Chapter 3 - Prime Minister and Cabinet Portfolio
3.1
The Committee took evidence from the Office of the
Official Secretary to the Governor-General and the Department of the Prime
Minister and Cabinet on Monday, 22 May
2006 and from the Department of the Prime Minister and Cabinet (in
continuation), the Australian National Audit Office and the Office of National
Assessments, on Tuesday, 23 May 2006.
Office of the Official Secretary to the
Governor-General
3.2
Issues raised by members of the Committee and senators
in attendance included:
- The Governor-General's outback trip;
- Cultural loans to official establishments; and
- Orders of Australia.
3.3
The Committee examined in detail the purpose, cost,
staffing and itinerary of the Governor-General's outback trip. Mr
Hazell, Official Secretary to the
Governor-General, informed the Committee that the trip was being undertaken to
promote the Year of the Outback 2006. The Committee heard that the first phase
of the Governor-General's schedule began on 8 May 2006 and included visits to South
Australia and Queensland.
Mr Hazell
told the committee that the second phase started on 22 May 2006 and would include visits to the Northern
Territory and Western Australia.
3.4
Senators were interested to understand the
Governor-General's role in revoking Orders of Australia. Mr
Hazell told the Committee that the
Governor-General revokes Orders of Australia on the basis of recommendations
from the Council of the Order of Australia.
The Committee heard that since inception of the Australian honours system
twenty-two Orders of Australia had been revoked. The reasons for revocations
concerned criminal and inappropriate behaviour by nominees.
Department of the Prime Minister and Cabinet
3.5
Issues raised by members of the Committee and senators
in attendance included:
- Answers to questions on notice;
- Issues related to the Cole
commission;
-
United States Senate investigation into the
Australian Wheat Board (AWB);
-
State funerals;
-
Iraqi civilian casualties;
-
Interdepartmental task forces and committees;
-
Indigenous programs;
-
Progress of planning for the Asia-Pacific
Economic Cooperation (APEC) meeting 2007;
-
Government advertising;
-
Official visits by the Queen and United States
Secretary of State;
-
Official trips by the Prime Minister; and
-
Maintenance costs for the Prime Minister's
Official Residences.
3.6
As mentioned in chapter one, the continued government
ban on questioning of matters before the Cole
commission circumscribed the Committee's examination of the AWB affair.
Nevertheless, as during the February additional estimates hearings members were
able to pursue 'process questions' delving into internal departmental actions
to supply the commission with relevant documents and information. Questioning
also went to the department's actions and role in relation to similar inquiries
undertaken by the UN and the US Senate.
3.7
Under questioning it emerged that, despite possessing
the capacity to identify when diplomatic cables were opened and by whom, there
had been no checking to identify which officers had read cables containing information
on AWB's alleged activities before the government publicly announced its
knowledge of the matter. Questioning on various AWB matters, such as
communications between the Prime Minister's office and then Ambassador
Thawley in Washington,
was limited, however, by official witnesses refusing to answer on the ground of
the government ban.
3.8
Members examined the department's role in the coordination,
implementation and oversight of numerous Indigenous programs. These programs
are administered through Commonwealth departments and agencies or jointly
through the Commonwealth and state/territory government bodies. The complex
arrangements for delivery of Indigenous programs posed considerable difficulty
for the examination of the funding and performance of these programs. Senators
repeatedly struck problems in obtaining information when questions were
referred to other departments (appearing before other committees) to answer.
3.9
The concern with cross portfolio programs, like those
in the Indigenous affairs realm, is that it makes it very difficult to identify
who is responsible and answerable for expenditure and performance. This is also
of concern to the Committee in relation to the Department of Human Services and
related agencies, as previous Committee reports have shown.
Australian National Audit Office
3.10
As with previous estimates hearings examination of the
ANAO focused on issues of concern and importance raised in ANAO reports. On
this occasion questioning focused almost exclusively on defence related issues
including:
- Financial statements of the Department of Defence;
-
ANAO report No. 36 of 2005-06 on the Tiger
Helicopter Project; and
-
ANAO report No. 40 of 2005-06 on the procurement
of explosive ordnance for the Australian Defence Force.
3.11
The Committee heard that as with previous years the
ANAO had serious qualifications in regards to Defence's accounts. Mr
Michael Watson,
Executive Director – Assurance Audit Services Group, said:
In lay terms, in fiscal 2005 the Secretary of Defence was unable
to prepare a full set of accounts therefore the Auditor-General could not
conclude on that audit. That was the case in fiscal 2005. That is probably in
the hierarchy of an audit qualification ..... one of the most serious you can
get.[3]
3.12
Senators also examined in detail the ANAO report on
procurement of the Tiger armed reconnaissance helicopter. Senators raised
concerns with various aspects of the project, particularly the ANAO finding
that the Defence Materiel Organisation (DMO) had agreed to accept a lower
specification aircraft without adequately documenting the new agreement between
it and the contractor.[4] This finding
threw into doubt the adequacy of the governance framework and internal
accountability of DMO's contracting processes.
Office of National Assessments
3.13
Issues raised by members of the Committee and other
senators in attendance included:
- ONA's assessment of unfolding events in East
Timor;
-
ONA resources allocated to East Timor, Iraq and
the Solomon Islands;
-
The Iraq
conflict;
-
Evaluation of ONA performance; and
-
The procedure and controls for distributing ONA
reports.
3.14
ONA's appearance coincided with the early stages of the
deployment of Australian and other forces to East Timor,
where conditions on the ground continued to be of concern. The timing allowed
the Committee to explore with ONA the situation in East Timor
and its assessment of the roots of the current crisis and the prospects for
resolving the situation. Members also took the opportunity to inquire into the
adequacy of ONA's staffing dedicated to monitoring East Timor
prior to the outbreak of violence there.
3.15
The question of the apparent absence of any ONA
reporting to government on numerous reports alleging AWB bribes to Iraq
was also raised. However, questioning was immediately cut off by ONA's refusal
to answer on the ground of the ban on matters before the Cole
commission.
Navigation: Previous Page | Contents | Next Page