Thursday 1 December 2022

Scott Morrison falsely claimed he lacked powers to help Biloela family.

 Extract from The Guardian

Former PM said decision on Murugappan family was in immigration minister’s hands, despite being sworn in to administer home affairs at the time.

Scott Morrison looking sideways and smiling slightly
Scott Morrison in parliament on Wednesday, when he became the first former prime minister to be censured.
Wed 30 Nov 2022 17.35 AEDTLast modified on Wed 30 Nov 2022 18.26 AEDT
Scott Morrison falsely suggested he lacked ministerial powers to help the Biloela family while he was sworn in to administer the home affairs department.

The day before the 2022 election, Morrison dead-batted calls to help the Murugappan family, claiming he needed to leave the decision to immigration minister, Alex Hawke.

The answer flies in the face of Morrison’s claim in the House of Representatives on Wednesday that if he had been asked about his appointment to administer multiple departments he “would have responded truthfully about the arrangements”.

Morrison also claimed in December that he had exercised the power to scuttle the Pep-11 permit to explore for gas off the coast of Newcastle “as prime minister”, omitting the fact he had the power to do so because of one of his secret appointments.

The inquiry by former high court justice Virginia Bell found that several of Morrison’s secret appointments were an “exorbitant” way to overrule his ministers in the event of disagreement about their use of their powers.

Through his solicitor, Morrison told the inquiry his reasoning for being appointed to administer the home affairs department related to citizenship cancellation powers “as well as numerous direct ministerial powers under the Migration Act” including visa cancellations and “in relation to visas generally”.

On 20 May, Morrison was pressed by reporters on the campaign trail in Perth about why the government didn’t use “discretionary powers” to allow the Murugappan family to stay.

“And that ministerial intervention is done by the minister, not the prime minister. That’s not what the act provides.

“He [Hawke] makes that decision – no, that it’s his decision.”

Morrison doubled down, insisting it would be “inappropriate” to discuss the matter with Hawke because “it’s his decision … in the same way it was his decision over Novak Djokovic”.

Asked what his decision would be, Morrison replied: “Well, I’m not the minister.”

Morrison had been sworn in to administer the home affairs department on 6 May 2021, more than a year earlier.

A spokesperson for Morrison said he stood by the accuracy of the claim that “intervention is done by the minister” as “no reference [was] made to powers”.

“Morrison was not sworn to hold the office of the minister and was not acting as minister at that time and had not activated any authorities to act.”

Morrison said he had “methodically worked through the proper process to make the ultimate decision and take all the necessary advice that I had to take and then form a decision”.

Despite Morrison’s claim he had made the decision “as the prime minister”, it was powers he gained on 15 April 2021 to administer the department of industry, science, energy and resources that allowed him to make the decision personally.

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