The claim that the Coalition government scrapped a public inquiry into law enforcement access to journalists' telecommunications data is **factually accurate**.
The Parliamentary Joint Committee on Intelligence and Security (PJCIS) had initiated an inquiry in early March 2015 to examine "how to deal with the authorisation of a disclosure or use of telecommunications data for the purpose of determining the identity of a journalist's source" at the request of Attorney-General George Brandis [1].
A scheduled public hearing on March 20, 2015, at which media organisations had been scheduled to appear, was cancelled, and the committee ceased accepting submissions in late June 2015 [1].
The data retention legislation (Telecommunications (Interception and Access) Amendment (Data Retention) Act 2015) passed Parliament on March 26, 2015, forcing telecommunications providers to retain customer metadata for two years [2].
**The inquiry was replaced with legislative protections, not simply abandoned.** The claim omits critical context that the inquiry was scrapped because the government had amended the data retention bill to introduce:
1. **Journalist Information Warrants**: A warrant system specifically for accessing journalists' telecommunications data
2. **Public Interest Advocate**: An independent advocate to scrutinise warrant applications affecting journalists [1]
**The PJCIS retained oversight authority.** The amendments provided that the PJCIS itself would be able to offer oversight of journalist information warrants and required annual reporting on the number of warrants issued [1].
**Labor supported the entire data retention regime.** The data retention laws passed with Labor's full support after the party initially expressed concerns but ultimately backed the legislation with amendments [3][4].
The PJCIS inquiry was not a government-imposed process but a committee-initiated review that the committee itself chose to terminate.
**Post-2015 developments reveal systemic issues.** In 2019, it was revealed that the Australian Federal Police accessed journalists' metadata 58 times in a single 12-month period, and conducted highly publicised raids on ABC headquarters and News Corp journalist Annika Smethurst's home [5][6].
The original source (Computerworld Australia) is a publication of IDG Communications, a mainstream technology journalism organisation without identifiable partisan political alignment.
However, the framing suggests the scrapping was a negative outcome without adequately explaining the legislative alternatives that replaced the inquiry.
**Did Labor do something similar?**
Labor not only supported the Coalition's data retention legislation but was complicit in the same processes:
1. **Bipartisan support for data retention**: Labor voted with the Coalition to pass the data retention laws in March 2015 [3][4]
2. **Committee representation**: The PJCIS includes members from both major parties.
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The decision to scrap the inquiry was a committee decision, not a unilateral government action
3. **No Labor opposition to scrapping**: There is no record of Labor members of PJCIS dissenting from the decision to terminate the inquiry or demanding it continue
4. **Labor's own record on press freedom**: In 2019, when AFP raids on journalists occurred, Labor was in opposition and criticised the raids, but the data retention framework they helped establish enabled those actions
**Scale comparison**: The data retention regime affected all Australians, not just journalists.
The PJCIS, on its own recommendation, initiated the inquiry in March 2015 and terminated it in July 2015 after the government introduced amendments establishing a warrant system and public interest advocate mechanism [1].
The committee retained authority to oversee the warrant system through annual reporting requirements [1].
**However, the warrant system proved inadequate:**
The 2019 revelations that AFP accessed journalist metadata 58 times in 12 months, with only two journalist information warrants issued, suggests the oversight mechanisms were not robust [5].
The 2019 AFP raids on ABC and News Corp demonstrated that the data retention regime enabled significant encroachment on press freedom.
**Legitimate government rationale:**
The data retention laws were justified as necessary for counter-terrorism and serious crime investigations [2].
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The warrant requirements for journalists represented an attempt to balance law enforcement needs with press freedom protections.
**The bipartisan nature of the issue:**
Both major parties have historically prioritised national security over press freedom when these values conflict.
Labor's support for the data retention regime demonstrates this is not a uniquely Coalition issue but reflects bipartisan consensus on security matters.
**Key context:** This is not unique to the Coalition.
Both parties have since been confronted with the consequences of these laws through the 2019 AFP raids and subsequent revelations about metadata access.
The core claim is factually accurate: the PJCIS inquiry into law enforcement access to journalists' telecommunications data was indeed scrapped in July 2015 without holding public hearings.
The committee itself had initiated the inquiry and chose to terminate it after legislative amendments were made
The claim presents the scrapping as a unilateral negative action by the Coalition when it was actually a bipartisan committee decision that followed the introduction of alternative oversight mechanisms.
The core claim is factually accurate: the PJCIS inquiry into law enforcement access to journalists' telecommunications data was indeed scrapped in July 2015 without holding public hearings.
The committee itself had initiated the inquiry and chose to terminate it after legislative amendments were made
The claim presents the scrapping as a unilateral negative action by the Coalition when it was actually a bipartisan committee decision that followed the introduction of alternative oversight mechanisms.