Andrew Bolt unleashes on Scott Morrison, secret ministry roles: John Howard defends former PM: Sky

Andrew Bolt has launched an extraordinary attack on former prime minister Scott Morrison, saying he ’embarrassed’ the Liberal Party and should ‘just go’.

The fiery salvo came after it emerged Mr Morrison secretly appointed himself to five additional ministerial portfolios over the last two years of his time as leader of Australia. 

The fired-up conservative commentator also blasted new Liberal leader Peter Dutton for defending Mr Morrison, saying it amounted to a ‘double disaster’.

But another former Liberal prime minister, John Howard, who led the country from 1996 to 2007, defended Mr Morrison’s actions – saying he should not resign from parliament over the scandal. 

Facing a wave of outrage from all sides of politics, Mr Morrison on Wednesday night issued a lengthy explanation – saying he made the unprecedented decision partly because he feared that ministers at any moment could be struck down with Covid.

But his reasoning did not wash with the Sky News presenter.

Scott Morrison (pictured centre, with his wife Jenny) ’embarrassed’ the Liberal Party, Andrew Bolt said

Timeline of Scott Morrison secretly appointing himself to five ministries

March 14, 2020: Mr Morrison appointed himself as the second Health Minister. The existing Health Minister, Greg Hunt, reportedly approved of the move

March 30, 2020: Mr Morrison appointed himself as the second Finance Minister. The existing Finance Minister, Mathias Cormann, was not told

April 15, 2021: Mr Morrison appointed himself as the second Resources Minister. The existing Resources Minister, Keith Pitt, was told. Mr Morrison went on to use his powers in the portfolio to force Mr Pitt to block the controversial gas project PEP-11.

May 6, 2021: Mr Morrison appointed himself as the second Treasurer and Home Affairs Minister. The existing Treasurer, Josh Frydenberg, and Home Affairs Minister, Karen Andrews, were not told

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Bolt gave an almost 10-minute long monologue on his program on Tuesday night lambasting Mr Morrison.

‘Former prime minister Scott Morrison has embarrassed, even devastated his party and today the scandal got even more bizarre,’ Bolt said. 

‘He’s finished, quit parliament now, just go.’

Bolt said Mr Dutton made ‘exactly the wrong call when he ‘defended Morrison when he should have cut him loose. Double disaster.’

He was furious Mr Morrison had gone on Sydney radio station 2GB on Tuesday to ‘defend his crazy decision’ to make himself the second Minister for Health, Resources and Finance and was asked ‘was that all, just those three’.

Mr Morrison denied there were any more, but shortly after it emerged that he had also appointed himself as the second Treasurer and Home Affairs Minister. 

‘What a shocking memory. Morrison had somehow forgotten being secretly sworn in by the Governor-General as minister of not just one more ministry, but two,’ Bolt said.

‘It seems that Morrison got a real taste of power when he became the other Health Minister, and over the next 14 months got hungrier and hungrier.’

Bolt was scathing over Mr Morrison’s actions as the secret Resources Minister, saying he got himself sworn into the position ‘not because of the pandemic crisis.

‘But quite openly because he wanted to kill off a gas project in NSW that was threatening to cost the Liberals seats in the election,’ he said.

The damning rant continued, with Bolt slamming Morrison’s clandestine backroom party moves as ‘outrageous’. 

‘Making himself the secret minister of five ministries that had ministers already in and not even telling four of the five minsters he’d done it, not even his good friend and flatmate, Josh Frydenberg?’ he asked rhetorically.

But Australia’s most popular prime minister leaped to the defence of the embattled former leader. 

John Howard (pictured) has defended fellow former Liberal prime minister Scott Morrison over secretly appointing himself to five ministries while he was the PM

‘I don’t think it’s something that is so reeking with principle as to require an unwanted, expensive, unnecessary by-election,’ Mr Howard said on ABC’s 7.30 show.

‘There are reasons why he did it. And part of the conservative tradition is to always understand the context.’

