By Royce Millar
Secret phone taps have further embroiled Daniel Andrews in the Casey land scandal, with veteran lobbyist Phil Staindl claiming the Premier "waxed lyrical" about donations from allegedly corrupt developer John Woodman to Labor’s 2018 election campaign.
In the covert recordings played at anti-corruption public hearings on Thursday, Mr Staindl also claimed Mr Andrews told him the government had "no choice" but to shelve the controversial land rezoning at the heart of the scandal because The Sunday Age had published revelations about Mr Woodman and his outsized influence.
Counsel assisting the inquiry, Michael Tovey, QC, said that political donations had created a sense of obligation to Mr Woodman at the highest levels of government. This gave rise to "a need to apologise" for not approving the land deal.
The rezoning from industrial to residential land would have delivered a windfall of up to $150 million to the developers but it was held up indefinitely after The Sunday Age articles and then finally rejected in April this year.
One telephone intercept played at the Independent Broad-based Anti-corruption Commission inquiry on Thursday revealed Staindl reporting to his client, Mr Woodman, a conversation with Mr Andrews at a fundraising dinner at a city restaurant known as Kirk’s in late February 2019. Labor had won the state election three months earlier.
"I just mentioned you and the publicity in the The Sunday Age spread two weeks running and [Mr Andrews] said, '[Age journalist] Royce [Millar] was a right arsehole' or something," Mr Staindl told Mr Woodman.
Mr Staindl recalled Mr Andrews responding: "We'd had no choice but to do that [shelve the rezoning] once Royce was working on that story in the critical final couple of weeks of the campaign."
In another recording from 2018, which was made shortly after the rezoning was deferred by Planning Minister Richard Wynne, Mr Woodman is heard telling Mr Staindl: "If we get pushback on this, I'll go to the top." Mr Staindl said this was a reference to Mr Andrews.
Twice in different recordings, Mr Staindl and Mr Woodman called Mr Andrews "the boss".
The IBAC inquiry is probing Mr Woodman’s manipulation of the planning system, including alleged bribes paid to councillors and donations to MPs as he pushed from 2014 for the rezoning of land in Cranbourne West.
On Thursday, Commissioner Robert Redlich QC described the carefully targeted use of donations in the expectation they would buy MPs' support for developers' projects as "a form of corruption".
The Casey saga is the biggest planning corruption scandal in Victoria for decades and has already led to the sacking of Casey Council, and likely charges against key figures.
Mr Andrews confirmed last week that he had "exchanged pleasantries" with Mr Staindl at the Hardware Lane fundraiser, but denied discussing the Cranbourne West rezoning. However, Mr Staindl contradicted him and stood by his secretly recorded comments to Mr Woodman, confirming that he had in fact discussed the land rezoning and donations with Mr Andrews.
Despite this, Mr Andrews on Thursday continued to stand by comments from last December about his relationship with Mr Woodman, in which he denied the pair had discussed individual planning matters.
"If [Mr Woodman] had raised an individual planning matter with me, then the meeting would have been over," Mr Andrews said then.
This is at odds with Mr Staindl's claims on the secret recordings, and also with the lobbyist's evidence on Wednesday, in which he recounted meetings where Mr Woodman and Mr Andrews did in fact discuss individual projects. Mr Woodman poured more than $150,000 into Mr Andrews' successful 2018 re-election campaign.
On Thursday, Opposition Leader Michael O'Brien called for Mr Andrews to appear before the IBAC inquiry, saying it was time for the commission to "call the Premier and get him to answer questions under oath".
"The Premier needs to come clean. Victorians cannot afford to have a Premier who is compromised, and they cannot have a Premier who is prepared to lie about planning matters and corrupt developments."
IBAC also heard on Thursday how Mr Woodman and Mr Staindl offered then still-serving Narre Warren South MP Judith Graley a job when she retired from Parliament at the 2018 poll. The offer had come at the same time Ms Graley was actively advocating for the Cranbourne West rezoning to the office of the Planning Minister.
Mr Tovey told the inquiry that it seemed there was "an expectation that Judith Graley would do what you wanted her to do". Ms Graley has not responded to repeated calls from The Age through 2020.
IBAC heard recordings of Mr Woodman and Mr Staindl discussing a $20,000 donation to parliamentary hopeful Pauline Richards in a bid to win the seat of Cranbourne. They indicate Ms Richards had promised her support for the Cranbourne West rezoning and that Mr Woodman was confident she could resurrect it despite the negative newspaper articles.
"If anyone can get it across the line, she can," Mr Woodman said on the recording.
But Mr Tovey said that because of the publicity Mr Woodman was "kryptonite" and the rezoning was doomed.
In another recording, Mr Staindl told Mr Woodman how Ms Richards had been "enormously grateful" for Mr Woodman's donations and that she "felt really bad on your behalf", but that because of the controversy she could not intervene.
Mr Tovey said Ms Richards appeared to have a sense of "obligation" to Mr Woodman such "that she needed to apologise". He said that this sense of obligation appeared to be felt "at highest level" of government.
Through the public examinations, Mr Redlich has repeatedly highlighted the lack of transparency and accountability around lobbyists and political fundraising and the "privileged access" that donations and lobbyists give developers.
Mr Staindl is renowned for his access to MPs and ministers especially through the doling out of political donations from his clients – often developers. He was formerly the president of Labor fundraising body Progressive Business. The February dinner last year was a Progressive Business function.
In 2018 Planning Minister Richard Wynne was on the cusp of approving a version of the Cranbourne West when The Sunday Age raised concerns about Mr Woodman’s influence at Casey and his donations to local state Labor MPs. Mr Wynne then deferred a decision until after the state poll and finally rejected the rezoning in April in the wake of initial Operation Sandon hearings that ran from November to March.
In June, The Age revealed that Mr Wynne had allowed the rezoning process to proceed against the repeated advice of his own department, including a warning about the involvement of the controversial Mr Woodman.
Mr Andrews has known both Mr Woodman and Mr Staindl for many years. Mr Woodman donated $2500 to Mr Andrews when he first ran for parliament in 2002 and had access to him as a "Platinum" member of Progressive Business and through meetings, including a small lunch in a private room at the upmarket Flower Drum restaurant.
When details of the alleged corruption of councillors were aired in November, Mr Staindl resigned as a lobbyist to Mr Woodman and his son Heath's development company Wolfdene.
“I was shocked by the revelations,” he told The Age, saying he thought Mr Woodman limited his payments to councillors and politicians to donations.
It was also revealed on Thursday that a ‘probity auditor’ who accompanied a state Labor minister at political fundraisers attended by property developers was hired by the ALP’s fundraising arm Progressive Business, not government departments.
It is unclear who the auditor was and Progressive Business President Patsy Toop could not be contacted on Thursday for comment.
State Opposition Leader Michael O'Brien used the disclosure, by the Office of the Victorian Information Commissioner, to attack Mr Andrews in Parliament over interactions between a "dodgy" developer and government ministers.
Mr O’Brien said the hiring of probity auditors by a fundraising entity was an unacceptable conflict of interest.
“This is a massive conflict of interest,” the Opposition Leader said.
“The same Labor fundraising arm that accepts donations from dodgy developer John Woodman is also responsible for ensuring the probity of Labor ministers and Labor donors.
“There is nothing ‘independent’ about a probity auditor engaged by Labor’s fundraising arm."
Mr Andrews was dismissive of the Opposition’s attacks.
“Who a political party or an associated entity of a political party chooses to act as their auditor, their accountant, their probity auditor, that’s not a matter for me, that’s a matter for that political party,” the Premier said.
With Noel Towell
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