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Research Note no. 40 2001-02
Post-separation Employment of Ministers
Ian Holland
Politics and Public Administration Group
28 May 2002
Ministers hold positions of power and influence. Some of the knowledge
they acquire might be of a confidential nature, or could confer on them
advantages if subsequently, as private citizens, they were to work in
an area related to their former responsibilities. It has been suggested
that Australia is 'way behind contemporary democratic practice'(1)
in regulating these situations, a sentiment recently echoed in parliamentary
debate.(2)
This Research Note examines examples elsewhere of the regulation of post-separation
employment of ministers. This issue has gained currency following publicity
surrounding the careers of recently-retired ministers, particularly the
appointment of former Health Minister Michael Wooldridge as a consultant
to the Royal Australian College of General Practitioners. Other examples
have included former:
- Liberal Defence Minister, Peter Reith, working for defence contractor
Tenix
- Liberal Finance Minister, John Fahey, working for investment bank
J.P. Morgan
- Labor Environment Minister, Ros Kelly, working for environment consultants
Dames and Moore, and(3)
- Queensland Labor Deputy Premier, Jim Elder, working on tenders for
projects on which he may have had ministerial involvement.(4)
The State of Play in Other Jurisdictions
Restricting the conduct of ministers after they leave office is becoming
increasingly common. Summarised below are the conditions in:
- the United States
- Canada
- the United Kingdom, and
- Western Australia.
The United States (US)
In the US the heads of executive agencies are not members
of Congress but appointees of the President. Those appointees are governed
by Title
18 Section 207 of the US Code, in which they are
referred to as 'very senior personnel'. The US system is multi-tiered:
there are limited restrictions to which every government employee is subject,
which become progressively more onerous as staff become more senior.
Very senior personnel must comply with several restrictions:
- a lifetime ban (which covers all executive employees) on 'switching
sides' to represent any organisation on a matter on which they directly
worked as an executive employee
- a two-year ban in cases on which they may not have directly worked
but for which they had 'direct responsibility'
- a one-year ban on representing any organisation to any current representative
of the executive, regardless of what portfolio they are with, and
- a one-year ban on representing a foreign entity 'before any department
or agency of the United States' and on aiding or advising a foreign
entity.(5)
A statutory agency, the Office of Government Ethics, advises executive
employees to ensure compliance with this law.
Canada
The Conflict
of Interest and Post-employment Code for Public Office Holders
was established in June 1994.(6) It is an executive instrument
rather than a statute, but it is administered by a statutory office, the
Office
of the Ethics Counsellor. The Code governs ministers.
Its stated aims for what it terms post-employment compliance measures
are to:
'minimise the possibilities of:
- allowing prospects of outside employment to create a real, potential
or apparent conflict of interest for public office holders while in
public office
- obtaining preferential treatment or privileged access to government
after leaving public office
- taking personal advantage of information obtained in the course of
official duties and responsibilities until it has become generally available
to the public, and
- using public office to unfair advantage in obtaining opportunities
for outside employment.' (s. 27)
The Canadian arrangement is similar to that in the US in the creation
of tiers of restrictions. It contains a permanent ban on a public office
holder 'changing sides' in any 'ongoing specific proceeding, transaction,
negotiation or case where the former public office holder acted for or
advised the Government.' (s. 29(1))
The key provision, however, is a two-year ban preventing ministers from:
- '[accepting] appointment to a board of directors of, or employment
with, an entity with which they had direct and significant official
dealings during the period of one year immediately prior to the termination
of their service in public office, or
- [making] representations for or on behalf of any other person or entity
to any department with which they had direct and significant official
dealings during the period of one year immediately prior to the termination
of their service in public office.' (s. 30)
Unlike in the US, in Canada the Prime Minister has a discretionary power
to reduce the two-year waiting period, subject to consideration of a range
of factors.
