Economy In its second term of office, the Morrison government initially continued the Coalition's program of tax cuts and Budget deficit reduction, however the arrival of the
COVID-19 pandemic in Australia from early 2020 led to a dramatic increase in government expenditure and a brief recession by September 2020. The
second Frydenberg Budget was delayed until October 2020, with the global economy facing its greatest crisis since the
Great Depression. Two years into the pandemic, the economy was recovering strongly. By December 2021, the economy was 3.4 per cent bigger than it had been before the commencement of the pandemic, and unemployment was at 4.2%, which was lower than it had been prior to the pandemic. During the period, the Morrison government concluded free trade agreements with
Indonesia,
the United Kingdom and
India. These followed on from the
Japan,
South Korea and
China free trade agreements negotiated by the Coalition during the term of the
Abbott government.
Income tax cuts The government's income tax cut election commitments were legislated in the form of the Treasury Laws Amendment (Tax Relief So Working Australians Keep More Of Their Money) Bill 2019. In total the legislation provided $158 billion in income tax cuts. Despite opposing
Stage 3 of the legislation (set to come into effect after 2022) which flattened the tax rate to 30% for all workers earning between $45,000 and $200,000, the Labor Party voted in favour and only the
Greens voted against the bill.
2020 Coronavirus recession On 2 September 2020, Australia was declared to be officially in a recession as GDP fell 7 per cent in June, the first time since the early 1990s. However, by December 2020 Australia was out of the recession after recording a GDP growth rate of 3.3% in the September quarter. As part of the Coronavirus-recession, Frydenberg attempted to wind back Rudd-era reforms to responsible lending obligations.
Defence, Foreign Affairs and Trade at a
Quad meeting with Japanese Prime Minister
Yoshihide Suga, the Indian Foreign Minister, and the U.S. Secretary of State
New Zealand The Morrison government continued the Australian policy of deporting non-citizens who had committed crimes under Section 501 of the
Migration Act 1958, which was enacted by the
Abbott government in December 2014.
New Zealanders residing in Australia were particularly affected by the policy; with 1,300 having been repatriated to New Zealand by July 2018. Due to the close
bilateral relations between the two countries, New Zealanders in Australia enjoy special work and residency rights. In response to
Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern's criticism that the deportation policy was having a "corrosive" effect on bilateral relations, Morrison defended the policy on law and order grounds. In February 2021, Morrison defended his government's decision to revoke the citizenship of dual Australian–New Zealand citizen
Suhayra Aden, who had become an
ISIS bride. Ardern had criticised the decision, accusing Australia of abandoning its citizens. Following a phone conversation, the two Prime Ministers agreed to work together to resolve Aden's situation. In August 2021, Aden and her children were repatriated to New Zealand. Despite disagreements on immigration issues, Australia and New Zealand have collaborated on other international issues. In December 2020, Wellington sided with Canberra during a dispute with China over a controversial social media post by
Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesperson
Zhao Lijian accusing Australia of committing war crimes in Afghanistan in response to the
Brereton Report. In late May 2021, Morrison and Ardern issued a joint statement in
Queenstown affirming bilateral cooperation on the issues of COVID-19, bilateral relations, security issues in the Indo-Pacific such as the
South China Sea dispute, and human rights in Hong Kong and Xinjiang. In March 2022, Wellington also supported Canberra's concerns about a planned security pact between China and the Solomon Islands. In late March 2022,
Home Affairs Minister Karen Andrews and
New Zealand Immigration Minister Kris Faafoi announced that Australia had accepted a longstanding New Zealand offer to accept 150 refugees a year from the
Nauru Regional Processing Centre or asylum seekers temporarily in Australia for "processing." While Morrison's Labor predecessor
Julia Gillard and her New Zealand counterpart
John Key had initially reached the refugee resettlement deal in 2012, subsequent Liberal governments had reneged on New Zealand's offer due to concerns that it would encourage more asylum seekers to use New Zealand as a backdoor for immigrating to Australia.
