Australia news live: Scott Morrison’s secret ministry swearing-ins ‘more Trump than Westminster’, Bill Shorten says

Morrison’s multiple ministries ‘more Trump than Westminster’, Bill Shorten says

NDIS minister Bill Shorten was just on the ABC’s Afternoon Briefing, and was asked what he thought of the biggest story of the day (former PM Scott Morrison taking on multiple ministries).

Shorten said it was the dysfunction that concerned him, and compared Morrison to former US President Donald Trump, and added that it was “shocking” that a PM would accrue power.

Here’s his answer:

Viewers might say what is this to do with us? We’ve discovered that we had a prime minister who was acting more from the Donald Trump playbook than the Westminster democracy playbook.

The idea that a prime minister is accruing powers, not telling the public at large is shocking.

The fact [is] he didn’t even trust his own cabinet. When a prime minister and cabinet don’t know what each other is doing, that is a fundamental breakdown in our system of government.

If it was all above board you would have told people, wouldn’t you.

Even if they felt they needed to keep it secret, this speaks to a pathology or sickness that existed in the previous government. Mr Morrison had his ‘miracle election win’, the problem is their conduct since then was just shocking.

Updated at 03.00 EDT

Key events

Scott Morrison couldn’t do his own job properly, and it turns out he didn’t trust his other Ministers to do theirs either.

As the Libs slide from dysfunction to far-right irrelevance, I wonder what a *proper* federal ICAC with teeth will uncover about their time in office.

— Adam Bandt (@AdamBandt) August 15, 2022

Morrison’s multiple ministries ‘more Trump than Westminster’, Bill Shorten says

NDIS minister Bill Shorten was just on the ABC’s Afternoon Briefing, and was asked what he thought of the biggest story of the day (former PM Scott Morrison taking on multiple ministries).

Shorten said it was the dysfunction that concerned him, and compared Morrison to former US President Donald Trump, and added that it was “shocking” that a PM would accrue power.

Here’s his answer:

Viewers might say what is this to do with us? We’ve discovered that we had a prime minister who was acting more from the Donald Trump playbook than the Westminster democracy playbook.

The idea that a prime minister is accruing powers, not telling the public at large is shocking.

The fact [is] he didn’t even trust his own cabinet. When a prime minister and cabinet don’t know what each other is doing, that is a fundamental breakdown in our system of government.

If it was all above board you would have told people, wouldn’t you.

Even if they felt they needed to keep it secret, this speaks to a pathology or sickness that existed in the previous government. Mr Morrison had his ‘miracle election win’, the problem is their conduct since then was just shocking.

Updated at 03.00 EDT

Good afternoon, and a quick thanks to the brilliant Tory Shepherd for steering us through the afternoon. This is Mostafa Rachwani, and there is still much going on, so let’s dive in.

And, on that note of the “adorable but possessed lamb”, this little Shepherd is handing over to Mostafa Rachwani. Till next time!

I haven’t played a video game since Donkey Kong (does that count?) but how can you go past this as a storyline?:

An adorable but possessed lamb … has their life saved by an ominous deity; as repayment, they must form a cult to appease the deity, growing its following by launching crusades, collecting resources and venturing out into the game’s five regions to defeat rival cults.

Updated at 02.37 EDT

“I would have been asking questions,” McKenzie says, when asked what she would have done had she been aware that former prime minister Scott Morrison was surfing in on others’ turf.

McKenzie: ‘We need to understand decision-making process’

“Our system relies on long-standing conventions,” McKenzie says, when asked if the appointments should have been made public.

As for former prime minister Scott Morrison, she says it’s up to him to decide what to do. “We need to understand the decision-making process,” she says:

We need to understand whether this was a precedent set, and under what authority.

Updated at 02.26 EDT

McKenzie: secret ministerial appointments ‘absolutely unprecedented’

Nationals senator Bridget McKenzie tells the ABC’s Afternoon Briefing that the revelations of the multiple portfolios former prime minister Scott Morrison nabbed for himself are “absolutely unprecedented”. She said:

I think these revelations do bring into question our Westminster system of government, the conventions that underpin how we have confidence and trust in our parliamentary system.

As a former cabinet minister in the Turnbull and Morrison governments I took those conventions very seriously.

Who was the senior minister? What if they disagree? McKenzie says there are a lot of questions that have been raised. “Was the governor general informed or not?”

Nationals senator Bridget McKenzie speaking at a meeting of The Nationals Federal Council in Canberra, Saturday, August 13, 2022.
Nationals senator Bridget McKenzie says Scott Morrison’s secret ministerial appointments raise a lot of questions. Photograph: Jane Dempster/AAP

Updated at 03.13 EDT

Australian government issues statement on anniversary of the fall of Kabul

The deputy prime minister, Richard Marles, the foreign affairs minister, Penny Wong, and the immigration minister, Andrew Giles, have issued a statement on the anniversary of the fall of Kabul:

One year on from the fall of Kabul our thoughts are with the people of Afghanistan, as well as the Afghan community in Australia and around the world.

We acknowledge the brave contribution and sacrifices made by more than 39,000 Australian Defence Force and civilian personnel who conducted or supported operations in Afghanistan over 20 years.

In this time, Australia contributed to the Nato-led mission towards capacity building in counter-terrorism, counter-insurgency, and national security.

We are proud of their service.

We remember the 41 Australian soldiers who died on operations in Afghanistan and will never forget their ultimate sacrifice.

