As a long-serving cabinet minister,Merlino is perhaps the most qualified of the more than 30 former Labor MPs the Andrews government has selected for taxpayer-funded roles.
Those appointments include Marsha Thomson,the former member for Footscray who is on the board member of Zoos Victoria and attracts an annual salary of $19,999. Last financial year the board held four meetings.
Then there is Labor stalwart Liz Beattie,who spent almost 15 years in parliament – the majority on the backbench – and now receives a similar taxpayer-funded salary as a member of the Greater Metropolitan Cemeteries Trust.
Or former upper house MP Johan Scheffer – a one-time teacher and political staffer – who now chairs Sustainability Victoria,alongside fellow board memberNeil Pharaoh,who twice ran for Labor in the seat of Prahran.
These are great gigs if you can get them. Which poses the question,are the rest of us plebs looked on as favourably for public appointments if we haven’t had the honour of serving as MPs,staffers and party officials?
TheGrattan Institute has looked into it and discovered that no,we are not. The think tank discovered about 12 per cent of Victorian government appointments to powerful boards have political connections – and the overwhelming majority are linked to Labor.
To borrow a phrase from younger Victorians – who are severely underrepresented on government boards:“I’m shook.”
Anticipating screams of “the other mob do it too” – it seems federally,after almost a decade of Coalition rule,the problem is reversed. There,the Grattan Institute found 21 per cent of appointees to high-paying,powerful or prestigious boards have political connections and almost all have connections to the Coalition.
What this suggests is no political party is exempt from the trappings of power. It also exposes a clear pattern that the longer a party is in power the more political appointments are made.
Chatting to a number of state MPs – from both sides – who are nearing retirement,it’s clear that many of them employ a strategy of staying sweet with the government in exchange for a future appointment. But if governments use these appointments as gifts to reward allies,it promotes an environment of political patronage and fuels the public’s concerns about self-interest.
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With so many former MPs,staffers and hangers-on in taxpayer-funded gigs,it would be unfair to assume they’re all hopeless. But it would also be equally naive to assume they were all the best candidates for the job,which makes you wonder if we are getting value for money.
Merlino’s appointment to the Suburban Rail Loop Authority board may not be the problem,but it's indicative of a wider culture of patronage,and one the Andrews government has chosen to embrace.
After locking in two former Labor MPs as ambassadors in Washington and London,the federal Labor government has shown more enthusiasm to end this culture with the abolition of the Administrative Appeals Tribunal – the body which reviews government decisions. It has been outrageously stacked with well-paid political appointees.