Brereton Report The
Brereton Report into war crimes allegedly committed by the Australian Defence Force (ADF) during the War in Afghanistan between 2005 and 2016 delivered its final report on 6 November 2020. The redacted version was released publicly on 19 November 2020. The report found evidence of 39 murders of civilians and prisoners by (or at the instruction of) members of the
Australian special forces, which were subsequently covered up by ADF personnel. The Morrison government established a new Office of the Special Investigator to investigate further criminal conduct and recommend prosecution of individuals involved. In December 2020, Home Affairs Minister Peter Dutton appointed former Judge of the Supreme Court of Victoria, Mark Weinberg as the Special Investigator. The Department of Defence released a plan to respond to the findings of the Brereton Report on 30 July 2021.
Evacuation of Afghanistan During the
2021 evacuation of Afghanistan in August 2021, the Morrison government deployed 250 Australian soldiers and three
Royal Australian Air Force aircraft to aid in evacuations. Morrison, Defence Minister Dutton and Foreign Minister Payne also called on the Taliban to "cease all violence against civilians and adhere to international humanitarian law and the human rights all Afghans are entitled to expect, in particular women and girls". By 24 August, Morrison confirmed that Australian and New Zealand forces had evacuated more than 650 people from
Hamid Karzai International Airport in five flights. In addition, Australian forces also assisted with the evacuation of six Fijian
United Nations workers.
The Quad The Morrison government embraced the
Quadrilateral Security Dialogue between the Australia, India, Japan and the United States as a key pillar of its
Indo-Pacific strategy. On 24 September 2021, US President
Joe Biden hosted the first in-person Quad Leaders’ Summit with Prime Minister Morrison, Indian Prime Minister Modi and Japanese Prime Minister Suga in Washington. The leaders announced further initiatives on COVID-19 vaccines, technology and climate change, and launched Quad cooperation on clean energy supply chains, infrastructure, cyber, outer space, and cultivating next-generation STEM talent. The group is also widely perceived as a democratic counterbalance to the rise of authoritarian China. Outlining his vision for the organisation, Morrison said ahead of the meeting: "We are liberal democracies, that believe in a world order than favours freedom and we believe in a free and open Indo-Pacific. Because we know that's what delivers a strong, stable and prosperous region. The Quad is about demonstrating how democracies like ours... can get things done."
AUKUS In September 2021 ahead of the Quad Leaders meeting in Washington, Morrison announced the
AUKUS security pact between Australia, the United Kingdom and the United States in a joint virtual press conference with US President
Joe Biden, UK Prime Minister
Boris Johnson. As part of the pact, the United States and Britain will share defence technologies with Australia, including nuclear submarine technology for the first time. The agreement formed the most significant security arrangement between the three nations since World War Two, and came in the context of rapidly expanding naval and military spending by Communist China. As part of the deal, Australia scrapped a $90 billion submarine contract with a French State owned Naval company signed in 2016. French President
Emmanuel Macron reacted angrily to the announcement, publicly accused Morrison of lying, and recalled France's ambassadors to
Australia and the United States, as well as Malaysia and Indonesia. Macron's accusation was later said to have caused an avalanche of people disparaging Morrison's character, thought to have been a factor in the 2022 election loss. Morrison later said that the possibility of Australia losing all its submarine deals with no submarines as a result was the most stressful part of his prime ministership.
Australia–United Kingdom Free Trade Agreement In December 2021, the Morrison government formally signed the
Australia–United Kingdom Free Trade Agreement. The deal reduced restrictions on Australians to live and work in Britain, and will eliminate or phase out tariffs on a large range of products, including lamb, beef, sugar and dairy. The agreement was the first reached by Britain since its departure from the
European Union, which had created barriers to trade between the two nations. The Government called it "the most comprehensive and ambitious free trade agreement that Australia has concluded, other than with New Zealand..."
Counter-terrorism The
Counter-Terrorism (Temporary Exclusion Orders) Act 2019 and related legislation passed the parliament on 25 July 2019. The legislation gives the
Minister for Home Affairs the power to issue an order barring an Australian citizen over the age of 14 from being able to enter Australian sovereign territory. A
Temporary Exclusion Order can only be issued when the Minister or
ASIO (Australia's foreign intelligence agency) reasonably suspects that the person is likely to commit or enable an act of terrorism in Australia, and can last for a maximum of two years. All Temporary Exclusion Orders must be submitted for review to a reviewing authority (an Attorney-General-appointment former Justice), and can be revoked by the reviewing authority for any one of nine reasons. The government controversially rejected the amendments suggested by the
Parliamentary Joint Committee on Intelligence and Security, which were supported by the opposition parties.
