However, neither the Labor Party
nor Centre Alliance can walk away from the shameful part they played in this betrayal.
A
bipartisan call to increase the Newstart allowance was removed from a
parliamentary report at the direction of the Morrison government on
the eve of the federal election.
As
Prime Minister Scott Morrison stares down growing demands by
Coalition MPs to lift the unemployment benefit for the first time
since 1994, The Sydney Morning Herald and The Age can reveal former
social services minister Paul Fletcher intervened in an inquiry to
erase a major recommendation that would have turbo-charged the
sensitive issue.
The
probe into the causes of long-term welfare was established by the
government in mid-2018 to investigate why some Australians become
trapped in the system.
The
draft final report - agreed to by MPs from the Coalition, Labor and
crossbench - contained a specific call to lift the Newstart payment
for singles and families.
But
sources said Mr Fletcher demanded to review the recommendations
before they were publicly released in April and is understood to have
told the committee chair - veteran Liberal MP Russell Broadbent -
that the final report could not contain the specific Newstart
recommendation.
The
committee, which included Liberal MPs Kevin Andrews, Bert van Manen,
Ben Morton and Rowan Ramsey, as well as Labor MPs Ged Kearney and
Sharon Bird, was then hastily reconvened to change the wording of the
report.
The
opposition's policy at the time was to merely review Newstart rather
than raise it.
Following
Mr Fletcher's intervention, MPs agreed to only recommend an
examination of the "adequacy of payments on young people and
single parent families".
In
a sign of the growing sensitivity of the issue, Mr Morrison on
Tuesday warned Coalition MPs against airing personal views, telling
them "government is not a blank cheque" and that they
disrespected colleagues by pursuing personal policy agendas.
Amended
Final
Report
can be found here.
Australian
Parliamentary Library Briefing
Book,
retrieved
18 July 2019;
From
20 March 2020, Newstart Allowance will be replaced by a new JobSeeker
Payment. Over time a number of other working age payments such as
Sickness Allowance and Widow Allowance will end and recipients will
also move to the JobSeeker Payment. The new payment will have the
same payment rates and indexation arrangements as Newstart Allowance.
This is part of a 2017–18 budget measure that aims to simplify the
income support system. [my
yellow highlighting]