Source: SMH 2006 (see p. 2)Yet ministers in the Government are confident they will not be directly implicated in the [AWB] affair. The Government's own scouring of the files show there is no document demonstrating any direct ministerial knowledge that the kickbacks were being paid, senior figures in the Government say.
Under the earlier definition of the doctrine of ministerial responsibility, this wouldn't have mattered. According to the text Constitutional and Administrative Law, by E.C.S. Wade and G. Godfrey Phillips - a book that was on Howard's undergraduate reading list - ministerial responsibility requires that "for every act or neglect of his department a minister must answer". So even if ministers didn't know about the bribery, they should still be held responsible for what happened at what was, at the time, a government board.
But Howard has redefined the doctrine. Under his code of ministerial responsibility, "this does not mean that ministers bear individual liability for all actions of their departments. Where they neither knew, nor should have known about, matters of departmental administration which come under scrutiny, it is not unreasonable to expect that the secretary or some other senior officer will take the responsibility."
So, the notion of ministerial responsibility has changed (as all with an interest in the federal arena would know), but has it changed for the better or worse when one considers scandals such as those faced by the immigration department and the AWB? In your opinion, which notion of ministerial responsibility should apply to the current minister? If the issue occurred prior to a recent changing of the guard, should either notion apply to minister at the helm at the time of the problem in question if the then minister still retains a ministerial position? Furthermore, should both ministers be culpable in such an instance?
Discuss away.
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Edit (8/8/2006): Win at all costs is eroding democracy
What do you think? Should principles regarding government accountability be developed and actually enforced?Win at all costs is eroding democracy
Matthew Moore Freedom of Information Editor
August 8, 2006
AUSTRALIAN governments are so practised at frustrating the democratic process that legislation is urgently needed to try to make them accountable, a report urges.
Authors of the paper, including a former Liberal speaker of the NSW Parliament, Kevin Rozzoli, and a former Labor speaker from the Victorian Parliament, Ken Coghill, say an ever-growing desire to maintain political advantage has eroded the way democracy operates.
[continued - see link]
Also of interest may be this thread: Senate Committees - Controlling the Agenda
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