**Fund Name Clarification:** The claim references "Building Better Futures" but audit reports consistently refer to the "Building Better Regions Fund" (BBRF).
These appear to be the same program, though the claim uses the incorrect name [1].
**Core Fact - Merit-Based Allocation:** The claim is substantially TRUE.
The Australian National Audit Office (ANAO) conducted a comprehensive audit of the Coalition's Building Better Regions Fund and found that 65 per cent of infrastructure grants were awarded to projects not assessed as having the most merit [1][2].
In the first round, 75% of highest-merit projects were chosen, but this declined sharply—in subsequent rounds, only between 13-55% of highly-scored infrastructure applications were approved [2].
**Dollar Amount:** The claim states "$44M from the Building Better Futures fund." However, the ANAO found that National-held electorates received $104 million MORE than would have been awarded if funding followed merit-based assessment [1][2][3].
The $44M figure on mdavis.xyz may refer to a subset of the total misallocated funding or a different calculation method.
**Marginal Electorates:** The claim about targeting marginal electorates is partially supported.
The ANAO found that Nationals electorates (which include several marginal seats) received disproportionate funding—$104 million more than merit-based distribution would provide [1].
However, the audit did not specifically isolate "marginal" seats; rather, it showed all Nationals seats benefited, while Liberal seats received $73.5 million LESS than merit-based allocation would provide [2].
**Ranked Projects & Rejected Applications:** The claim that "projects ranked last for merit were more likely to be funded than ones ranked first" is supported.
The pattern shows ministerial override of merit-based recommendations becoming more pronounced in later rounds [1].
**Government Refusal to Cooperate:** The claim states "when the audit office asked for an explanation, the government refused." This is PARTIALLY SUPPORTED.
However, contemporary reports suggest government officials did cooperate with the ANAO investigation—the 2022 audit was completed and released publicly.
Michael West Media's article titled "The Pork Henchmen" may have referred to specific officials refusing to cooperate with the audit process, though this specific refusal is not elaborated in the mainstream audits [3].
The claim omits several important contextual factors:
**Program Design:** While the ANAO found merit-based assessment was ignored, the BBRF was specifically designed with "other factors" as an override mechanism.
This doesn't excuse departure from merit assessment, but explains why the discretion existed.
**Departmental Assessment Changes:** The ANAO noted that the department's approach changed across rounds.
For rounds 3 and 5, the department provided a "pool" of pre-selected projects rather than ranked recommendations, which gave ministers more discretion [2].
This systemic change is not mentioned in the claim.
**Coalition's Justification:** Coalition ministers argued that local/regional knowledge was valuable.
Fiona Nash specifically noted that "decision-makers located in the cities do not have the benefit of an on-the-ground understanding of regional communities" [2].
While this explanation was rejected by the auditor-general, it represents the government's reasoning at the time.
**Previous Labor Program Scandals:** The claim does not mention that Labor had its own pork-barrelling controversies.
In 1993, Labor's Ros Kelly presided over the original "sports rorts" scandal involving a $60 million Community Recreational and Sporting Facilities Grants Program that also favored specific seats [4].
**Michael West Media:** The original sources provided are from Michael West Media (michaelwest.com.au), a self-described "independent investigative journalism" outlet.
The outlet's framing of issues consistently emphasizes criticism of Coalition actions [3].
**Mainstream News Confirmation:** However, the core facts from the claim ARE confirmed by mainstream, credible sources: ABC News, SBS News, The Sydney Morning Herald, and most importantly, the ANAO's official audit report [1][2].
**Did Labor do something similar?**
Search conducted: "Labor government pork barrelling grants allocation" and "Labor government grants marginal seats audit"
**Finding:** YES - Labor has engaged in similar pork-barrelling behavior, though to a different extent:
1. **1993 Sports Rorts:** Labor's Ros Kelly administered a $60 million Community Recreational and Sporting Facilities Grants Program that allocated funds to politically favored seats [4].
* * * *
This was the first major grants scandal of its type in Australian politics.
2. **Stronger Communities Fund:** A $252 million Labor-funded grants program came under scrutiny when an upper house inquiry found 95% of funds went to councils in coalition-held or marginal seats—indicating Labor also engaged in similar targeting behavior [5].
3. **Mobile Black Spot Program Round 6:** The Coalition recently alleged that Labor's sixth round of this program allocated three-quarters of 54 approved projects to Labor-held electorates, suggesting the pattern continues under Labor [5].
4. **Comparative Scale:** Research by the Australia Institute found that during the Coalition's tenure, 71% of grants with ministerial discretion went to Coalition seats.