Bolt made fun of how Mr Frydenberg who had been staying with Mr Morrison at the prime minister’s official house in Canberra, The Lodge, but had no idea of what was going on.

‘He thought they were mates, this guy. Josh was out there saying (they’d) be sharing stuff and bunking together and chat, chat, chat at The Lodge during the pandemic.

‘And not once in these comfy little chats over the spag bol did Morrison lean over to his good mate Josh and say ‘Joshy boy, I’m now the Treasurer as well, it’s not just you, it’s me as well’.’

Bolt lashed out at Mr Dutton’s defence of his former boss calling it ‘the second tragedy for the Liberals’. 

Sky News presenter Andrew Bolt (pictured) spent almost 10 minutes lambasting Scott Morrison on Tuesday night

‘He said he didn’t know that Morrison had been appointing himself as the secret minister of almost everything, but today he defended him, and I think this was a big mistake.’

Mr Dutton backed Mr Morrison’s explanation that it was necessary to have himself sworn in to five ministries because contingency plans were needed during the pandemic.

But Bolt said this did not explain why it was done in secret and that making himself the Resources Minister ‘had nothing to do with the pandemic’. 

Mr Dutton should have used ‘this chance to draw a line between him and Morrison, (to) say ‘what Scott Morrison did was wrong, I don’t operate that way’,’ Bolt said.

Former Australian prime minister Scott Morrison (pictured) was lambasted on Sky News

Bolt said Mr Dutton should have ditched Mr Morrison to show that he’s a ‘Liberal with principles’ who ‘fights for a cause, not just power’.

He finished by saying that ‘every Liberal should be ashamed that it takes a Labor prime minister of the socialist left, a big government guy, to warn them against letting a prime minister centralise power in himself.

‘The Liberals are supposed to be the party of freedom. But look now. Under Scott Morrison it looks like they were the party just hungry for power.’

Scott Morrison’s full statement on why he took on so many roles

The devastating impacts of the Covid-19 pandemic and associated recession required an unprecedented policy response from our Government.

These were extraordinary times and they required extraordinary measures to respond. Our Government’s overriding objective was to save lives and livelihoods, which we achieved. To achieve this we needed to ensure continuity of government and robust administrative arrangements to deal with the unexpected in what was a period of constant uncertainty during the nation’s biggest crisis outside of wartime.

Information and advice changed daily and even hourly. Meetings with Ministers, officials and advisers were constant, as was liaison with industry and other stakeholders as we were dealing with everything from supply chain shocks to business closures, the overwhelming of the social security and hospital system and the sourcing of critical medical supplies and workforce. The prospect of civil disruption, extensive fatalities and economic collapse was real, especially in the early stages, which was occurring in other parts of the world.

Scott Morrison (pictured) released a long statement explaining why he secretly appointed himself to five ministerial portfolios

The risk of Ministers becoming incapacitated, sick, hospitalised, incapable of doing their work at a critical hour or even fatality was very real. The Home Affairs Minister was struck down with Covid-19 early in the pandemic and the UK Prime Minister was on a ventilator and facing the very real prospect of dying of Covid-19.

The Parliament was suspended from sitting for a time and Cabinet and others meetings were unable to be held face to face, as occurred with businesses and the public more generally.

As Prime Minister I considered it necessary to put in place safeguards, redundancies and contingencies to ensure the continuity and effective operation of Government during this crisis period, which extended for the full period of my term.

To ensure oversight, the Government, with the support of the Opposition, established a concurrent public Senate Inquiry into the management of Covid that effectively ran for the duration of my term as Prime Minister.

In addition I took the precaution of being given authority to administer various departments of state should the need arise due to incapacity of a Minister or in the national interest. This was done in relation to departments where Ministers were vested with specific powers under their legislation that were not subject to oversight by Cabinet, including significant financial authorities.

Given the significant nature of many of these powers I considered this to be a prudent and responsible action as Prime Minister.

