Abbott's choice for IT-related portfolios remained relatively unchanged from his shadow ministry, aside from one significant alteration to the Finance department.
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Finance, which houses the Australian Government Information Management Office, had been held by Senator Arthur Sinodinos. WA Senator Mathias Cormann will become finance minister in his first sitting government, with Sinodinos moved to the assistant treasurer role.
Abbott denied claims Sinodinos was switched out of the post at the last minute because of the possibility he could be called to appear before the NSW Independent Commission Against Corruption.
“I would not be appointing Arthur Sinodinos to my outer ministry if there was any cloud over him,” he said.
Ultimate responsibility for government ICT is likely to remain split between Cormann and Howard-era parliamentary secretary Michael Ronaldson, who will become the Coalition’s special minister of state.
Technology procurement functions, which are headed up by government CTO John Sheridan, will remain within the Finance remit, while the strategic outlook of AGIMO will be under the oversight of Ronaldson.
The Coalition has already indicated it will adopt a stricter approach to agency management of ICT to what it described as the past government’s “timidity and passivity” in its own tech policy document.
Prior to the election a spokesperson told iTnews the Coalition would step up the government’s internal cloud policy to a ‘cloud-first’ approach to procurement. It also plans to split agencies into two groups based on their annual ICT investment, with heavy users to maintain autonomy of their technology operations but smaller agencies required to adopt cloud solutions more appropriate to their scale.
Marise Payne will take over the technology-heavy Human Services portfolio.
Attorney-General
Long-running Shadow Attorney-General George Brandis will retain his position in the new Government.
Brandis will be tasked with guiding the Government through new changes to the Privacy Act 2012, which will come into effect in March 2014.
Changes to the 24-year-old Act include 13 new privacy principles which cover both private and public sectors, called Australian Privacy Principles (APPs). The APPs replace the existing Information Privacy Principles (IPPs) for the public sector and National Privacy Principles (NPPs) which apply to the private sector.
The Coalition, led by Brandis, is also expected to study the case for a mandatory data breach notification scheme. A bill was proposed under the former government but failed to be heard on the last day of Senate sitting before the federal election.
The Coalition has not expressed support for the bill in its current form, but is understood to believe in the concept of mandatory data breach notifications in principle. It is expected to study the case for such a scheme to accompany the introduction of the new privacy reforms.
What about Science and Innovation?
Abbott today confirmed Science would fall under the Industry portfolio, led by Ian Macfarlane.
Macfarlane has previously served as minister for Industry, Tourism and Resources under the Howard government. He has also served in the shadow portfolios of Trade, and Infrastructure and Water, and most recently was shadow minister for Energy and Resources.
Sophie Mirabella, who most recently served as shadow minister for Innovation, Industry and Science, withdrew herself from consideration for a cabinet position as she battles to retain her seat of Indi.
In the previous government both Science and innovation portfolios were situated in the Department of Industry, Innovation, Climate Change, Science, Research and Tertiary Education, under former minister Anthony Albanese.
It is not yet clear where responsibility for Innovation will sit, though Abbott said the order of business for each portfolio would be clearer after the swearing in ceremony.