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June 25, 2026

The legalities around pork barrelling in NSW

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Paul Gregoire

Pork barrelling is the distributing of public money to fund projects in government-held electorates and marginal seats for political gain, or as current NSW premier Gladys Berejiklian puts it, it’s about making ‘commitments to the community in order to curry favour’.

This misallocation of public funds to benefit partisan interest, to the detriment of making such decisions based on merit, is nothing new in the state of NSW. However, the blatant justifications of the practice by the current coalition government are something new.

Since last November, numerous instances of senior ministers partaking in these scenarios have been uncovered, and yet, rather than shirk away from the allegations over what the majority of the public perceives as misconduct, the government has persistently asserted it’s done nothing wrong.

In relation to her own currying of favour, Berejiklian acknowledged that it’s ‘not something the community likes’, but it was an accusation she would wear. And she further asserted that ‘it’s not an illegal practice’, and, unfortunately, ‘it does happen from time to time by every government’.

For his part, NSW Deputy Premier, John Barilaro, revels in the politically profitable distribution of public funds. In early 2019, he quipped that his nickname is ‘Pork Barrel-aro’, while, earlier this year, he stated that ‘what we call pork barrelling is investment’.

‘You want to call that buying votes,’ the deputy premier boldy said, ‘it’s what the elections are for.’

Pork pies

The NSW Public Accountability Committee inquiry into grants programs found late last year that in the lead up to the last state election, the Berejiklian government had distributed 95 per cent of $252 million from the Stronger Communities Fund to local governments in Coalition voting regions.

The premier signed off on $141.8 million of these grants herself. Her office was then found to have breached the law by shredding documents and deleting files relating to the grants she approved. And Barilaro signed off on $61.3 million worth of these ‘investments’.

But the pork didn’t end there.

In February, it came to light that the state coalition had been currying favour with arts grants, as well as being up to its neck in the deceitful distribution of bushfire relief, with Barilaro involved in the allocating of $177 million for 71 projects, with only $2.5 million making it to Labor seats.

Indeed, when it came to the 2019–20 bushfires, the Blue Mountains was one of the hardest hit regions in the state. Yet, despite the Labor-held seat having been crippled by two megafires, the coalition couldn’t find it within itself to grant it any relief funding whatsoever.

A watchdog with teeth

NSW Greens MLC, David Shoebridge, chairs the Public Accountability Committee. He told Sydney Criminal Lawyers last week that despite the premier’s protestations around pork barrelling being legal, it is very much outlawed by the Act that governs the NSW anti-corruption watchdog.

‘It’s my view that the conduct we’ve seen by the Berejiklian and Barilaro government has obviously met the definition of corrupt conduct under the ICAC Act,’ said Mr Shoebridge. ‘However, ICAC is the ultimate judge of that.’

Section 8 of the Independent Commission Against Corruption Act 1988 (NSW) outlines the general nature of corrupt conduct, which includes ‘any conduct of a public official that constitutes or involves the dishonest or partial exercise of any of his or her official functions’.

However, according to Shoebridge, ‘what is missing in NSW is a legal consequence.’ So, while pork barrelling may be considered corrupt conduct under the ICAC Act, there is no actual offence for the practice of it on the books. And this is why Berejiklian can make her assertion that it’s legal.

Misconduct in public office

Crikey legal expert Michael Bradley takes the argument further. He points to the NSW Ministerial Code of Conduct, which was created by Section 9 of the ICAC Act, as containing provisions that lead to pork barrelling being unlawful, but again fails to make it a crime in itself.

The lawyer points to Clause 6 of the code, which states ‘A minister, in the exercise or performance of their official functions, must not act dishonestly, must act only in what they consider to be the public interest, and must not act improperly for their private benefit or for the private benefit of any other person.’

As Berejiklian openly admitted to pork barrelling in the case of the Stronger Communities Fund, Bradley asserts, she did not act in the public interest, but rather distributed the grants in the private interests of her party.

Bradley further posits that this could then constitute the common law offence of ‘misconduct in public office’. Penalties for common law offences are ‘at large’, which means that the penalty that applies to any of these offences has no limit.

The elements of the offence that capture the nature Berejiklian’s behaviour, the lawyer continues, are ‘wilfully’, ‘intentionally’ and ‘culpably’, which is especially so for Stronger Communities as the funds were supposed to help amalgamating councils, yet they weren’t used in this manner.

Criminalisation unlikely

The initial report on the distribution of NSW grants concluded that the Stronger Communities Fund ‘morphed into a brazen pork-barrel scheme’. And the Public Accountability Committee handed over its findings to the ICAC to consider in late May.

Right now, pork barrelling is part and parcel of the Australian political landscape. Not only was it rife in the lead up to the last state election, but the Morrison government was up to the same tricks right before the May 2019 federal election, as it was favourably distributing sports and car park grants.

Yet, as Shoebridge mentioned, the real issue is pork barrelling doesn’t constitute a specific offence.

And the problem here is neither major party wants to criminalise the practice once it obtains power, as it too wants to curry favour in much same manner in order to shore up its re-election next time the vote comes round.

♦ Article originally published on Sydney Criminal Lawyers.



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