Burke elevated to 'super portfolio'

July 29, 2024

Monday 29 July 2024
Stephanie Peatling
The Age


 Tony Burke will take on a super portfolio of home affairs and immigration in  a ministerial reshuffle Prime Minister Anthony Albanese will use to try to  build momentum against the Coalition heading into the next federal election.
 
 Burke, the minister for employment and workplace relations, will take on the  new portfolio, which brings two of the most politically challenging areas  under the control of one minister.
 
 Albanese said Burke was ''up for'' the challenge of his new job and praised  his performance in employment and workplace relations.
 
 ''Tony, of course, is a senior minister who's been focused on a range of  portfolios, has done a great job in employment and workplace relations. He  has held similar portfolios in the past and he's someone who will bring that  experience to what remains a challenging portfolio,'' Albanese said at a  press conference in Parliament House in Canberra yesterday.
 
 Queensland Senator Murray Watt will take on employment and workplace  relations, TasmanianMP Julie Collins will move from housing to agriculture  while Northern Territory senator Malarndirri Mc- Carthy will replace outgoing  NSW MP Linda Burney as Indigenous Australians minister.
 
 Burke's appointment confirms weeks of speculation that Clare O'Neil and  Andrew Giles would be moved from home affairs and immigration. O'Neil will  take on housing and Giles will stay in the ministry as skills and training  minister.
 
 NSW MP Pat Conroy has also been promoted into cabinet as minister for defence  industry and capability delivery.
 
 ''This combination of changes represents a significant moving forward,''  Albanese said.
 
 He defended the performance of O'Neil and Giles saying the pair had worked  hard to ''repair the damage'' the Coalition had done to the area when it was  in government.
 
 Albanese said they had been moved to different areas because of the  retirements of Burney, Brendan O'Connor and Carol Brown.
 
 ''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,'' Albanese said.
 
 The new ministry will have its first full meeting this morning after new  members have been sworn in.
 
 Opposition leader Peter Dutton derided the changes on social media platform  X, formerly known as Twitter, as a ''shuffling of deckchairs''.
 
 ''This is a significant reshuffle because the Albanese government is in all  sorts of trouble,'' Dutton posted. ''The prime minister has expressed no  confidence in half his ministry. The problem for the prime minister is that  it's his constant lack of leadership, backbone and judgment which is now  recognised by millions of Australians.
 
 ''It is nothing more than shuffling of deckchairs on the sinking Albanese  government.'' Other changes include the elevation of NSW senator Jenny  McAllister to the ministry as minister for cities and emergency management.
 
 Sydney MP Matt Thistlethwaite will become the assistant minister for  immigration. Thistlethwaite was previously responsible for the pathway to  Australia becoming a republic. In the new line-up the republic no longer has  a minister, in a sign the government has little appetite for further  constitutional change following the resounding defeat of the Voice referendum  last year.
 
 NSW senator Tim Ayres becomes the assistant minster for the government's  signature budget initiative, the billion dollar Future Made in Australia  fund, while Queensland senator Anthony Chisholm becomes the junior education  minister, Victorian MP Kate Thwaites becomes the assistant minister for  social security and women, and energetic Melbourne backbencher Julian Hill  will be sworn in as assistant minister for citizenship and multicultural  affairs.
 
 The changes in immigration and home affairs come after months of political  controversy for the government after a High Court ruling late last year that  ended indefinite detention and led to the release of about 150 former  detainees.
 
 Some were later found to have committed serious crimes and the government  endured months of ferocious media and opposition scrutiny. The speed and  competence of their response to the case and its flow-on effects were  questioned.
 
 The opposition had been calling for heads to roll over the handling of the  saga, arguing more should have been done to keep the detainees locked up  despite the highest court ruling indefinite detention was illegal.
 
 The opposition's home affairs spokesman, James Paterson, said a change in  ministers in the home affairs and immigration portfolios would be an  admission of failure by the government.
 
 ''When you think about it, they were two crazy decisions and it would be an  admission of failure, an admission of fault by the prime minister if they are  moved today. But I think a lot of Australians would be hoping for that, given  the chaos that we've seen over the last two years,'' Senator Paterson said.

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