Introductory Info
Date introduced: 2 September 2021
House: House of Representatives
Portfolio: Prime Minister
Commencement: Most amendments in Schedules 1–3 commence the day after Royal Assent. A few amendments (described in clause 2) are contingent on the commencement and passage of other legislation.
Purpose of
the Bill
The purpose of the COAG
Legislation Amendment Bill 2021 (the Bill) is two-fold:
- to
amend a range of legislation to update terminology, to reflect the cessation of
the Council of Australian Governments (COAG) and the introduction of new federal
structures and
- to
expand the meaning of Cabinet in several Acts with the purpose of making clear
that where Commonwealth legislation has existing provisions to protect from
disclosure the deliberations and decisions of the Cabinet and its committees,
the same protections apply to the deliberations and decisions of the National
Cabinet and its committees.
Structure of
the Bill
The Bill comprises three Schedules: The purposes of those
Schedules are as follows:
- Schedule
1: to update outdated references to COAG Reform Fund where it occurs in
legislation with Federation Reform Fund
- Schedule
2: to replace references in legislation to ‘COAG’ with references to the
generic concept of a ‘First Ministers’ Council’. In addition, the term
Ministerial Council would be redefined and references to specific names of a
Council (such as COAG Health Council) would be replaced with the term
‘Ministerial Council’
-
Schedule 3: to amend the definition of ‘Cabinet’ in the Freedom of
Information Act 1982 (FOI Act) so that documents of the National
Cabinet and its committees are subject to the existing Cabinet documents
exemption in section 34 of that Act. Schedule 3 also amend numerous
other Acts, expanding the meaning of ‘Cabinet’ and providing that where legislation
includes provisions to protect from disclosure the deliberations and decisions
of the Cabinet and its committees, these provisions apply to the deliberations
and decisions of National Cabinet and its committees.
Background
National
Cabinet and the new federal relations structures
In March 2020 the Prime Minister, the premiers of each
state and the chief ministers of the Northern Territory and the Australian
Capital Territory agreed to establish the National Cabinet as the most appropriate
forum to coordinate and deliver a response to COVID-19 in Australia.[1]
Prior to the creation of the National Cabinet, the
federated decision-making body had been the Council of Australian Governments
(COAG). COAG, established in 1992, was the body that facilitated co-operation
amongst all levels of government, achieving this through its various and
supporting advisory mechanisms.[2]
On 29 May 2020, the Prime Minister announced that the
Premiers, Chief Ministers, and he had agreed that the National Cabinet would
replace COAG as the primary forum for intergovernmental relations. It was
argued that, in contrast to the National Cabinet's ‘agility and decisiveness’, COAG and its related bodies were burdened by red tape and
bureaucracy which made them inefficient in taking decisions and slow to advance
reform.[3]
According to the Prime Minister:
By any measure, the National Cabinet has proven to be a much
more effective body for taking decisions in the national interest than the COAG structure.[4]
On 26 June 2020, it was announced that former Director-General
of the Western Australian Department of Premier and Cabinet and former
Commonwealth Cabinet Secretary Mr Peter Conran would lead a review of the former
COAG Councils and Ministerial Forums (the Conran Review) ‘with a view to rationalise
and reset their work’. The review would ‘make recommendations on a streamlined
structure, scope and reporting arrangements and on focused regulatory and
policy work programs’ and would provide recommendations to National Cabinet by
September 2020.[5]
On 23 October 2020, the National Cabinet accepted the
Conran Review’s recommendations that included ‘reducing the number of
ministerial forums and ensuring that those that remain are more agile and
responsive, with direct responsibility for decision-making resting with
Ministers’.[6]
The new arrangement would include six National Cabinet Reform Committees
consisting of the relevant portfolio Minister (rural and regional; skills; infrastructure
and transport; population and migration; energy, and health), plus the Council
on Federal Financial Relations, consisting of the Treasurers of each
jurisdiction.[7]
Under the new arrangements National Cabinet can establish
additional committees as required. The committees may be temporary or ad hoc in
nature or standing forums to inform the deliberations of the National Cabinet.[8]
The National Cabinet has also agreed to the formation of
the National Federation Reform Council (NFRC).[9]
The NFRC is a joint forum for the National Cabinet, the Council on Federal
Financial Relations, and the President of the Australian Local Government
Association to consider priority national federation issues that fall outside
of the National Cabinet’s remit. The NFRC is supported by three taskforces on
Women’s Safety, Indigenous Affairs and Veterans’ Wellbeing.[10]
The Conran Review also recommended that, in recognising
the cessation of the former COAG model, the Commonwealth should introduce
legislation to the Parliament to amend outdated references to COAG councils and
Ministerial Councils.[11]
The amendments in Schedules 1 and 2 to the Bill
seek to implement this recommendation. The amendments are definitional changes
to reflect the new federal structures and the cessation of COAG. A brief
description is provided below under the heading Provisions.
Freedom of
Information Act 1982: an outline
The Freedom of
Information Act 1982 (FOI Act) provides the legislative basis
for accessing information in documents held by Australian Government agencies
and Ministers.[12]
The FOI Act recognises in its objects that information held by
government is a national resource and is to be managed for public purposes. As
the Office of the Australian Information Commission (OAIC) states:
Comprehensive coverage of agencies and ministers under the
FOI Act supports a key object of the FOI Act, which is to increase scrutiny,
discussion, comment and review of government activities.[13]
Consistent with the objects of the FOI Act, the
starting point for an agency or minister dealing with a freedom of information
(FOI) request is that the applicant has a right to obtain the requested
material.[14]
However, the FOI Act includes a number of
exemptions and conditional exemptions to that right of access, balancing the
objective of providing access to government information with legitimate claims
for protection.
Where a document is an exempt document[15]
access to the document is not required to be given. Examples of exemptions
include:
- documents
affecting national security, defence or international relations (section 33)
- Cabinet
documents (section 34)
- documents
affecting enforcement of law and protection of public safety (section 37)
- documents
to which secrecy provisions of enactments apply (section 38)
- documents
subject to legal professional privilege (section 42)
- documents
containing material obtained in confidence (section 45).
Where a document is a conditionally exempt document,[16]
access to the document is required to be given unless it would be contrary to
the public interest. Examples of conditional exemptions include:
- Commonwealth-State
relations (section 47B)
- deliberative
processes (section 47C)
- financial
or property interests of the Commonwealth (section 47D)
- certain
operations of agencies (section 47E)
- personal
privacy (section 47F)
- business
(section 47G)
- research
(section 47H)
- the
economy (section 47J).
The application of conditional exemptions requires the
agency or Minister to consider whether disclosing a document would be contrary
to the public interest. Factors favouring access to the document in the public
interest include whether access would promote the objects of the Act, inform
debate on a matter of public importance, promote effective oversight of public expenditure,
or allow a person access to their own personal information.[17]
Irrelevant factors include that access to the document
would result in embarrassment to the Commonwealth Government or cause a loss of
confidence in the Commonwealth Government.[18]
The application
of the Freedom of Information Act to COAG
The former Council of Australian Governments (COAG) and
its committees were not subject to a specific exemption in the FOI Act. However,
in some cases, agencies have applied existing exemptions and conditional
exemptions in the FOI Act to exempt COAG documents from disclosure.[19]
The most relevant of those conditional exemptions is section
47B which grants a conditional exemption to documents the disclosure of which
could reasonably be expected to cause damage to relations between the
Commonwealth and a State or would divulge communications made in confidence on
behalf of a State or the Commonwealth. Another relevant conditional exemption
is section 47C, documents containing deliberative matters. Deliberative matter
is content that is or relates to either:
- an
opinion, advice or recommendation that has been obtained, prepared or recorded
or
- a
consultation or deliberation that has taken place, in the course of, or for the
purposes of, a deliberative process of the government, an agency or minister.[20]
The current position is therefore that some
inter-governmental material is protected, if it would not be in the public
interest to release it, but not all such material is exempt from public
disclosure.
