Anika Wells faces scrutiny over a “sideline meeting” at a friend’s birthday during a taxpayer-funded trip
Behind official duties: Anika Wells’ “sideline meeting” at a friend’s 40th birthday during tɑxpɑyer-funded trip — with the shσcking truth now coming into focus…
Sports and Communications Minister Anika Wells told a parliamentary watchdog that she conducted official business at an evening function celebrating a friend’s birthday during a taxpayer-funded trip to Adelaide.
The explanation emerged in a 268-page audit by the Independent Parliamentary Expenses Authority (IPEA), which scrutinised Wells’ travel claims after she referred herself for review amid mounting political pressure.
At the centre of the Adelaide trip was Wells’ account of how a planned meeting with South Australian Health Minister Chris Picton fell through at the last minute and was replaced by what she described as a ‘sideline meeting’ later that night.
She told the watchdog that a scheduled meeting with the office of Trade Minister Don Farrell ‘ran over time’.
‘The meeting with the South Australian Minister for Health and Wellbeing did not take place as scheduled in the afternoon due to the prior meeting running over,’ she said in her submission to IPEA.
‘We instead held a sideline meeting during a function later that evening. I therefore estimate that my parliamentary business concluded at 7:45pm on 7 June.’
The ‘function’ referred to in the report coincided with a 40th birthday celebration for Wells’ friend Connie Blefari, who is married to Picton.
The trip blended official duties with the social event, raising questions about whether parliamentary business was conducted in what was effectively a private setting.
IPEA accepted Wells’ account, finding her explanation sufficient to justify the travel as primarily work-related.

Anika Wells (pictured) said she did work on the sideline of a 40th birthday party in Adelaide

Wells (left) was ordered to pay back over $10,000 following an audit of her travel expenses
The authority concluded it was reasonable for her to remain overnight and return the following day, given her claim that parliamentary business continued into the evening.
Details of the ‘sideline meeting’ emerged as Wells was ordered to repay $10,116 to taxpayers after an audit released on Friday found four breaches of parliamentary travel rules across a broader set of trips between 2022 and 2025.
Those breaches primarily related to family travel entitlements that did not meet the requirement of being predominantly for parliamentary purposes.
Wells accepted the findings and apologised, describing the issues as ‘honest mistakes’ and acknowledging she had misunderstood how the rules applied when attempting to choose cheaper travel options.