Russian invasion of Ukraine to Ukraine at the request Ukrainian President
Volodymyr Zelenskyy in 2022. The Morrison government denounced the February 2022
invasion of Ukraine by the Russian dictator
Vladimir Putin. Morrison told the nation on February 24 that the Russian government had launched a "brutal" and "unprovoked" invasion of Ukraine, and announced the imposition of sanctions on Russian interests. The Abbott government had previously taken a strong stance against Putin during the Russia's
invasion of Crimea and
incursions into Eastern Ukraine, as well as the shooting down of
Malaysia Airlines Flight 17. In the immediate aftermath of the 2022 invasion, Australia offered medical supplies, financial support and non-lethal military equipment to assist Ukraine. Morrison criticised China for not condemning the invasion, and accused the Chinese government of "throwing a lifeline" to Putin by lifting restrictions on trade with Russia. In the weeks following the invasion, Australia committed $116 million in military aid to support the Ukrainian war effort. Ukrainian President
Volodymyr Zelenskyy addressed the Australian Parliament on 31 March. Morrison called Zelensky a "Lion of Democracy" and told him ahead of his Parliamentary address: "Yes, you have our prayers, but you also have our weapons [and] our military aid. We stand with you, Mr President, and we do not stand with the
war criminal of Moscow." Zelensky thanked Australia for its support, and requested Australian-designed
Bushmaster armoured vehicles be sent to Ukraine. Morrison accepted the request.
Solomon Islands In response to the
2021 Solomon Islands unrest, the Morrison government dispatched personnel from the
Australian Federal Police and
Australian Defence Force. This was done at the request of
Prime Minister Manasseh Sogavare, who invoked the
Australia–Solomon Islands Bilateral Security Treaty. The Morrison government stated that this deployment was to support the
Royal Solomon Islands Police Force's efforts to main order and protect vital infrastructure in the island nation. In late March 2022, Foreign Minister
Marise Payne and Defence Minister
Peter Dutton expressed opposition to a draft security pact between China and the Solomon Islands that would allow Beijing to deploy military forces in the country and establish a military base. In response to Canberra's criticism, Sogavare defended the security pact with China, criticising the leaking of the document and objecting to the Australian media's coverage of the security pact. In addition, the Chinese government defended the bilateral pact and rejected Australian criticism that Beijing was coercing the Solomon Islands.
India Free Trade Agreement (left) and Indian Prime Minister
Narendra Modi meeting on the sidelines of the
East Asia Summit in
Singapore, November 2018 Australia and India launched negotiations for the
Australia-India Comprehensive Economic Cooperation Agreement (AI-CECA) in May 2011. Negotiations were suspended in 2015, but were revived in 2020 by Prime Ministers Morrison and
Narendra Modi. On 2 April 2022, An interim agreement was signed by Trade Minister
Dan Tehan and his Indian counterpart
Piyush Goyal. "India and Australia are natural partners. Like two brothers, both nations supported each other during the COVID-19 pandemic. Our relationship rests on the pillars of trust and reliability", Minister Goyal said.
Infrastructure construction site in 2021 , near the
Snowy 2.0 pumped hydro construction site. In April 2014, the
Abbott government announced approval for the
Western Sydney Airport, a second airport for the city at
Badgerys Creek, west of
Sydney's CBD. In November 2021, Prime Minister Morrison said the Coalition government had invested over $14 billion to the project, creating 11,000 jobs. With terminal construction commencing, Morrison said the project was already 25 per cent complete "as a result of a great partnership, a partnership between the federal Liberals and Nationals and the state Liberals and Nationals working closely to secure Australia’s economic future and to secure the success of Western Sydney." In 2017, the
Turnbull government announced plans for
Snowy 2.0, a $2bn construction project to increase the capacity of
Snowy Hydro by 50% through 'pumped hydro' technology. Following extensive environmental and feasibility study, the Morrison government announced Federal approval for implementation of the project in June 2020. Unveiling a tunnel boring machine for Snowy 2.0 in December 2021, Morrison said: "Snowy 2.0 is building on the proud legacy of the first Snowy scheme, using local ingenuity to deliver landmark new infrastructure that will benefit Australia and the national electricity market for decades to come."
