by Squawk » Tue Dec 13, 2011 3:20 pm
With the announcement yesterday of the Prime Minister's reshuffled Parliamentary line up, I took a close look and was suprised to see a few things I hadn't noticed before. A quick look at the standard "örder of precedence" shows allocations by portfolio. However, if you apply a general category to many of the individual portfolios, you can quickly see that the Cwlth Govt has an abundance of Ministers covering a number of areas, and many of these areas are those in which the states and territories have traditional responsibilities (particularly in regard to frontline services, such as education and health).
(Based on my categorisations below), Why do we need
5 separate parliementarians covering education?
5 separate parliamentarians for treasury and finance?
5 for Defence? (Including one for the Änzac Centenerary)
4 for Health?
5 for Law and Order? (Including the Quensland Flood Recovery process)
4 for the environment (but no portfolio specifically for the Murray Darling Basin and only the 'resources'portfolio to cover mining which is keeping our economic life sustained?)
6 for Social Services?
6 for Industry and Trade?
4 for Employment?
On the other end of the spectrum there are 2 each for primary production, immigration and tranport/infrastructure, plus a further 7 "single" portfolios (including Foreign Affairs, Arts, Sport etc).
If you accept my categorisations (below), the plethora of apparent duplication suggests a few things to me:
The High Court has really extended the powers of s51 of the Constitution further than I thought (Federalism at its best, or worst?)
Cwlth votes are there to be won when the Cwlth can apply maximum money to areas traditionally the domain of states and territories and thus exacerbate "vertical fiscal imbalance"
We have 5 financial Ministers yet not one dedicated portfolio to either or both of the "Global Financial" or "Ëuro" crisis'?
The Queensland floods were a big crisis but why would they get a dedicated Minister when the Murray Darling Basin cannot get a portfolio with that name? (answer - Cwlth money directly allocated through the taxpayer flood levy).
Why do we have a Minister for the Anzac Centeneary, yet no Minister for the G20 and B20 to be held in 2014?
South Australia has 15 Ministers in the Cabinet and the Cwlth has 22. What does that say about us and them? We have too many in Cabinet but by the time you take into account the Cwlth's "Öuter Ministry" then they would seem to have too many Ministers duplicating one another.
Education (5)
Senator Chris Evans Minister for Tertiary Education, Skills, Science and Research
Peter Garrett MP Minister for School Education, Early Childhood and Youth
Brendan O'Connor MP Minister Assisting for School Education
Kate Ellis MP Minister for Early Childhood and Childcare
Senator Jacinta Collins Parliamentary Secretary for School Education
Treasury and Finance (5)
Wayne Swan MP Deputy Prime Minister Treasurer
Senator Penny Wong Minister for Finance and Deregulation
Bill Shorten MP Minister for Financial Services and Superannuation
Senator Mark Arbib Assistant Treasurer
David Bradbury MP Parliamentary Secretary to the Treasurer
Health (4)
Tanya Plibersek MP Minister for Health
Mark Butler MP Minister for Mental Health and Ageing and Minister Assisting the Prime Minister on Mental Health Reform
Warren Snowdon MP Minister for Indigenous Health
Catherine King MP Parliamentary Secretary for Health and Ageing
Defence (5)
Stephen Smith MP Minister for Defence
Senator Kim Carr Minister for Defence Materiel
Warren Snowdon MP Minister for Defence Science and Personnel and Minister for Veterans' Affairs and Minister Assisting the Prime Minister on the Centenary of ANZAC
Mike Kelly MP Parliamentary Secretary for Defence
Senator David Feeney Parliamentary Secretary for Defence
Law and Order (5)
Nicola Roxon MP Attorney-General
Robert McClelland MP Minister for Emergency Management
Senator Joe Ludwig Minister Assisting on Queensland Flood Recovery
Jason Clare MP Minister for Home Affairs and Minister for Justice
Gary Gray MP Special Minister of State and Minister for the Public Service and Integrity
Environment (5)
Tony Burke MP Minister for Sustainability, Environment, Water, Population and Communities
Greg Combet MP Minister for Climate Change and Energy Efficiency
Mark Dreyfus MP Parliamentary Secretary for Climate Change and Energy Efficiency
Senator Don Farrell Parliamentary Secretary for Sustainability and Urban Water
Martin Ferguson MP Minister for Resources and Energy
Social Services (6)
Jenny Macklin MP Minister for Families, Community Services and Indigenous Affairs and Minister for Disability Reform
Robert McClelland MP Minister for Housing and Minister for Homelessness
Mark Butler Minister for Social Inclusion
Brendan O'Connor MP Minister for Human Services
Julie Collins MP Minister for Community Services
Senator Jan McLucas Parliamentary Secretary for Disabilities and Carers
Primary Production (2)
Senator Joe Ludwig Minister for Agriculture, Fisheries and Forestry
Sid Sidebottom MP Parliamentary Secretary for Agriculture, Fisheries and Forestry
Industry and Trade (6)
Dr Craig Emerson MP Minister for Trade
Greg Combet MP Minister for Industry and Innovation
Senator Kim Carr Minister for Manufacturing
Senator Mark Arbib Minister for Small Business
Justine Elliot MP Parliamentary Secretary for Trade
Mark Dreyfus MP Parliamentary Secretary for Industry and Innovation
Employment (4)
Bill Shorten MP Minister for Employment and Workplace Relations Kate Ellis MP Minister for Employment Participation
Julie Collins MP Minister for Indigenous Employment and Economic Development
Senator Jacinta Collins Parliamentary Secretary for Workplace Relations
Infrastructure (2)
Anthony Albanese MP Minister for Infrastructure and Transport
Catherine King MP Parliamentary Secretary for Infrastructure and Transport
Immigration (2)
Chris Bowen MP Minister for Immigration and Citizenship
Senator Kate Lundy Parliamentary Secretary for Immigration and Multicultural Affairs
Miscellaneous (7)
Conroy (Broadband and Digital Productivity)
Crean (Regional matters, Arts, Local Govt)
Rudd (Foreign Affairs)
Ferguson (Tourism)
Arbib (Sport)
Collins (Women)
Marles (Pacific Island Affairs)