The Australian Human Rights Commission states that COAG
materials were accessible via FOI requests.[21]
In its submission to the Senate Committee inquiry into the Bill the Commission further
states:
The COAG Handbook included requirements that key decisions
and outcomes were made available publicly within one week of a meeting, along
with the publication of core work where required. COAG members could comment
openly on COAG decisions, as long as they made clear that their commentary was
representing the view of COAG or of individual COAG members.[22]
[footnotes removed]
Administrative
Appeals Tribunal: Patrick and Secretary, Department of the Prime Minister and
Cabinet
The amendments in Schedule 3 follow a ruling in the
Administrative Appeals Tribunal (AAT) on 5 August 2021 in the matter
of Patrick
and Secretary, Department of Prime Minister and Cabinet[23]
(Patrick). That ruling overturned a decision by the Department of the Prime
Minister and Cabinet (PM&C) to refuse access under the FOI Act to
certain National Cabinet documents. The AAT held that the documents were not
exempt under the Cabinet exemption in section 34 or the Commonwealth-State
relations conditional exemption in section 47B of the FOI Act.[24]
The case in the AAT was brought by Senator Rex Patrick
following denial of his FOI requests relating to National Cabinet meeting
minutes and procedures. The OAIC referred Senator Patrick’s appeal to the AAT.
PM&C had rejected Senator Patrick’s FOI requests on the basis that the
documents were official records of the federal Cabinet, and were therefore
exempt under the FOI Act. The Government’s position was that that
National Cabinet information is confidential in the same way as Cabinet information
under longstanding and well-established conventions of Cabinet.[25]
Justice Richard White (a Judge of the Federal Court of
Australia, sitting as a Deputy Presidential member of the AAT) held that, on
the basis of the evidence before the Tribunal, the entity known as the National
Cabinet did not, in fact, constitute a committee of the Commonwealth Cabinet
for the purpose of the ‘Cabinet documents exemption’ in section 34 of the FOI
Act. His Honour said:
The mere use of the name ‘National Cabinet’ does not, of
itself, have the effect of making a group of persons using the name a
‘committee of the Cabinet’. Nor does the mere labelling of a committee as a
‘Cabinet committee’ have that effect. That term has the meaning with which it
is used in the FOI Act and, in order for s 34(1)(b) of that Act to be
applicable in the present case, the National Cabinet must come within that
statutory meaning.[26]
His Honour considered that a ‘committee of the Cabinet’
means a subgroup of the Cabinet and the Cabinet must, amongst other things, be
comprised of Ministers who, according to the Constitution, must be Members
of Parliament within three months of their appointment.[27]
An example of such a committee may be those groups that relate to particular
subject areas, such as national security or expenditure.[28]
Importantly, the committee must not only consist mostly of persons from the
Cabinet, but also should be performing functions for or on behalf of the
Cabinet – essentially a connection is required where the group can be said to belong
to the Cabinet.[29]
Justice White also rejected PM&C’s argument that the
National Cabinet was a Cabinet committee because the Prime Minister had
established it as such. He said:
This seemed tantamount to a submission that any committee may
be a ‘committee of the Cabinet’ for the purposes of the FOI Act merely because
the Prime Minister of the day has purported to establish it as such. This
premise is unsound.[30]
In any case, His Honour also concluded that neither the Prime
Minister nor the Federal Cabinet created the National Cabinet. It was instead
established by resolution of COAG on 13 March 2020.[31]
The AAT decision
also rejected the alternative claims by PM&C that particular documents of
the National Cabinet (being minutes of specific meetings) were conditionally
exempt under section 47B of the FOI Act. White J held that the
Commonwealth had failed to discharge its legal onus to establish that
disclosure would be reasonably likely to cause harm to Commonwealth-State
relations. Specifically, White J held that the opinion evidence of Commonwealth
officials about apprehended harm arising from disclosure was not persuasive,
because it comprised generalised and abstract claims of impediments to full and
free discussion at National Cabinet meetings. It was held that such claims
could not reasonably be sustained from the actual contents of the documents
under review in that case, being minutes of particular National Cabinet
meetings, which were independently inspected by White J during the proceedings.[32]
On 2 September
2021, the day of introduction of the Bill into Parliament, PM&C indicated it
would not appeal the AAT’s decision, and in compliance with the decision, the
Department provided the documents in issue to the FOI applicant, Senator Rex
Patrick.[33]
Neither the Minister’s Second Reading Speech nor the
Explanatory Memorandum mention the Patrick case. However, PM&C, in its
submission to the Senate Committee inquiry into the Bill, does refer to the Patrick
case, asserting in particular that the AAT decision ‘is not considered to have
precedential force beyond the facts and documents before it’.[34]
The submission further argues:
The Government’s position has always been that National
Cabinet information is confidential in the same way as Cabinet information
under longstanding and well established conventions of Cabinet. Consistent with
that original intention, the Bill confirms that position by proposing amendment
to the definition of ‘Cabinet’ in the FOI Act to expressly provide that the
Federal Cabinet includes a committee known as the National Cabinet and any
committee of the National Cabinet.[35]
Committee
consideration
Senate
Finance and Public Administration Legislation Committee
The Bill has been referred to the Senate Finance and Public
Administration Legislation Committee for inquiry and report by 14 October 2021
(Senate Committee inquiry into the Bill). Details of the inquiry are at the
inquiry webpage.
Submissions are discussed below under headings, Position of major interest
groups and Key issues and provisions.[36]
Senate
Standing Committee for the Scrutiny of Bills
At the date of writing, the Committee had not reported on
the Bill.
Policy
position of non-government parties/independents
Australian Labor
Party
The Shadow Attorney-General Mark Dreyfus has criticised
the Bill, seeing it as an attempt by the Government to overturn the AAT’s
decision in the Patrick case and to exclude National Cabinet meetings
from FOI disclosure. He states:
Just weeks after he was humiliated by a Federal Court Judge
over his delusional and arrogant attempt to make meetings of First Ministers
exempt from public scrutiny by calling it “National Cabinet”, Mr Morrison is
now trying to get the Parliament to overturn the umpire’s ruling.
[…]
Now, after having his tricky marketing ploy to rebadge COAG
as “National Cabinet” overturned in the AAT Mr Morrison has introduced
legislation to try to hide his meetings with Premiers and Chief Ministers from
Freedom of Information requests.
This is a Government addicted to secrecy.
[…]
At a time when record amounts of taxpayers’ funds are being
spent responding to the pandemic, the Australian people have every right to be
kept informed about what is being done in their name.[37]
Australian
Greens
The Australian Greens are critical of the Bill noting that
it seeks to overrule the AAT ruling that National Cabinet was not subject to Cabinet
secrecy provisions or exempted from FOI laws. Senator Larissa Waters has stated:
Rather than accept that more transparency was required, the
government has introduced the COAG Legislation Amendment Bill to overrule the
court’s decision. This government wants to keep its deliberations secret and
prevent proper scrutiny of its abysmal vaccination rollout, its shambles of a
national quarantine program, and its pandering to fossil fuel donors.
[…]
The PM’s war on transparency and accountability has to end.[38]
Australian Greens leader Adam Bandt has said:
The Prime Minister is addicted to secrecy. Attempts to shut
down decision-makers' transparency set a worrying precedent.