Indigenous Affairs , the first indigenous Australian to sit in Cabinet The Morrison government's second term commenced with the historic appointment of
Ken Wyatt as
Minister for Indigenous Australians in the
Second Morrison Ministry. Wyatt became the first
Aboriginal person to sit in Cabinet and hold the indigenous affairs portfolio. On the eve of
Australia Day, 2022, the Morrison government announced that it had transferred the
Aboriginal flag's copyright to the Commonwealth. Prime Minister Morrison said the flag had been "freed" for all Australians to use without asking for permission or the need to pay someone. Copyright was originally held by the original designer
Harold Thomas, however non-Indigenous company WAM Clothing had bought exclusive rights to the flag in November 2018.
Religious freedoms The dispute between professional rugby player
Israel Folau and
Rugby Australia was a major story during the federal election campaign. In the previous parliament, the two major parties had been unable to agree on legislation which would have removed the right of religious schools to expel
LGBT students and sack homosexual teachers. Amidst intense pressure from conservative MPs, the government in August 2019 released a draft bill focusing on
religious freedom. The draft legislation included provisions preventing employers from limiting the religious expression of workers in their private capacity (unless the business can prove it is a "reasonable" limitation and necessary to avoid unjustifiable financial hardship) and explicitly overrides a Tasmanian anti-discrimination law, which prohibits conduct which "offends, humiliates, intimidates, insults or ridicules" based on protected grounds including gender, race, age, sexual orientation, disability and relationship status. The government had promised to introduce the bill to the parliament before the end of 2019 but objections from conservative religious groups and
LGBTIQ equality advocates forced the government to delay and re-draft the bill. In March 2020 the government dropped draft legislation to protect gay students and teachers from being expelled or sacked from religious schools. In November 2021 the Cabinet signed off on a revised religious freedoms bill, that included a "statements of belief" protection, meaning such statements could not be considered discriminatory so long as they don't threaten, intimidate, harass or vilify a person or would be considered malicious to a "reasonable person". The statement of beliefs clause would override any countervailing state or territory laws. The bill retained a clause that allows faith-based institutions, such as religious schools and hospitals, to positively discriminate against people who do not share or practice their faith. These institutions would be required to have a publicly available policy that clearly explained how those religious views would be enforced. In early February, Morrison confirmed that he would seek support from the Liberal Party to amend the
Sex Discrimination Act 1984 to scrap a clause allowing religious schools to discriminate against same-sex and gender diverse students. His announcement came in response to
Citipointe Christian College's unsuccessful attempt to get families to sign an anti-gay and anti-trans enrolment contract. Morrison had earlier introduced religious discrimination legislation into the Australian Parliament protecting certain expressions of religious expression and overrode state laws limiting when religious schools can give preferentially employment to staff of the same faith. Morrison's plan to amend the Sex Discrimination Act drew opposition from the
Australian Christian Lobby and
Christian Schools Australia, which threatened to withdraw their support for Morrison's religious discrimination legislation. The national LGBT advocation organisation
Equality Australia welcomed Morrison's commitment to amend the Sex Discrimination Act but called for the proposed religious discrimination legislation to be scrapped. Following an all-night marathon sitting, the government's
Religious Discrimination Bill 2022 passed its third reading in the House of Representatives, despite five Liberal MPs voting with the Labor Party to pass amendments to the Sex Discrimination Act banning religious schools from discriminating against students on gender and sexuality grounds following a failed attempt by the government to defeat its own legislation. This amended legislation was referred to the Senate, where the government chose to remove the bill from consideration until after the 2022 election.
