29 July 2024

PM sends government agencies scrambling to prepare for new ministers

| Chris Johnson
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Hon Anthony Albanese MP, Prime Minister of Australia

Prime Minister Anthony Albanese has announced a wider-than-expected ministerial reshuffle. Photo: Michelle Kroll.

Anthony Albanese’s new-look front bench is all sworn in, with the Prime Minister promising to take this Cabinet to the next federal election.

But while all ministers have been tasked with making a mark in the face of Labor’s dwindling polling numbers, there is a frantic scramble across public service departments bracing for the changes their new bosses will implement.

For many agencies right now, it’s all about preparing incoming briefs for new ministers.

That’s a huge task for those affected by Sunday’s reshuffle, which was substantially broader than had been anticipated.

With the resignations of Linda Burney and Brendan O’Connor last week, speculation was their respective Indigenous Affairs and Skills and Training portfolios might have been the only ones reassigned.

However, the PM took the opportunity to make some sweeping changes and shake up the floundering Home Affairs and Immigration ministries.

Clare O’Neil was moved sideways from Home Affairs to become Housing Minister, while the embattled Andrew Giles was dumped from Immigration to take up Skills and Training.

As expected, Northern Territory senator Malarndirri McCarthy was named Minister for Indigenous Australians.

But it is Tony Burke who has emerged as the big winner from the shakeup. He is taking on a massive portfolio as the Minister for Home Affairs, Minister for Immigration and Multicultural Affairs, Minister for Cyber Security, Minister for the Arts, and Leader of the House.

READ ALSO Burney and O’Connor announce retirements, trigger PM’s first cabinet reshuffle

Murray Watt takes over from Burke as Minister for Employment and Workplace Relations, while Julie Collins leaves Housing to replace Watt as Agriculture Minister.

Pat Conroy takes his Defence Industry and International Development and the Pacific portfolios into Cabinet, while Jenny McAllister is Minister for Cities and Emergency Management.

“These combined changes, I think, represent a significant move forward,” Mr Albanese said.

“I would expect that this is the team that I will take to the election when it is held sometime in the future.”

In addition to the Cabinet and outer ministry changes, the Prime Minister tweaked the roles of a number of assistant ministers, including adding Assistant Minister to the Attorney-General to Patrick Gorman’s other assistant roles, which still include Assistant to the Prime Minister and Assistant Minister for the Public Service.

Matt Thistlethwaite is Assistant Minister for Immigration; Ged Kearney, Assistant Minister for Health and Aged Care and for Indigenous Health; Tim Ayres, Assistant Minister for a Future Made In Australia and Trade; Anthony Chisholm, Assistant Minister for Education, Assistant Minister for Regional Development and Agriculture; Kate Thwaites, Assistant Minister for Social Security, for Ageing and Assistant Minister for Women; Josh Wilson, Assistant Minister for Climate Change and Energy; and Julian Hill, Assistant Minister for Citizenship and Multicultural Affairs.

The PM also named three special envoys – Peter Khalil for Social Cohesion, Luke Gosling for Defence, Veterans’ Affairs and Northern Australia, and Andrew Charlton for Cyber Security.

READ ALSO Federal Police looking to strike when MPs return to Parliament as pay fight drags on

Mr Albanese denied Ms O’Neil and Mr Giles had made too many mistakes in Home Affairs, necessitating their removal.

He said identified dysfunctions in the department were leftover from the previous Coalition government.

“What Clare O’Neil and Andrew Giles have had to do is to repair the damage which has been done,” the Prime Minister said.

“There is one change to the Department of Home Affairs, which is that ASIO will move to the Attorney-General’s Department, so it will be there with the Australian Federal Police.

“That’s something I’ve discussed with the Director General of ASIO. [We did] what we had to do. What you do when there’s a reshuffle is that there is a change that then has a knock-on effect.

“The fact is that we have been a very stable government.”

The changes mount up to some serious admin and paperwork for the Australian Public Service this week, with so many agencies affected.

Incoming briefs are the first opportunity for department heads to impress on their new political masters that their portfolios are in safe hands and ready for smooth transitions.

Informing incoming ministers of department priorities and the status of policies is an immediate focus for public servants at all levels of the APS.

Some departments have incoming briefs already essentially prepared, or at least well in train, in anticipation of expected changes, but the size and depth of the ministerial reshuffle has caught many of them by surprise.

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Heywood Smith12:15 pm 30 Jul 24

Burke was moved simply due to his links with the CMFEU. AlboGoEasy thinks by doing so, he and Burkey can avoid all the union corruption scrutiny they are both well aware of.

Tony Burke is doing a Scott Morrison – Minister for everything. Albanese must think he is a threat and given him these portfolios so he doesn’t have time to scratch himself, let alone plot against him

Albert South12:08 pm 30 Jul 24

Burke is not doing a Morrison.
Morrison, while Prime Minister, ended up with: Minister for the Public Service, Minister of Industry, Science and Energy, Minister for Resources, Minister for Home Affairs, Minister for Finance, Minister for Health and Aged Care, and Treasurer. Most of those gained without public, or even party, knowledge.
Burke is not Prime Minister, and is only getting Home Affairs minus ASIO, all in full view of the party, the media, and the public.

And every time they do we all scramble to get a new portrait of some nobody printed and put up on the wall, knowing it will be taken down and thrown away within 2 years max.
Invite them to a briefing on how to perform basic functions that they have no idea about, hand them a bunch of speech’s and wheel them out in front of the waiting crowds.

Not quite accurate. Most, if not all agencies, update their briefs for incoming ministers at least quarterly. They are working documents, not produced as one off, as the article suggests, knowing that reshuffles are part of business as usual.

Varies some depts don’t; but some secretaries are even briefing the next minister to be with the expectation they will win the election.

Albert South12:13 pm 30 Jul 24

Agreed. This is hardly “scrambling”. And “some serious admin and paperwork”? Oh, please. It’s the public service; admin and paperwork is their raison d’etre.

Heywood Smith12:17 pm 30 Jul 24

We havent updated IMB briefs where i work for years. Not sure where you pulled this jargon from. Same can be said for other Comm Gov depts ive worked in.

Heywood Smith12:18 pm 30 Jul 24

What an absolute load of BS. Any Secretary caught doing so would be sacked in seconds… How do you come up with this sh7T?

Stephen Saunders2:16 pm 29 Jul 24

Yeah right, O’Neil and Giles have “repaired the damage”, with a million migrants in two years flat.

Albert South1:07 pm 01 Aug 24

@Stephen, this ABS site indicates that arrivals and departures are only back to 2019 levels. See table 1.3.
https://www.abs.gov.au/statistics/industry/tourism-and-transport/overseas-arrivals-and-departures-australia/latest-release#arrivals-and-departures

Deck chairs on the houso Titanic.

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