Thousands of public servants have witnessed corruption at work, report shows

The latest State of the Service report, tabled in parliament this week, reveals 4,300 government employees believe they witnessed corruption at work.

Christian Porter speaking to media

Decades-long secrecy orders have been made over files related to Christian Porter's now-settled defamation case against the ABC. Source: AAP

The Australian Public Service Commission’s latest report reveals 78 public servants were investigated over allegations of corruption in 2017-18.

The report was tabled in parliament in the midst of a complex political showdown over a proposal for a new National Integrity Commission, or a federal version of the NSW ICAC.

Independent MPs on the crossbench are pushing for a body to be set up, and Labor and the Greens also support the idea.
A group of 34 well-known former judges also support a new body that could hold public hearings, describing the current framework as obviously inadequate.

On Tuesday morning, Attorney-General Christian Porter said he had been working on anti-corruption reforms for “six months”.

Mr Porter suggested his preference might be to strengthen existing federal bodies before setting up a new Commission.

Speaking on ABC Radio, Mr Porter singled out the Commissioner for Law Enforcement Integrity – which currently regulates police and intelligence agencies.

“It is a very, very important agency. It largely does very good work,” he said.
Shadow Attorney General Mark Dreyfus.
Shadow Attorney General Mark Dreyfus. Source: AAP
“My personal assessment of the agency is that it probably needs some assistance in a variety of ways. But that's the logical place to start.”

Shadow attorney-general Mark Dreyfus said he would welcome the government coming to the table and developing a bipartisan solution.

The APSC’s report found 569 public servants were investigated for breaches of the Code of Conduct, while 4,300 said they believed they had witnessed some form of corruption.


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By James Elton-Pym


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