Official: Ex-Aussie PM ‘undermined’ govt with secret roles

Australia's former prime minister Scott Morrison speaks to media during a press conference in Sydney on August 17, 2022. (STEVEN SAPHORE / AFP)

SYDNEY – Australia's Prime Minister Anthony Albanese said advice from the solicitor-general showed his predecessor Scott Morrison's secret appointment to ministries during the COVID-19 pandemic "fundamentally undermined" responsible government despite being legally valid.

The advice from the country's second highest law officer was a "very clear criticism" of the implications for Australia's parliamentary democracy, Albanese told reporters on Tuesday.

Albanese said his cabinet had agreed "there will be a need for a further inquiry" into the matter, to answer questions on how the unprecedented assumption of power occurred and the need for reform.

"Scott Morrison owes the Australian people an apology for undermining our parliamentary democracy system of government that we have – something that can't be taken for granted," Albanese said.

Former prime minister Scott Morrison's secret appointment to ministries was "inconsistent with the conventions and practices that form an essential part of the system of responsible government prescribed by the Constitution," the solicitor general's written advice showed

Morrison, who stepped down as leader of the Liberal Party after losing a general election in May, has faced a barrage of criticism from the Labor government and his own party, after it was revealed he was secretly sworn in to ministries without telling parliament or his cabinet, an unprecedented assumption of power.

In the written advice, the solicitor-general was critical that the public and Parliament were not informed of Morrison's appointment to the ministries.

This was "inconsistent with the conventions and practices that form an essential part of the system of responsible government prescribed by the Constitution," the advice said.

"That is because it is impossible for Parliament and the public to hold Ministers accountable for the proper administration of particular departments if the identity of the Ministers who have been appointed to administer those departments is not publicized."

Morrison's office did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

ALSO READ: Morrison says took secret roles because responsibility was his

Three ministers were unaware Morrison shared power over their ministries of home affairs, treasury and finance until last week. Morrison said he only intervened in one ministry, resources, to block an offshore gas project. The decision is now being challenged in court by the resources company.

A view of Australia's Parliament House in Canberra can be seen on March 22, 2020. (DAVID GRAY / AFP)

The solicitor-general's advice also found the Governor-General "has no discretion to refuse to accept the Prime Minister's advice in relation to such an appointment"

The solicitor-general's advice was Morrison's appointment to the resources ministry was legally valid.

It also found the Governor-General "has no discretion to refuse to accept the Prime Minister's advice in relation to such an appointment".

The Governor-General as largely ceremonial head of state had approved Morrison's appointment to the ministries, on Morrison's advice, but there was no public swearing-in ceremony.

Morrison said last week the coronavirus pandemic was an extraordinary time and he secretly took on the ministries because he felt responsibility for the nation was his alone.

Australia has a cabinet-based system that relies on a group of ministers governing, and not a presidential system.

READ MORE: Aussie PM says Morrison's secret roles 'undermined democracy'

The popularity of Albanese's government has soared since the May election win, with a Resolve Strategic opionion poll published by Nine newspapers showing Labor on a primary vote of 42 percent, up from 33 percent at the election, ahead of the Coalition's 28 percent.