The pandemic is the biggest policy challenge that the
government has taken on this decade. It should be possible to interrogate the
decision-making process that has seen the government introduce unprecedented
restrictions on our lives.
People need to be able to know the justification behind these
important restrictions.[39]
Other
parties and independents
Senator Rex
Patrick
Senator Rex Patrick has condemned the Bill and the Government’s
intention to overrule the AAT decision stating:
Scott Morrison is clearly a sore loser, but more importantly
he’s still trying to stifle public scrutiny of ‘National Cabinet’ decision
making as well as many other dealings of Federal, state and territory
governments.[40]
Senator Patrick in his press release also notes the broad
impact of the Bill to prevent disclosure of National Cabinet documents in all
circumstances:
The Bill further provides for the issuing of conclusive
certificates by Ministers to prevent the disclosure of ‘National Cabinet’
records in Administrative Appeals Tribunal hearings and to keep records of
‘National Cabinet’ secret in the deepest and darkest vaults of the National
Archives.[41]
Senator Patrick has circulated amendments
to the Bill aimed at removing the provisions that relate to National Cabinet
confidentiality.[42]
Senator
Jacqui Lambie
It is reported that Senator Jacqui Lambie opposes the
Bill. Crikey, in quoting the Senator, states:
“Scott Morrison reckons he can pass a bill that says down is
up and up is down,” Lambie said. “But he knows what we all know: national
cabinet is not a committee of cabinet. It doesn’t matter what fancy language
his department uses, or the legal garble they chuck in a bill. The public knows
when we’re being played. We aren’t going to change the law just because it’s
inconvenient to the PM’s people”.[43]
Senator
Gerard Rennick
It is reported that Liberal Senator Gerard Rennick will
cross the floor and vote against the Bill. The Guardian reports that the
Senator is opposed to ‘secrecy at the best of times’ and also questions how
National Cabinet was initially established, noting it was done without first
consulting the Coalition Party room. According to the Guardian, Senator
Rennick argues that National Cabinet decisions regarding ‘destruction of livelihoods, denying kids
their education, keeping families apart, all this quarantining … all those meetings
need to be completely transparent’.[44]
At the time of writing the views of other parties and
independents are not known.
Position of
major interest groups
The Senate Committee inquiry into the Bill received 13 written
submissions, the majority expressing concern about the amendments in Schedule 3
that propose to classify the National Cabinet as a committee of the
Commonwealth Cabinet and classify its deliberations, decisions and documents as
being subject to Cabinet confidentiality. Most submissions argue that the entirety
of Schedule 3 should be deleted. A selection of views is provided here with
further detail under the heading Key issues and provisions.
Australian
Human Rights Commission
The Australian Human Rights Commission notes that the
National Cabinet is the replacement for COAG and is not a Cabinet body. Therefore,
in its view, the use of the term ‘cabinet’ is misleading and ‘obfuscates the
nature of the body’. The National Cabinet, rather than being a committee of
Cabinet, is ‘an intergovernmental forum, made up of representatives of
jurisdictions with sovereign powers, and the Prime Minister is the only member
accountable to Federal Parliament’.[45]
The Commission is concerned that bringing the National
Cabinet under the remit of Cabinet secrecy rules will reduce transparency and
accountability. It may also implicate the right to freedom of expression by
unnecessarily restricting the open communication of information to, and by, the
public.[46]
The Commission submits that Schedule 3 should not be
enacted arguing:
Australians should be able to be informed about the nature of
the decisions made by their representatives, especially in times of emergency
where governments enact extraordinary measures that affect their lives and
rights in significant ways.
…
COVID-19 has instigated potentially transformational changes to
government operations in Australia. It is important to ensure that Executive
power is not unnecessarily or permanently expanded through related
administrative efficiency measures, as this would have negative implications
for democratic principles and the rule of law.[47]
Professor Anne
Twomey
Anne Twomey, Professor of Constitutional Law, University
of Sydney, has concerns with the amendments in the Bill that propose to
classify the National Cabinet as a committee of the Commonwealth Cabinet and classify
its deliberations, decisions and documents as being subject to Cabinet
confidentiality. She argues strongly that there are problems with these
amendments:
First, they defy the self-evident facts. Second, they
undermine the federal system. Third, they undermine the constitutional
principle of responsible government. Fourth, they reduce governmental
accountability and transparency. [48]
In Professor Twomey’s view, asserting that National
Cabinet is a committee of the Commonwealth Cabinet when ‘plainly it is not’
could have two outcomes.
First, it may be recognised that this is no more than a
convenient lie for the purpose of attracting complete confidentiality, thus
bringing the Parliament and the law into disrepute. Second, it might be
interpreted as having the effect of changing the nature, status, composition
and powers of the National Cabinet so that it ceases to be an intergovernmental
body and becomes no more than a committee that is controlled by the
Commonwealth Cabinet and the Prime Minister. This would undermine both its
utility and the federal system.[49]
In terms of the Bill’s impact on the federal system, Professor
Twomey argues that National Cabinet is, like its predecessor COAG, a key
element in Australia’s federal architecture and it should fulfil that role.[50]
Therefore, asserting that National Cabinet is a committee of the Commonwealth
Cabinet dependent on that one jurisdiction for its power, is inconsistent with
the equality of status of the members of National Cabinet, the retention of
sovereign power of the states and ‘would seriously undermine the federal system’
as a whole.[51]
Professor Twomey acknowledges there may be good reasons
for keeping the discussions of National Cabinet and its committees such as the
Australian Health Protection Committee confidential during a major crisis, such
as a pandemic, but argues this could be achieved in more legitimate and
accountable ways. She states:
Secrecy is sometimes both legitimate and necessary. But one
needs also to be confident that any requirements of confidentiality are being
imposed in the public interest rather than in the political interests of
governments to avoid accountability and embarrassment resulting from poor
management or even corrupt behaviour.
If one were genuinely seeking to protect the deliberations,
documents and records of National Cabinet and its committees for legitimate
reasons, then one would add an additional sub-section to s 47B of the FOI Act,
so that they were conditionally exempt and were not released if, on balance, it
was contrary to the public interest to do so. One might well ask why the
records of the National Cabinet and its committees should be kept confidential
if the public interest does not warrant their protection?[52]
Office of
the Australian Information Commissioner
The OAIC’s
submission is made with the concurrence of state and territory information
commissioners and ombudsmen.
The OAIC notes
that the purpose of the Cabinet exemption in section 34 of the FOI Act is
‘to protect the confidentiality of the Cabinet process and to ensure that the
principle of collective ministerial responsibility, fundamental to the Cabinet
system, is not undermined’. It submits that the proposed amendments to the FOI
Act extend the Cabinet exemption to a ‘different construct’ which does not
adhere to those principles and conventions.[53]
It also observes that the amendment would extend the existing Cabinet exemption
beyond the National Cabinet to its various committees, and that this is ‘a
significant extension of the exemption which would result in a corresponding
reduction in the public’s right to access information held by governments’.[54]
The OAIC also
questions the Bill’s Statement of Compatibility of Human Rights arguing it does
not make out a proper case for limiting rights to seek, receive and impart
information, which are protected by Article 19(2) of the International
Covenant on Civil and Political Rights. It states:
[…] noting the existing exemptions and conditional exemptions
already contained in the FOI Act, the case is not made as to how the impact on
information access rights is necessary, reasonable and proportionate.[55]
Further, based on
its own regulatory experience, the OAIC suggests:
… the extension of the existing exemption to National Cabinet
may give rise to practical difficulties in its application, such as evidentiary
issues regarding the extent to which the existence of the deliberation or
decision has been officially disclosed (s 34(3)) by the independent membership
of the National Cabinet across all Australian jurisdictions. Similarly, the
question of whether and when a document has been ‘officially published’ (s
34(5)) where there are a number of autonomous and independent leaders making up
the National Cabinet may also give rise to uncertainty in the application of the
provision.[56]
The OAIC
submission concludes arguing:
[…] the existing provisions in the FOI Act provide an
adequate framework to balance the need, in appropriate circumstances, to
maintain the confidentiality of opinions, advice, recommendations and deliberations
that occur as part of government decision making – including by National
Cabinet – with the public’s interest in and right to access government-held
information.
