Australia news live: reports of Morrison’s ‘shadow government’ extraordinary and unprecedented, Albanese says

Reports of Morrison’s ‘shadow government’ are ‘extraordinary and unprecedented’, Albanese says

Anthony Albanese is kicks off his press conference by describing the former PM’s ministerial sharing arrangement as “extraordinary and unprecedented”.

Let’s be very clear: Australians knew during the election campaign that I was running a shadow ministry. What they didn’t know was that Scott Morrison was running a shadow government. A shadow government that was operating in the shadows. What we have when we get sworn in as ministers is that there’s some transparency there.

Prime minister Anthony Albanese.
Prime minister Anthony Albanese. Photograph: Mick Tsikas/AAP

Updated at 21.31 EDT

Key events

Extraordinary work here from Ben Doherty on the Afghans Australia left behind:

My boys eat only one meal a day. My wife has got health and mental issues. It is a really difficult situation for my boys, starving, they are two, eight and 10 years old. They cannot go out as their visas are expired. We face police outside and the Australian government is not responding to our questions.

Thanks to Royce Kurmelovs for holding on tight to the wild ride that was former prime minister Scott Morrison apparently appointing himself to a range of ministries.

Tory Shepherd with you now – well, sort of. I can only feel half my face thanks to the wonders of modern dentistry. There may or may not be drool. Anyhoo, on with the show!

Peter Hannam

Peter Hannam

In the wake of Friday’s energy ministers’ meeting in Canberra, it’s worth remembering that Australia’s electricity prices remain high after tripling in the June quarter in the National Electricity Market, which serves 80% of the country’s population.

Today’s weekly readout of futures prices from the ASX shows only a gradual decline from the $264/megawatt hour averaged in the April-June period.

(As @dylanjmcconnell notes, a better measure of calculation – the volume-weighted price – puts the June quarter average slightly above $300/MWh.)

Energy ministers, as has been reported, have effectively shelved plans for a capacity mechanism – an indication perhaps that imposing a new complication on the NEM might not be the wisest course of action. “Probably fair to say it will go in a different direction to how it was originally conceived,” was one insider’s diplomatic takeout.

Kerry Schott, formerly the head of the Energy Security Board and a supporter of a mechanism to pay for idle generation capacity in the market, is reported in the AFR today as saying that states “will be largely left to implement their own schemes”.

That was probably always going to be the case, particularly as the Morrison government had largely given up on a national energy policy.

In the meanwhile, when the wind is blowing and the sun is out, wholesale spot prices are low – as they were a little while ago. Renewables were accounting for half of supplies in the NEM:

Still, market conditions remain tight, particularly in Queensland where there are “lack of reserve” forecasts for Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday from AEMO.

The gaps that the operator is looking to nudge suppliers to fill aren’t huge – in the 100MWs or so levels – but that could change if an ageing black or brown coal generator were to have any conniptions. We’ve had enough of those in recent months to be wary of more to come.

Updated at 22.13 EDT

Queensland police commissioner to face inquiry over DV response

Eden Gillespie

Eden Gillespie

Queensland’s police commissioner will front a commission of inquiry into police responses to domestic violence this week after questions were raised about her absence from the public hearings.

Katarina Carroll, commissioner of the Queensland Police Service, is set to appear at the last public hearing on Thursday to discuss the police’s capability, capacity and structure to respond to domestic violence, as well as cultural issues within the force.

It comes after Guardian Australia reported earlier this month that the commission had not asked Carroll to give evidence at the public hearings before they were scheduled to wrap up last week.

Queensland police commissioner Katarina Carroll.
Queensland police commissioner Katarina Carroll. Photograph: Jono Searle/AAP

Over the past five weeks, the inquiry has heard several disturbing allegations such as officers referring to domestic violence as “foreplay” and reports police did not investigate a woman’s suspicious death because she and her husband were “a pair of scumbags who live in a shit area”.

Other notable absences from the public hearings have included Queensland police minister Mark Ryan and president of the Queensland Police Union, Ian Leavers.

When contacted by Guardian Australia, the commission did not explain why the state’s most influential police figures were not asked to give evidence at the hearings in person.

The commission later uploaded Leavers’ statement to its website, which was made two weeks earlier and said there was no “widespread cultural problem” in how officers respond to domestic violence incidents.

Updated at 22.06 EDT

Adelaide Holocaust Museum fears antisemitic threats

The Adelaide Holocaust Museum is at risk of being targeted after news reports of antisemitic vandalism in South Australia has raised security concerns.

Kathy Kaykitch, director of the Adelaide Holocaust Museum and Andrew Steiner Education Centre (AHMSEC), said the museum and its patrons were at risk of being targeted.

“The growing threat from extremist groups, both here and around the world, highlight the urgent need to ensure that school groups and patrons are safe and not subject to any antisemitic activity while visiting the museum,” Kaykitch said.

“Extremist groups are active and organising in online spaces, these disgusting acts of racist vandalism bring to the fore the critical importance of supporting the education of young people through our programs.”

