Scandal haunts NAB and Thorburn

Ian Rogers
'My name is Andrew'. NAB's CEO at a roundtable in Taree last week.   (Image:  Twitter)
A cynical beat up?  Or a strategic shakedown of the most vulnerable of Australia's major banks and its goofy CEO Andrew Thorburn?

This morning Thorburn is waking up to news reports alleging he took a luxury holiday (and a luxury kitchen appliance) arranged through a company now under police investigation over accusations it used bribery to win NAB contracts - a "gotcha" timed to shape the weekend's mass media as Kenneth Hayne's industry inquisition reaches its zenith beginning on Monday.

One big bank CEO at least has got to go over the next fortnight to satisfy the public and media clamour, and it's a congested field. Useless and pathetic on so many measures, the notional elite of Australia's ruling class may be herding for clean kills of the weakest of the banking leadership class.

The Age and the Sydney Morning Herald have the "exclusive", long in the planning most likely, that contends Thorburn enjoyed (though not to excess) the fruits of the long alleged corrupt conduct of his principal assistant, Rosemary Rogers.

Look at the bylines: Nick McKenzie and Richard Baker and also Sarah Danckert.

Baker and McKenzie have earned their status as carriers of the consensus assassinations flowing from the work of the Federal Police, the NSW Police (actually cited in their article) and the shadowier facets of Australia's deep state.

NAB and not just its CEO have been held on the rope all year by the work of Hayne's commission and not one follower of hearings next week will be able to bear any mutterings alone the line of the bank's September response: "NAB acknowledges that it is not perfect and, regrettably, mistakes have been made."

The campaign for reform of NAB has been running all year.

"Andrew Thorburn's number is up and it's the entire bank (and not just the job of NAB CEO) that's in play," Banking Day argued back in the first week of September. He held on for only nine more weeks.

Fairfax quoted a NAB response to its report, which allowed that "certain matters" had emerged as part of the alleged fraud investigation.

"These included certain control failings and breaches of policy in the office of the CEO, and a small number of unintended breaches of policy by the group CEO. These matters have been resolved and closed to the board's satisfaction,"  NAB said.

The Hayne horror show may store more spectacular material in its briefing folders.

A kind of consensus seemed to permeate the FINSIA do in Melbourne yesterday.

There's nothing extreme in the suggestion that another bank CEO will falter in the face of a clinical presentation of the facts of institutional failure and widespread avoidance of accountability.  

Thorburn is token, easy pickings.  A Sydney-based bank CEO stands a chance of following NAB's boss to the knackery.