1.1
The referral of matters relating to the Bell Group of Companies
(Finalisation of Matters and Distribution of Proceeds) Act 2015 (WA) (Bell
Act), on 29 November 2016 to the Legal and Constitutional Affairs
References Committee (the committee) for inquiry and report (the inquiry)
instigated a complex, time-consuming and expensive Senate committee process
that has failed to educe any relevant supporting evidence in relation to its
Terms of Reference (TOR), or yield any particular benefit at all for the
Australian taxpayer.
1.2
The conduct of the inquiry revealed three core allegations that were
levelled at the government generally, and at Senator the Hon George Brandis,
Commonwealth Attorney-General (Attorney-General) more specifically, by Labor
and the Greens Political Party regarding the Bell Act:
- that an agreement existed between the Commonwealth and the government of
Western Australia regarding the division of proceeds from the Bell Group
liquidation;
-
that the Attorney-General was party to the alleged agreement; and
-
that the Attorney-General instructed the former Solicitor-General not to
argue the constitutional inconsistency between the effect of the Bell Act and
the operation of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1936 in the Bell Group
litigation.
1.3
Over the duration of the inquiry—which has lasted more than six months,
involved four dedicated public hearings, and has dominated questioning in the
Attorney-General’s portfolio at Senate Estimates from Labor and the Greens Political
Party Senators—no evidence that supports these allegations has been provided.
1.4
The substance of the issues raised in the TOR relates to the passage of
the Western Australian government’s Bell Act, which was drafted in response to
the protracted nature of the winding-up of the Bell Group of Companies (Bell
liquidation)—the most complicated and costly corporate winding-up in Australian
history—and the subsequent High Court of Australia (HCA) action[1]
(Bell Group litigation) that resulted in the Bell Act being struck out.
1.5
Government senators have formed the view that the allegations summarised
in paragraph 1.2 (above) were confected by Labor and the Greens Political Party
in a politically-motivated attempt to discredit the Attorney-General. All three
allegations lack foundation and are comprehensively refuted by the evidence to
the inquiry.
1.6
The inquiry has heard testimony from 11 senior public officials from the
Attorney-General’s Department (AGD), the office of Australian Government
Solicitor (AGS), the Australian Taxation Office (ATO) and the Department of
Treasury (Treasury). Public hearings, debate, speeches and questions without
notice on the inquiry’s subject matter have generated hundreds of pages of
Hansard transcripts. However none of this activity, as anticipated by government
senators, has unearthed any evidence that supports the false and politically
opportunistic allegations upon which the inquiry, and its TOR, were based.
1.7
The conduct of this inquiry has diverted the personnel and resources of
senior parliamentary offices, and senior public officials, away from their core
business serving the interests of the Australian taxpayer. The Labor Party and
the Greens Political Party have once again demonstrated their willingness to
divert the resources of the Parliament, and the Australian taxpayer, into
pointless inquiries designed to further their own electoral objectives at
public expense.
1.8
The Labor and Greens Political Party members of the committee have
alleged that the Attorney-General did not defend the Commonwealth’s interests
as vigorously as he ought. This allegation is fundamentally disproved by the
facts. The ludicrous and frankly offensive proposition that the Attorney-General
interfered with the ATO’s intervention in the Bell Group litigation has been
comprehensively disproved by compelling evidence presented to the inquiry by
senior officers of the ATO and the AGD.
1.9
Evidence to the inquiry clearly shows that there was no collusion
between the Commonwealth and the government of Western Australia in relation to
the Bell Group liquidation, the Bell Act or the Bell Group litigation, and that
at no time was any action taken by the Attorney-General that disadvantaged the
Australian taxpayer.
1.10
The accusation that the Attorney-General attempted to influence the
Solicitor-General’s position regarding the Bell Group litigation has similarly
been comprehensively disproved by evidence to the inquiry.
