Kelly O'Dwyer won't admit government 'wrong' on banks

Financial Services Minister Kelly O'Dwyer has repeatedly refused to concede the government should have called a banking royal commission sooner.

Financial Services Minister Kelly O'Dwyer has defended the government's action on banks.

Financial Services Minister Kelly O'Dwyer has defended the government's action on banks. Source: AAP

Financial Services Minister Kelly O'Dwyer has refused to accept the federal government was wrong to stall on holding a banking royal commission.

Deflecting the question eight times, she instead talked up the coalition's efforts to boost the standards for financial advisors, increase the penalties for misconduct and offer greater funding for the regulator ASIC.
"We have done it, we have established (the commission), not only with very broad terms of reference rather than the narrow focus that some might have actually had instead, but we have also put in place a very good royal commissioner," she told ABC TV on Sunday.

Five months ago, Ms O'Dwyer described the idea of a royal commission as a talkfest, claiming it would "kick the can down the road" for a number of years.

Now, she admits to be being appalled by a number of issues aired at the royal commission.

"The government has been very alive to the problems in the financial services industry and we have been acting from the get-go," she said.

Labor hit back, saying anyone watching Ms O'Dwyer's performance would conclude the government is from another planet.

"They've learnt absolutely nothing from all of the scandalous revelations that we've heard over the last little while at the royal commission," the party's finance spokesman Jim Chalmers told ABC TV.

"They still can't bring themselves to say that they were wrong to run a protection racket against that royal commission for so long."
Crossbench senator Derryn Hinch tweeted his reaction to the minister's refusal to accept the government should have acted sooner.

"The words "we were wrong" obviously not in O'Dwyer lexicon. Cassidy 100, Minister nil," he said.

Former deputy prime minister Barnaby Joyce admitted he was wrong in standing against a royal commission, just days before the head of AMP quit.

The commission had heard the the wealth manager had lied to regulators and charged customers fees without providing the specified service.

Treasurer Scott Morrison on Friday announced tough new penalties for shonky bankers and corporate criminals, with individuals found guilty of misconduct in the finance sector to face up to 10 years behind bars.

Corporations could be fined up to 10 per cent of their turnover.


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Published 22 April 2018 10:26am
Updated 22 April 2018 10:42am


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