If – contrary to our submission – Parliament considers that a
non-conditional exemption for documents relating to National Cabinet and its
committees is necessary, we suggest a separate provision is considered that
overcomes the issues raised in this submission in relation to the application
of s 34 to National Cabinet and includes a legislative requirement to publish
specific National Cabinet documents in a timely way.[57]
Law Council
of Australia
The Law Council does not support the proposed amendments
to section 34 of the FOI Act in relation to National Cabinet documents,
or the effective replication of this approach in other Commonwealth
information-disclosure laws proposed to be amended by Schedule 3. Its
submission provides two reasons for this, namely:
- the
absence of meaningful justification for applying an absolute exemption based on
the status rather than substance of information
- there
are already adequate conditional exemptions from disclosure under the FOI
Act, which apply subject to ‘both a statutory harm-based threshold and a
structured public interest test’.[58]
The submission further argues:
The Law Council is concerned that the proposed expansion of
the Cabinet documents exemption has the potential to significantly weaken
transparency and accountability by undermining one of the key objects of the
FOI Act, as set out in subsection 3(2). That is, to ‘promote Australia’s
representative democracy’ by contributing to increasing public participation in
Government processes and increasing scrutiny, discussion, comment and review of
the Government’s activities.
Accordingly—and given the reliance that is evidently being
placed on the National Cabinet to make decisions about matters of critical
importance to the lives and livelihoods of all Australians in the context of
the current COVID-19 pandemic—any reduction of the existing, legally
enforceable rights of public access to information should not be undertaken
lightly.[59]
The Law Council, like other submitters, notes the
substantial policy shift which would curtail the scope of existing rights to
access official information – rights which are expressly protected by Article
19(2) of the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights as a
component of the right to freedom of expression. It argues that such a
curtailment must be treated carefully:
Accordingly, the necessity and proportionality of any such
reduction of these existing rights must be established convincingly, through
the presentation of compelling and specific evidence of the actual harm to the
national interest that has been sustained, or is reasonably likely to be
sustained, if the existing right of access was not curtailed in the manner
proposed by the Bill.
The Law Council is concerned that the extrinsic materials to
the Bill offer only a brief explanation of the proposal to apply a far-reaching
limitation upon a legal right to access information. The Explanatory Memorandum,
at page 17, essentially states that, because the proposed amendments would
legislatively deem the National Cabinet to be a Committee of the Commonwealth
Cabinet, it follows that the same requirements for absolute confidentiality
apply to all proceedings and documents of the National Cabinet, as this
absolute degree of confidentiality is ‘essential to enable full and frank
discussions’ of all matters of business placed before it.[60]
The Law Council is also concerned that the extrinsic
materials to the Bill provide no explanation as to why alternative proposals
have not been pursued (such as the conditional exemptions in sections 47B and
47C) which would have been less restrictive on the right to seek and access
official information than an ‘absolute, status-based exemption’ for all
National Cabinet-related documents.[61]
The Law Council in supporting arguments also refers to historical
precedent, noting:
[it] is not aware of FOI legislation ever having contained an
absolute exemption in favour of the former COAG or the multitude of Ministerial
Councils such as former Standing Committee of Attorneys-General, or Ministerial
Council on Police and Emergency Management, all of which have taken many highly
significant policy and operational decisions on sensitive matters of national
importance, and would inevitably have involved extensive ‘full and frank’
discussions between leaders’.[62]
The Law Council submission also considers at some length
the decision in the Patrick case, noting that the reasons of White J set
out why National Cabinet did not, in fact, possess the requisite
characteristics to be a committee of the Commonwealth Cabinet.[63]
It the Law Council’s view that decision was based on evidence about the nature,
composition and operations of the body known as the ‘National Cabinet’ and:
That finding should not be overridden via the legislative
creation of a legal fiction, which would be the effect of Schedule 3 to the
Bill, if it is passed.[64]
Grata Fund
Grata Fund, a partner of the University of New South Wales
Sydney Law School, focuses on the amendments affecting the FOI Act. It
submits that the amendments are ‘inconsistent with democratic principles of
good governance and accountability’ and argues that they are ‘an attempt to
evade the public accountability Australia’s FOI system was designed to provide’.[65]
It argues that the existing provisions of the FOI Act already provide
sufficient scope to withhold documents that ought not be subject to FOI
requests, including on the grounds of national security, the protection of
public safety, and where they affect Commonwealth-state relations.[66]
The submission states:
Placing a body as politically and economically significant as
the National Cabinet entirely beyond the scope of Australia’s FOI system is a
clear overreach and poses a threat to good governance and democratic
accountability.[67]
Andrew
Podger
Andrew Podger, former Commonwealth senior public servant
and currently Honorary Professor of Public Administration, Australian National
University, sees serious dangers in the wording in the Bill that would include
National Cabinet as a form of Cabinet.[68]
He notes there are two key attributes of a Cabinet, namely
the decision-makers are Ministers and authorised as such by the Parliament to
whom the Ministers are accountable; and the Cabinet Ministers accept
‘collective responsibility’ for the decisions made. Professor Podger, therefore,
argues:
The notion that a forum of ministers from separate and
different governments accountable to their own respective parliaments and
voters can constitute a ‘cabinet’ runs afoul of these essential characteristics.