 Former prime minister Scott Morrison (pictured) has come under fire for secretly appointing himself to five ministries in the last two years of his reign

It is not uncommon for multiple Ministers to be sworn to administer the same Department. However, given that such additional Ministers were in a more junior position in the relevant Departments, and would not be familiar with all the details of the pandemic response, I considered it appropriate that the redundancy be put in place at a higher level within the Government and not at a more junior level.

The major Department for which this was considered was the Health Department, given the extensive powers afforded to the Minister by the Biosecurity Act. This was put in place on March 14, 2020. The Department of Finance was added on March 30, 2020.

As an added administrative precaution, as a ‘belts and braces’ approach, the Departments of Treasury and Home Affairs were added some time after in May 2021. I did not consider it was likely that it would be necessary to exercise powers in these areas, but the future was very difficult to predict during the pandemic. As events demonstrated with the resurgence of Covid-19 in the second half of 2021, we could never take certainty for granted. In hindsight these arrangements were unnecessary and until seeking advice from the Department of Prime Minister and Cabinet today, I had not recollected these arrangements having been put in place. There was a lot going on at the time.

Thankfully it was not necessary for me to trigger use of any of these powers. In the event that I would have to use such powers I would have done so disclosing the authority by which I was making such decisions. The authority was pre approved to ensure there would be no delay in being able to make decisions or take actions should the need arise.

The crisis was a highly dynamic environment and it was important to plan ahead and take what precautions could lawfully be put in place to ensure I could act, as Prime Minister, if needed.

It is important to note that throughout this time Ministers in all Departments, where I was provided with authority to act, exercised full control of their Departments and portfolios without intervention. Ministerial briefs were not copied to me as Prime Minister in a co-Minister capacity, as this was not the nature of the arrangement. These arrangements were there as a ‘break glass in case of emergency’ safeguard. I also did not wish Ministers to be second guessing themselves or for there to be the appearance to be a right of appeal or any diminishing of their authority to exercise their responsibilities, as this was not the intention of putting these arrangements in place. I simply wanted them to get on with their job, which they did admirably and I am grateful for their service.

There have been calls for Scott Morrison to resign his seat in parliament over the scandal of him secretly appointing himself to five ministerial positions

The decision in relation to the Department of Industry, Energy and Resources was undertaken in April 2021 for separate reasons. This was the consequence of my decision to consider the issues of the PEP11 license directly. Under the legislation the decision is not taken by Cabinet, but unilaterally by a Minister with authority to administer that Department. I sought and was provided with the authority to administer matters in relation to this Department and considered this issue observing all the necessary advice and issues pertaining to the matter before making a decision, without prejudice, which I announced publicly. Once having been given the authority to consider this matter I advised the Minister of my intention to do so and proceeded to consider the matter. I retained full confidence in Minister Pitt who I was pleased to have serve in my Ministry. I believe I made the right decision in the national interest. This was the only matter I involved myself directly with in this or any other Department.

The use of the powers by a Prime Minister to exercise authority to administer Departments has clearly caused concern. I regret this, but acted in good faith in a crisis.

I used such powers on one occasion only. I did not seek to interfere with Ministers in the conduct of their portfolio as there were no circumstances that warranted their use, except in the case of the Department of Industry, Science, Energy and Resources which I have explained.

The pandemic has been a difficult time for Australia, although we have performed better than almost any other developed country in the world. There is no guide book in these circumstances and there is much commentary that will be offered in hindsight from the comfort of relatively calmer conditions. It is not surprising that some of this commentary will have a partisan or other motive, but that’s politics. In a democracy it is a positive thing for these issues to be discussed and for experience to inform future decisions and I hope my statement will help inform that process.

I have endeavoured to set out the context and reasoning for the decisions I took as Prime Minister in a highly unusual time. I did so in good faith, seeking to exercise my responsibilities as Prime Minister which exceeded those of any other member of the Government, or Parliament. For any offence to my colleagues I apologise. I led an outstanding team who did an excellent job and provided me great service and loyalty as Ministers.

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