We all know that Ita was chosen because she is a Packer publishing doyenne, hence the “I trust Ita, everyone trusts Ita” line peddled by our southern preacher boy called scottie from marketing who happens to currently be living in Kirrabilli House.
Emma Alberici has been flogged and her credibility called into question, whilst the ABC management seems to think that cringing in the corner works.
Maybe it is time for ABC management to inform the political class that they have decided to stop covering press conferences because the time and energy versus actual real news is a poor usage of a political journalist’s time.
The dumbing down of programs like Q&A, the care with which the interviewers look after Scottie’s ego and his self delusion that he is competent, the appalling self censorship will only end in ruin.
Alberici copped it because she did not understand how Company Tax in Australia works! That’s a problem for an economics reporter and erstwhile expert.
Company Tax is a ‘profits’ tax, and prior year losses and current year depreciation can reduce current year profits to zero. Big companies with big capital investments and big depreciation expenses can easily not make a profit for several years – in some cases if the investment goes bad – never.
Bernard might like to educate himself on this vital point before talking nonsense about her ‘excellent detailed analysis’.
You left out Related Party Transactions as a way to siphon off those profits. So the untaxed gazillions flow to the Caymans ….. Emma might have something to say about that …..
It is easy for corporations to structure their ‘expenses’ in such a way as to not have to pay any tax at all and it is common. Emma Alberici is being badly treated by the ABC pandering to all the usual bastards. I am glad that Bernard Keane has brought the matter up. I for one AABC viewer am missing her on screen.
Well said SS…sounds like the ABC has been stacked with L/NP lackeys calling themselves journalists…it certainly appears that way to this viewer/listener.
Emma is a far superior journalist, TV presenter and broadcaster than most of those ‘yes women’ (and men) we now have to endure on ‘their’ ABC.
No wonder her fellow employees are trying to get rid of Emma…too much competition!
I hope she continues to fight back!!
No its not. Not for most types of companies.
It never ceases to amaze how bullies pick on and gang up on an individual at such a public level and can get away with it so blatantly (even helped to get away with it by ABC in this case)
The FREDDO attempt at simplistic explanation of company taxes hardly merits much attention, but suffice it to say that it might at least have referred to the use of transfer pricing, offshore transactions, registration of companies and their subsidiaries in tax havens, and a few other methods of finishing up with zero or minimally token tax payments by companies on a global basis.
For credibility, this might have acknowledged these can and do play a significant part in finally- declared company income figures, and bear little relationship to genuine “free market” operations.
One maker of tax planning software advertises:
‘Sixty seven percent of Australia’s top 100 ASX listed companies have subsidiaries in tax havens or low-tax jurisdictions. News Corporation, Westfield and the Goodman Group are the most prolific with each having more than 50 entities in low-tax jurisdictions. Telstra (wholly owned by the Australian government until 1997) controls 20 subsidiaries registered in well-known tax havens – 11 in the British Virgin Islands, four in Bermuda, four in Jersey, one in Mauritius and one in the Cayman Islands.”
You’d think a tax planning company might know something?
Oh dear. Look — there’s News Corporation. Shucks.
Don’t forget the inter-company “loans” that Australian subsidiaries of multinational companies take out and with totally usurious interest rates. When combined with off-shore tax haven administration they can magic up avoiding paying the proper tax anywhere.
Here is one example:
The Guardian Australia:
ExxonMobil Australia to face Senate scrutiny after paying no tax on $18bn income
Company reported no taxable income and paid no corporate tax in 2013-14 and 2014-15 despite $18bn in earnings
Calla Wahlquist, 4 December 2017
A Senate committee will investigate ExxonMobil’s Australian tax records following revelations the oil and gas company paid no corporate income tax in Australia for at least two years.
Public records released by the Australian Tax Office (ATO) show ExxonMobil Australia reported no taxable income and paid no corporate tax in 2013-14 and 2014-15, despite reporting an annual income of $9.6bn and $8.5bn respectively.
For the same period, Woodside, an Australian-owned oil and gas company with a slightly lower total income than ExxonMobil and a declared taxable income of $4.8bn from 2013-2015, paid $1.1bn in Australian corporate tax.
The Senate committee inquiry into corporate tax avoidance is expected to announce on Tuesday that it plans to extend its hearings to examine ExxonMobil’s records, after three trade unions announced the findings of a report on the company’s conduct.
