ALP rocked by immigration official's exit

March 6, 2025

Thursday 06 March 2025
Geoff Chambers
The Australian


 Anthony Albanese's top immigration official Emma Cassar who oversaw the  government's citizenship division and previously ran Daniel Andrews'  quarantine system in Victoria has quietly exited the Department of Home  Affairs just weeks out from the federal election.
 
 The Australian can reveal that days after Dr Cassar and senior Home Affairs  officials were grilled in a Senate estimates hearing last week, department  staff on Friday were alerted about her departure after only 11 months in the  job.
 
 Dr Cassar, who ran the migration system from her home base of Melbourne and  travelled between Canberra and Victoria, was appointed on March 25 last year  as associate secretary immigration, making her the second most senior Home  Affairs bureaucrat under department secretary Stephanie Foster.
 
 The secondment of the senior Victorian public servant, who served as Mr  Andrews' pandemicera quarantine commissioner and deputy state controller for  the state's Covid-19 accommodation program, surprised Australian Public  Service insiders given her state-based background and experience with the  immigration system.
 
 A Department of Home Affairs spokeswoman on Wednesday confirmed Dr Cassar  "will conclude her secondment ... on March 7 and is returning to the  Victorian government".
 
 "Dr Cassar has made this decision for family reasons. The department  recognises Dr Cassar's significant contribution to the organisation over the  past 12 months as associate secretary immigration, and as a key part of the  broader Home Affairs leadership team," the spokeswoman said.
 
 A Home Affairs department organisational chart published last Monday showed  Dr Cassar as immigration head, overseeing citizenship and multicultural  affairs, refugee, humanitarian and settlement, temporary visas and  immigration operations.
 
 The department spokeswoman said "while ongoing arrangements for the role  are settled", the three immigration group managers under Dr Cassar would  report directly to Ms Foster.
 
 Dr Cassar's role, previously held by Ms Foster, was created by the Albanese  government to shift power away from former secretary Mike Pezzullo, who was  eventually removed as department chief.
 
 The Albanese government, which has been beset by immigration scandals  including the NZYQ debacle that predated Dr Cassar's arrival, came under fire  last month after Home Affairs Minister Tony Burke ordered his department to  hold 25 citizenship ceremonies across the country.
 
 Australian Electoral Commission staff were on hand to enrol up to 12,852 new  citizens and encourage them to vote in the upcoming election.
 
 Amid ongoing speculation that a re-elected Albanese government could  reinstate immigration as a stand-alone department and abolish the  Coalition-era Home Affairs portfolio, which has already had key national  security agencies stripped out, Dr Cassar's departure leaves a hole at the  top of the large and complex migration system.
 
 When The Australian revealed her appointment in November, the department  would not confirm whether a $590,000 remuneration package authorised by the  Australian Public Service Commissioner on March 8 last year for a senior Home  Affairs official was linked to Dr Cassar's role. The 2023-24 Department of  Home Affairs annual report listed Dr Cassar's remuneration package as  $193,581, encompassing her term as a key manager between March 25 and June 30  last year.
 
 Immediately prior to her secondment, Dr Cassar was working as deputy  secretary in the Victorian Department of Premier and Cabinet leading social  policy and intergovernmental relations.
 
 The former Corrections Victoria commissioner received a Public Service Medal  in Australia Day honours last year for "outstanding public service and  leadership in Victoria's response to the Covid-19 pandemic".
 
 Opposition home affairs spokesman James Paterson on Wednesday said Mr Burke  should "come clean" about what is going on in his department.
 
 "It is extraordinary that the second most senior person in the  department responsible for immigration and citizenship walks days after a  shambolic estimates hearing, weeks before an election and after just one year  in the job," Senator Paterson said.

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