Lawmaking Flashcards

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1
Q

Major party’s involvement with the religious discrimination bill

A

Liberal- Announced commitment to bill in Dec 2018, Withdrew bill from the senate in Feb 2022 due to internal opposition
Labor- Agreed to not oppose in the HOR but signalled they would seek to amend in the senate

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2
Q

Minor party’s involvement with the religious discrimination bill

A

Centre Alliance:- Rebekah Sharkie moved amendments to repeal exemption in s58 of the sex discrimination act, Supported by 5 liberal MP’s crossing the floor to vote with centre alliance as well as labor and independents

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3
Q

Individuals’ involvement with the religious discrimination bill

A

Professor George Williams- Wrote a submission to the parliamentary joint committee of human rights that the bill shouldn’t be enacted due to its failure to protect students from expulsion from school due to sexuality
Philip Ruddock- Chaired the religious freedom review panel in 2018, Found little evidence Christians are being persecuted in Australia

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4
Q

Pressure group’s involvement with the religious discrimination bill

A

Australian Christian Lobby- Called for bill to be scrapped as amendments even though they had close ties with Scott Morrison
Law council of Aus- Gave evidence in Jan 2022 at parliamentary joint committee on human rights public hearing into the bill

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5
Q

Strengths of individuals in lawmaking

A

Uphold democratic principles, Rise of independent movement, Strongest/significant influence when bringing constitutional cases (parliament can’t abrogate)

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6
Q

Weaknesses of individuals in lawmaking

A

Courts- Expensive, Standing
Parliament- Difficult to achieve majority support when not part of a political party (especially in HOR)

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7
Q

Opportunities of individuals in lawmaking

A

Courts- Can create new precedent or cause Parliament to introduce/change a law
Parliament- Private members bills aren’t backed by political party’s, Can support and capitalise on minority gov to undermine gov- Medevac, Increased number or teals that Albanese looks to

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8
Q

Threats of individuals in lawmaking

A

Courts- Only around 13% of cases successfully reach the high court
Parliament- Government dominance of legislative agenda- 0/379 passed bills were private member bills in 46th parliament

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9
Q

Examples of individuals lawmaking in parliament (3)

A

Medevac- inspired by a PMB, David Pocock wanted 16 recommendations added to the climate change bill, Helen Haines lead a joint committee that looked into the NACC, Antony Green made a submission to a committee to abolish group ticket voting which influenced the act that passed in 2016

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10
Q

Examples of individuals making constitutional law (7)

A

Aliens power defined (cannot be overruled)- Love and Thoms (2020), Limits to freedom of political communication- Clubb v Edwards; Preston v Avery (2019), Comcare v Banerji (2018), Mabo and Wik, Timber Creek, Sharma v Ministre for Environment

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11
Q

Internal lawmaking by individuals

A

HOR- Independents during minority government 2018-2019, Kerryn Phelps’ private member bill inspired senate amendments to the government bill which were passed in the HOR with support of other independents Julia Banks and Andrew Wilkie
Senate- independents on crossbench, only 1 in the 46th parliament
Private members’ bill- Same sex marriage amendment 2017

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12
Q

External lawmaking by individuals

A

‘Maeve’s Law’- mitochondrial donation laws, Rosie Batty led to legislation at commonwealth and state level- Family law Amendment bill (2017), Migration amendment bill (2016), Antony Green- 2016 senate voting reform to abolish group ticket voting

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13
Q

Mitochondrial donation law reform bill

A

2021, Known as ‘Maeve’s law’, Legalised mitochondrial donation in March 2022, Reproductive technology is designed to help parents avoid passing on a potentially fatal disease

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14
Q

Strengths of political parties in lawmaking

A

Party/coalition can dominate legislative agenda with majoritarian mandates, Balance of power mandate helps negotiation- religious discrimination bill, higher education reforms, medevac repeal

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15
Q

Weaknesses of political parties in lawmaking

A

Tyranny of majority- minor parties and opposition have reduced impact
Tyranny of minority- hold balance of power

