Prime Minister and Cabinet Portfolio
3.1
The Committee took evidence from the department and
agencies of the Prime Minister and Cabinet portfolio on Monday, 14 February 2005.
Department of the Prime Minister and Cabinet
3.2
As noted earlier in the report, the government's
directive prohibiting answers relating to matters before the Cole
commission dominated the examination of PM&C. At the start the minister
representing the Prime Minister, Senator Minchin,
declared:
I should inform the
committee that the government has directed that officials appearing before
Senate legislation committees should not answer questions directed to them on
matters before the commission of inquiry being conducted by the Hon. Terrence Cole into certain Australian companies in relation to the oil for food
program.[4]
3.3
The minister went on to indicate that the prohibition
might be lifted when the commission was finished. The rationale for the
prohibition appeared to be a government view that 'parallel public questioning'
of officials by committees would be unhelpful for the commission's examination
of the matters before it. The minister stated:
While examination of
officials by the committees might be appropriate in the future, the government
considers that Mr Cole should be able to proceed with his inquiry and
present his findings without parallel public questioning that would not assist
consideration of complex issues.[5]
3.4
The directive was the subject of lengthy and at times
robust debate between the minister and Committee members.
3.5
The minister did permit officials to answer a number of
questions to do with departmental and interdepartmental 'processes' relating to
the commission. These 'process questions' concerned matters such as staff
monitoring the commission's proceedings, internal file searches, the provision
of documents on request to the commission, contact between PM&C and other
department's on these issues and so on.
3.6
Discussion on the directive dominated proceedings to
the extent that it left little time to examine other issues. Issues that
members of the Committee and other senators in attendance raised included:
-
PM&C's role on the Iraq Task Force;
-
Whether new or revised Freedom of Information
guidelines had been issued recently within the department; and
-
Indigenous policy and the monitoring of trials
done under the Council of Australian Governments
3.7
The Committee was concerned that departmental officers
were not in a position to answer straightforward questions relating to the Iraq
Task Force. As this matter has been a recurring theme at the Committee's
estimates hearings since Australia
deployed combat forces to Iraq
in 2003, it was reasonable for the Committee to expect officials to be prepared
to answer questions on the department's involvement with the task force.
3.8
The Committee's concern about this oversight was
heightened when officers indicated that high staff turnover in the relevant
division had left the department with limited corporate knowledge of the Task
Force. The impact of high turnover rates on the department's general corporate
knowledge maybe an issue the Committee returns to in future estimates rounds.
Office of National Assessments
3.9
The Committee examination of ONA resumed its ongoing
scrutiny of the agency's growth as recommended by the 2004 Flood report into Australia's
intelligence agencies, as well as measures to promote contestability in its
intelligence assessments process. The Committee also returned to issues
relating to ONA's work on the conflict in Iraq.
3.10
Other issues examined included whether ONA provides
advice to the government. Mr Varghese
made it clear that ONA, since its inception and like comparable foreign
intelligence bureaux, produces analytical assessments and 'would not get into
the business of policy advising'. In Mr Varghese's
words, 'ONA does not cross the line between assessment and policy advice'.[6]
3.11
As with the Committee's examination of PM&C, the
minister permitted answers to 'process' questions but not to questions on
matters of substance in relation to the Cole
commission. It emerged that ONA had not been asked to check its files as part
of the government's response to the commission's subpoena for all relevant
government documents. Mr Varghese
informed the Committee that he had of his own accord initiated an internal
check of ONA's records. Mr Varghese
indicated that ONA had collated a number of documents but none had yet been
provided to any external body.
Office of the Commonwealth Ombudsman
3.12
Examination of the Ombudsman's office concentrated on
its reporting relating to immigration detention centres. The Ombudsman, Professor
McMillan, told the Committee that about 10
per cent of all complaints the office receives relate to immigration matters
but that these represent close to 25 per cent of the office's work. He also
referred to the expanded oversight role that the office now has for matters to
do with detention centres and immigration compliance.
3.13
Professor McMillan
took on notice a request to provide the Committee with the office's quarterly
reports to the department on issues that have arisen during Ombudsman
investigations.
3.14
Professor McMillan
was also asked about the Freedom of Information Act. He said that a report on
FOI administration and processes would be released shortly. He noted that the
report did not address the question of departmental claims for exemption under
the act.
Australian National Audit Office
3.15
The examination of the ANAO followed the Committee's
usual practice with members raising issues related to reports of the ANAO or
parliamentary committees. On this occasion the issues included:
-
Audits of the Defence Materiel Organisation and
major defence capital acquisition projects;
-
Continuing ANAO qualified audits of Department
of Defence financial statements and remediation programs to address weaknesses
in Defence's financial management and reporting;
-
ANAO report No. 28 of 2005-06 on management of
net appropriation agreements;
-
Pressure from the heavy Defence audit load on
the ANAO's budget and resources; and
-
ANAO report No. 25 of 2005-06 on ASIC's
implementation of financial services licences.
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