The report, by Tax Justice Network’s Jason Ward, cited the company’s US filings that showed it had US$54bn in “indefinitely reinvested, undistributed earnings” in offshore holdings. It traced its ownership though the Netherlands to the Bahamas, where, according to the Paradise Papers, it has 575 subsidiaries, including three directly linked to Australia.
Exxon’s 2016 filings with the US Securities and Exchange Commission also state the ATO was still examining its Australian tax filings from 2008 to 2016. Ward said ExxonMobil also had $18.5bn in offshore-related party loans and suggested it was “more aggressive” in pursuing this policy than fellow oil and gas company Chevron, which reached a reported $1bn settlement with the ATO after the federal court found against it in a landmark profit-shifting decision in April.
Chevron had $42bn in related party debt, while Exxon has $18.5bn in consolidated related party debt. Exxon made $1.2bn in debt repayments in 2016, amounting to 1.7% of its total revenue.
……………..
Nonsense. She actually ‘copped it’ because she rebutted, as so many other equally authoritative writers did, the now completely discredited ‘argument’ that corporate tax cuts would have economic benefits including higher wages and job creation. Can you produce any evidence that Alberici’s position was incorrect? The Trump corporate tax cuts were mainly used (as predicted) for share buy-backs rather than wage increases or job creation. Some companies gave one-off bonuses, other raised wages, but only a tiny proportion of workers benefited.
https://americansfortaxfairness.org/key-facts-american-corporations-really-trump-tax-cuts/
Any mistake by Emma A. was jumped onto to deflect from and support the mantra of ‘trickle down effect’; to justify corporate and other tax cuts for the top end of town.
The discredited ‘trickle down’ effect that has been promoted by the Chicago and Austrian schools via the Koch led radical right libertarians, channeled via the IPA, has always been nebulous and nowadays old hat.
Curiously not only were there no demands for evidence based on research, no journalists nor economists thought of presenting peer reviewed economic research that debunked the ‘trickle down’ fantasy?
Why? Maybe they also think that you cannot trust education and science….. or simply know to keep their mouths shut to remain employed?
Amazed at how subservient and spineless many supposedly empowered by Australians in the public gaze are……
Re debunking the ‘trickle down effect’ – the author of a social/political history and bio of former Tasmanian premier “Electric Eric The Life and Times of an Australian State premier” debunked it as far as 19th and 20th century history is concerned. Nothing’s changed in the 21st century despite the chanting of neo-liberals and co.
No, not correct, completely wrong, that’s not what Alberici wrote and wasn’t within a bulls roar of what they were complaining about. As Drew points out, it was the article that belled the cat that tax cuts do not lead to higher wages or employment.
But sure, write your own history, everybody else does.
Freddo, you probably believe that “ABC funding is rising every year” too. Just like you apparently believe that company tax cuts lead to improved wages and conditions of workers which was what Alberici questioned.
The News Corp deadbeats managed to kill Lateline, turn the 7.30 Report into a pathetic shell of its former self so even Tony Abbott might be ‘safe’ on it, but that wasn’t enough for them because Alberici still was doing some genuine investigative reporting. So they did a serious job on her, throwing enough mud over trivial matters that gullible people like you fell for it. Worse, ABC management was complicit in this despicable wrecking–of investigative journalism and personal careers. Of course no surprise since the board and MD were chosen by the government of the day. The fact that Ita Buttrose has changed none of this does not bode well, but then she too was chosen by this government–apparently personally by the PM.
So too can transfer pricing schemes, phony interest and intellectual property charges and the use of tax havens reduce profits to zero. Your argument might hold water if prior year losses were the only reason profits were being reduced.
she would find a welcome beyond all imagination if she chose to work for Micheal West.
That would be a tag team worthy of respect.
The Coalition of neolibs along with the cartel of beneficiaries that profit directly from a subservient government and in turn sponsor their election campaigns don’t like any distraction from their message.
The boldness it requires to hobble the national broadcaster financially and then interfere with it’s message editorially including choosing who can say what is just another example of how far we have strayed from being a true democracy.
It also points out the institutionalized corruption that is the Neocon way.
One would have thought that owning virtually all the countries output from media and control of message ,a near total monopoly would be enough , apparently not.
Self interest and greed are very successful driving forces.