1.11
Evidence to the inquiry comprehensively refutes the accusation that the
Legal Services Amendment (Solicitor-General Opinions) Direction was issued as a
result of an alleged disagreement between the Attorney-General and the
Solicitor-General in relation to the Bell Group litigation.[2]
1.12
Government senators are completely satisfied that the Attorney-General’s
account of his involvement in matters relating to the Bell Act—including that
the Attorney-General did not become involved until 3 March 2016—is absolutely
consistent with the facts.
1.13
Evidence shows that Attorney-General has at all times acted with the
utmost propriety, in accordance with advice and established legal processes,
and has consistently and diligently defended the Commonwealth’s interests.
1.14
The inquiry should have ended following its first hearing on 7 December 2016.
At that hearing, Mr Andrew Mills, Second Commissioner of Taxation, gave the
following evidence to the inquiry:
We were not, and did not, seek permission or approval from
the minister for our decision or action. The ATO have upheld our position as an
independent administrator and independence in our decisions throughout the
course of this matter. Neither the commissioner nor I, or any other
decision-maker in the ATO, were lent on by a minister or their office or
directed to do anything other than what we did. The nature of the exchanges
with ministers and their offices was to provide high-level explanations to them
of our intentions and our decisions. This was done in the normal course of our
duties, as we do with all high profile and significant cases.[3]
1.15
Mr Iain Anderson, Deputy Secretary, Civil Justice and Corporate Group, AGD,
said this, also at the inquiry’s hearing on 7 December 2016:
CHAIR: So you will not tell us whether you witnessed Senator
Brandis telling Mr Justin Gleeson not to pursue a particular line of argument?
Mr Anderson: I can say that I am not aware of any such
instruction or direction from the Attorney to the Solicitor-General, and I note
the Attorney has also commented in the media that he did not give any
instruction to the Solicitor-General.
...
Senator McKIM: That is right, but that is not the same
question as: ‘Did you instruct the Solicitor-General not to run a particular
argument?’ That is just the point I am making.
Mr Anderson: I take the point, but I go back to what I said
initially—that I am not aware of any instruction from the Attorney to the
Solicitor-General not to run an argument.[4]
1.16
Inexplicably, the inquiry continued even after the Commissioner of
Taxation gave this evidence to the Senate Economics Legislation Committee on 1
March 2017:
Second Commissioner Mills and I have been at the specific
inquiry on this. There have been a lot of questions and answers. I can simply
say that we had a view around the course of action we should take. We did not
deviate from that view. We took that course of action. No-one sought to
inappropriately or otherwise persuade us to discontinue from that view. So,
whichever way you cut it, that is our position. We always had that view.
Whether or not people were having discussions outside of us, no-one ever sought
to inappropriately influence the course of action that we had, continued and
did.[5]
1.17
That should have been the end of the matter. No-one has suggested, nor
could suggest, that Mr Anderson, Mr Jordan or Mr Mills has given misleading or
false evidence to a Senate committee. Government senators note that none of
this testimony is referred to in the majority report. There is a solitary
reference in paragraph 2.49 of the majority report to the ATO ‘provid[ing]
information to show it had independently decided to intervene in the High Court
proceedings’. The majority’s failure to cite significant exculpatory evidence
shows the dishonesty of Labor and Greens Political Party senators in conducting
this inquiry.
1.18
Throughout this inquiry, the Labor Party and the Greens Political Party have
made much of the Attorney-General’s supposed attempts to issue a Legal Services
Direction to the Commissioner of Taxation, which had it in fact been issued,
could have had the effect of preventing the Commissioner from intervening in
the High Court proceedings. Mr Mills gave evidence to the committee that
the ATO heard ‘bureaucratic whispers’ such a direction was being considered.
The ATO sought permission to obtain legal advice as to the Commissioner’s
obligations if such a direction was to be issued. However, the matter went no
further. The Attorney-General informed Mr Mills on 7 March 2016 that he
would not be issuing any such direction. No direction was ever issued. The committee
has conceded it was never issued. Whether it was ever contemplated is
irrelevant.
