“I met the guy who did it,” Treasury secretary John Fraser said of the person who leaked then-treasurer John Howard’s speech to veteran political journalist Laurie Oakes in the 1980s. The leak that sunk the budget. Fraser said in Senate estimates yesterday that it was the last time there had been a leak from the Treasury Department.
Fraser is on a hunt for new leaks, however, as hours before the budget lockup in May this year, both Sky News and The Australian Financial Review reported the details of the proposed levy to be imposed on the banks, which was announced in the budget. Both reports went public well before journalists filed into Senate committee rooms, but Fraser has focused his attention on cracking down on the lockup while ASIC and the AFP investigate the leak on the bank levy.
Every year, hundreds of journalists from around the country descend on the nation’s capital and agree to be cut off from the rest of the world and locked up in parliament’s committee rooms for six hours while they digest the budget documents. As part of this agreement, each media representative must sign a document agreeing to not report any of the information before the treasurer starts speaking, and they are warned that to do so would be in breach of the Commonwealth Crimes Act — a crime that carries a penalty of up to two years’ imprisonment.
Upon entry, journalists must surrender their mobile phones, with Treasury officials putting them in ziplock bags for safe keeping. In previous years, journalists have been allowed to keep their laptops and other electronic devices, and the larger media outlets set up an entire room full of computers the day before the budget, establishing encrypted links to their head offices to ensure they can publish at 7.30pm. Journalists are told that Treasury officials monitor the transmissions from the lockup and Treasury officials patrol each committee room to ensure that everyone is abiding by the rules.
But this practice looks set to end, after Fraser announced in estimates, apropos of nothing, Treasury was going to ban the media from taking in laptops.
“Going forward we will have more exhaustive and sadly in this day and age more intrusive measures to ensure people aren’t taking electronic devices into the lockup,” he said.
This wasn’t the result of any review, rather a decision Fraser — whose first stint in Treasury was in the John Stone era, before the internet or laptops — had personally made.
“I was worried we were relying on the co-operation and goodwill of too large a [group of] people. It’s sad we have to do this, and I hope I am terribly wrong. We don’t need a review for everything. Some things are blindingly obvious,” he said.
“My view is that the lockup procedures were open to abuse, invariant as to whether there had been a breach in the lockup.”
Fraser said that there hadn’t been any specific leak, but monitoring the transmissions out of the lockup suggested that while the overwhelming majority of traffic was from Treasury officials — who keep their mobile phones to answer the questions of journalists in the lockup — it didn’t account for all the traffic, and that was enough to motivate Treasury to crack down. In addition to that, Treasury has advice from the Australian Federal Police that Treasury has no power to compel journalists to open up their devices to officials to show they weren’t transmitting budget material during the lockup.
[Waiting on a miracle in a phone-free journo cage]
Treasury will issue iPads and USB thumb drives to every single media representative in lockup to write their stories and prepare to file.
“We will have iPads for everybody that are issued. So you can’t take an iPad or laptop in. People will be able to prepare their stories or reports onto a USB that they can then plug into their laptops.”
There are a number of issues with this proposal. Firstly, iPads don’t have USB ports, so there’s nowhere to plug in a USB thumb drive. Secondly, journalists in the lockup work in a wide variety of media. What will the radio reporters use to prepare their stories? What about TV journalists? How will the newspaper editors prepare layouts? And presumably Fraser has never had to type quickly, under deadline pressure, on an iPad.
And equally crucially, a large part of the reason why it is useful for journalists to take their own devices in is that they can be loaded up with previous years’ budget papers, budget stories and other research material to ensure that the numbers and announcements presented in the budget stack up.
The crackdown looks like the Treasury Department seeking to avoid accountability, rather than any real concern over leaks. It is the latest in a series of changes around the lockup designed to make it tougher for journalists to do their job. There was a ban on student journalists and a decision to cut down the number of seats available in the room for the Treasurer’s press conference, and the numbers contained on budget tables were not able to be copied into spreadsheets, as in previous years, and had to be entered manually.
The cost of issuing all these iPads won’t be cheap for Treasury. In the last calendar year alone, the department spent close to $40,000 on issuing iPads. There are currently 172 iPads issued to staff, mostly iPad Airs, which would not be appropriate for the lockup. This year there were 580 media representatives in the lockup More likely the department would need to fork out for iPad Pros, which cost well over $1000 each. Excluding some sort of fleet deal, it could cost well over half a million just to stock enough iPads to cover the nation’s media for lockup.
Crikey asked the Treasury Department how much it spends on budget lockup, but the department said it could not break down the cost as it was covered across several contracts.
I’m not making any comment on the merit or lack of merit in this proposal, but there are such things as iSticks, which have a lightning input and a USB input, which could be used to transfer documents from iPad to laptop via flash drive. I don’t see where iPad Pros would be necessary – I’ve typed documents on an iPad Air with a Bluetooth keyboard without issues.
This is purely addressing this article’s technical concerns.
The simple, obvious solution is for journalists to simply not go. Wait for the Treasurer to officially release the budget documents and analyze it properly where you have all the resources at hand and in the form you prefer.
The budget will keep for a few more hours, days, weeks. The whole charade seems pointless to me – rather than bemoaning the hoops that the increasingly insecure and irrational government of the day wants to make journos jump through, just ignore the process and do your jobs as normal – analyze announced policy and ask probing questions. That doesn’t require a lockup to achieve.
I used to think this, but the six hours provides a good amount of time to digest the document and to ask officials questions to clarify something. Something we don’t get much of a chance to do when everyone is rushing to file all at once.
I get why from the outside it might seem like a charade, but it’s really quite invaluable to journalists and results in better stories being produced, in my opinion.
Jackol – notwithstanding Josh’s reply, I would take this concept much further, to the extent that any journo. who takes a leak or secret, you-my-speshal-frend briefing be blackballed by colleagues.
We’ve seen the, fully justified, erosion of public trust in lobby stenographers over the last couple of decades – hence the lack of concern for job shedding at FauxFux & NewsCorpse – so it might be worth a bit of solidarity (HA!) amongst them to hold an intervention and “just say NO!”.
It would be impossible for the oldest ones, so thoroughly addicted to feeds, to go cold turkey but, given the calamitous results of the current hugger-mugger relationship on the community & public weal, it’s gotta be worth a try.
@ Josh Taylor
“…and the numbers contained on budget tables were not able to be copied into spreadsheets, as in previous years, and had to be entered manually.”
There is plenty of software available to crack a PDF or do OCR on a table and get its contents into Excel/Word. I pay for the Adobe software to do this (https://acrobat.adobe.com/au/en/acrobat/how-to/pdf-to-excel-xlsx-converter.html), though I’m sure there is free software to achieve a similar result.
The availability of this software does not change that the material should be available in Word/Excel etc, but it is not an impediment to a determined journalist.
As with the other comment above, OCR and other means to bypass the hurdles they put up are fine but it’s not really the point. It’s the principle.
Ahhh That word “accountability” . . . again.
Ah. Here it is. ” Crikey asked the Treasury Department how much it spends on budget lockup, but the department said it could not break down the cost as it was covered across several contracts.” One of the many advantages the government gets from outsourcing. It can’t tell us how much drug testing “dole bludgers” will cost either: “commercial confidence”. Outsourcing = unaccountability.
One might almost think that that particular cop-out -“so sorry, commercial-in-confidence” is not an accident or unfortunate side effect but a feature of such political ‘thinking’.
Imagine if we knew the real figures on any given PPP or privatisation or, the new wrinkle in NSW for the bus network, franchising.
Coz that works so well with sub post offices & fast food cloacae.