‘Very frustrated’: Porter said he was sceptical about robo-debt talking points

‘Very frustrated’: Porter said he was sceptical about robo-debt talking points

02/02/2023

Former Coalition social services minister Christian Porter says talking points he was given as the robo-debt saga was making headlines appeared to avoid the question of whether debts were being incorrectly raised against welfare recipients.

Porter told the robo-debt royal commission he became increasingly frustrated with the lack of clarity from bureaucrats about the operation of the scheme after he took temporary control of it while human services minister Alan Tudge was on leave in late 2016.

Former Coalition social services minister Christian Porter told the robo-debt royal commission he was frustrated by the lack of information he received over the scheme.Credit:Alex Ellinghausen

Porter told the Brisbane hearing this afternoon he went from acceptance of talking points he was provided by the department, “which turned at some point to circumspection,” then to scepticism.

“There was a point I became very frustrated,” he said.

The commission was shown a document provided to Porter on December 28, 2016, with a series of talking points in response to the following question:

“Is it true that debts are being incorrectly raised against customers due to their employer reporting their income as being earned over twelve months when in fact they’ve only worked part of the year and had income support for part of the year?”

Porter said talking points he was given didn’t appear to answer a crucial question about incorrect debts being raised.

Counsel assisting the commission, Justin Greggery KC, asked Porter whether the combined effect of the talking points gave the effect that he was avoiding the question.

Porter replied, “it could easily give that appearance”.

“Looking back on it, it kind of appears those talking points avoid that question as well,” he said.

A Federal Court judge found in 2019 that income averaging – the method used to calculate debts of thousands of vulnerable people – was unlawful, a conclusion that had already been reached in legal advice seen by both the departments of human services and social services several years before.

The scheme used Tax Office annual income data and averaged it over 26 fortnights, presuming income was the same across each, and put the onus on welfare recipients to prove they didn’t owe the government money.

Porter, who is being represented by high-profile silk Arthur Moses SC in the inquiry, was social services minister from September 2015 to December 2017, before being elevated to the role of Attorney-General.

He did not contest last year’s federal election following the fallout from a historical rape allegation he strenuously denies.

Earlier, Coalition human services minister Alan Tudge told the commission he should have sought legal advice over the lawfulness and accuracy of income averaging.

The robo-debt royal commission heard that former prime minister Malcolm Turnbull texted Tudge a Sydney Morning Herald article raising questions of the accuracy and legality of the welfare crackdown to Tudge in January 2017, when Tudge was human services minister.

Tudge said he later met with Turnbull but spoke mainly about problems with the implementation of the scheme.

The commission was also shown a document drafted by Tudge’s department to the Australian Government Solicitor about the lawfulness of income averaging around that time.

Tudge told the commission he couldn’t explain the document prepared by the department. “This is the first I’ve seen of this document,” he said.

Counsel assisting the commission, Justin Greggery KC asked: “Can you think of any reason why draft instructions to the Australian Government Solicitor on a program affecting so many Australians would not have been progressed to the final stage in seeking advice?” Tudge answered: “No.”

Greggery: “You agree with the benefit of hindsight, it would’ve been prudent to seek legal advice on the question of accuracy and lawfulness?”

Tudge: “Definitely. Even going back to 1990 [when the Coalition said income averaging had begun], and at every stage of the development of the process which used income averaging.”

Cut through the noise of federal politics with news, views and expert analysis from Jacqueline Maley. Subscribers can sign up to our weekly Inside Politics newsletter here.

Most Viewed in Politics

From our partners

Source: Read Full Article