Brutal moment Scott Morrison is asked ‘are you listening at ALL’ as royal commission grills him over botched Centrelink robodebt program
- Former PM Scott Morrison has fronted the royal commission into robodebt
- The scheme falsely accused welfare recipients of owing money to the govt
- More than $750million was taken from recipients as many took their lives
- Mr Morrison was social services minister when it was enforced back in 2015
- He was grilled at the commission over why changes to welfare debt were made
- Commissioner Catherine Holmes SC asked him at one point if he was listening
Former prime minister Scott Morrison has repeatedly been told to listen to questions during a testy Royal Commission hearing into Centrelink’s botched robodebt scheme.
Robodebt involved using individuals’ annual tax filings to determine their average fortnightly earnings and then automatically establish welfare debts; an approach ruled unlawful by the Federal Court in 2019.
Mr Morrison was grilled over why the changes to welfare debt programs were adopted despite concerns about their legality when he was social services minister in 2015.
Former Prime Minister Scott Morrison (pictured) appeared at a Royal Commission into the failed Robodebt scheme
Mr Morrison was involved with implementing the scheme when he was social services minister in 2015
Records show the then-minister signed a departmental document which stated legislative change could be necessary, a note that was absent when the policy was later presented to cabinet for consideration.
Straying well off script as the inquiry progressed, Mr Morrison delved into the ins and outs of departmental processes and at one point brought the inquiry to a standstill over concerns of violating parliamentary privilege.
The frustrated commissioner, Catherine Holmes SC, asked the former prime minister at one point: ‘Are you listening at all?’
Mr Morrison told the commission he was not privy to communications between the departments and he assumed the concerns had been settled.
He said there was an ‘evolving understanding’ of what was required to implement the policy and this changed by the time it was presented to cabinet.
‘By the time of the submission going to cabinet, that view …had changed and advice was given that legislation was not required, by the department,’ he said.
Mr Morrison said he took on the social services portfolio with the express aim of overhauling the welfare system and reducing rorts.
As well as the legal concerns, early proposals for the scheme identified potential savings to the federal budget of $1.2 billion by more efficiently identifying welfare discrepancies.
Ms Morrison delved into the ins and outs of departmental processes and at one point brought the inquiry to a standstill over concerns of violating parliamentary privilege
The frustrated commissioner, Catherine Holmes SC, asked the former prime minister at one point: ‘Are you listening at all?’
Mr Morrison conceded the government had a strong desire to balance the budget and that it faced a hostile Senate, creating roadblocks for legislation.
Between 2015 and 2020 the scheme wrongly recovered more than $750 million from 381,000 people. More than 2000 people took their own lives while being pursued for the false debts.
Former human services minister Marise Payne told the royal commission on Tuesday she had no knowledge of why the legal issues flagged in earlier briefings were omitted from the final policy proposal.
When asked who held responsibility for advancing any concerns, Senator Payne said ministers were always ultimately responsible but they received advice from their departments.
Prime Minister Anthony Albanese announced a royal commission into the robodebt scheme back in August.
His government scrapped the debts of 197,000 robodebt victims that were still under review.