Some of our people continue to live with lasting physical and mental scars, and tragically we have lost more of our people since they returned home.

The fall of Kabul led to one of Australia’s largest humanitarian evacuations.

4,100 people were evacuated from Kabul, the statement says. They’re working on the rest.

Updated at 02.04 EDT

One of Australia’s top constitutional lawyers, Anne Twomey, has penned an explainer on all that prime ministerial portfolio hoarding.

Twomey, a professor of constitutional law at the University of Sydney, goes through the ins and outs and writes:

It is inappropriate for such matters to be kept secret – especially if it is kept secret from the cabinet and from the minister who was formally allocated responsibility for a portfolio by the governor general.

Such a lack of transparency is indicative of a lack of respect for the institutions of government and for the general public who have a right to know how power is allocated.

Updated at 03.09 EDT

Fish and chips next on the budgeting chopping block? Gah, you can keep your iceberg lettuce. (Also, it’s fair to assume this goes for potato scallops as well…):

Can’t get enough of the multi-tasking prime minister? Sarah Martin brings you the latest on Scott Morrison hitting the override button. With pep!:

Peter Hannam

Peter Hannam

The week to come in economic numbers

Economic news this week looks like it will be dominated by labour-related numbers that may also feature prominently at the upcoming Jobs and Skills Summit on 1-2 September.

The wage price index numbers from the Australian Bureau of Statistics on Wednesday will likely remind everybody how much real wages are being eroded by inflation.

The June quarter figures will show wages rose at an annual rate of about 2.7%, up from the 2.4% pace in the March quarter, the Commonwealth Bank of Australia estimates. The bank’s own indicators point that way, although the result will be far short of the consumer price index’s June quarter 6.1% increase.

Wednesday’s wage price index numbers for the June quarter will be closely watched. CBA’s wage tracker suggests a rise above 2.5%, with the bank predicting a 2.7% increase (or less than half the 6.1% annual rise in consumer prices). pic.twitter.com/r8TUjKwZgP

— Peter Hannam (@p_hannam) August 15, 2022

(It seems an age ago now but the weak WPI reading, landing just three days before the federal election, was the final of three unhappy results for the Coalition during the official campaign. The other two were the spike in CPI and the Reserve Bank lifting its cash rate the following week.)

Other labour numbers of note include Thursday’s release of July labour market figures, including whether the jobless rate remains at 3.5% – the lowest in almost half a century. A strong result, such as lots more jobs added and a lower unemployment rate, would likely stoke expectations of (a lot) more RBA rate rises to come.

Also worth watching will be average weekly earnings data, also out on Thursday, giving a twice-yearly look at how our wages are going (mostly backwards).

The RBA’s main scheduled event is the release on Tuesday of the minutes of its August board meeting when it lifted its cash rate for a fourth meeting in a row (and making it the most aggressive series of increases since 1994 – no idea whose music was popular then).

We’ll get a bit more insight into the central bank’s thinking about the pace of future rises. That said, the RBA’s quarterly statement on monetary policy, released a couple of days after the 2 August meeting, has already filled in many of the blanks.

Apropos of an earlier post about renewables keeping a lid on electricity prices today, here’s an interesting note from Aemo, the energy market operator. It says Queensland yesterday posted record low power demand, thanks mostly to a sunny day helping solar panel owners avoid tapping into the grid.

Just seven days after the previous record (3,672MW on 7 August), Queensland’s minimum operational demand dropped by nearly 200MW to a new record low of 3,490MW at 12:30pm Sunday. At the time, sunny conditions allowed rooftop solar to contribute 44% (2,777MW) of underlying demand. pic.twitter.com/Fcpbg2ksn9

— AEMO (@AEMO_Energy) August 15, 2022

Updated at 01.21 EDT

Josh Butler

Josh Butler

Pitt: Morrison’s secret ministerial self-appointments ‘unusual’

Keith Pitt, the former minister for resources, said the arrangements around former prime minister Scott Morrison’s secretive ministerial self-appointments were “unusual” but has resisted wading further into the explosive debate.

A new book, Plagued, reports Morrison secretly appointed himself minister for health and finance during the early stages of the pandemic. A News.com.au article reported that Morrison also made himself resources minister in 2021.

Pitt, the minister at the time Morrison reportedly made himself minister for resources too, told Sky News on Monday afternoon that he hadn’t read the book or made any contribution to it.

He added that decisions around ministerial appointments are “clearly not decisions that I was involved with, generally that would be discussion between the two leaders of the parties in Coalition.”

But Pitt did respond that “certainly there’s no doubt it was unusual”.

Updated at 01.12 EDT

A person’s body has been found in Melbourne’s Yarra River

AAP reports:

The body was found about 12.40pm at South Wharf Promenade on Monday and police are yet to formally identify the person.

A post-mortem would be conducted to determine their cause of death, but it appeared to be non-suspicious, police said.

Police will prepare a report for the coroner.

Updated at 01.04 EDT

Some good news out of New Zealand – signs the winter Omicron wave is easing. Tess McClure reports infections are at their lowest level in six months:

Here’s an extraordinary story from the ABC about Marley. As a toddler he began to choke and vomit when eating. Later, he started wheezing, and was diagnosed with asthma.

Years later, doctors finally worked it out. Marley had a plastic flower stuck in his throat!

Worse than the old pea up the nose, surely.