It’s been a while since Australian politics saw an act as gutless as Scott Morrison’s on Friday.
Mere minutes after the prime minister finished another of his interminable post-national cabinet monologues and walked away from journalists, Government Services Minister Stuart Robert issued a media release revealing one of the most expensive backflips in Commonwealth history. The government would repay at least $720 million in fake debts it had “raised” against welfare recipients under the now discredited robodebt scheme.
At a media conference conveniently on the Gold Coast, rather than before the same journalists Morrison had just walked out on, Robert tried to claim he’d moved quickly to address the scheme’s flaws: “the information presented to me saw a change in November, I acted swiftly on behalf of the government to pause debt recovery and to refine the system.”
Robert refused to apologise to the 373,000 victims (at a minimum) of the scheme. Christian Porter, appearing on the ABC yesterday, also refused to apologise. Both at least fronted the cameras. Scott Morrison ran away.
Coward.
This was Scott Morrison’s scheme, one he — the former social services minister — proudly boasted about as treasurer in the 2016 election campaign, claiming it would pump billions into the budget bottom line.
Now it’s fodder for a Friday afternoon garbage dump, with junior ministers sent out to publicly eat the shit sandwich.
It’s unlikely the scheme will ever generate a single cent of additional revenue, given the repayment, the likely compensation, the legal costs associated with a number of cases, and the extraordinary costs of implementing the supposedly automated scheme, including the siccing of debt collectors onto innocent welfare recipients.
Morrison and his colleagues, and the Social Services public servants who devised and implemented the scheme, will be hoping to avoid accountability for the debacle, which goes back to a single fact: there was always a serious question mark over the legality of the mechanism at the heart of robodebt, income averaging.
The government gave up pretending income averaging was lawful last November, just before settling the case brought by Deanna Amato in the Federal Court. Robert is trying to pretend that that was when the penny dropped about income averaging, and the government is refusing to say how long it knew about the lack of a legal basis for its flagship savings measure.
As is now well documented, however, the lack of a lawful basis was clear from early on. Social security law expert Matthew Butt raised serious questions about the legality of income averaging in early 2017, noting the limitations on its use under legislation and that Human Services’ own guidelines recommend that averaging be used selectively.
Administrative Appeals Tribunal (AAT) member Terry Carney found that there was no legal basis for the debts raised at the same time, in decisions the government declined to appeal. The government instead dumped Carney from the tribunal while it stacked it with former Coalition MPs, staffers and party members.
Why did public servants prepare and implement a scheme they knew had a strong chance of being found unlawful? Was legal advice sought? Or did Social Services, like the Department of Health in the sports rorts scandal, refuse to obtain legal advice it knew would show there was no legal basis for the proposed actions?
The financial cost of the debacle is only one aspect. Robodebt needlessly inflicted misery and anxiety of hundreds of thousands of Australians. The number of suicides caused by the receipt of automatically generated debt letters is unlikely to ever be known.
Throughout, the bureaucrats involved have sought to stymie or evade accountability. In the most recent round of Senate estimates hearings, departmental officials like Social Services secretary Kathryn Campbell refused to provide basic information, like the number of victims of income averaging, to a Senate committee.
Similar obfuscation is likely to be used against attempts by the Senate to establish the crucial issue of how much Social Services knew about the unlawfulness of income averaging when the scheme was crafted in 2015, what advice was sought and what was communicated to the minister.
The only effective mechanism for determining that is a judicial inquiry or royal commission, in which the likes of Campbell and her offsiders like Annette Musolino will be unable to take questions on notice or hide behind ministers.
It’s pro forma to call for a royal commission into any minor scandal these days, but the case for a judicial inquiry into the debacle is compelling. It would be able to examine not merely the issue of what was known about the unlawfulness of the scheme, but the human cost of the scheme, the government’s use of private debt collectors to pursue victims, the release of the private information of Andie Fox by departmental officials when she dared to criticise the scheme (disgustingly defended by Campbell, Musolino and other officials in 2018), the government’s legal strategy of avoiding appealing AAT decision if they might lead to exposure of the unlawfulness of the scheme, and behaviour in Centrelink’s “debt recovery offices”.