However, Labor's Stronger Communities Fund directing 95% of funds to coalition-held/marginal seats suggests both parties engage in this practice.
**Key Context:** While both parties have engaged in pork-barrelling, the ANAO's criticism of the Coalition's Building Better Regions Fund is that the extent and opacity of ministerial override became MORE PRONOUNCED in later rounds, showing a pattern of increasing disregard for merit-based assessment [1][2].
**Criticisms (Well-Founded):**
The ANAO's audit found legitimate problems: ministerial panel decisions were not appropriately informed by departmental merit assessments; the department's recommended "most meritorious" projects were increasingly ignored; 65% of approved projects were not those ranked highest for merit; and 179 funding decisions were not properly documented [1][2].
Barnaby Joyce stated he "didn't care if people called it pork-barrelling" [2], suggesting ministerial awareness of the political nature of allocations.
The program timing—with round 3 signed off February 2019 (before the May 2019 election) and round 5 announced October 2021 (before the May 2022 election)—suggests electoral considerations influenced timing [2].
**Coalition's Arguments (Legitimate but Insufficient):**
1. **Local Knowledge:** The Coalition argued that ministerial input added valuable local community knowledge that departmental assessors, based in cities, couldn't provide [2].
2. **Program Design:** Guidelines explicitly allowed "other factors" beyond merit [2], meaning ministers technically operated within published parameters.
3. **Regional Focus:** The fund was explicitly designed for regional Australia, and all electorates (Coalition and Labor) had eligible applications [1].
**The Verdict on Arguments:** While the local knowledge argument has some validity, the ANAO found the extent of merit departure was excessive and increasingly pronounced over time, suggesting political advantage rather than legitimate local knowledge was the driver.
The ANAO explicitly stated decisions were "not appropriately informed by departmental advice" [2].
**Comparative Context:** Both Coalition and Labor have engaged in pork-barrelling with government grants programs [4][5].
However, this does NOT excuse the Coalition's Building Better Regions Fund allocation patterns—it means both parties have systemic problems with merit-based grant allocation.
The fact that Labor also engages in this practice does not make it acceptable when the Coalition does it.
**Systemic Issue:** Pork-barrelling appears to be a systemic problem across Australian politics rather than unique to the Coalition.
This suggests the problem requires systemic reform (clearer guidelines, reduced ministerial discretion, transparent documentation) rather than partisan condemnation [1].
The core claim that Coalition ministers allocated grants to marginal electorates through non-merit-based processes IS TRUE and confirmed by the ANAO audit [1][2].
The audit found 65% of infrastructure projects approved were not assessed as most meritorious, Nationals electorates received $104 million more than merit-based allocation would provide, and ministerial panel decisions increasingly departed from departmental recommendations [1][2].
The claim suggests government refusal to cooperate with the audit, but ministers did respond to the ANAO—though perhaps not as thoroughly as critics wanted
3.
The claim omits that both Coalition and Labor governments engage in pork-barrelling with grants programs, creating a misleading impression of unique Coalition misconduct [4][5]
4.
The claim doesn't distinguish between the fund name (incorrectly called "Building Better Futures" instead of "Building Better Regions")
**Accuracy of Core Narrative:** TRUE - Non-merit-based allocation to marginal electorates occurred
**Fairness of Framing:** LACKS CONTEXT - Missing comparative information about Labor's similar practices and systemic nature of problem
**Source Quality:** MIXED - Michael West Media reporting is advocacy-oriented but core facts are confirmed by ANAO and mainstream news
The core claim that Coalition ministers allocated grants to marginal electorates through non-merit-based processes IS TRUE and confirmed by the ANAO audit [1][2].
The audit found 65% of infrastructure projects approved were not assessed as most meritorious, Nationals electorates received $104 million more than merit-based allocation would provide, and ministerial panel decisions increasingly departed from departmental recommendations [1][2].
The claim suggests government refusal to cooperate with the audit, but ministers did respond to the ANAO—though perhaps not as thoroughly as critics wanted
3.
The claim omits that both Coalition and Labor governments engage in pork-barrelling with grants programs, creating a misleading impression of unique Coalition misconduct [4][5]
4.
The claim doesn't distinguish between the fund name (incorrectly called "Building Better Futures" instead of "Building Better Regions")
**Accuracy of Core Narrative:** TRUE - Non-merit-based allocation to marginal electorates occurred
**Fairness of Framing:** LACKS CONTEXT - Missing comparative information about Labor's similar practices and systemic nature of problem
**Source Quality:** MIXED - Michael West Media reporting is advocacy-oriented but core facts are confirmed by ANAO and mainstream news