The United Kingdom (UK)
As in Canada, post-separation ministerial employment in
the UK is governed by executive instrument, not statute. Chapter
Nine of the Ministerial Code (Ministers'
Private Interests) guides post-separation employment:
On leaving office, Ministers should seek advice from the independent
Advisory Committee on Business Appointments about any appointments they
wish to take up within two years of leaving office, other than unpaid
appointments If therefore the Advisory Committee considers that an
appointment could lead to public concern that the statements and decisions
of the Minister, when in Government, have been influenced by the hope
or expectation of future employment with the firm or organisation concerned,
or that an employer could make improper use of official information
to which a former Minister has had access, it may recommend a delay
of up to two years before the appointment is taken up ...(7)
Similar arrangements exist in Scotland and Wales. Whereas in Canada there
is a two-year bar unless the Prime Minister makes an exception, in the
UK former ministers are merely restricted if, after seeking advice from
the Advisory Committee, it is recommended that they delay their activities.
Western Australia
In Western Australia some guidance is contained in the Ministerial
Code of Conduct. Section 15 of the Code covers
post-separation employment.(8) It contains no time frame and
establishes no advisory bodies. It recommends that former ministers 'take
care' in their choice of employment, not abuse confidential information,
and ensure their new employer does not receive preferential treatment.
South Australia
On May 16, the South Australian government announced a new ministerial
code which
places a two year restriction on the type of employment activities,
consultancies and directorships that ministers can take up after they
have ceased to be a minister.(9)
A Recent Commonwealth Proposal
The Australian Democrats recently proposed that a two-year ban be enshrined
in legislation. It would prevent ministers from providing 'advice for
personal profit or for commercial advantage on any aspect of the work
of any department or agency for which the former Minister had ministerial
responsibility for any period of time during the last two years of service
as a Minister '(10)
The Labor Opposition proposed a twelve-month ban, and that it be located
in a prime ministerial code of conduct rather than in legislation.(11)
Criticising both approaches, the Prime Minister argued that people leaving
public life should be able to use their talents, and that 'most of the
insights that people bring is an understanding of the climate and the
working, not secrets.'(12) He also argued against a framework
as rigid as those in the US and proposed by the Australian Democrats.
Whether a legislated solution (as in the US) is best practice is a matter
of opinion. On the one hand, it is questionable whether a ministerial
code of conduct can effectively bind former ministers, as they are private
citizens. Enforcement thus is only indirect, based on the assumption that
no one would want to employ a former minister if they knew it would breach
the guidelines. On the other hand many argue that there should be more
flexibility than the US system provides, both to avoid depriving former
ministers from legitimately using their skills and to ensure the community
reaps the benefits of those skills being available.
Nevertheless, in terms of international best practice, Australia appears
deficient in two respects:
- post-separation employment is not addressed at all in any ministerial
code, and
- there is no standing advisory body to assist ministers in complying
with any guidelines that might address post-separation employment.
The latter feature is common to legislative and executive ethics instruments
internationally (not just for dealing with post-separation employment),
but has been resisted in Australia.
Endnotes
- John Uhr, quoted in 'The conflict of interest gap', The Australian,
16 March 2002.
- Senate, Debates, 21
March 2002, p. 863.
- 'Life after politics', The Age, 12 March 2002.
- 'The conflict of interest gap', The Australian, 16 March 2002.
- Office of Government Ethics, Memorandum
Regarding Revised Post-Employment Restrictions,
26 October 1990.
- Office of the Ethics Counsellor website, http://strategis.ic.gc.ca/SSG/oe00001e.html
- S.140 Ministerial Code: A Code of Conduct and Guidance on Procedures
for Ministers, Cabinet Office, July 2001.
- Western Australia Department of Premier and Cabinet, Ministerial
Code of Conduct, http://www.premier.wa.gov.au/accountability/MinisterialCodeofConduct.pdf
- South Australia. Legislative Assembly, Debates, 16 May 2002,
p. 240.
- Senate, Debates, 21
March 2002, p. 858. A similar but less onerous
regulatory framework had been recommended some years earlier by an Australian
National University research project. See Paul Finn, Abuse of Official
Trust, Integrity in Government Project, Second Report, ANU, Canberra,
1993, pp.11751.
- ibid., p. 864.
- Interview
with Jon Faine, 3LO Melbourne, 18 February 2002.

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