Setka charged with harassing a CFMEU administrator

3 days ago 4

February 25, 2026 — 5:40pm

Disgraced union boss John Setka faces fresh criminal charges over allegations he issued a Christmas Day threat to an official from the Albanese government-backed administration that seized control of the CFMEU in 2024.

Police arrested the 61-year-old in Footscray on Wednesday morning, and he will face court over the charges in early June.

Former CFMEU head John Setka was arrested on Wednesday morning. File photo.

Setka has also been charged by Victoria Police’s Taskforce Hawk, which is investigating alleged criminal behaviour linked to the construction industry, for allegedly committing offences while on bail.

Setka said he did not threaten anyone in the messages he sent on Christmas Day last year, telling this masthead: “People should just toughen up and drink a bit of concrete and harden up a bit … It is the building industry.”

He said CFMEU staff were behaving like “rose petals”, and claimed the prosecution against him was politically driven.

Asked what he had said in the messages, Setka said he had written: “I hope you have a shit Christmas, because you are a bunch of sell-out dogs.”

Setka said there was no menace in the comment as he was just expressing his opinion. “We’re not a communist country,” he told this masthead.

At the time of his arrest on Wednesday, the former CFMEU boss was already facing a series of charges laid by Taskforce Hawk officers in November.

Those charges relate to allegations Setka used a carriage service to menace or harass administration officials, including corruption-busting lawyer Geoffrey Watson, SC.

In an explosive report published this month, Watson accused Victoria’s Labor government of turning a blind eye to CFMEU corruption and organised crime on infrastructure projects at an estimated cost to taxpayers of $15 billion. These claims prompted fierce backlash from the government.

Police established Operation Hawk in mid-2024, in response to this masthead’s Building Bad series, which exposed criminal behaviour and corruption in the CFMEU.

The operation later became Taskforce Hawk in 2025 in response to fresh allegations of serious and violent criminal behaviour, also broken by this masthead.

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Mathew DunckleyMathew Dunckley is deputy editor at The Age. He was previously digital editor at the Age, national business editor for The Sydney Morning Herald and The Age and Melbourne bureau chief for the Australian Financial Review.Connect via X, Facebook or email.

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