1.19
In light of the evidence referred to above, Government senators believe
it is clear that neither the Attorney-General nor any other minister has a case
to answer. Apparently, neither do the Labor Party and the Greens Political
Party. The majority has not made any finding that any serving Minister acted
improperly, or did otherwise than act in the best interests of the
Commonwealth. After nearly seven months, four public hearings and two interim
reports, the best that the majority can do is to ‘note’ that the Attorney‑General
‘contemplated’ a state of affairs.
1.20
The committee majority’s report (the report) itself is an exercise in
speculation and equivocation. The report uses 'soft' language such as 'possible'
and 'potential' (majority report paragraph 2.53) in an unsuccessful attempt to
obscure the absence of facts and supportable conclusions. Government senators
are concerned, but not surprised, that the resources of the Senate have been
utilised in this cynical and opportunistic manner by the Labor and Greens
Political Party majority of the committee.
1.21
The report also raises the issue of consultation between the
Attorney-General and the Solicitor-General regarding potential amendment to the
Legal Services Direction. Government senators note that Ian Anderson, and
others, have stated that there is no connection between the Bell Act litigation
and the Legal Services Direction. This issue was comprehensively considered,
and found to be lacking in any factual basis, in a previous inquiry that has
since been closed. The inclusion of this matter in this inquiry, and in the
committee majority’s report, only serves to confirm that Labor and Greens
Political Party majority are far more concerned with personal political attacks
than they are with educing factual evidence regarding the Bell Group matter.
1.22
The recommendations of the majority are an embarrassment to the Senate
and diminish the Senate’s standing and demonstrate ever so clearly why the
Senate should direct its limited resource to serious enquires that do bring to
the senate worthwhile recommendations that will improve governance or raise
serious policy issues. The recommendations in this case do neither. For
example:
-
Recommendation 1 of the majority report refers to 'possible
collusion' when there is no direct or plausible evidence of any 'collusions' in
the normal sense of the word;
- the first dot point in Recommendation 1 says the Western
Australian government was clearly operating under an 'understanding' when,
firstly, there is no such evidence and secondly, for the Committee to allege an
'understanding' of another government is simply ludicrous;
- two of the dot points suggest that merely 'contemplating' a
course of action is something unusual and worthy of Senate attention whereas
Ministers are required to, and indeed would be failing in their duties if they
did not, 'contemplate' various policy or procedural options;
- the fourth dot point is a misconstruction of the evidence to the inquiry
which, the Senate should recall, examined the Attorney-General's 'involvement'
in the Bell litigation, not his 'awareness' of the Bell matter itself. The
Attorney‑General would have had to be living under a rock not to be 'aware'
of the Bell matter; and
- the last three dot points in Recommendation 1 are nonsense. At
all times, as is confirmed by the evidence to the inquiry, the Attorney-General
complied with the law, and with the practice and conventions of the parliament.
1.23
Government senators unreservedly reject Recommendation 2 of the report
which scolds the Attorney-General for his interpretation and application of the
principles of privilege. As previously stated, and confirmed by the evidence to
the inquiry, the Attorney-General complied with the law, and with the practice
and conventions of the parliament, at all times.
1.24
Government senators do not disagree with Recommendation 3 that affirms
the principle of providing information in a timely manner to the Senate and its
committees, and would call upon Labor and the Greens Political Party to commit
to observing the same convention.
1.25
Government senators note Recommendation 4 that calls on the Senate to
remind Senators of their obligation to act in taxpayers’ best interests in a
transparent manner. The extreme irony of this statement as a recommendation is
that the inquiry itself has been an abject waste of taxpayer funds.
Recommendations 3 and 4 amount to little more than the gratuitous lecturing of
senators by the committee majority, and as such are an insult to all Senators.
1.26
Recommendation 5 is again a waste of the Senate's time as this occurs
currently without fail and in the Bell inquiry case, is exactly what occurred
according to the evidence.
Senator the Hon Ian
Macdonald
Deputy Chair
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