As is already apparent, calling Australia’s heads-of-government meeting the
‘National Cabinet’ rather than COAG does not constrain any of the members
representing its own sovereign government from departing from the decisions
made. They are accountable not to National Cabinet, nor to the prime minister’s
parliament, but to their own parliaments.[69]
Professor Podger also has
concerns that the use of the term ‘National Cabinet’ suggests a further
substantial shift to ‘executive federalism’ reducing the role of parliaments in
their oversight of their executives.[70]
He also submits that the ongoing use of the term will be misleading:
Replacing the title ‘COAG’ with ‘National Cabinet’ may have
served an immediate political objective to convey to the public the urgency and
combined effort that the Prime Minister and Premiers/Chief Ministers attached
to addressing the COVID 19 crisis. However, it serves no ongoing substantial
purpose: on the contrary, it misrepresents some of the fundamentals of
Australia’s federal arrangements.[71]
In relation to FOI, Professor Podger agrees that there is
a public interest case for confidentiality surrounding intergovernmental
deliberations, but that a case for a blanket exemption from FOI access is not
clear. He observes that much of the material before National Cabinet may
already be confidential because of its preparation for Commonwealth (and State)
Cabinets while other material (such as recent modelling about COVID-19
infections, hospitalisations and deaths) may fail a public interest test for
exemption from public access. Professor Podger submits that a blanket exemption
would, therefore, seem inappropriate.[72]
The
Accountability Round Table
The Accountability Round Table[73]
(ART) has several concerns with the Bill and its impact on accountability and
transparency. In evidence to the Senate Committee Fiona McLeod, Chair of ART, summarised
its concerns, stating:
The first is that this is an inappropriate model. There are
serious constitutional and legal doubts as to the validity of equating national
cabinet, by whatever name, with federal cabinet. The legislative intention to
clothe this intergovernmental coordinated meeting with cabinet confidentiality,
in our submission, is untenable. The second is our concerns with the objective
of the bill. The bill subverts responsible government accountability and
transparency and the government's own commitment to the Open Government
Partnership. And the third is that, despite the assertion of the explanatory
memorandum and the Prime Minister and Cabinet in their submission, there is no
evidence the current carefully framed FOI exemptions are inadequate to the task
of exempting appropriate matters from disclosure.[74]
Department
of the Prime Minister and Cabinet
The Department of the Prime Minister and Cabinet
(PM&C) submission justifies the expanded definition of Cabinet to include
National Cabinet, arguing:
This flows from a foundational operational rule of the
National Cabinet, as established by the Prime Minister, and subsequently agreed
by State and Territory First Ministers, that the National Cabinet is a
committee of the Commonwealth Cabinet. As such, its operations and its
conventions are the same in respect to the Commonwealth Cabinet.[75]
The PM&C submission further points to a supporting
joint statement by members of the National Cabinet on 17 September 2021, in
which all leaders agreed that:
[…] National Cabinet had strengthened relationships between
governments by facilitating regular discussions in the national interest,
founded on the same principles of trust, confidence and collaboration which
underpin State, Territory and Commonwealth cabinets.[76]
The PM&C submission states that the main justification
for maintaining confidentiality over National Cabinet information and
discussions is that confidentiality is critical to its effective operation and that
it reflects the close relationship that National Cabinet has to the Federal
Cabinet. It states:
Federal Cabinet has close oversight of issues to be
considered by, and outcomes of, the National Cabinet. Federal Cabinet and its
committees are briefed in advance on issues which are proposed for the National
Cabinet. While it remains a matter for States and Territories how they manage
information informing or endorsed by National Cabinet, the Department
understands that State and Territory governments intend to have similar
arrangements and relationships between their Cabinets and the National Cabinet,
given the well accepted principle that National Cabinet does not derogate from
State or Territory sovereign authority.
Maintaining the confidentiality of National Cabinet
information is an essential part of maintaining the protection of Federal
Cabinet information. The application of cabinet conventions over National
Cabinet information supports full and frank discussions between leaders with a
view to ensuring robust decisions in the interests of all Australians.
This does not mean there is no transparency of National
Cabinet decisions. After each National Cabinet meeting the Prime Minister, as
Chair of the National Cabinet, issues a statement summarising the outcomes of
the decisions made.[77]
Financial
implications
The Explanatory Memorandum states that the Bill has no
financial impact.[78]
Statement of Compatibility with Human Rights
As required under Part 3 of the Human Rights
(Parliamentary Scrutiny) Act 2011 (Cth), the Government has assessed the
Bill’s compatibility with the human rights and freedoms recognised or declared
in the international instruments listed in section 3 of that Act. The
Government considers that the Bill is compatible.[79]
Parliamentary
Joint Committee on Human Rights
The Parliamentary Joint Committee on Human Rights (PJCHR)
made no comment in relation to the Bill. The PJCHR makes no comment when a Bill
does not engage, or only marginally engages, human rights; promotes human
rights; and/or permissibly limits human rights.[80]
Key issues
and provisions
Schedule 3
The Freedom
of Information Act and the Cabinet documents exemption
As already noted, section 34 of the FOI Act
provides a Cabinet documents exemption to FOI. It is one of the non-conditional
exemptions described above, and therefore consideration of the public interest
is not a factor in decision-making about the release of documents. The
exemption is broad. Subsection 34(1) provides a document is an exempt document
if:
(a) both of the following are satisfied:
(i) it
has been submitted to the Cabinet for its consideration, or is or was proposed
by a Minister to be so submitted;
(ii) it
was brought into existence for the dominant purpose of submission for
consideration by the Cabinet; or
(b) it is an official record of the Cabinet; or
(c) it was
brought into existence for the dominant purpose of briefing a Minister on a
document to which paragraph (a) applies; or
(d) it is a draft of a document to which paragraph (a), (b)
or (c) applies.
As many submitters to the Committee note, the
justification for giving absolute confidentiality to Cabinet documents is that
it underpins principles of responsible government and is necessary to ensure
the government remains collectively responsible to Parliament for its decisions.
The OAIC explains:
The purpose of s 34 of the FOI Act is to protect the
confidentiality of the Cabinet process and to ensure that the principle of
collective ministerial responsibility, fundamental to the Cabinet system, is
not undermined.
The proper implementation of strong, accepted conventions around
confidentiality and collective responsibility is also dependent on a commitment
to the operational values of consultation, confidentiality, respect for the
primacy of Cabinet decisions and ministerial responsibility. Those principles
and conventions underpin the policy basis for the existing Cabinet
confidentiality exemption in the FOI Act.[81]
Definition of Cabinet
Cabinet is currently defined in section 4(1) of the FOI
Act as:
Cabinet includes a committee of the Cabinet.
Item 14 repeals this definition and substitutes:
Cabinet includes:
(a) a committee of
the Cabinet (including the committees known as the National Cabinet)
(b) a committee
(however described) of the National Cabinet.
Schedule 3 makes amendments to a range of other Acts that
also define or use the term ‘Cabinet’ to reflect this new and expanded
definition.
Comment
The new definition of Cabinet in item 14 is
significant. By effectively deeming National Cabinet and its committees to be a
Committee of the Commonwealth Cabinet, National Cabinet documents will be
exempt documents for the purpose of the FOI Act. As the Law Council notes,
this total exemption in section 34 would apply very broadly including to
proposals of individual Ministers to place matters on an agenda of the National
Cabinet (even if the matter ultimately never proceeds), to briefings of
Ministers on submissions and proposed submissions, and to drafts of all these
documents. This, it argues ‘is a much wider, and potentially indeterminate,
class of documents than the specific, official meeting minutes that were the
subject of the access request under review in Patrick’.[82]
The Law Council, like many submitters, sees these amendments
as extending the current Cabinet confidentiality exemption in section 34 to a
different construct which does not adhere to the Cabinet principles and
conventions of collective responsibility and responsible government described
above.
Professor Twomey also argues that, while Cabinet
confidentiality is justified ‘in order to maintain collective responsibility to
Parliament for the decisions made by the Cabinet formed from that Parliament’,
National Cabinet does not operate according to those principles. She states:
The National Cabinet is not collectively responsible to the
Commonwealth Parliament. Each of its leaders is responsible individually to a
separate legislature. Accordingly, the justification of maintaining ‘collective
ministerial responsibility’ does not apply and this basis for ‘Cabinet
confidentiality’ therefore cannot justify a departure from the ordinary
requirements of accountability to Parliament.
Each leader must be responsible to his or her own Parliament
for their actions, including in the inter‑governmental sphere, and this
continues to require a degree of transparency.[83]
Committees
of National Cabinet
A number of submitters found the extension of Cabinet
confidentiality to committees of National Cabinet particularly concerning,
noting that membership of these committees is not restricted to Ministers or
even elected Members of Parliament. As Professor Twomey states:
[…] the extension of ‘cabinet confidentiality’ to the
‘committees of the National Cabinet’, such as the Australian Health Protection
Principal Committee (‘AHPPC’) and the National COVID-19 Coordination
Commission, is particularly problematic. None of the members of these bodies
are Ministers or even elected Members of Parliament. How can such bodies be
regarded as subject to the cabinet confidentiality that derives from collective
ministerial responsibility when their members are not ministers and they are
not collectively or even individually responsible to any Parliament? This
creates an avenue, which could be easily exploited in the future, to cover any
body and its work with an impenetrable veil of secrecy, without any concomitant
democratic responsibility.[84]
The Law Council also has concerns, stating that the
extension of the exemption to Committees of National Cabinet seems unwarranted.
