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Morrison ministries ‘breached Coalition agreement’: Senator

Governor-General defends actions on Scott Morrison

Scott Morrison breached the Liberal-National Coalition agreement by keeping his ministerial appointments secret, a former cabinet minister says.

Nationals senator Bridget McKenzie said the former prime minister’s decision showed “complete disrespect” for her party.

“Our Coalition arrangements are a negotiated outcome and they include a ratio of cabinet portfolios in a Coalition government,” she told ABC Radio National on Thursday.

“By essentially removing the authority of one of those ministers and giving it to a Liberal minister … [he] breached the coalition agreement.

“It showed complete disrespect for the second party of government … the National Party would not have agreed with having one of its ministers removed.”

Mr Morrison secretly appointed himself to the finance, treasury, health, home affairs and resources portfolios between March 2020 and May 2021.

Defiant Morrison defends actions

Former minister Karen Andrews said he had not called her to apologise after secretly swearing himself into her home affairs portfolio.

“I understand he has made a broad apology to his colleagues and I’m fine with that, it’s not an issue,” she told Sky News on Thursday.

Mr Morrison has personally apologised to Josh Frydenberg and Mathias Cormann for keeping his appointments to their portfolios secret.

But Ms Andrews is steadfast in her calls for the former prime minister to resign after he addressed the media on Wednesday, saying he took over the five portfolios in secret in the national interest.

“I made my statements a couple of days ago and I assure you I have not changed my views,” she said.

“It’s good we’ve had the line drawn in the sand by [Opposition Leader] Peter Dutton. He has made it clear that would not happen if he were to be elected.”

While Ms Andrews had no problem with contingencies being put in place, she said she did not understand the need for secrecy.

“For me, transparency is incredibly important,” she said.

“If you put in place contingencies, that’s a good thing … but they needed to be done in a matter of good governance.”

Mr Dutton said he would have told his former leader it was “inappropriate for him to be assuming these powers” had he been consulted at the time.

“My colleagues are rightly angry and aggrieved and I understand that. Scott has made the wrong call … and if he hasn’t spoken to Karen, then I believe he should,” he said.

Mr Dutton also called for the saga to move on.

“Most people want to move on and start dealing with issues that are more important, the rising cost of living,” he said.

“He’s apologised for it, he’s no longer occupying the office and there’s not much more you can continue to trail over it.”

Meanwhile, Governor-General David Hurley has revealed he had “no reason to believe” Mr Morrison would not make the appointments public knowledge.

The blame lay with Mr Morrison and not with the governor-general, Labor frontbencher Chris Bowen said.

“The governor-general was in a difficult position, he has to accept the advice of the government of the day,” he told ABC Radio National.

“I will not politicise or criticise the office of governor-general. I will politicise and criticise the office of the former prime minister because he is the one responsible for this imbroglio.”

Mr Morrison said on Wednesday he kept the roles confidential as he did not want to “undermine the confidence of ministers in the performance of their duties”.

He said he only used the extra powers once, to block a gas drilling project off the NSW coast.

Nationals MP Keith Pitt held the resources portfolio at the time.

Mr Morrison’s decision, made in 2021, is now the subject of a Federal Court appeal.

Prime Minister Anthony Albanese is seeking advice from the solicitor-general on whether his predecessor’s actions have legal implications.

Home Affairs Minister Clare O’Neil said her office was working to check for any other decisions that could have been made by Mr Morrison.

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