senate vote 2022-02-10#1
Edited by
mackay staff
on
2022-04-12 10:42:22
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Title
Committees — Selection of Bills Committee; Report
- Committees - Selection of Bills Committee; Report - Inquire into three electoral bills
Description
<p class="speaker">Dean Smith</p>
<p>I present the first report of 2022 of the Selection of Bills Committee. I seek leave to have the report incorporated in <i>Hansard</i>.</p>
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- The majority voted against an [amendment](https://www.openaustralia.org.au/senate/?gid=2022-02-10.18.1) to a motion that calls for a committee inquiry into three pieces of proposed legislation (that is, bills). Because this vote was unsuccessful, these three bills will not be sent to a committee for inquiry.
- ### Amendment text
- > *(3) At the end of the motion, add:*
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- >> *"and, in respect of the [Electoral Legislation Amendment (Foreign Influences and Offences) Bill 2022](https://www.aph.gov.au/Parliamentary_Business/Bills_Legislation/Bills_Search_Results/Result?bId=s1333), the bill be referred immediately to the Finance and Public Administration Legislation Committee for inquiry and report by 25 March 2022".*
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- > *(4) At the end of the motion, add:*
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- >> *"and, in respect of the [Electoral Legislation Amendment (Authorisations) Bill 2022](https://www.aph.gov.au/Parliamentary_Business/Bills_Legislation/Bills_Search_Results/Result?bId=s1331), the bill be referred immediately to the Finance and Public Administration Legislation Committee for inquiry and report by 25 March 2022".*
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- > *(5) At the end of the motion, add:*
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- >> *"and, in respect of the [Electoral Legislation Amendment (COVID Enfranchisement) Bill 2022](https://www.aph.gov.au/Parliamentary_Business/Bills_Legislation/Bills_Search_Results/Result?bId=s1332), the bill be referred immediately to the Finance and Public Administration Legislation Committee for inquiry and report by 25 March 2022".*
<p>Leave granted.</p>
<p class="italic"> <i>The report read as follows—</i></p>
<p class="italic"> <i>The report was unavailable at the time of publication</i></p>
<p>I move:</p>
<p class="italic">That the report be adopted.</p>
<p class="speaker">Nick McKim</p>
<p>ator McKIM (—) (): I flag that the Greens have a number of amendments to this report. After the two amendments that I will shortly be moving, Senator Rice and Senator Waters will have amendments. I move:</p>
<p class="italic">(1) At the end of the motion, add:</p>
<p class="italic">"and, in respect of the Social Media (Anti-Trolling) Bill 2022, contingent upon introduction in the House of Representatives, the provisions of the bill be referred immediately to the Legal and Constitutional Affairs Legislation Committee for inquiry and report by 24 March 2022".</p>
<p class="italic">(2) At the end of the motion, add:</p>
<p class="italic">"and, in respect of the Treasury Laws Amendment (Cyclone and Flood Damage Reinsurance Pool) Bill 2022, the provisions of the bill be referred immediately to the Economics Legislation Committee for inquiry and report by 24 March 2022".</p>
<p>These two amendments are critical. I will speak first to the Treasury Laws Amendment (Cyclone and Flood Damage Reinsurance Pool) Bill 2022. This bill, in effect, creates a system where the government becomes an insurer of last resort. It will only apply to a relatively small geographic part of the country. The reason the government has to do this—or wants to do this—is because insurance companies are vacating the field. The reason insurance companies are vacating the field is because of climate change. What we are facing is a climate that is breaking down around us. Governments are going to have to come to grips with this, because, more and more, we will see insurance companies—driven by the massive, global, multinational, reinsurance companies—vacating the field. This will mean that ordinary Australians won't be able to get insurance on their homes, their properties and their businesses.</p>
<p>This shouldn't just be limited to one small part of the country; this is a valid and growing area of concern around the whole country. It's only going to get worse. So it's critical that this bill be referred to an inquiry, so that Australians from right around the country who will not benefit from this bill can have their voices heard, and Australians who are extremely worried about the lack of climate action and climate ambition with both major parties in this place can make those views heard.</p>
<p>What needs to happen on this bill, ultimately, is that we should be putting a levy on the companies that massively profit from burning fossil fuels, logging our native forests and producing massive carbon emissions as a result. We should be levying them to pay for schemes like this. That's why this needs to go to an inquiry, and that's why the Greens have moved this amendment.</p>
<p>In the short time left to me, I will quickly indicate why we believe that the Social Media (Anti-Trolling) Bill 2022 needs to go to an inquiry. Of course something needs to be done to address some of the online harms that are caused by trolls. This bill does not do that. This is actually not an antitrolling bill, as is claimed in the title. What we've seen from this government is the continued erosion of rights, freedoms and liberties over the last couple of decades. This bill is yet another step in that dangerous path down the road to a surveillance state and a police state. On that basis, if on no other basis, this bill should be referred to an inquiry so people can have a say about that.</p>
<p>Question agreed to.</p>
<p class="speaker">Slade Brockman</p>
<p>Unless there is someone who wishes to vote separately, I will put these two amendments together. Is that acceptable? I put the two amendments moved by Senator McKim.</p>
<p>Question agreed to.</p>
<p class="speaker">Larissa Waters</p>
