13th Nov 2018, 3:52 PM – Senate Documents - Australian Research Council - Order for the Production of Documents
Summary
EditThe majority voted in favour of a motion introduced by Labor Senator Anne Urquhart (Tas), which means it succeeded.
Motion text
That the Senate—
(a) notes that:
(i) in evidence to the supplementary Budget estimates hearing of the Education and Employment Legislation Committee, the Chief Executive Officer of the Australian Research Council (ARC), Professor Sue Thomas, revealed that the former Minister for Education and Training, Senator Birmingham, had vetoed the funding of eleven humanities and social sciences grants,
(ii) the projects and scholars affected were not notified that their proposal had been deemed successful only to be denied funding by the former Minister; rather this intervention was deliberately and callously kept secret,
(iii) some of scholars involved have had their careers, professional reputation and employment status materially affected by this political interference,
(iv) there has been no comprehensive and detailed public explanation of the reason for the exercise of the ministerial veto, despite this being the practice of the past Labor Government, and
(v) the number of projects in the humanities and social sciences being funded by the ARC has fallen by 35% for Discovery project grants, and 51% for Discovery Early Career Researcher Awards (DECRA) between 2016 and 2018;
(b) condemns this political interference in the normal independent, rigorous and peer review process;
(c) acknowledges the universal condemnation of the Government's position from universities, the learned academies, the research community and ordinary Australians;
(d) urges all political parties, members and senators to commit to the Haldane principle that politicians should not make decisions on funding of individual research projects;
(e) calls on the Federal Government to provide a full and public explanation of why the then Minister for Education and Training arbitrarily rejected these eleven grants recommended by the ARC; and
(f) calls on the ARC to actively encourage the scholars whose grants were rejected to submit them again for the forthcoming grants rounds.
Votes Passed by a small majority
Nobody rebelled against their party.
Party | Votes | |
---|---|---|
Cory Bernardi SA Australian Conservatives | No | |
Australian Greens (100% turnout) | 9 Yes – 0 No | |
Richard Di Natale Victoria | Yes | |
Mehreen Faruqi NSW | Yes | |
Sarah Hanson-Young SA | Yes | |
Nick McKim Tasmania | Yes | |
Janet Rice Victoria | Yes | |
Rachel Siewert WA | Yes | |
Jordon Steele-John WA | Yes | |
Larissa Waters Queensland | Yes | |
Peter Whish-Wilson Tasmania | Yes | |
Australian Labor Party (76% turnout) | 19 Yes – 0 No | |
Catryna Bilyk Tasmania | Yes | |
Carol Brown Tasmania | Yes | |
Kim Carr Victoria | Yes | |
Anthony Chisholm Queensland | Yes | |
Jacinta Collins Victoria | Yes | |
Patrick Dodson WA | Yes | |
Alex Gallacher SA | Yes | |
Kristina Keneally NSW | 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 | |
David Smith ACT | Yes | |
Anne Urquhart Tasmania | Yes | |
Murray Watt Queensland | Yes | |
Doug Cameron NSW | Absent | |
Don Farrell SA | Absent | |
Gavin Marshall Victoria | Absent | |
Claire Moore Queensland | Absent | |
Glenn Sterle WA | Absent | |
Penny Wong SA | Absent | |
Centre Alliance (100% turnout) | 2 Yes – 0 No | |
Stirling Griff SA | Yes | |
Rex Patrick SA | Yes | |
Nigel Scullion NT Country Liberal Party | No | |
Derryn Hinch Victoria Derryn Hinch's Justice Party | Yes | |
Sue Lines WA Deputy President | Yes | |
Tim Storer SA Independent | Yes | |
Lucy Gichuhi SA Independent | No | |
Fraser Anning Queensland Independent | Absent | |
Steve Martin Tasmania Independent | Absent | |
Fraser Anning Queensland Katter's Australian Party | No | |
David Leyonhjelm NSW Liberal Democratic Party | No | |
Liberal National Party (100% turnout) | 0 Yes – 2 No | |
Matthew Canavan Queensland | No | |
James McGrath Queensland | No | |
Liberal Party (74% turnout) | 0 Yes – 17 No | |
Eric Abetz Tasmania | No | |
Slade Brockman WA | No | |
David Bushby Tasmania | No | |
Michaelia Cash WA | No | |
Richard Colbeck Tasmania | No | |
Jonathon Duniam Tasmania | No | |
David Fawcett SA | No | |
Concetta Fierravanti-Wells NSW | No | |
Mitch Fifield Victoria | No | |
Jane Hume Victoria | No | |
Jim Molan NSW | No | |
Marise Payne NSW | No | |
Linda Reynolds WA | No | |
Anne Ruston SA | No | |
Zed Seselja ACT | No | |
Dean Smith WA | No | |
Amanda Stoker Queensland | No | |
Simon Birmingham SA | Absent | |
Mathias Cormann WA | Absent | |
Lucy Gichuhi SA | Absent | |
Ian Macdonald Queensland | Absent | |
James Paterson Victoria | Absent | |
Arthur Sinodinos NSW | Absent | |
National Party (100% turnout) | 0 Yes – 3 No | |
Bridget McKenzie Victoria | No | |
Barry O'Sullivan Queensland | No | |
John Williams NSW | No | |
Pauline Hanson's One Nation Party (100% turnout) | 0 Yes – 2 No | |
Peter Georgiou WA | No | |
Pauline Hanson Queensland | No | |
Scott Ryan Victoria President | No | |
Brian Burston NSW United Australia Party | Absent | |
Totals (83% turnout) | 33 Yes – 30 No |
Turnout is the percentage of members eligible to vote that did vote.