Electoral Reforms In Late 2021 the government had plans for a
Voter ID Law, the electoral committee had recommended it after the 2013, 2016 and 2019 elections. Under the proposed voter integrity bill, a voter unable to produce ID can still vote if their identity can be verified by another voter, or by casting a declaration vote, which requires further details such as date of birth and a signature. One Nation leader,
Pauline Hanson, has claimed credit for the Coalition's voter integrity bill, saying she made voter identification a condition for her support. The Labor party and the Greens were opposed to the Voter ID bill, forcing the government to approach the remaining crossbench senators – Griff Stirling, Rex Patrick and Jacqui Lambie – to try and pass the bill. After Senator Patrick came out against the Bill, calling it "a solution looking for a problem" and Senator Lambie announced her intention to vote against the bill siting more time was required to consider the bill, the government announced that they would defer the issue until after the election. Also The government had In August 2021, the
Electoral Legislation Amendment (Party Registration Integrity) Bill 2021 legislation which passed. The bill that made the rules surrounding the
registration of political parties stricter. The membership requirements for a party was increased from 500 to 1500, and parties could not have names that were too similar to political parties registered before them. The tightening of party registration rules was reportedly due to an increase of parties on the Senate ballot, which resulted in the requirement of magnifying sheets for some voters to read the ballot, and a perception that voters would be misled by names of some minor parties. Trade union groups, Labor and the Greens opposed the bill, saying it was "contrary to international law and Australia’s commitments" and "hostile to the interests of working people". Industry groups and the
Business Council of Australia argued the bill would "raise standards of conduct in the system" and would enforce penalties against "recalcitrant organisations". The votes of crossbench Senators
Jacqui Lambie and
Pauline Hanson were crucial to the outcome, with the government having brought the legislation to a vote under the impression Hanson and her
One Nation party colleague would support the bill. The government responded by refusing to rule out the possibility of bringing back the legislation at a later date if it felt it could command newfound support in the Senate. While touring bushfire hit communities in Queensland on 13 September, Morrison announced that people affected by the fires would be eligible for additional financial assistance of up to 13 weeks of support payments equivalent to the maximum rate of the Newstart Allowance. By November, fires had ignited in all states, and the severity of the fires worsened through December. On 11 December the Morrison government committed an $11 million grant to the National Aerial Firefighting Centre (NAFC), which coordinates the air fleet of federal, state and territory governments. On 4 January, the Prime Minister confirmed that the grant would become a permanent annual increase, and committed $20m to lease four extra large air tankers to combat the fires. On Christmas Eve 2019 the government granted public service volunteer firefighters an extra four weeks paid leave, and committed up to $6000 for volunteers from the private sector on 26 December. On 4 January the government announced the call up of an additional 3000 Army reservists to help with bushfire recovery efforts, along with the opening of defence force bases for emergency short-term accommodation, and the deployment of defence aircraft to assist in firefighting and , to sit off the coast should it be required to help with evacuations. On 9 January Morrison committed $2 billion to a national bushfire recovery fund. On 20 December Morrison cut short a family holiday to Hawaii after four days, amid an outcry that he had left the country during a crisis.
Sports rorts scandal The
"sports rorts" affair led to the resignation of
Bridget McKenzie from the cabinet. The subsequent election of a new deputy leader of the National Party turned into the
2020 National Party of Australia leadership spill when
Barnaby Joyce unsuccessfully challenged for the leadership. McKenzie was reappointed to the cabinet 17 months later. A report by Phil Gaetjens, the Secretary of the Department of the Prime Minister and Cabinet and Morrison's former chief-of-staff, found that the allocation of grants was not politically motivated, but that McKenzie had breached ministerial standards by allocating a grant to a gun club which she was a member of. The Gaetjens report was not released, with Senate leader Mathias Cormann claiming public interest immunity. Morrison maintained at this time that the grants program was not politically motivated, and that all projects that were funded were eligible, disputing the Auditor-General's report, which found that 43% of projects funded were ineligible, and that the grants program disproportionately favoured marginal and target seats. It was later found that the offices of Bridget McKenzie and Scott Morrison exchanged 136 emails concerning the sports grants, and McKenzie breached caretaker convention to make changes to the list of projects to be funded after the election was called, in at least one instance at the direction of the Prime Minister's Office. Morrison denies involvement.
