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Australian education minister stands aside over abuse claims

Alan Tudge denies wrongdoing and promises to cooperate with independent investigation

Published on
December 2, 2021
Last updated
December 2, 2021
Australian shadow education minister Alan Tudge
Australian education minister Alan Tudge

Australian education minister Alan Tudge has stood aside from his role over allegations that he acted abusively during an聽extramarital affair four years ago.

Mr Tudge has acknowledged a聽consensual sexual relationship with a聽media adviser when he was minister for human services in聽2017, but 鈥渃ompletely and utterly鈥 rejected allegations of聽abuse.

He has taken personal leave until Christmas and vowed to 鈥渃ooperate in every way鈥 with an independent review. Similar claims aired previously were 鈥渁lso considered and rejected鈥 through an independent investigation, he said.

Skills and employment minister Stuart Robert will act as education minister during Mr聽Tudge鈥檚 absence.

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The abuse claims have emerged amid an intense public focus on sexual misconduct by Australian parliamentarians and their staff, after allegations surfaced that a former attorney general had sexually assaulted a young woman decades ago and a male staffer was accused of raping a female colleague in a minister鈥檚 office in 2019.

A on the culture of commonwealth parliamentary workplaces, released by sex discrimination commissioner Kate Jenkins on 30聽November, found that one-third of staff had experienced sexual harassment on the job and about 1聽per cent had suffered actual or attempted sexual assault.

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Mr Tudge鈥檚 affair was revealed well before he was appointed education minister last December. His interim replacement also has a tarnished past. Mr Robert was ejected from the human services ministry in 2016 after being found to have acted inconsistently with ministerial standards during a private business trip to China in 2014.

Since then, Mr Robert has been investigated by the corporate regulator over his business affairs and has been obliged to repay almost A$40,000 (拢21,000) of home internet bills that had been charged to the public purse.

john.ross@timeshighereducation.com

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