The Sydney Morning Herald logo
Advertisement

This was published 3 years ago

Support reporting that matters by subscribing to The Age

Gay Alcorn

The Age covers many subjects – sport, culture, politics, business and more – but central to our purpose is public interest journalism.

From exposing Crown Resorts’ misdoings, to investigating alleged war crimes by Australian soldiers, to revealing the misuse of community grants for political purposes, The Age has an unrivalled reputation for fearless journalism in the public interest.

Few other newsrooms commit the time and effort to reveal what many would prefer to keep secret.

The Independent Broad-based Anti-Corruption Commission (IBAC) and Ombudsman’s report into misuse of public funds, rampant nepotism and widespread misuse of public resources in the Victorian branch of the Labor Party was a direct result of Age and 60 Minutesinvestigative journalism that was published in June 2020.

Advertisement

Age reporters Nick McKenzie and Sumeyya Ilanbey spent months working with whistleblowers to piece together how Labor’s culture became mired in what IBAC Commissioner Robert Redlich concluded was “grey or soft corruption”.

Investigative journalism is time-consuming, difficult and legally challenging in Australia. I want to thank subscribers for the support that enables us to do such work.

If you can, please consider a subscription, so we can continue to do it.

Click here to subscribe

Our Breaking News Alert will notify you of significant breaking news when it happens. Get it here.

Continue this investigation

Labor’s branch-stacking scandal
Up next
  • Explainer

What's branch stacking and why does it happen?

What is branch stacking? And why does it happen?

Victorian Labor’s Right caucus are all smiles at a meeting following the 2018 election win. Clockwise L-R: Frank McGuire, Hong Lim, Meng Heang Tak, Manor Kumar, Neil Pharaoh, Sarah Connolly, Marlene Kairouz, Australian Workers Union secretary Ben Davis, unclear, Anthony Carbines, unclear, unclear, unclear, Robin Scott, unclear, Cesar Melhem, Colin Brooks, Adem Somyurek, Kaushaliya Vaghela, Tim Richardson, Luke Donnellan, Tien Kieu and Natalie Suleyman.

‘Total bloodletting’ for state Labor as seven MPs shown the door

Seven sitting MPs have been told their political careers are over, escalating the threat of byelections for the Andrews government.

Previously
xxxxxxxxx
  • Analysis

Reducing political corruption will only happen with cultural change

The fact such vast powers were needed to expose wrongdoing shows how hard it was to substantiate what was an open secret within Victorian Labor.

See all stories
Gay AlcornGay Alcorn is a senior writer with Good Weekend.

From our partners

Advertisement
Advertisement