Coronavirus The Morrison government announced an economic stimulus package to combat the effects of coronavirus on the economy. On 12 March 2020 the government announced a billion stimulus package, the first since the
2008 financial crisis. The package consists of multiple parts, a one-off A$750 payment to around 6.5 million welfare recipients as early as 31 March 2020, small business assistance with 700,000 grants up to $25,000 and a 50% wage subsidy for 120,000 apprenticies or trainees for up to 9 months, $1 billion to support economically impacted sectors, regions and communities, and $700 million to increase tax write off and $3.2 billion to support short-term small and medium-sized business investment. On 30 March the
Australian Government announced a $130 billion "JobKeeper" wage subsidy program, Scott Morrison later admitted there was a
$60 billion error in the calculation. The JobKeeper program would pay employers up to $1500 a fortnight per full-time, part-time or casual employee that has worked for that business for over a year. For a business to be eligible, they must have lost 30% of turnover after 1 March of annual revenue up to and including $1 billion. For businesses with a revenue of over $1 billion, turnover must have decreased by 50%. Businesses are then required by law to pay the subsidy to their staff, in lieu of their usual wages. This response came after the enormous job losses seen just a week prior when an estimated 1 million Australians lost their jobs. This massive loss in jobs caused the
myGov website to crash and lines out of
Centrelink offices to run hundreds of metres long. The program was backdated to 1 March, to aim at reemploying the many people who had just lost their jobs in the weeks before. Businesses would receive the JobKeeper subsidy for 6 months. Morrison promised in September 2020 that Australians stranded overseas would be “home by Christmas“, without consulting the rest of government.
Parliamentary workplace culture & sexual assault allegations During the term of the Morrison government, allegations of misconduct by Parliamentary members and staffers of the government, Opposition and cross benchers became a matter of intense scrutiny, as part of wider societal debate on the topic of the eradication of bullying, sexual harassment and sexual assault. These events led to widespread debate and demonstrations against mistreatment of women in Parliamentary workplace culture, as well as to debates about media coverage and due process. ; Independent Review into Commonwealth Parliamentary Workplaces On 5 March 2021, the Morrison government established the Independent Review into Commonwealth Parliamentary Workplaces, with support from the Opposition and crossbench. The review was conducted by the Australian Human Rights Commission and led by the Sex Discrimination Commission. The Review's Terms of Reference asked for recommendations to ensure that Commonwealth parliamentary workplaces were safe and respectful, reflecting best practice in the prevention and handling of bullying, sexual harassment and sexual assault. The report found that men in parliament were "more likely to perpetrate sexual harassment, while women were more likely to bully". On 8 February 2022, the Parliament issued a Statement of Acknowledgement of an "unacceptable history of workplace bullying, sexual harassment and sexual assault in Commonwealth Parliamentary Workplaces" which committed the Parliament to "continuing to build safe and respectful workplaces." ; Rape allegations Two separate historical rape allegations became public in February 2021, one regarding the alleged conduct of the Morrison government's Attorney General
Christian Porter when he was a child, and one regarding the alleged rape of a female Liberal staffer by a male staffer in the office of the Defence Minister
Linda Reynolds after hours, in the lead up to the 2019 election campaign. The allegations followed a similar allegation against the former Labor Opposition Leader
Bill Shorten, and emerged as female Labor staffers were also coming forward with allegations of sexual harassment and abuse by some male Labor colleagues in the workplace. On 15 February 2021,
Brittany Higgins, a former staffer in the office of Defence Minister
Linda Reynolds came forward in the media with an allegation that, in March 2019, she had been raped by a male staffer in the office of the Defence Minister after being taken their after hours following a heavy drinking session. Higgins took the matter to police on 24 February, and investigations are ongoing. Higgins said the support offered by her Liberal bosses had been inadequate after the alleged rape. After the ABC had announced that a "cabinet minister" was the subject of rape allegations, Attorney-General
Christian Porter came forward on 3 March 2021, to confirm that he had been the subject of the allegation that in 1988, when he was a 17-year-old boy, he had raped a 16-year-old girl. He denied the allegation. The woman who had made the allegation committed suicide in June 2020. NSW police pronounced the matter closed on the basis of "insufficient admissible evidence to proceed". Porter is currently suing the ABC for defamation, and the matter remains ongoing. The ABC campaigned strongly for the removal of the Attorney General. ABC political correspondent
Laura Tingle argued in an 3 March editorial for the
7:30 program that it did not matter if he been found guilty of a crime beyond reasonable doubt, but that "perception" was sufficient for his removal. She dismissed comparisons made by Porter to Labor leader
Bill Shorten. An
Essential poll found that 65% of respondents (including 76% of Labor supporters, 51% of Coalition supporters and 88% of Greens supporters) said that the government was more interested in protecting itself than women. As well as the
Labor and
Greens parties, the government faced criticism from within its own party. Former Prime Minister
Malcolm Turnbull, who had been made aware of the allegations against Porter in 2019, criticised him for taking too long to come forward. Former Prime Minister
John Howard, however, defended Morrison's decision not to open an independent inquiry into Porter's conduct.
