Religious Discrimination Bill 2021 - Second Reading - Impact on Tasmania
Passed by a large majority
1 rebellion 68% attendance
Division last edited 18th Feb 2022 by mackay staff
The same number of MPs voted for and against a motion to disagree with the opposition amendment to government amendment (8) so the Speaker made a casting vote with the 'Yes' votes, meaning that the opposition amendment failed.
There were two rebellions, with Bass MP Bridget Archer (Liberal) and North Sydney MP Trent Zimmerman (Liberal) crossing the floor to vote 'No' against the rest of their party, who voted 'Yes.'
Isaacs MP Mark Dreyfus (Labor) explained that:
there has been a lot of disagreement about what clause 12—the statements of belief clause in this bill—would allow and what it would not allow. The government says that the clause simply clarifies that there is no law against a person making a statement of belief. But disability groups, human rights groups, women's groups, aged-care organisations, the Australian Medical Association, LGBTIQ groups and the Law Council of Australia have raised alarm. Lawyers can argue about the precise legal impact of this provision, but it is impossible to escape the fact that the provision is drafted in a way that suggests people of faith should be able to discriminate against other Australians on the basis of race, gender, sexual orientation, age and disability, particularly in Tasmania, which is singled out in this provision. This is what the provision says. It literally says that a statement of belief will not constitute discrimination under any of Australia's existing antidiscrimination laws. All of Australia's antidiscrimination laws in each of the states and territories are actually listed in this clause, and so too is a specific provision of Tasmanian Anti-Discrimination Act.
Labor does not believe that people of faith in Australia are seeking a special right to discriminate against people on the basis of disability or gender or race or sexual orientation or any other protected attribute. We agree that the mere expression of a non-malicious statement of belief should not contravene any Australian law, and we want to reassure people of faith on that front. We stand ready to work with the government on a better way of providing that reassurance, if it can be done in a way that does not remove protections against discrimination. But a law that says, on its face, that one group of Australians should be allowed to discriminate against other Australians is not the way to do it. Quite apart from the precise legal impact of the provision, it sends the wrong signal—a very divisive signal.
(1) Amendment (8), omit subclauses (1) to (1B), substitute:
(1) To avoid doubt, making a statement of belief does not, in and of itself, constitute discrimination for the purposes of this Act.
According to the bill homepage, the bill was introduced with the Religious Discrimination (Consequential Amendments) Bill 2021 and Human Rights Legislation Amendment Bill 2021 in order to:
SBS News has provided a good summary of the more controversial parts of the bill, including an explanation for each rebellion that occurred during the long debate. According to this summary, the key areas for concern were:
There were 2 rebellions in this division.
Party | Votes | |
---|---|---|
Adam Bandt Melbourne Australian Greens | No | |
Australian Labor Party (81% turnout) | 0 Yes – 55 No | |
Anthony Albanese Grayndler | No | |
Chris Bowen McMahon | No | |
Tony Burke Watson | No | |
Linda Burney Barton | No | |
Josh Burns Macnamara | No | |
Terri Butler Griffith | No | |
Anthony Byrne Holt | No | |
Jim Chalmers Rankin | No | |
Lisa Chesters Bendigo | No | |
Jason Clare Blaxland | No | |
Sharon Claydon Newcastle | No | |
Libby Coker Corangamite | No | |
Julie Collins Franklin | No | |
Pat Conroy Shortland | No | |
Milton Dick Oxley | No | |
Mark Dreyfus Isaacs | No | |
Justine Elliot Richmond | No | |
Mike Freelander Macarthur | No | |
Steve Georganas Adelaide | No | |
Andrew Giles Scullin | No | |
Patrick Gorman Perth | No | |
Luke Gosling Solomon | No | |
Chris Hayes Fowler | No | |
Julian Hill Bruce | No | |
Ed Husic Chifley | No | |
Stephen Jones Whitlam | No | |
Ged Kearney Cooper | No | |
Peter Khalil Wills | No | |
Catherine King Ballarat | No | |
Madeleine King Brand | No | |
