Deal will effectively limit scrutiny of unlawful and damaging compliance checks
In March 2017 Alan Tudge, then the human services minister, was under pressure over a different scandal.
Fresh from releasing the personal information of a debt recipient who had written an article critical of the robodebt scheme, and threatening so-called welfare cheats with jail, Tudge told the ABC’s Fran Kelly that critics who believed the program was flawed had a “philosophical objection to widespread compliance checks”.
Continue reading...from The Guardian https://ift.tt/3npaqIy
via
0 Comments