It argues:
That language seems likely to include specialist working
groups (of for example, public health experts or lawyers) whose discussions may
be purely technical. Documents pertaining to those working groups may be of immense
value to the public—for example, in consideration and debate about preparations
for the next pandemic—and the case for a blanket exemption from disclosure
seems weak. Revelation of the advice given to political leaders may be awkward
or embarrassing for them, but since the enactment of FOI legislation that has
not been regarded as a legitimate basis for preventing disclosure.[85]
Other
amendments to the FOI Act
Item 15 amends subparagraph 34(1)(a)(i) of
the FOI Act so that the Cabinet exemption applies to documents
submitted, or proposed to be submitted, by a Minister (including a Minister of
a State),[86]
to the National Cabinet
Item 16 amends paragraph 34(1)(c) of the FOI
Act so that the Cabinet exemption applies to documents that are brought
into existence for the dominant purpose of briefing a Minister, (including a
minister of a State), on a document submitted or proposed to be submitted to
the National Cabinet.
Comment
These amendments in items 15 and 16 are aimed at
ensuring that all documents and deliberations of National Cabinet and its
various committees will be exempt from FOI.
Professor Twomey was asked during the Senate Committee
inquiry hearings on 27 September 2021 to take on notice a question about
the effect of references to State Cabinet that are made in Schedule 3 to see
whether they would potentially be unconstitutional or would undermine the
federal system. In relation to these FOI amendments (items 15 and 16),
Professor Twomey noted that, while these were substantive amendments which
will reduce the transparency of National Cabinet, she does not think that they
interfere in any way with the States. She submits:
The only substantive changes directly relevant to the States
are in the Freedom of Information Act. The proposed amendments to s 34
would extend the application of a conclusive exemption to National Cabinet
documents, including documents submitted (or proposed to be submitted) to the
National Cabinet by a State Minister and documents brought into existence for
the dominant purpose of briefing a State Minister on a National Cabinet
document. While these proposed amendments would expand the scope of s 34 in a
way that reduces transparency concerning the National Cabinet, I do not think that
they would interfere in any way with the States.[87]
Application
provision affecting the FOI Act amendments
Item 33 is an application provision affecting the
amendments to the FOI Act. It provides that the amendments will apply
- in
relation to requests for access to a document made on or after commencement and
- in
relation to requests for access to a document made, but not finally determined
before commencement.
The Government considers that a request is not ‘finally
determined’ unless all rights of review or appeal have expired or have been
exhausted.[88]
Some submitters questioned the retrospective application
of this provision, the Grata Fund for example submitting it is:
[…] a clear attempt to prevent public scrutiny of government
decision-making during the COVID-19 pandemic, despite the fact that COAG would
not have enjoyed those same privileges.[89]
Archives Act
1983
Under the Archives Act 1983,
the National Archives of Australia is responsible for providing that all
Commonwealth records, other than exempt records, are to be made available to
the public when they are in the open access period.[90]
Under the Act most Commonwealth records other than Cabinet notebooks are in the
open access period 20 years after they came into existence.[91]
Cabinet notebooks created after 1990 are not in the open access period until 30
years after they came into existence.[92]
Cabinet notebook is currently defined in subsection 3(1)
to mean:
… a notebook or other like record that contains notes of
discussions or deliberations taking place in a meeting of the Cabinet or of a
committee of the Cabinet, being notes made in the course of those discussions
or deliberations by, or under the authority of, the Secretary to the Cabinet.
Item 6 amends this definition with the effect that
a ‘committee of the Cabinet’ will include ‘National Cabinet and a committee of
the National Cabinet (however described)’.
The effect of this amendment will be that notebooks and
any records containing notes of discussions or deliberations of National
Cabinet and its various committees will not be accessible for 30 years.
Comment
Several submitters to the Senate Committee inquiry into
the Bill questioned the rationale for this amendment. Professor Twomey says
‘locking up’ National Cabinet notebooks for 30 years appears far from necessary[93]
and the Law Council agrees, noting that there is no apparent reason for this
‘status-based exclusion from the open-access period’ which will ‘lock-down’
historical access to these documents.[94]
Other
amendments affecting access to National Cabinet information
Apart from the amendments to the FOI Act and the Archives
Act, Schedule 3 contains amendments to 13 other Acts.[95]
The purpose of these amendments is to limit access to documents and deliberations
of National Cabinet and its various committees in legislation dealing with,
amongst other things: the information gathering powers and public reports of
independent oversight agencies; the statutory right of affected individuals to
obtain written reasons for administrative decisions which adversely affect
them; and the protection of public officials against reprisals for making
public interest disclosures of suspected wrongdoing.
In relation to these amendments Professor Twomey suggests
that, while the documents coming from the National Cabinet may most likely be
peripheral or irrelevant in these legislative schemes, the amendments do raise
a question as to whether these limitations are really required and genuinely in
the public interest.[96]
The Law Council is concerned about the combined effect of
these amendments stating:
when operating collectively, the measures in Schedule 3 would
shut down the key legally enforceable avenues for public disclosure of the
proceedings and decisions of National Cabinet, and thereby make transparency
reliant on the beneficial exercise of ad hoc executive discretion in favour of
disclosure.[97]
This section of the Bills Digest selectively describes
some of these amendments. For further information the reader is referred to the
Explanatory Memorandum.
Administrative
Decisions (Judicial Review) Act 1977
Under the Administrative
Decisions (Judicial Review) Act 1977 (ADJR Act) federal courts have power to review Australian
Government decisions of an administrative nature, to determine whether they
have been made according to law.
Of relevance to the Bill the ADJR Act includes
provisions that prevent the disclosure of information or documents relating to
Cabinet. In particular under paragraph 14(1)(b), the Attorney-General may issue
a certificate stating that disclosure of certain information or documents may
be contrary to the public interest by reason of involving the disclosure of
deliberations or decisions of the Cabinet or a Committee of the Cabinet. In
general terms, the effect of the certificate is that a person who is required
to give a statement of reasons for their decision in accordance with
section 13 of the ADJR Act is not required to include in the
reasons the information that is subject to the certificate.
Item 5 amends paragraph 14(1)(b), the effect
being that the existing power to issue a public interest certificate under the ADJR
Act to prevent disclosure of deliberations or decisions of the Cabinet or
its committees will be expanded so that a public interest certificate could be
issued to prevent disclosure of deliberations and decisions of the National
Cabinet and its committees.
Comment
Schedule 3 also includes amendments to the Administrative
Appeals Tribunal Act 1975 (AAT Act) similar to the ADJR Act
amendments (see items 1-4). The AAT Act provides another avenue
for seeking review of Government decisions. Like the amendments to the ADJR
Act, the effect of items 1-4 is to limit the statutory right of
affected individuals to obtain written reasons for administrative decisions
affecting them, so as to exclude all National Cabinet information from those
statements of reasons.
Australian
Human Rights Commission Act 1986
The Australian Human
Rights Commission Act 1986 (AHRC Act) establishes the Australian
Human Rights Commission (Commission), its principal purpose being to
investigate and conciliate discrimination and human rights complaints.
