12th Sep 2017, 3:57 PM – Senate Documents - Defence Procurement - Order for the Production of Documents
Summary
EditThe majority voted in favour of a motion introduced by South Australian Senator Nick Xenophon (Nick Xenophon Team), which means it succeeded and that the documents will need to be produced.
Motion text
That—
(1) The Senate notes that:
(a) on 5 September 2017, the Senate agreed to an order for the production of documents directed at the Minister representing the Minister for Defence Industry for:
(i) any correspondence between the Department of Defence and ASC Pty Ltd in response to the announcement that Australian shipbuilders ASC Pty Ltd and Austal would partner to win the contract to build the $35 billion Future Frigate in Adelaide,
(ii) any correspondence between the Department of Defence and Austal in response to the announcement that Australian shipbuilders ASC Pty Ltd and Austal would partner to win the contract to build the $35 billion Future Frigate in Adelaide,
(iii) any correspondence between the Department of Defence and the three prospective design partners in response to the announcement that Australian shipbuilders ASC Pty Ltd and Austal would partner to win the contract to build the $35 billion Future Frigate in Adelaide, and
(iv) any other documentation held by the Future Frigate project that discusses Australian Industry Capability, the partnering or use of Australian shipyards, and how Techport and other Australian facilities might be used in the program;
(b) on 7 September 2017, the Minister for Defence tabled a letter in response claiming public interest immunity, and stated that release of such documents would potentially damage national security, damage international relations and adversely affect the Department of Defence's negotiation position in respect of future contracts;
(c) information on Australian Industry Capability and the partnering or use of Australian shipyards, and how Techport and other Australian facilities might be used in the program are not matters that would reasonably attract a security classification – the order for production of documents does not seek access to any documents that have been marked with national security markings, only unclassified data;
(d) the tender is restricted to three foreign companies: BAE Systems, Fincantieri and Navantia – a claim that disclosing documents passed to three commercial companies could in some way affect Australia's international relations is not a reasonable claim;
(e) the Government is seeking to negotiate a contract that prevents established Australian shipbuilders and their workers from a lead role in Australia's Continuous Naval Shipbuilding Program – this approach will have the opposite effect of a creating a sovereign capability – contract negotiations under the current tender arrangements will be harmful to Australian industry and national security; and
(f) on 16 July 1975, the Senate laid out by resolution its position with respect to public interest immunity claims – paragraph 4 of that resolution makes it clear that, while the Senate may permit claims of public interest immunity to be advanced, it reserves the right to determine whether a particular claim will be accepted.
(2) The Senate does not accept the public interest immunity claim made by the Minister representing the Minister for Defence Industry in relation to order for production of documents number 449 and requires the minister to table documents in full compliance with order for the production of documents number 449 by the commencement of business on 13 September 2017.
(3) If the Minister does not comply with this order for the production of documents by the specified time, the Senate requires the Minister representing the Minister for Defence Industry to attend the Senate at the end of question time on 13 September 2017, so that any senator may ask for an explanation in connection with this matter, and at the conclusion of the explanation any senator may move without notice a motion to take note of the explanation or any failure to provide an explanation.
Votes Passed by a small majority
Nobody rebelled against their party.
Party | Votes | |
---|---|---|
Cory Bernardi SA Australian Conservatives | Yes | |
Australian Greens (100% turnout) | 7 Yes – 0 No | |
Richard Di Natale Victoria | Yes | |
Sarah Hanson-Young SA | Yes | |
Nick McKim Tasmania | Yes | |
Lee Rhiannon NSW | Yes | |
Janet Rice Victoria | Yes | |
Rachel Siewert WA | Yes | |
Peter Whish-Wilson Tasmania | Yes | |
Australian Labor Party (84% turnout) | 21 Yes – 0 No | |
Carol Brown Tasmania | Yes | |
Doug Cameron NSW | Yes | |
Kim Carr Victoria | Yes | |
Anthony Chisholm Queensland | Yes | |
Jacinta Collins Victoria | Yes | |
Sam Dastyari NSW | Yes | |
Patrick Dodson WA | Yes | |
Don Farrell SA | Yes | |
Alex Gallacher SA | Yes | |
Katy Gallagher ACT | Yes | |
Chris Ketter Queensland | Yes | |
Kimberley Kitching Victoria | Yes | |
Jenny McAllister NSW | Yes | |
Malarndirri McCarthy NT | Yes | |
Deborah O'Neill NSW | Yes | |
Helen Polley Tasmania | Yes | |
Louise Pratt WA | Yes | |
Lisa Singh Tasmania | Yes | |
Glenn Sterle WA | Yes | |
Anne Urquhart Tasmania | Yes | |
Murray Watt Queensland | Yes | |
Catryna Bilyk Tasmania | Absent | |
Gavin Marshall Victoria | Absent | |
Claire Moore Queensland | Absent | |
Penny Wong SA | Absent | |
Nigel Scullion NT Country Liberal Party | No | |
Derryn Hinch Victoria Derryn Hinch's Justice Party | Yes | |
Sue Lines WA Deputy President | Yes | |
Lucy Gichuhi SA Independent | Yes | |
Jacqui Lambie Tasmania Independent | Yes | |
David Leyonhjelm NSW Liberal Democratic Party | Yes | |
Liberal National Party (50% turnout) | 0 Yes – 1 No | |
James McGrath Queensland | No | |
Matthew Canavan Queensland | Absent | |
Liberal Party (76% turnout) | 0 Yes – 16 No | |
Eric Abetz Tasmania | No | |
Simon Birmingham SA | No | |
Slade Brockman WA | No | |
David Bushby Tasmania | No | |
Michaelia Cash WA | No | |
Jonathon Duniam Tasmania | No | |
David Fawcett SA | No | |
Concetta Fierravanti-Wells NSW | No | |
Mitch Fifield Victoria | No | |
Jane Hume Victoria | No | |
James Paterson Victoria | No | |
Marise Payne NSW | No | |
Linda Reynolds WA | No | |
Zed Seselja ACT | No | |
Arthur Sinodinos NSW | No | |
Dean Smith WA | No | |
George Brandis Queensland | Absent | |
Mathias Cormann WA | Absent | |
Ian Macdonald Queensland | Absent | |
Anne Ruston SA | Absent | |
Scott Ryan Victoria | Absent | |
National Party (100% turnout) | 0 Yes – 4 No | |
Bridget McKenzie Victoria | No | |
Fiona Nash NSW | No | |
Barry O'Sullivan Queensland | No | |
John Williams NSW | No | |
Nick Xenophon Team (100% turnout) | 3 Yes – 0 No | |
Stirling Griff SA | Yes | |
Skye Kakoschke-Moore SA | Yes | |
Nick Xenophon SA | Yes | |
Pauline Hanson's One Nation Party (100% turnout) | 4 Yes – 0 No | |
Brian Burston NSW | Yes | |
Peter Georgiou WA | Yes | |
Pauline Hanson Queensland | Yes | |
Malcolm Roberts Queensland | Yes | |
Stephen Parry Tasmania President | No | |
Totals (86% turnout) | 41 Yes – 23 No |
Turnout is the percentage of members eligible to vote that did vote.