Overview
- The Labor opposition, which wrote to the Crime and Corruption Commission on Wednesday, asked it to investigate every element of an integrity dispute involving Premier David Crisafulli, Amanda Camm, and Tim Mander.
- The referral questions whether a past relationship between Camm and Mander was declared at the right time and whether it influenced government decisions.
- Crisafulli, Camm, and Mander say they met disclosure requirements but have declined to confirm if they sought advice from the Integrity Commissioner, the office that guides ministers on managing conflicts.
- Labor urged the CCC to review decisions involving taxpayer funds, including 2032 Olympics planning and grants, while Mander denied that Camm pushed to move sailing events to the Whitsundays.
- The CCC can run misconduct investigations and publish reports, so any probe could force more detail about declarations and conflict-management plans now under scrutiny.