Home Affairs officials have said there is no evidence supporting claims that Australian Prime Minister Scott Morrison’s WeChat account was hacked or subject to foreign interference. Senator Kristina Keneally, Australian Labor Party (ALP)’s home affairs spokeswoman who sought a departmental briefing over Morrison’s WeChat account, told the Labor caucus on Monday that there was no evidence of hacking or foreign interference in the Prime Minister’s recent saga of WeChat, a Chinese social media platform popular among Chinese communities. Morrison’s official WeChat account, which had around 76,000 followers, was hijacked and rebranded as a lifestyle page last month. The channel’s name was changed from “Scott Morrison” to “Australian Chinese New Lifestyle.” His photo was changed as well. It was later revealed that the account was “sold” to a Chinese businessman, who was part of the agency hired by the prime minister’s office to run his WeChat account—a practice common among politicians and …