Grattan on Friday: winners and losers in end-of-year report card on Albanese ministers
It’s not just kids who get report cards (PDFs these days) as school breaks up. So do government ministers, when parliament rises at year’s end.
Judgments about how members of the team have performed, often public but also private, are made by stakeholders, the media, colleagues and ultimately the prime minister.
As Christmas looms, the Minister for the National Disability Insurance Scheme,
Shorten this week has not only launched his review of the NDIS, but seen national cabinet agree to a deal to curb the scheme’s cost explosion, shifting (with the way smoothed by generous Commonwealth funding) some of the responsibility for disability services onto the states.
Shorten can claim to be the original “father” of the NDIS in the days of the former Labor goverrnment; having to reshape it to make it sustainable is the classic poisoned chalice, but he was the best person in the government for the task.
We won’t know for several years how well the changes of the NDIS itself and the federal-state agreement for more service-sharing are actually working. It will be a long reform process, and much will depend on whether the states meet their obligations. But a direction has been set.
Burke this week will be receiving high marks from the unions. Right at the end of the parliamentary sitting he clinched a deal with
Parts of the legislation, covering protections for gig economy and casual workers, remain held up until next year, but Burke has secured more of it this year than seemed likely only a few days ago.
For some other ministers, their end-of-year assessments say “substantial improvement needed”.
Most recently, Home Affairs Minister
The government should have been prepared for all eventualities, even if it thought this particular outcome was unlikely. It should have had legislation ready to go. That it did not is as much (or more) the fault of the public servants as of the ministers, but it’s the ministers who have to carry the responsibility.
The sprawling
O'Neil, whose vast empire ranges from cyber security to migration and border security, has plenty of potential but a style that usually defaults to the politics. It’s a better look when a minister rations their attacks on their opponents. This government in general and O'Neil in particular too often seem preoccupied with Opposition Leader
O'Neil is about to have another late-year test, when the government releases its migration policy. She’ll be glad of a respite from the ex-detainees imbroglio, but migration is an inherently fraught area. The policy, many months in the making, will have to be well-pitched, with answers to whatever criticisms emerge.
Giles, meanwhile, is in charge of administering the preventative detention scheme the parliament approved on Wednesday – making applications to court for the re-detention of people who previously committed major crimes and are considered to pose high risks of doing so again.
That will apply to only a limited number of the former detainees. If others, who are still in the community, are arrested, Giles will have to deal with bouts of bad publicity. (So far, five have been arrested.)
For a couple of other ministers, it’s been a very difficult year. Minister for Indigenous Australians
Infrastructure and Transport Minister
More seriously, her announcement of the government’s cuts to parts of the infrastructure program (though not the total value of the program) has produced blowback from the states. There will be ongoing arguments about the details that will put further pressure on King.
In contrast, ministers such as Treasurer
As Deputy Prime Minister and Defence Minister,
Education Minister
The jury will be out for a long time on the performance of Climate Change and Energy Minister
Some commentators suggest a reshuffle is needed, but that would seem premature. However, more active prime ministerial and cabinet oversight is certainly required to sharpen the performance of the team.
What about the boss?
This week parliamentarians mourned the death of
Ping An of China CSI HK Dividend ETF(3070.HK)Won Yinghua Award*
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