Andrew Leigh Fenner | No | |
Richard Marles Corio | No | |
Kristy McBain Eden-Monaro | No | |
Emma McBride Dobell | No | |
Brian Mitchell Lyons | No | |
Shayne Neumann Blair | No | |
Brendan O'Connor Gorton | No | |
Clare O'Neil Hotham | No | |
Julie Owens Parramatta | No | |
Graham Perrett Moreton | No | |
Fiona Phillips Gilmore | No | |
Amanda Rishworth Kingston | No | |
Michelle Rowland Greenway | No | |
Joanne Ryan Lalor | No | |
Bill Shorten Maribyrnong | No | |
David Smith Bean | No | |
Warren Snowdon Lingiari | No | |
Anne Stanley Werriwa | No | |
Meryl Swanson Paterson | No | |
Susan Templeman Macquarie | No | |
Matt Thistlethwaite Kingsford Smith | No | |
Kate Thwaites Jagajaga | No | |
Tim Watts Gellibrand | No | |
Anika Wells Lilley | No | |
Tony Zappia Makin | No | |
Anne Aly Cowan | Absent | |
Sharon Bird Cunningham | Absent | |
Mark Butler Hindmarsh | Absent | |
Nick Champion Spence | Absent | |
Joel Fitzgibbon Hunter | Absent | |
Matt Keogh Burt | Absent | |
Rob Mitchell McEwen | Absent | |
Daniel Mulino Fraser | Absent | |
Peta Murphy Dunkley | Absent | |
Alicia Payne Canberra | Absent | |
Tanya Plibersek Sydney | Absent | |
Maria Vamvakinou Calwell | Absent | |
Josh Wilson Fremantle | Absent | |
Rebekha Sharkie Mayo Centre Alliance | No | |
Mark Coulton Parkes Deputy Speaker | Yes | |
Craig Kelly Hughes Independent | Yes | |
Helen Haines Indi Independent | No | |
Zali Steggall Warringah Independent | No | |
Andrew Wilkie Clark Independent | No | |
Bob Katter Kennedy Katter's Australian Party | Yes | |
Liberal National Party (80% turnout) | 4 Yes – 0 No | |
Angie Bell Moncrieff | Yes | |
Garth Hamilton Groom | Yes | |
Julian Simmonds Ryan | Yes | |
Phillip Thompson Herbert | Yes | |
Terry Young Longman | Absent | |
Liberal Party (83% turnout) | 43 Yes – 2 No | |
John Alexander Bennelong | Yes | |
Katie Allen Higgins | Yes | |
Karen Andrews McPherson | Yes | |
Kevin Andrews Menzies | Yes | |
Russell Broadbent Monash | Yes | |
Scott Buchholz Wright | Yes | |
David Coleman Banks | Yes | |
Peter Dutton Dickson | Yes | |
Warren Entsch Leichhardt | Yes | |
Trevor Evans Brisbane | Yes | |
Jason Falinski Mackellar | Yes | |
Paul Fletcher Bradfield | Yes | |
Nicolle Flint Boothby | Yes | |
Josh Frydenberg Kooyong | Yes | |
Ian Goodenough Moore | Yes | |
Alex Hawke Mitchell | Yes | |
Luke Howarth Petrie | Yes | |
Greg Hunt Flinders | Yes | |
Steve Irons Swan | Yes | |
Andrew Laming Bowman | Yes | |
Sussan Ley Farrer | Yes | |
Nola Marino Forrest | Yes | |
Fiona Martin Reid | Yes | |
Melissa McIntosh Lindsay | Yes | |
Scott Morrison Cook | Yes | |
Ben Morton Tangney | Yes | |
Ted O'Brien Fairfax | Yes | |
Tony Pasin Barker | Yes | |
Gavin Pearce Braddon | Yes | |
Christian Porter Pearce | Yes | |
Rowan Ramsey Grey | Yes | |
Dave Sharma Wentworth | Yes | |
Tony Smith Casey | Yes | |
James Stevens Sturt | Yes | |
Michael Sukkar Deakin | Yes | |
Angus Taylor Hume | Yes | |
Bert Van Manen Forde | Yes | |
Ross Vasta Bonner | Yes | |
Lucy Wicks Robertson | Yes | |
Rick Wilson O'Connor | Yes | |
Tim Wilson Goldstein | Yes | |
Jason Wood La Trobe | Yes | |
Ken Wyatt Hasluck | Yes | |
Bridget Archer Bass | No | |
Trent Zimmerman North Sydney | No | |
Vince Connelly Stirling | Absent | |
Celia Hammond Curtin | Absent | |
Andrew Hastie Canning | Absent | |
Julian Leeser Berowra | Absent | |
Gladys Liu Chisholm | Absent | |
Melissa Price Durack | Absent | |
Stuart Robert Fadden | Absent | |
Dan Tehan Wannon | Absent | |
Alan Tudge Aston | Absent | |
National Party (80% turnout) | 12 Yes – 0 No | |
Darren Chester Gippsland | Yes | |
Pat Conaghan Cowper | Yes | |
Damian Drum Nicholls | Yes | |
David Gillespie Lyne | Yes | |
Kevin Hogan Page | Yes | |
Barnaby Joyce New England | Yes | |
Michelle Landry Capricornia | Yes | |
David Littleproud Maranoa | Yes | |
Michael McCormack Riverina | Yes | |
Llew O'Brien Wide Bay | Yes | |
Ken O'Dowd Flynn | Yes | |
Keith Pitt Hinkler | Yes | |
George Christensen Dawson | Absent | |
Andrew Gee Calare | Absent | |
Anne Webster Mallee | Absent | |
Andrew Wallace Fisher Speaker | Yes | |
Craig Kelly Hughes United Australia Party | Absent | |
Totals (83% turnout) | 63 Yes – 62 No |
Red entries are rebel votes against the majority of a party.
Turnout is the percentage of members eligible to vote that did vote.