Federal Victorian Labor MP Anthony Byrne continued his one-man demolition of branch stacking within the Victorian ALP yesterday, taking out yet another Andrews government minister, Luke Donnellan, who admitted to branch stacking after Byrne outed him in evidence to Victoria’s Independent Broad-based Anti-corruption Commission inquiry into the moderate Labor faction.
Byrne — professing he had long harboured a desire to clean up a party branch increasingly under the control of now-exiled Adem Somyurek — discussed an environment in which former ministers Somyurek and Marlene Kairouz coerced ministerial and electorate staff into undertaking factional work, one in which his lack of factional recruitment after a “demilitarisation” deal with the socialist left faction was criticised; he also discussed the ramp-up of branch stacking in 2019 by Somyurek to remove socialist left parliamentarians, the continuing use of state ministerial staff for branch stacking, the use of federal electorate office staff for branch stacking out of Byrne’s office, and the appointment of staff in Byrne’s office, paid for by taxpayers, who never showed up.
The only reason any detail of the misuse of taxpayer money for Labor factional work has come out is because a state-based integrity commission is investigating the matter, and because Byrne decided he’d had a gutful of the corruption within his party and the activity of Somyurek.
Byrne decided to expose it despite the cost to his own 20-plus-year political career, which is likely now over.
How many other staffers in the appalling Andrews government — best known for its “red shirts” affair and its financial proximity to Crown — have been paid by taxpayers to branch stack, stuff ballots and undermine colleagues?
There’s been more comment on Byrne and his revelations by Labor figures than by the federal government, which of course has its own Victorian branch stacking scandal. But it prompts the question of what integrity processes are in place to prevent federal electorate office and ministerial staff being misused for the apparently incessant activity of branch stacking within the major parties. And in particular, why it takes a state anti-corruption body to expose misuse of federal money.
The answer, of course, lies in the lack of an anti-corruption body at the federal level.
Be assured that the hopelessly weak integrity body proposed by the Morrison government would not be able to publicly inquire into blatant misuse of electorate office or ministerial staff, nor initiate its own secret inquiry. In fact, short of an MP taking the highly unusual route of Byrne and deciding to blow up his career in the quest to expose corruption, such rorting would never be investigated at the federal level.
Even as we speak, federal taxpayer money is doubtless going to electorate offices and ministerial staff to engage in intra-party activities rather than manage electoral affairs, respond to constituents or work on portfolio issues.
And there’s zero chance of any of it being exposed unless an MP or minister has an attack of principles.
Meanwhile we’ll have to make do with the poor option of state integrity bodies doing a little of what the Morrison government refuses to allow at the federal level.
You may well refer to the Liberal Party’s own branch stacking scandal, BK, but I doubt that’s even made the front page of The Australian or the Herald Sun, unlike today’s Australian cover which has about 2/3 of it handed over to shrieking about ALP corruption. Then there’s the usual suspects spruiking their always predictable always poisonously biased so-called commentary and the usual (so rendered completely unfunny by virtue of sheer repetition) smearing cartoon of Dan Andrews even though he’s pretty well peripheral to the stacking being investigated.
Don’t suppose you could have thrown in an ‘anti-China’ one with your ‘ant-Andrews’ one today, Bernard? Just for balance only
Something like Australia’s longest running war was on Chinese soil as the Republic of China (Taiwan) claims in its constitution that Afghanistan is part of the Republic of China (Taiwan).
This isn;t about anti-Andrews or anything else, Anthony Byrne has done this in order to eliminate corruption from the ALP and, by demonstrating the need for a Federal ICAC after the next Federal election.
If it gets authority to conduct retrospective investigations, we should be free of Morrison and his ilk ever after – whereas if we stick with seeing this through strictly partisan lenses, we never rise above the muck.
You might want to reflect on that.
You reckon Morrison and Cash will be inspired by Byrne to set up an ICAC with teeth now?
the appalling Andrews government
Give it a rest Bernard. Which Premier is being investigated by an anti-corruption body again?
Perhaps BK is expecting a triumphant Trumpian turnaround and Her Shreddingness will be returned by public acclaim, carried on the shoulders of property developers and dodgy visa mill owners?
‘appalling Andrews Government’? Unfortunately I think I’ve subscribed for a year..
Just thought the same Don. Hate to hear what is thought of the (late) even more appalling Berejiklian government, and most likely her successor, Perrotet and his government.
Sub-optimal language for objective journalism but seems par for the course in Australian media which is applied often to Labor and related groups e.g. unions, of the perceived centre left through to centre right, but not to LNP governments e.g. Berejiklian?
For example I think ABC’s Probyn, who is no friend of Labor, was hauled across the coals for describing Abbott’s government similarly in negative terms…. media acting as the praetorian guard for the LNP and power.
“Appalling Andrews Government” eh Bernard?
Well each to his own I guess. But after 12 years as a (generally) satisfied Crikey reader,
that was the clickbait crack that finally broke me.
My sub ends on Oct 20 and won’t be renewed.
It’s been a bloody good ride, but for me, Crikey is no longer worth the sub.
Good luck to you and all the crew. Hope you can make a living doing the “both sides” thing.
Cheers Paddy
It would be a blessing & relief if the pieces here were “both sides” – that would be a change.