Frank wrote on Jan 31
st, 2022 at 7:43pm:
If an elected Parliament cannot monitor and expose corruption then an unelected body monitoring an elected body won't either.
How does your conclusion follow from your premise?
Of course there are always some bad apples in any basket, but an unelected outside observer, chosen on the basis of ability, can obviously examine the bad players without fear or favour because (if) he has no skin in the players' game.
Quote:An elected parliamentarian has better access and privileges than an unelected commission
Which elected polie or polies have better access (than an unelected commission) to what, exactly? (I see the 'fallacy of composition' emerging here, see my concluding reamarks).
Quote:that, in fact, cannot make any rulings, only recommendations to... er... an elected parliament.
Unelected commissions can expose illegality. It will be interesting to see the results of the Queensland premier's intervention into the apparent failure of the state's ICAC.
Quote:The trophies of the NSW ICAC are puny - premier resigning for not remembering a bottle of wine given to him.
I agree. Interestingly, if politicians of the governing party didn't have to beg for money from the electorate (see MMT), there would be far less corruption in government, because polies would be able to present clearly costed - AND FUNDED - policies to the electorate; unlike Albo who even now, before a looming election, cannot say how much he will increase the wages of age-care workers......
Quote:Also:
In 1992 Greiner was forced to resign when ICAC, the very body he had pioneered, expressed concerns about his integrity over the offer of an appointment to a former education minister to a new post in the public service. Though subsequently cleared by the NSW Court of Appeal it was the end of Greiner's political career.
I agree. Another case of politicians being blamed for the political realities of life under our current evil economic system which reserves money creation rights to private bankers. (...which is why this discussion of ICAC arose, when Valkie suggested MMT is unworkable).
Quote:Did ANY ICAC commissioner resign or lose his job over being wrong? NO.
I'm not conversant with the details, but:
https://www.abc.net.au/news/2022-01-31/qld-pccc-corruption-tony-fitzgerald-revie..."
Tony Fitzgerald to chair review of Queensland's Crime and Corruption Commission, Premier Annastacia Palaszczuk says""CCC (the equivalent of IPAC in Qld) chair Alan MacSporran did not ensure the watchdog acted independently and impartially at all times, a report found.
Mr MacSporran resigned last week, saying his relationship with the PCCC had broken down irretrievably"
Hmmm...the elected PCCC examining the unelected CCC (which is authorized to examine public officials).
So.... different to your scenario, because both bodies are reviewing each other. The truth will be revealed, unless ALL politicians - and all judges - are corrupt, which is an absurd proposition.