Scott Morrison: Former Australian PM censured over secret ministries

1 year ago 22
ARTICLE AD BOX

Scott MorrisonImage source, Getty Images

Image caption,

Scott Morrison lost a general election in May

By Tiffanie Turnbull

BBC News, Sydney

Former Australian Prime Minister Scott Morrison has been censured by the nation's parliament for giving himself secret powers while in office.

The historic motion follows a damning report which said his actions were "corrosive of trust in government".

It marks the first time a former prime minister has been censured by the House of Representatives.

Mr Morrison has defended appointing himself to several ministries, calling the censure "retribution" by opponents.

But Prime Minister Anthony Albanese has described his actions as a "power grab".

In August, it emerged that Mr Morrison had become joint minister for health, finance, treasury, home affairs and resources in the two years before he lost power in May.

Most ministers were reportedly unaware they were sharing portfolios with Mr Morrison and he has been widely criticised, including by close colleagues.

Mr Morrison - now a backbench MP - has said the decisions were made amid the "extraordinary times" of the pandemic.

An investigation found his appointments were legal, and that he used his extra powers only once - to overrule a minister in a matter unrelated to the pandemic.

A censure is the parliament's way of formally expressing disapproval in an MP. Such motions are rare and largely symbolic, but they can have political consequences.

Read Entire Article