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16
Q

Opportunities of political parties in lawmaking

A

Minor parties and coalition agreements or minority government negotiations, Internal government conflict- 5 liberals crossed the floor in the religious discrimination bill, Minority government, Senate holds balance of power

17
Q

Threats of political parties in lawmaking

A

Parliament- Hostile senate is a threat to government legislation, Minority gov in the HOR threatens the ability to pass gov legislation, Like-minded minor parties in senate with balance of power- medevac repeal, higher education reforms

18
Q

Effectiveness of minor parties in parliament

A

Medevac repeal passes in the senate with the support of Pauline Hanson’s One Nation and Jacqui Lambie Network, Greens, One Nation and Jacqui Lambie combined with the Labor party to block the government’s fair work amendment, Rebekah Sharkie from centre alliance proposed a successful amendment to the sexual discrimination act that would see transgender students better protected under the act

19
Q

Ineffectiveness of minor parties in parliament

A

Jacquie Lambie network and the Greens were unable to prevent the higher education support amendment bill from passing due to the support of One Nation and Centre alliance, Greens and centre alliance were unable to stop the medevac repeal from passing due to support from One Nation and Jacquie Lambie’s ‘secret deal’, Greens failed to pass their climate emergency declaration bill in the HOR, it was initiated by Adam Bandt and seconded by Zali Steggall however it didn’t move past the second reading speech phase

20
Q

Examples of political parties lawmaking in parliament

A

Major party- climate change bill, NACC, no successful private member bills in the 46th parliament
Minor party- coalitions force compromises such as on climate change bill where the liberals wanted a goal for 2030 but nations didn’t, no goal was specified
Opposition- medvac passes against the liberal government
Minor parties- Bandt adding amendments to climate change bill (43% is minimum)

21
Q

Court cases by political parties

A

Communist party case (1951)- High court rules that the law outlawing the Australian communist party was ultra vires, Day (a member the family first political party) v electoral commissioner for SA (2016)- Dismissed senator day’s arguments and upheld validity of changes to the electoral amendment act (2016)

22
Q

Strengths of pressure groups in lawmaking

A

Form an important link between the people and the parliament (anyone can join a pressure group, not everyone can vote), Facilitate a ‘check’ by the judiciary on the actions of the legislative- Minister for the environment v Anjali Sharma (2022)

23
Q

Weaknesses of pressure groups in lawmaking

A

Not directly involved in the lawmaking process which limits their impact, May require significant financial resources especially when influencing lawmaking in the courts (Students who sued the Commonwealth regarding Climate change were represented pro bono by David Barnden from equity generation lawyers)

24
Q

Opportunities of pressure groups in lawmaking

A

Lobbying- especially influential if there is a close relationship with the political decision makers- ACTU (close ties to labor) and jobkeeper in 2020, Can make issues election issues- climate 200 groups and ‘teal independents’, Submissions to parliament via committee stage or inquiries, Bring court action- Minister for the environment v Anjali Sharma

25
Q

Threats of pressure groups in lawmaking

A

Disproportionate influence to those they represent, Some pressure groups are seen to act like quasi-political parties due to their close ties- Getup! and Labor

26
Q

Examples of pressure groups lawmaking in parliament (2)

A

ACTU put many recommendations to the Liberal government regarding the proposed jobkeeper policy and some were added such as that the legislation is time limited, applies to only eligible workers and protects pay rate, Any person/group can send in submissions with their worries and recommendations surrounding the proposed policy
Submissions received by the senate committee

27
Q

Examples of pressure groups lawmaking in the courts (2)

A

Rowe and Anor v Electoral Commissioner- Rowe (supported by GetUp!) argued to change the period of time that people could enrol to vote after it was shortened to 3 days following the issue of the writs when it was previously 7 days
The High court found it unconstitutional meaning up to 100,000 more citizens could vote in the 2010 election
GetUp Ltd v Electoral Commissioner- Federal court argued that electronic voting enrolment wasn’t consistent with the Commonwealth Electoral Act meaning Sophie Trevitt who had enrolled online couldn’t vote Judge Perram determined that her online enrolment was valid and should be counted setting precedent for all citizens being able to enrol online