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AAP
AAP
Politics
Andrew Brown

Minister asked for files on robodebt whistleblowers

Rachelle Miller served as a media adviser to human resources minister Alan Tudge in 2016 and 2017. (PR HANDOUT IMAGE PHOTO) (AAP)

Former human services minister Alan Tudge requested access to the private Centrelink files of robodebt recipients who had appeared in media stories about the unlawful scheme, a federal inquiry has heard.

The royal commission examining the Centrelink debt recovery scheme heard evidence on Tuesday from Mr Tudge's former media adviser, Rachelle Miller, who served in the role between 2016 and 2017.

Ms Miller told the hearing select pieces of information from personal files were also provided by the department's office to some journalists in an effort to "correct the record" in the media following negative stories about individual cases who had received a robodebt notice.

"The minister requested the file of every single person who appeared in the media so that we (could) see the exact transactions that they'd had with Centrelink and understand what the details of their case was," Ms Miller said.

"The legal advice to us was that we were able to (provide personal information to journalists) but just the specific pieces of information ... it was just specific lines that contradicted what had been said in the original (media) piece."

The former adviser said the strategy was deployed after attempts at pushing counter-narratives about the scheme were unsuccessful and groups of journalists reporting on robodebt at the time became "vindictive".

Ms Miller said Mr Tudge was forceful about finding case studies of people who had received Centrelink debt notices so they could be used in the media as well as political attacks.

Rachelle Miller, a former staffer in Alan Tudge's office, will front the robodebt royal commission. (Lukas Coch/AAP PHOTOS) (AAP)

She told the hearing she first heard about the robodebt scheme in late 2016 and that it suited the government narrative on cracking down on welfare debt.

"We were under a great deal of pressure there and I think that I saw that as a good story opportunity," she said.

The commission heard concern about negative stories about the robodebt scheme escalated during late 2016 and into early 2017.

Ms Miller said there was significant concern within the government that the stories about robodebt needed to go away.

"(Mr Tudge) was very firm with me that I need to shut this story down," she said.

"The minister became quickly aware that (then prime minister Malcolm Turnbull) was unhappy with the escalating media issue around this."

Despite the negative attention, Ms Miller said feedback from the prime minister's office was that the scheme enjoyed a positive reception in key marginal electorates and people supported it.

Commissioner Holmes criticised the lack of response to findings the robodebt scheme was illegal. (PR HANDOUT IMAGE PHOTO) (AAP)

The Centrelink debt recovery scheme used annual tax office data to calculate fortnightly earnings and automatically issue welfare debt notices.

The controversial program recovered more than $750 million from over 380,000 people and led to several people taking their own lives while being pursued for false debts.

Earlier, royal commissioner Catherine Holmes blasted former top lawyer for the Department of Human Services Annette Musolino on the lack of response by the agency following tribunal decisions raising issues with the legality of robodebt.

"You were chief counsel, you were supposed to keep an eye on this, weren't you? You seem to have been oblivious to what was going on in the (Administrative Appeals Tribunal)," the commissioner said.

"It seems to me you let this system run, getting decisions from the AAT that told you there was a fundamental problem with its legality."

However Ms Musolino said the department had operated within a framework laid out by government departments in charge of the scheme.

Mr Tudge will appear as a witness on Wednesday.

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