The AWU raids and Cash case explained

Employment Minister Michaelia Cash is under pressure to resign for misleading a Senate committee about federal police raids on trade union offices.

Minister for Employment Senator Michaelia Cash during Senate Estimate at Parliament House in Canberra, Wednesday, October 25, 2017.

Minister for Employment Senator Michaelia Cash during Senate Estimate at Parliament House in Canberra, Wednesday, October 25, 2017. Source: AAP

THE AWU RAIDS AND WHAT HAPPENED AFTER

* The Turnbull government set up the Registered Organisations Commission to act as a watchdog over the activities of trade unions and other registered organisations.

* It has been investigating 10 claims against the Victorian branch of the Australian Workers Union.

* Employment Minister Michaelia Cash referred to the commission a $100,000 donation the AWU made to advocacy group GetUp! during the 2005-06 financial year, when federal Labor leader Bill Shorten was the union's national secretary.

* The ROC, acting on information it received from "a caller" and fearing documents were being destroyed, asked federal police to conduct raids on the Sydney and Melbourne offices of the AWU on Tuesday.

* The AWU and Labor reacted with fury when the media were tipped off about the raids.

* Cash told a Senate estimates committee on Wednesday, she had no prior knowledge of the raids. Insists neither she nor any of her staff alerted journalists about the raid.

* Hours later, Cash was forced to admit to the same committee her senior media adviser David de Garis did alert journalists after he heard about the raid through another media source.

* Cash told senators de Garis resigned, and continued to insist she knew nothing about the raids before they occurred.

* Labor says the Cash explanation defies belief, noting she misled the Senate committee five times.

* Cabinet colleagues argue there is no case for the minister to resign.

* Cash writes to the ROC to ask them to consider referring the leak to the federal police.

* Cash says she hasn't considered quitting, but refuses to comment on suggestions her resignation was canvassed in a meeting with the prime minister on Thursday.


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Source: AAP


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The AWU raids and Cash case explained | SBS News