Industry sources have toldThe Age andThe Sydney Morning Herald that continued delays with the project,first flagged in 2017,are risking the system not being complete and implemented before the next election.
The extended timeline for a decision,which was originally slated to be made by October this year,was also costing each bid tens of millions of dollars the longer it went on,one source said.
The two shortlisted bidders are Australian Visa Processing – a consortium consisting of Ellerston Capital,PwC,Qantas Ventures,NAB and Pacific Blue Capital – and a joint proposal between Australia Post and Accenture.
Another source closely linked to one bidder said any further delays would only aid the fierce campaign being run against outsourcing the process by Labor and the Greens.
The tender bid,managed by the department,is now at arm's length from Prime Minister Scott Morrison and Immigration Minister David Coleman because of their long personal and professional relationships with Scott Briggs,who is leading the Australian Visa Processing consortium.
The pair have recused themselves from expenditure review committee and cabinet discussions on the issue and will not be part of the process once the department makes its final recommendation to Home Affairs Minister Peter Dutton.