Since it opened in November 2020, the museum has been targeted in acts of antisemitic vandalism.

The museum is calling the state government to take measures to help ensure it is protected.

Updated at 22.03 EDT

Caitlin Cassidy

Caitlin Cassidy

Qantas flight crew back at work after engine malfunction forces emergency landing

Qantas flight crew have returned to work after a Sydney to Hobart flight was forced to divert to Melbourne yesterday afternoon.

A Qantas spokesperson said the aircraft, a Boeing 717, made a snap priority landing after pilots received an alert in the cockpit about an engine issue, followed by a loud noise in one of the engines.

The pilots followed all standard procedures, shut down one of the aircraft’s engines and asked for a priority landing into Melbourne, where the aircraft landed safely and without incident.

Engineers are inspecting the aircraft. We understand this would have been an unsettling experience for our customers and we thank them for their patience and cooperation.

A passenger onboard the flight reported hearing an “enormous bang” and experiencing “the plane shaking like it would fall apart”.

The crew were DAMP tested and have returned to work today, while passengers were re-accommodated on to flights to Hobart last night. Emergency services attended the scene, however there were no injuries.

A spokesperson for the Australian Transport Safety Bureau confirmed an engine malfunction issue had been reported and they were “gathering further information at this stage”.

Updated at 22.02 EDT

ACT records no new Covid deaths

No one with Covid-19 has died in Australian Capital Territory overnight, with the territory recording 287 new cases on Monday morning, 135 people in hospital, two in ICU and one on ventilation.

(1/2) ACT COVID-19 update – 15 August 2022

🦠 COVID-19 case numbers
◾ New cases today: 287 (156 PCR and 131 RAT)
◾ Active cases: 2,429
◾ Total cases since March 2020: 198,470 pic.twitter.com/GzOUdcJMlL

— ACT Health (@ACTHealth) August 15, 2022

(2/2)
🏥 COVID-19 hospital numbers
◾ In hospital: 135
◾ In ICU: 2
◾ Ventilated: 1
◾ Lives lost: 0
◾ Total lives lost since March 2020: 110

ℹ For more detail, including an age breakdown of case numbers, please visit https://t.co/qRDoepyJkh

— ACT Health (@ACTHealth) August 15, 2022

Updated at 21.49 EDT

PM’s press conference ends

That’s it for the PM’s press conference – strong words there from Anthony Albanese saying that his government will be investigating what has occurred before they offer detailed comments.

The prime minister made clear the ministerial power-sharing arrangement violated the customary norms of government in Australia and that Scott Morrison “should be held accountable for his actions”.

Updated at 21.48 EDT

Albanese claims Morrison ‘didn’t allow ministers to do their job’

On whether Albanese has instructed the solicitor general to investigate what happened, the PM says he will be getting a “full briefing” this afternoon.

This is dripping out like a tap that needs a washer fixed and what we need is actually to get the full flow of all the information out there and then we’ll make a decision about a way forward here. But these circumstances should never have arisen. You know, we do have a non-presidential system of government in this country, but what we had from Scott Morrison is a centralisation of power, is overriding of ministerial decisions, and all done in secret.

Albanese raises the prospect that this power-sharing relationship may have compromised the operation of the Australian government:

Perhaps this explains why we didn’t order enough vaccines. I mean, the minister for health might have thought the prime minister was ordering them because he was also the minister for health and he thought the minister for health was ordering them.

Then prime minister Scott Morrison talks to then health minister Greg Hunt in parliament on 1 December 2021.
Then prime minister Scott Morrison talks to then health minister Greg Hunt in parliament on 1 December 2021. Photograph: Mike Bowers/The Guardian

He says he won’t have any more information until he has a full briefing and is able to get advice. However the PM says his government will “operate in an orderly and transparent way”.

I’ll have more to say about that when we receive advice. But let’s be clear here – this was a centralisation of power by the former prime minister and the former prime minister should be held accountable for his actions as well as the actions of other members of his government. This was a political decision, or a series of political decisions, were made. It’s not clear to me or, indeed, to anyone at this point in time how many other portfolios Scott Morrison was sworn into, but what’s very clear is that this was a sign of no confidence by Scott Morrison in the Morrison government – in the Morrison government. Because he didn’t allow ministers to do their job.

Updated at 21.47 EDT

‘The people of Australia were kept in the dark,’ says Albanese

Albanese:

Nothing about the last government was real, not even the government itself.

The PM is also asked about Morrison’s use of the arrangement to kill the PEP11 exploration licence off the New South Wales coast.

The fact that Minister Pitt disagreed with the decision that was made by the prime minister as the minister for resources as well as Minister Pitt, is quite extraordinary. I don’t think it’s clear whether Minister Pitt was aware that his role had been usurped.

Albanese says there “was an obligation upon the prime minister at that point in time, if not beforehand, to actually reveal what the arrangements were”.

This isn’t some, you know, local footy club. This is a government of Australia where the people of Australia were kept in the dark as to what the ministerial arrangements were. It’s completely unacceptable.

Updated at 21.38 EDT