https://www.skynews.com.au/australia-news/politics/improper-influence-daniel-and...The Andrews Govt is corrupt but no one is going to jail - go figure?
'Improper influence': Daniel Andrews government rocked by bombshell IBAC findings involving senior Labor figures.
Premier Daniel Andrews has been rocked by bombshell findings from Victoria’s corruption watchdog implicating some of the most senior figures of the state government.
The Victorian anti-corruption body has found senior Andrews government figures interfered in a contract procurement process to give “favourable treatment” to a Labor aligned union affiliate.
The Independent Broadbased Anti-corruption Commission said it found evidence of “misconduct and improper influence” implicating high-placed figures in the Andrews Government.
IBAC’s Operation Daintree was established to investigate a $1.2 million Department of Health and Human Services contract awarded to a firm linked to the Health Workers Union in 2018.
The investigation found senior advisors to the health minister as well as
Premier Daniel Andrews senior staff had
“improperly influenced” the awarding of the contract to the Health Education Federation
for occupational violence and aggression training to health workers.
IBAC uncovered evidence which showed the powerful health union was “given privileged access and favourable treatment in its access” to ministerial offices.
It also found there was a clear conflict between the government’s interests in awarding the contract to the most suitable provider and Labor’s interest in “assisting an affiliated union” which the corruption commission said was “not properly managed or declared”.
“Advisors in the Premier’s Private Office and the Minister for Health’s office also interfered in the management of the HEF contract to obstruct consideration of its termination and to ensure it continued,” IBAC Acting Commissioner Stephen Farrow said in a statement.
“The DHHS awarded the contract to HEF without a competitive procurement process due to senior staff in the department believing it was the minister’s and government’s preference, and because of ongoing pressure from both the Minister for Health’s advisor and Secretary of the union.
“This conduct by senior public servants falls short of the required Victorian public sector standards.”