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Senator pursues details of ABC’s top exec salaries despite failure

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Liberal Senator Sarah Henderson is planning another attempt to force the ABC to disclose the salaries of its top-paid executives after two motions were voted down by the Senate late last week.

Henderson has signalled she will be relentless in her efforts to have the wages disclosed in a more transparent way, claiming it was “untenable” that information is kept secret from taxpayers.

Senator Sarah Henderson will make another attempt to have the salaries of high paid ABC staff exposed.

Senator Sarah Henderson will make another attempt to have the salaries of high paid ABC staff exposed.Credit:Alex Ellinghausen

“As a publicly funded corporation accountable to Australian taxpapers, it is untenable that information about this expenditure should remain secret,” she said. “That the ABC’s public interest immunity claims were supported by Labor and the Greens shows they could not care less about transparency.”

“I will continue to fight for greater transparency at the ABC and intend to make further requests for information. The ABC Act is no longer fit for purpose and it is clear we need legislative reform to ensure that the national broadcaster is delivering in the interests of all Australians.”

Henderson wrote to ABC managing director David Anderson in early November, requesting disclosure of the remuneration packages for employees, contractors, subcontractors, or other workers earning an annual salary of at least $230,000. She also requested a breakdown of the roles, genders, places of work, and remuneration bands of ABC employees, on public interest grounds and believes these disclosures can help reduce the diversity of wages.

Anderson made a claim of public interest immunity in early November against requests by Henderson, the shadow communications spokesperson, to disclose the remuneration of highly paid staff as well as the gender, place of work, and remuneration bands of employees.

He said it raised commercial in confidence concerns, staff privacy, work health and safety. In late November, the environment and communications legislation committee said it shared the ABC’s view on privacy and commercial in confidence concerns.

Henderson tabled two motions in the Senate last week, demanding the information by December 9. Both were rejected by Labor, the Greens and Senator David Pocock.

Labor senator Anthony Chisholm on Thursday said Henderson’s attempts to disclose salaries “smack of a personal vendetta” against the ABC.

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