LEADER OF THE OPPOSITION | SELENA UIBO MLA
CLP RUSHES MAJOR INTEGRITY OVERHAUL WITHOUT SCRUTINY
Tuesday, 25 November 2025
The CLP’s Integrity and Ethics Commissioner Bill is a step backwards for transparency and accountability in the Northern Territory.
The Bill collapses four independent oversight bodies the ICAC, Ombudsman, Information Commissioner and Health and Community Services Complaints Commissioner into a single office.
The NT Opposition has the following concerns about the proposed new body in Parliament today:
- A single Commissioner would control investigations, complaints and integrity functions across all four agencies, creating major and unavoidable conflict-of-interest risks.
- The Government has provided no explanation for how one Commissioner can credibly manage the workload and complexity of four agencies.
- Each existing integrity body has been found to be under-resourced and under-funded, yet no additional resources are being provided for this new mega-agency.
- The Chief Minister claims the mega-agency is not a cost-cutting exercise, yet her own review identifies ‘economies of scale’ as the primary benefit, with no detail on budget or costings.
- The Government refused to send the Bill to its own Scrutiny Committee, providing no opportunity for the Bill to be fully considered by the community or stakeholders.
- It is not clear what influence or decision-making the new CEO position, to be filled by a public servant, will have over the Commission’s integrity operations.
- It is not clear whether staff of the Commission report to the Commissioner or the CEO.
This is a significant change to the way public sector integrity and accountability is monitored and upheld. The fact that the Chief Minister refused to send this Bill to the Scrutiny Committee is beyond ironic.
It is yet another example of this Government refusing to be upfront and honest with Territorians about changes that significantly impact them, and their real motives for making these changes.
This Bill reduces oversight and opens up serious conflict of interest concerns at a time when Territorians expect stronger integrity protections, not weaker ones. The Government has failed to demonstrate how its model will maintain independence or improve accountability.
Labor is calling for a mandatory 12-month report back to Parliament so Territorians can see the real impact of these changes. Oversight must be robust, independent and open to public scrutiny.
Any appointments to the Commissioner, CEO and Inspector roles must be open, transparent and merit based. Territorians deserve integrity positions filled on competence, not political convenience.