Morrison can try to run away from his debacle, but serious questions about why a government embarked on an unlawful campaign to immiserate hundreds of thousands of Australians will remain.
What did you make of the government’s Friday afternoon robodebt backflip? Let us know your thoughts by writing to letters@crikey.com.au. Please include your full name to be considered for publication in Crikey’s Your Say column.
Is there any coalition portfolio that doesn’t warrant a Royal Commission ? RoboDebt, Sports Rorts, NBN just off the top of my head.
Anything to do with Angus Taylor.
And Mechalia Cash
“Maniacal”?
Yeah that woman is freakily manic!
or “Crash” either one will do.
“Miss Funny Money”?
I believe ‘Chuckles The Clown’ was the best moniker I ever heard for her.
Not to mention the Community Development Grants scheme…which I’ve mentioned here before…that NO ONE is talking about except Michael Pascoe.
A much bigger corruption scandal…about 11 times the size…of Sports rorts. Strange behaviour by ALL other journalists, including those at Crikey.
Are we back to ‘protecting’ this putrid government and their fellow travellers? If so, WHY???
So much corruption, so few to deal with it and sadly, even fewer who appear to care.
Hi! Sidney…you may be interested to know that Michael Pascoe has written another article on CDGs in The New Daily and he is reporting that it is much worse than he first thought.
Some 25 times more money…billions of dollars… dished out to favoured electorates than in Sports rorts.
Amazing that this is not front page news across the country. Wonder why?????
Scotty From Marketing :- “Bad PR is for losers.”
As for “A changing media grapples with Scott Morrison’s Team Australia reset”?….
Robert and Morrison are as thick as thieves and two short planks.
Together attending Steve Irons’ (all the way from Perth) wedding in Melbourne – and bunging it all on the public purse “because they thought they could get away with it” – set the scenes to follow.
Trouble for them was they had to repay that self-gratifying indulgence.
… Then again, maybe it wasn’t Scotty’s fault that he couldn’t attend a mea culpa presser? Maybe he was somewhere in that garbage?
The amount of stress and deep gut-wrenching anxiety this Government”initiative” has caused, even apart from an unknown number of suicides, makes it one of the most evil and wicked actions of any Government of my lifetime. I am certain that this appalling regime will try to attack aged pensioners , of whom I am one, next, to regain some semblance of “fiscal authority”. In vain! In one year the LNP government has demonstrated manifest incompetence financially and humanly, and a strong propensity to misuse public funds corruptly.
If there were more than 4 suicides relating to this scandal, then it outranks Pink Batts in the mortality stakes. Royal Commission thus justified on basis of precedent.
According to abc radio this morning a woman received an apology last week after spending 3 months in gaol for not paying back her debt!
For just three months of wrongful imprisonment she got an apology? Now that is news!
If Labor stands for anything like social justice it has to campaign on calling a RC into this when it wins power- because of the social injustice the baby of “Schemo’s” perpetrated.
With the hope that it doesn’t drop it after they win – like Rudd did his promised “Iraq RC”.
The piece of toilet paper stuck to SmoCo’s shoe just got longer. A tainted pastor, a rorted grants scheme, a lump of coal on the parliament floor, a confected national security issue over said tainted pastor, his Qanon linked staffer, his bush fire holiday, his bush fire holiday office lies, his unconscionable handshakes, his military call-up lacking any consultation, his defence of Angus (the document doctor) Taylor, his backflip on Newstart levels only when his own voters got hit, and now this shambles. How many more segments will this man add? God knows.
His “bush-fire video”. A “tape-worm of toilet paper”.
Been reading Michael Pascoe’s stuff on the Community Development Grant allocations in the New Daily? Rotting par excellence.
I meant Rorting but rotting is not out of place.
“his unconscionable handshakes”
Let me fix it for you: his assault of a traumatised pregnant woman.
Would that be “Adobe Angus” Taylor you are referring to?
“Tugger”?