Of relevance to the Bill, the Act includes provisions
preventing the disclosure of information or documents relating to Cabinet. In
particular under subsection 14(3), the Commission has the power to make a
direction that any evidence given to the Commission, or the contents of any
document produced to the Commission, must not be published, or can only be
published in accordance with the direction. For the purposes of deciding whether
to give a direction, subsection 14(5) lists a number of grounds that the
Commission is required to have regard to, including the need to prevent the
disclosure of deliberations or decisions of the Cabinet, or of a committee of
the Cabinet, of the Commonwealth or of a State. Item 10 amends paragraph
14(5)(c) so that the ground would be the disclosure of deliberations or
decisions of the Cabinet or State Cabinet.
Connected to this amendment, item 9 inserts new
definitions of Cabinet and State Cabinet into subsection 3(1). Cabinet
is defined to include:
- a
committee of the Cabinet (including the committee known as the National
Cabinet) and
- a
committee (however described) of the National Cabinet.
State Cabinet is defined as the Cabinet of a State
or a committee of the Cabinet of a State.[98]
The combined effect of items 9 and 10 is that
the Commission will be able to issue directions stopping the disclosure of
evidence or documents on the grounds of needing to prevent the disclosure of
decisions and deliberations of the National Cabinet or any of its committees.
The amendments do not change the Commission’s discretion to issue such a
direction or not.
Public
interest certificates
Under section 24 of the AHRC Act, disclosure of
information is also prevented by the use of public interest certificates. Relevantly,
under paragraph 24(1)(c), the Attorney-General may issue certificates to the
Commission certifying that the giving of information would be contrary to the
public interest by reason that it would involve the disclosure of deliberations
or decisions of the Cabinet or of a Committee of the Cabinet.
Item 11 amends paragraph 24(1)(c) to omit a
reference to ‘or of a Committee of the Cabinet’. The amendment is a consequence
of inserting the new definition of ‘Cabinet’ into subsection 3(1) (item
9 above). The combined effect of items 9 and 11 is to provide
that the existing power of the Attorney-General to issue a public interest
certificate to prevent disclosure of deliberations or decisions of the Cabinet
or its committees includes deliberations or decisions of the National Cabinet
and its committees. Issuing such a certificate means that neither the
Commission nor any other person acting for, or on behalf of, the Commission
could require that information to be disclosed.
Comment
The Bill proposes similar amendments affecting the issuing
of public interest certificates in the Ombudsman Act 1976
and Law
Enforcement Integrity Commissioner Act 2006. The Law Council expresses
concern about these amendments affecting independent Commonwealth oversight
bodies arguing:
[they] would be exposed to the Attorney-General potentially
issuing ‘public interest certificates’ which would override those agencies
information gathering powers in relation to any National Cabinet information
specified in those certificates.[99]
The Law Council also notes its long-standing reservation
about the existence of these statutory non-disclosure certification regimes in
their current form arguing:
they are unacceptable impediments to the independence of
statutory oversight bodies to obtain the necessary information to perform their
statutory functions of inquiring into the actions of executive government. The
expansion of the grounds on which those certificates may be issued, at the
pleasure of an individual Minister, would exacerbate those already significant
concerns.[100]
Auditor-General
Act 1997
The Auditor-General Act
1997 establishes the position of Auditor-General for Australia, who is
an officer of the Parliament with responsibility under the Act for auditing
Commonwealth entities and reporting these audits to Parliament.[101]
Part 5 of the Act sets out the information gathering
powers of the Auditor-General in the performance of its audit functions and
includes secrecy provisions. Section 37 places limits on the use and disclosure
of certain information. In relation to Cabinet, it provides that the Auditor‑General
must not include information in a public report in certain circumstances
including where:
- the
Auditor‑General is of the opinion that disclosure of the information
would be contrary to the public interest for reasons that it would involve the
disclosure of deliberations or decisions of the Cabinet or of a Committee of
the Cabinet or
- the
Attorney‑General has issued a certificate to the Auditor‑General
stating that, in their opinion, disclosure of the information would be contrary
to the public interest in that it would involve the disclosure of deliberations
or decisions of the Cabinet or of a Committee of the Cabinet.
Item 7 repeals and replaces paragraph 37(2)(b)
to include references to National Cabinet and its committees. The effect would
be:
- that
the Auditor-General must not include in public reports information that would
involve disclosure of deliberations or decisions of National Cabinet and its
committees, if the Auditor-General is of the opinion that disclosure of the
information would be contrary to the public interest and
- to
extend the existing power of the Attorney-General to issue a public interest
certificate to include a certificate to prevent disclosure of deliberations and
decisions of the National Cabinet and its committees.
The Independent
National Security Legislation Monitor Act 2010 (INSLM Act) provides
for the appointment of the Independent National Security Legislation Monitor (INSLM).
The INSLM independently reviews the operation, effectiveness and implications
of national security and counter-terrorism laws; and considers whether the laws
contain appropriate protections for individual rights, remain proportionate to
terrorism or national security threats, and remain necessary.[102]
In conducting reviews the INSLM has access to all relevant material, regardless
of national security classification, can compel answers to questions, and holds
public and private hearings.[103]
Under section 29 of the Act the INSLM must prepare and give
to the Attorney-General an annual report to be tabled in Parliament. If the
INSLM considers the annual report contains certain sensitive information a
version of the report, excluding that information (referred to as a
declassified report), must also be given to the Attorney. Information that must
not be included in the de-classified report includes information:
- obtained
from a document prepared for a meeting of the Cabinet or its committees (for
both Commonwealth and state) (subparagraph 29(3)(d)(i)) or
- that
would disclose the deliberations or decisions of the Cabinet or its committees (for
both Commonwealth and state) (subparagraph 29(3)(e)(i)).
Item 17 inserts new definitions for Cabinet and
State Cabinet into section 4. The definition of Cabinet is expanded so
that Cabinet includes a committee of the Cabinet, including the committee known
as the National Cabinet and a committee of the National Cabinet (however
described). A State Cabinet means the Cabinet of a State or a committee
of the Cabinet of a State.
Item 18 amends subparagraphs 29(3)(d)(i) and
(e)(i) reflecting these new definitions.
The combined effect of items 17 and 18 is
that INSLM de-classified reports must not include information obtained from a
meeting of National Cabinet and its committees or information that would
disclose the deliberations or decisions of National Cabinet and its committees.
Comment
These measures plus the amendments affecting the
Auditor-General were criticised by the Law Council on the basis that they would
‘limit the ability of the Parliament to inform itself about important matters,
for the purpose of discharging its Constitutional function of holding the
executive government to scrutiny and account, consistent with the doctrine of
responsible government’.[104]
Parliamentary Joint Committee on Law Enforcement Act 2010
The Parliamentary Joint Committee on Law Enforcement (PJCLE)
is established under the Parliamentary Joint
Committee on Law Enforcement Act 2010 (PJCLE Act). Under section
7 of the Act, the functions of the PJCLE include to monitor and to review the
performance by the Australian Criminal Intelligence Commission (ACIC) and the
Australian Federal Police (AFP) and to report to Parliament on these matters.
Subsection 8(1) of the PJCLE Act places obligations
on the Chief Executive Officer of the ACIC to provide information regarding ACIC
operations as requested by the PJCLE and to inform the PJCLE on the performance
of the ACIC’s function. Under subsection 8(2) the CEO is not obliged to comply
with such requests where satisfied that the information requested is sensitive
information and the public interest that would be served by giving the
information to the Committee is outweighed by the prejudicial consequences that
might result from giving the information. Subsections 9(1) and 9(2) replicate
these obligations with regard to the AFP Commissioner.
