Labor candidate calls for minister’s sacking during NSW inquiry into council’s actions

A New South Wales Labor candidate has accused a parliamentary committee of wasting taxpayers’ money by investigating him for impropriety and called for a government minister to be sacked.

The Canterbury Bankstown mayor, Khal Asfour, has been called as a witness by the upper house committee, which is looking into allegations of impropriety at Canterbury Bankstown council.

“Coming here today, I’m filled with mixed emotions and at the core of these emotions is one of anger,” Asfour told the committee on Wednesday.

The upper house candidate came under the spotlight after former Labor frontbencher Tania Mihailuk used parliamentary privilege to link him to disgraced former party powerbroker Eddie Obeid.

Asfour said the inquiry, which had been referred by the state’s local government minister, Wendy Tuckerman, had been put together in a haphazard way with little transparency given to him and other council staff.

“Wendy Tuckerman should be sacked for calling this inquiry and wasting taxpayer funds, all for political gain,” he told the committee.

“It is no secret I’ve got under the skin of this government when I stood up for my community and many other residents of western Sydney during the harsh lockdowns and overzealous policing during the Covid pandemic.

“I’ve had a political target on my back ever since and this is payback.”

Mihailuk used parliamentary privilege to make the allegations about Asfour, later referring the matter to the Independent Commission Against Corruption (Icac).

She was later removed from the frontbench by the Labor leader, Chris Minns, after ignoring an ultimatum to stop launching political attacks on Asfour.

She has since resigned from the Labor party to join the cross bench.

Asfour said Mihailuk’s complaints had been referred to the corruption watchdog more than 10 years ago, and were thrown out.

The mayor appeared with two lawyers, David Lloyd SC and David Riley, who he said were being funded by Canterbury Bankstown council’s insurer.

The council also paid for Asfour to study for an MBA, which the mayor said fell within the guidelines of the council’s professional development policy that allowed councillors to claim up to $3,000 in education a year.

In one financial year, Asfour claimed $5,090 worth of courses, but he said that was due to administrative error.

“If the claim was paid two weeks later, it would not have been a breach. So the breach was technical in nature,” he told the inquiry.

“The Office of Local Government has come back to the council and categorically agree that my professional development, my education, were completely within the guidelines of council’s policy.

“To quote the correspondence, no further action is warranted.”

The limit for professional development was later raised to $15,000.

The mayor denied this was done to fund his MBA, adding the issue had already been dealt with by the Office of Local Government.

Liberal MP Chris Rath said his answer did not pass the pub test.

“The average ratepayer, who is seeing their rates go up quite substantially, would then be funding your MBA,” Rath said during the hearing.

Asfour responded: “I think it depends on what you’re telling the drinkers at the pub.

“I think if you explain to them the background, and what the policy allows for, most of us would agree there’s nothing to see.”

Asked about his consulting business, EAL, declared as a recent source of income on his pecuniary interests declaration, Asfour could not recall details of his work, including clients.

He said the consulting business was not his main source of income and he had not prepared to answer questions about it because of the inquiry’s broad terms of reference.

Tuckerman was contacted and declined to comment.

source: theguardian.com