“In
terms of ministerial oversight, the portfolio has the following ministers: the
Minister for Home Affairs, who sits in the cabinet and who is also separately
sworn as the Minister for Immigration and Border Protection; the Minister for
Citizenship and Multicultural Affairs; the Minister for Law Enforcement and
Cybersecurity; and the Assistant Minister for Home Affairs. The core functions
of the department are policy, strategy, planning and coordination in relation
to the domestic security and law enforcement functions of the Commonwealth as
well as managed migration and the movement of goods across our borders…..four portfolio agencies that sit alongside the
department, which are statutorily independent, but they are within the
portfolio. They all, like me, report to the cabinet minister. The Australian
Federal Police, ACIC, AUSTRAC and Australian Border Force. That is four. Then,
with the passage of relevant legislation that is currently before the
parliament, ASIO will move across soon.” [Secretary Dept. of Home Affairs Michael
Pezullo at Senate Estimates
Hearing, Legal and Constitutional Affairs Legislation
Committee, 26 February 2018]
The
worry about concentration of political power per se and that power in inappropriate hands…….
Peter
Dutton is arguably the most powerful person in the country. In his new ministry
he has oversight for national security, for the Federal Police, Border Force
and ASIO, for the law enforcement and emergency management functions of the
Attorney-General’s Department, the transport security functions of the
Department of Infrastructure, Regional Development and Cities, the
counterterrorism and cybersecurity functions of the Department of Prime
Minister and Cabinet, the multicultural affairs functions of the Department of
Social Services, and the entire Department of Immigration and Border
Protection.
It is hard to imagine any member of
federal parliament less suited to exercise the sort of powers now held by
Dutton. It is easy to argue that no minister should be entrusted with such vast
powers. But the fact that those powers are in Dutton’s hands is seriously
alarming.
Ministerial powers are subject to
limits. The rule of law means that the limits are subject to supervision by the
judicial system. Most ministers understand that. Dutton apparently does not…..
On
April 7, 2018, Dutton called for “like-minded” countries to come together and
review the relevance of the 1951 Refugee Convention.
So,
here it is: Australia’s most powerful minister is wilfully mistreating innocent
people at vast public expense. He is waging a propaganda war against refugees
and against the people who try to help them. And he is trying to persuade other
countries to back away from international human rights protection.
He
tries to make it seem tolerable by hiding it all away in other countries, so
that we can’t see the facts for ourselves. [my
yellow highlighting]
Evidence
that the community concern is justified…….
Ministers
are planning to make it easier for the government to spy on its own citizens, a
leaked document has revealed.
As
it stands, the Australian Federal Police and Australian Security
Intelligence Organisation need a warrant from The Attorney-General
to access Australians' emails, bank records and text messages.
But ministers are reportedly planning
to amend the Intelligence Services Act of 2001 to allow Home Affairs Minister
Peter Dutton and Defence Minister Marise Payne to give the
orders without the country's top lawyer knowing.
The
intelligence - which could include financial transactions, health data and
phone records - would be collected by a government spy agency called the
Australian Signals Directorate.
The
plan was revealed by a leaked letter from Home Affairs Secretary Mike
Pezzullo to Defence Secretary Greg Moriarty.
The
top secret letter, written in February and seen by The Sunday Telegraph,
details a plan to 'hack into critical infrastructure' to 'proactively disrupt
and covertly remove' cyber-enabled criminals including child exploitation and
terror networks.
In
March, the plan was outlined in a ministerial submission signed by Mike
Burgess, the chief of the Australian Signals Directorate.
It
states: 'The Department of Home Affairs advises that it is briefing the
Minister for Home Affairs to write to you (Ms Payne) seeking your support for a
further tranche of legislative reform to enable ASD to better support a range
of Home Affairs priorities.'
But
a proposal to change the law has not yet been made.
A
spokesman for the Defence Minister Ms Payne said: 'There has been no request to
the Minister for Defence to allow ASD to counter or disrupt cyber-enabled
criminals onshore.'
An
intelligence source told The Sunday Telegraph that the proposals could
spell danger for Australians.
'It
would give the most powerful cyber spies the power to turn on their own
citizens,' the source said.
The
letter also outlines 'step-in' powers which could force companies to hand over
citizens' data, the source added.
The
submission says the powers would help keep Australian businesses and
individuals safe. [my yellow highlighting]
The inherent dishonesty
of the Dept. of Home Affairs…..
Secretary of Department of Home
Affairs Michael Pezullo,
Senate
Estimates, Legal and Constitutional Affairs Legislation Committee, 26
February 2018, denying the possibility of by-passing the judiciary and “the country's top lawyer”:
As I said at the last
estimates meeting of this committee, all executive power is subject to the
sovereignty of this parliament and to the supremacy of the law. In bringing the
security powers, capabilities and capacities of the Commonwealth together into
a single portfolio, these fundamentals will remain in place. All of them are
crucial attributes of liberty. I repeat what I said last year to this
committee: any contrary
suggestion that the establishment of Home Affairs will somehow create an extra
judicial apparatus of power bears no relationship to the facts or to how our
system of government works, and any suggestion that we in the portfolio are
somehow embarked on the secret deconstruction of the supervisory controls which
envelop and check executive power are nothing more than flights of
conspiratorial fancy that read into all relevant utterances the master
blueprint of a new ideology of undemocratic surveillance and social control.
[my
yellow highting]
Ministerial denial - of sorts....
When confronted by the mainstream media Dutton supported government spying on its citizens, saying he believes there is a case to be made for giving the Australian Signals Directorate more powers to investigate domestic cyber threats, with appropriate safeguards in place and "If we were to make any changes ... I would want to see judicial oversight or the first law officer (attorney-general) with the power to sign off on those warrants".
Hands up everyone in Australia who will sleep well knowing that the tsar has spoken. *crickets*