<p>I seek leave to move three amendments to the Selection of Bills Committee report as circulated in the chamber: Nos (3), (4) and (5).</p>
<p>Leave granted.</p>
<p>I move:</p>
<p class="italic">(3) At the end of the motion, add:</p>
<p class="italic">"and, in respect of the Electoral Legislation Amendment (Foreign Influences and Offences) Bill 2022, the bill be referred immediately to the Finance and Public Administration Legislation Committee for inquiry and report by 25 March 2022".</p>
<p class="italic">(4) At the end of the motion, add:</p>
<p class="italic">"and, in respect of the Electoral Legislation Amendment (Authorisations) Bill 2022, the bill be referred immediately to the Finance and Public Administration Legislation Committee for inquiry and report by 25 March 2022".</p>
<p class="italic">(5) At the end of the motion, add:</p>
<p class="italic">"and, in respect of the Electoral Legislation Amendment (COVID Enfranchisement) Bill 2022, the bill be referred immediately to the Finance and Public Administration Legislation Committee for inquiry and report by 25 March 2022".</p>
<p>These amendments pertain to removing the three latest electoral bills from being rammed through this chamber, because we would like to refer those three electoral bills to a committee for scrutiny in the ordinary manner of all legislation, because no-one should be passing legislation that they haven't even seen until 24 hours ago. So these amendments refer each of these three electoral bills—one about COVID enfranchisement, one about authorisations and one about foreign influences—to the Finance and Public Administration Legislation Committee for inquiry by 25 March. This is a fairly tight inquiry time frame as it is, but—people are looking at me strangely.</p>
<p class="speaker">Slade Brockman</p>
<p>Senator Waters, I will just interrupt briefly. Apparently these haven't been circulated.</p>
<p class="speaker">Larissa Waters</p>
<p>I'm sure our chamber attendants will do their very best to circulate them. That is the effect of the amendments: to refer those three electoral bills to the Finance and Public Administration Legislation Committee for an inquiry by 25 March. That will be with you on a piece of paper shortly.</p>
<p>The reason that we need these bills to be properly inquired into is that no-one should pass laws that they've only just seen in draft form 24 hours ago, particularly laws that relate to people's ability to vote and choose the government of the day. Some of these bills sound innocuous. Maybe they are, but we will never know unless we have time to scrutinise them and hear from experts and potentially find loopholes or nefarious consequences that the Senate might then seek to amend and close and change. That's the whole point of an inquiry, so it's kind of ironic that we need to argue for basic process here.</p>
<p>I might just point out that these three bills follow 10 electoral bills that we've seen in five months, so we have had a flurry of attempts by the government to change very fundamental rules about voting and elections in the shadow of an election that they are desperate to attempt to win, because they are so deeply unpopular throughout the entire community—in particular the Prime Minister. This is not the way to win an election—trying to rig the system at the last minute and ram through bills that suit your own purposes. It's pretty shameless, folks, even for you. So we'd like these bills to be inquired into.</p>
<p>I might add that, the last time we dealt with electoral legislation, this government was proposing to bring in the requirement that voters show identification before they voted and to then set up a convoluted, impractical process in the event that someone couldn't provide identification. It was a pure attempt to disenfranchise people. It would have had the effect of disenfranchising First Nations people, people without a home and women fleeing from violence. These are people who might not have their ID papers with them. They might not have ID papers at all, and they might not have a person who can come along to the polling booth and vouch for them, so that they can get a declaration vote. It was a shameless way of trying to deflate the vote of people who traditionally don't vote for the Liberal Party.</p>
<p>A deal was done between the two big parties. In the course of dealing with that bill, the government were also trying to silence the genuine involvement and advocacy of not-for-profit organisations in the contest of ideas that is an election campaign. They were trying to bring an additional layer of bureaucracy to non-government organisations which advocate for their purposes—sometimes, charitable purposes—and which are already covered by a schema that heavily regulates charities. The government were essentially seeking to silence dissent and silence voices that call out their terrible policies. In the course of dealing with that bill, the two big parties did a deal together, as they so frequently do, and pushed off voter ID laws. Yesterday in this chamber, we saw Senator McGrath introduce his own voter ID bill, so this issue is not dead.</p>
<p>This government is once again trying to rig the electoral system to benefit themselves because they've got nothing left. They've got no policies that anybody likes. They don't have any representatives that anyone likes much any more, if the latest polls are anything to go by. And now they're trying to ram through three more electoral bills which may have consequences that this chamber isn't across without having an inquiry to find out.</p>
<p>We are moving for these three electoral bills to go to an inquiry, as they normally would, in the usual manner. It's particularly important when bills are about voting and the right of people to have their say about who runs this country and protects their future or sells it out to big corporations and political donors.</p>
<p class="speaker">Slade Brockman</p>
<p>Does anyone require these three amendments to be split? Are you happy for them to be voted on together? The question is that amendments (3) to (5) be agreed to.</p>
<p></p>
<p></p>
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