Sensitive information is defined to include,
amongst other things, information that would disclose:
Deliberations or decisions of the Cabinet or of a Committee
of the Cabinet, of the Commonwealth or a State (subparagraph (b)(i) of the
definition of sensitive information in section 3).
Item 26 repeals subparagraph (b)(i) of the
definition of sensitive information and substitutes:
(i) deliberations or decisions of the Cabinet, a committee of the Cabinet
(including the committee known as the National Cabinet) or a committee (however
described) of the National Cabinet; or
(ia) deliberations or decisions of the Cabinet, or a
committee of the Cabinet, of a State […]
The effect of this amendment is that information
disclosing the deliberations or decisions of the National Cabinet and its committees
is also sensitive information for the purposes of the PJCLE Act. This
would mean that, under subsections 8(2) and 9(2) respectively, the ACIC CEO and
AFP Commissioner would not be required to disclose deliberations or decisions
of the National Cabinet and its committees to the PJCLE.
Public
Interest Disclosure Act 2013
The Public Interest
Disclosure Act 2013 provides a scheme for the investigation of alleged wrongdoing
in the Commonwealth public sector and provides protective mechanisms for
current or former officials who make public interest disclosures under the
regime.
In addition to internal disclosures of alleged wrongdoing,
it is possible to make a disclosure externally (such as to the media or a Member
of Parliament) providing certain conditions apply. Of relevance, subsection
26(3) of the Act requires a public official to consider a range of factors when
determining whether to make an ‘external disclosure’ of alleged wrongdoing. One
of those factors is:
if any of the information disclosed in the disclosure is
Cabinet information—the principle that Cabinet information should remain
confidential unless it is already lawfully publicly available (paragraph
26(3)(b)).
Cabinet information is defined in section 8
as:
(a) information
contained in a document that is an exempt document under section 34 of the
Freedom of Information Act 1982; or
(b) information
the disclosure of which would involve the disclosure of any deliberation, or
decision, of the Cabinet or a committee of the Cabinet.
Item 30 repeals and replaces paragraph (b)
of this definition to provide that Cabinet information includes a deliberation
or decision of the Cabinet, a committee of the Cabinet, including the committee
known as the National Cabinet, and a committee of the National Cabinet (however
described).
The practical effect of this amendment would be to limit
the ability of individual public officials to make external public interest
disclosures of information that is ‘National Cabinet information’.
Other
provisions
Schedules 1 and 2
propose terminology changes in numerous Acts to support the new federal
architecture as established since the abolition of COAG.
Schedule 1—Amendments of references to COAG Reform Fund
The COAG Reform Fund was established under the COAG Reform Fund
Act 2008 as a mechanism through which the Commonwealth makes financial
assistance grants to the states and territories. The Act specifies that the
terms and conditions on which financial assistance is granted are to be set out
in written agreements between the Commonwealth and the states and territories.[105]
While COAG has ceased to exist and the architecture of
federal-state relations has been remodelled, the operation of the COAG Reform
Fund has not been affected by these changes.
Schedule 1 does not make substantive amendments but
rather makes name changes so that the ‘COAG Reform Fund’ as it appears in
legislation will instead be referred to as the ‘Federation Reform Fund’.
Part 1 amends the COAG Reform Fund Act so that:
- the
title of the Act is to be ‘An Act to establish the Federation Reform Fund, and
for other purposes’ (item 1)
- the
short title of the Act is to be the ‘Federation Reform Fund Act’ (item
2)
- all
other references to COAG are replaced with references to Federation (items 3
to 9).
Parts 2 and 3 of Schedule 1 make
similar amendments to other legislation that refers to the COAG Reform Fund.
For example, the DisabilityCare
Australia Fund Act 2013 includes provisions that provide for the
transfer of funds via the COAG Reform Fund to the states and territories
reimbursing them for expenditure.[106]
That Act includes a definition of COAG Reform Fund
meaning ‘the COAG Reform Fund established by section 5 of the COAG
Reform Fund Act 2008’.[107]
Item 10 repeals this definition and item 11 inserts a new
definition:
Federation Reform Fund means the Federation
Reform Fund established by section 5 of the Federation Reform
Fund Act 2008.
Items 27 to 37 will further replace all
other references to ‘COAG’ in that Act with the word ‘Federation’.
Schedule 2—Amendments of references to COAG and Ministerial
Council et cetera
A range of Commonwealth legislation includes provisions to
do with intergovernmental relationships. These include references to COAG and
its various bodies.
Schedule 2 would replace references in this
legislation to ‘COAG’ with references to the generic concept of a ‘First
Ministers’ Council’. That term is defined to mean:
a body (however described)
that consists only of, or that includes, the following:
(a) the Prime Minister;
(b) the Premiers of each State;
(c) the Chief Ministers of the Australian Capital
Territory and Northern Territory.
The Government considers this proposed definition to be
flexible enough to not only cover National Cabinet, but also future groups, as
well as groups that may include other members, such as state and territory
Treasurers.[108]
Schedule 2 would also replace references to
specific names of a Council (such as the COAG Health Council or Australian
Transport Council) with a generic term of ‘Ministerial Council’. The
current definition of Ministerial Council is to be repealed and the
following definition substituted:
Ministerial Council means a body (however described) that
consists of the Minister of the Commonwealth, and the Minister of each State
and Territory, who is responsible, or principally responsible, for matters
relating to [a particular portfolio issue].
Existing references to ‘Ministerial Council’ would
be amended to that effect.
The amendments to the Australian
Education Act 2013 provide an example of how these amendments would
work.
The Preamble of the Act provides, amongst other things:
In its role as a national policy leader, the Australian
Government will work collaboratively with States and Territories to achieve
agreed national objectives and priorities for schools through the Council of
Australian Governments and the Education Council.
Item 2 will amend this provision so that it reads:
In its role as a national policy leader, the Australian
Government will work collaboratively with States and Territories to achieve
agreed national objectives and priorities for schools through the First
Ministers’ Council and the Ministerial Council.
Item 3 inserts the following definition into section
6:
First Ministers’ Council means a body (however
described) that consists only of, or that includes, the following:
(a) the Prime Minister;
(b) the Premiers of each State;
(c) the Chief Ministers of the Australian
Capital Territory and Northern Territory.
Ministerial Council is currently defined in section
6 as:
Ministerial Council means the Council of
Commonwealth, State and Territory Ministers, as it exists from time to time,
with responsibility for school education.
Item 4 repeals this definition and substitutes:
Ministerial Council means a body (however
described) that consists of the Minister of the Commonwealth, and the Minister
of each State and Territory, who is responsible, or principally responsible,
for matters relating to school education.
There are also amendments that provide more flexible
definitions of other inter-governmental forums. For example, in relation to the
My Health
Records Act 2012, item 26 inserts the definition of the Health
Chief Executives Forum into the Act to mean:
[…] a body (however described) that consists of:
(a) the Secretary of
the Department and
(b) each head
(however described) of the Health Department of a State or Territory.
Item 27 repeals the outdated definition of Ministerial
Council and updates it with a definition of Commonwealth, State and Territory
Ministers who are responsible, or principally responsible, for health.
Items 28 and 29 remove references to a
subcommittee of the Ministerial Council, substituting with references to
the Health Chief Executives Forum.
Comment
The Government explains that this drafting approach is
‘intended to more flexibly support future title changes to intergovernmental
bodies of this kind without need for legislative amendments’.[109]
Submitters to the Senate Committee inquiry into the Bill generally
saw these amendments as technical, and non-controversial.[110]