17 Aug 2022

Australia's Scott Morrison says he secretly took five ministries because responsibility was his

8:04 pm on 17 August 2022

Australia's former prime minister Scott Morrison says he decided to be secretly sworn in to five key ministries during the pandemic because he felt the responsibility for the nation was his alone.

Australia's Prime Minister Scott Morrison attends a press conference at Parliament House in Canberra on April 10, 2022. - Australian Prime Minister Scott Morrison on April 10 called federal elections for May 21, launching a come-from-behind battle to stay in power after three years rocked by floods, bushfires and the Covid-19 pandemic. (Photo by AFP)

Former Australian Prime Minister Scott Morrison says the weight of responsibility was on his shoulders during the pandemic. Photo: AFP

Morrison, who stepped down as leader of the Liberal Party after losing a general election in May, addressed a news conference to answer a barrage of criticism from the Labor government and his own party over the unprecedented move.

Prime Minister Anthony Albanese said Morrison had attacked the Westminster system of government by secretly appointing himself to five portfolios including home affairs, treasury, health, finance and resources between 2020 and 2021.

Three of the ministers were unaware Morrison shared power over their ministries until the revelations this week, they said.

"I was steering the ship in the middle of the tempest," Morrison told reporters, recalling how the pandemic hit Australia in 2020.

"As prime minister only I could really understand the weight of responsibility that was on my shoulders and on no one else," he added.

Morrison said he didn't "take over" the ministries, after being sworn in by the Governor General, and no ministers were interfered with except on one occasion, where he rejected a resources project.

He said he did not inform the ministers because he would only use the powers in an emergency.

"The fact that ministers were unaware of these things is actually proof of my lack of interference or intervention in any of their activities," he said.

George Williams, a constitutional law expert at the University of New South Wales, said Australia has a cabinet-based system that relies on a group of people governing a country and not a presidential system.

"The secrecy itself is what really gets to the heart of why this is a problem," he said.

Treasurer Jim Chalmers said earlier on Wednesday Morrison's behaviour was "dictatorial" and whether he remained in parliament was a test of Liberal Opposition leader Peter Dutton's leadership.

Morrison rejected this, and said the emergency powers were put in place by a democratically elected prime minister and according to law.

Morrison's secret accumulation of ministerial roles began with the health and finance ministries in 2020, because of concern these ministers could be struck down with COVID-19 while wielding emergency powers.

In May 2021, Morrison also became home affairs minister and treasurer.

Morrison said this was partly due to the national budget being delivered in May and negotiations with Britain and the United States over the AUKUS deal for nuclear submarines.

Home Affairs minister Clare O'Neil told ABC TV the intelligence agencies were unaware Morrison was home affairs minister.

"The head of ASIO (Australian Security Intelligence Organisation), an agency for which I am responsible, did not know that there was a second home affairs minister for an entire year... This creates real vulnerabilities for us as a country," she said.

The solicitor general will provide advice on the matter to Albanese on Monday.

"This is fundamentally a trashing of our democratic system," Albanese said today, after listening to Morrison's press conference.

- Reuters

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