Summary

Edit

The majority voted in favour of a motion "that the remaining stages of the bills be agreed to and the bills be now passed." This means the bill will now be sent to the House of Representatives for their consideration.

What do these bills do?

According to the bills digest:

  • The Digital ID Bill 2023 and the Digital ID (Transitional and Consequential Provisions) Bill 2023 (the DID Bills) will establish in legislation a network of organisations that provide or use Digital ID services in delivering participating government and commercial services.
  • The DID Bills will establish the architecture and framework for the network. These aspects are based on the Coalition Government’s Trusted Digital Identity Framework (TDIF), which is the basis for current unlegislated arrangements under which myGovID enables access to government services.
  • Under the DID Bills governance arrangements will be shared among the Minister and four agencies, with additional agencies providing advice, including the Australian Security Intelligence Organisation (ASIO). Some stakeholders consider the proposed governance arrangements too complex, with too many entities in too many portfolios, leading to concerns about delineation and coordination of roles, and the risk that these shortcomings could be exacerbated when Machinery of Government (MoG) changes occur.
  • Individuals’ participation in the Digital ID system will be at no financial cost and voluntary. However, fees for participating entities will be prescribed at a later date in rules and there are stakeholder concerns about protections for individuals who choose not to participate.
  • The DID Bills will establish protections for citizens and their data, and consequences for entities’ non-compliance with those protections and the governance requirements. However, there are ambiguities and concerns about, for example, the definition of and responses to cyber security and digital ID fraud incidents.
  • There are ambiguities and concerns around the interaction of DID Bill provisions with other legislated regimes for identity verification and digital transactions, such as Know Your Customer (KYC), anti-money laundering and counter-terrorism financing (AML-CTF), and security of critical infrastructure (SOCI).
  • The Bill provides for phasing-in, the progressive opening of the system to additional entities beyond initial Commonwealth entities. There is considerable stakeholder criticism that the scope and timing of the phases will be at the Minister’s discretion, and particularly that the Minister has indicated that private sector entities will not fully participate until phase four.

Votes Passed by a small majority

Nobody rebelled against their party.

Party Votes
Australian Greens (100% turnout) 11 Yes 0 No
Penny Allman-Payne Queensland Yes
Dorinda Cox WA Yes
Mehreen Faruqi NSW Yes
Sarah Hanson-Young SA Yes
Nick McKim Tasmania Yes
Barbara Pocock SA Yes
Janet Rice Victoria Yes
David Shoebridge NSW Yes
Jordon Steele-John WA Yes
Larissa Waters Queensland Yes
Peter Whish-Wilson Tasmania Yes
Australian Labor Party (71% turnout) 17 Yes 0 No
Tim Ayres NSW Yes
Catryna Bilyk Tasmania Yes
Carol Brown Tasmania Yes
Anthony Chisholm Queensland Yes
Raff Ciccone Victoria Yes
Varun Ghosh WA Yes
Nita Green Queensland Yes
Karen Grogan SA Yes
Fatima Payman WA Yes
Helen Polley Tasmania Yes
Louise Pratt WA Yes
Tony Sheldon NSW Yes
Marielle Smith SA Yes
Glenn Sterle WA Yes
Jana Stewart Victoria Yes
Anne Urquhart Tasmania Yes
Jess Walsh Victoria Yes
Don Farrell SA Absent
Katy Gallagher ACT Absent
Jenny McAllister NSW Absent
Malarndirri McCarthy NT Absent
Deborah O'Neill NSW Absent
Murray Watt Queensland Absent
Penny Wong SA Absent
Jacinta Nampijinpa Price NT Country Liberal Party No
Andrew McLachlan SA Deputy President No
David Pocock ACT Independent Yes
David Van Victoria Independent Yes
Lidia Thorpe Victoria Independent Absent
Jacqui Lambie Network (100% turnout) 2 Yes 0 No
Jacqui Lambie Tasmania Yes
Tammy Tyrrell Tasmania Yes
Liberal National Party (100% turnout) 0 Yes 2 No
Matthew Canavan Queensland No
James McGrath Queensland No
Liberal Party (70% turnout) 0 Yes 16 No
Alex Antic SA No
Wendy Askew Tasmania No
Andrew Bragg NSW No
Slade Brockman WA No
Michaelia Cash WA No
Claire Chandler Tasmania No
Richard Colbeck Tasmania No
Jonathon Duniam Tasmania No
David Fawcett SA No
Jane Hume Victoria No
Kerrynne Liddle SA No
Matt O'Sullivan WA No
Gerard Rennick Queensland No
Anne Ruston SA No
Paul Scarr Queensland No
Dean Smith WA No
Simon Birmingham SA Absent
Sarah Henderson Victoria Absent
Hollie Hughes NSW Absent
Maria Kovacic NSW Absent
James Paterson Victoria Absent
Linda Reynolds WA Absent
Dave Sharma NSW Absent
National Party (75% turnout) 0 Yes 3 No
Ross Cadell NSW No
Perin Davey NSW No
Susan McDonald Queensland No
Bridget McKenzie Victoria Absent
Pauline Hanson's One Nation Party (100% turnout) 0 Yes 2 No
Pauline Hanson Queensland No
Malcolm Roberts Queensland No
Sue Lines WA President Yes
Ralph Babet Victoria United Australia Party No
Totals (79% turnout) 33 Yes – 26 No