Australian of the Year and sexual assault survivor advocate
Grace Tame also criticised Morrison's rhetoric. Tame lambasted at Morrison at her NPC address, criticising Morrison's use of the “as a father” phrase, as well as saying "It shouldn't take having children to have a conscience." ; Prima facie case on Christian Porter In October 2021, the Morrison government successfully voted against sending government MP
Christian Porter to the privileges committee regarding his blind trust. This vote was significant because the
Speaker Tony Smith had determined there was a
Prima facie case and in voting down the motion, the Morrison government became the first government to refuse a referral from the Speaker since
Federation. The move from the government attracted significant criticism in the media. Additionally,
the Leader of the House Peter Dutton did not allow crossbench MPs remoting into Parliament (due to COVID) to vote on the motion even though
the Senate allows voting in such a fashion. If MPs were permitted to vote remotely the vote likely would have ended in a tie, giving the Speaker the deciding vote. ; Senator Kimberley Kitching In March 2022, Labor Senator
Kimberley Kitching died of a heart attack, aged 52. Journalists revealed that in the lead up to her death she had been seeking assistance for alleged bullying by senior Labor Senators
Penny Wong,
Kristina Keneally and
Katy Gallagher. At the Senator's funeral, her husband said a "cantankerous cabal" had targeted the late Senator. Morrison called for Labor to conduct an investigation. Opposition Leader
Anthony Albanese refused to open an investigation, citing "respect" for Kitching as the reason.
Car park rorts affair The Morrison government was accused of ‘pork-barrelling’ over a $660 million commuter car park program that saw a large number of promised car parks targeted at Liberal Party held seats considered at risk in the 2019 election. The Australian National Audit Office ‘found that the federal government cash splash was ‘not administered appropriately and that there was no consultation with state governments and councils about where the money was needed.' It further found that 'there is little evidence to demonstrate that the selection of commuter car park projects was based on assessed merit against the investment principles or achievement of the policy objective.' This led to claims that the government's commuter car park program was an example of 'pork-barelling', which was amplified after a number of the proposed car parks were found to be unsuitable and cancelled. This was soon followed by leaked texts sent from Deputy Prime Minister Barnaby Joyce, who in March 2021 labelled the Prime Minister “a hypocrite and a liar” in text messages. Joyce offered his resignation to the Prime Minister but the offer was declined. In 2022, New South Wales state MP Catherine Cusack accused Morrison of politicising the Lismore floods and not doing enough to assist flood relief. Sitting Liberal Senator Concetta Fierravanti-Wells accused Morrison of being “unfit for office", an "autocrat", and a "bully" with "no moral compass". She also suggested Scott Morrison "has used his so-called faith as a marketing advantage".
Cabinet appointments In August 2022, it was revealed that Prime Minister
Scott Morrison had secretly been appointed to six ministerial roles: Treasurer, Health Minister, Minister for Industry, Science and Energy, Minister for Resources, Minister for Finance and Minister for Public Service. His colleagues say that they were unaware of his "secret appointments". == 2022 federal election ==