Extract from The Guardian
National Anti-Corruption Commission
Minor party resolves to support a crossbench amendment instead of Coalition on key appointment.
Tue 29 Nov 2022 19.22 AEDT
First published on Tue 29 Nov 2022 12.55 AEDTOn Monday, Guardian Australia revealed the Greens’ threat to combine with the Coalition to require a super majority of three-quarters of the Nacc oversight committee to appoint a commissioner, in a move that could have derailed the bill.
But on Tuesday, the Greens resolved not to support the Coalition but instead push a crossbench amendment requiring the government to get the support of one non-government MP or senator to make an appointment.
The “naccflip”paved the way for the passage of the bill in the final sitting week of parliament this year, fulfilling Labor’s election pledge to legislate the anti-corruption body by the end of 2023.
In the Senate debate, the Greens justice spokesperson, David Shoebridge, argued Labor and the Liberals were prepared to cop “one bad headline” for teaming up to limit public hearings to avoid tens of negative stories about alleged corruption.
Independent senator David Pocock accused Labor of doing a “deal” with the opposition on “exceptional circumstances” which experts have warned would make it “nearly impossible” to hold public hearings.
The only successful crossbench amendment was a Greens proposal to expand the powers of the inspector that oversees the Nacc, which the Coalition supported.
The bill will now return to the House of Representatives for it to approve the Senate version. Labor is not expected to oppose the minor change.
Earlier, Shoebridge and the independent MP Helen Haines made a last-ditch appeal to the government to relinquish total control over appointments, although Shoebridge conceded that Labor is “not minded” to support it, and the Greens will not obstruct the Nacc bill.
But with a government member in the chair holding the casting vote, the executive retains control of the committee and appointments.
The Coalition proposed to raise the threshold to a three-quarters majority, which the attorney general, Mark Dreyfus, warned would give the opposition an effective veto of appointments and could prevent the Nacc from being established.
Dreyfus said the amendment amounted to the Liberals “trying to frustrate the will of the Australian people” after Labor was elected with a mandate to implement its model.
“It’s completely unacceptable wrecking behaviour from a party of blockers and wreckers and we’re gonna call them out,” he told Radio National. “The bill will pass this week and I’m calling on the opposition to drop their ridiculous amendment.
“It is a ridiculous amendment that they never included in their own proposed model when they brought a model forward as a draft in 2021.”
Dreyfus warned the Coalition’s “new allies, the Greens party” that if the amendment were successful, Labor would “reject it when it comes back to the House and send it back [to the Senate] again”.
The fighting words had the intended effect – as the Greens resolved at their party room later on Tuesday morning not to support the Coalition amendment and recommitted to passing the Nacc bill this year.
Instead, the Greens and senator David Pocock proposed an amendment requiring a simple majority on the oversight committee to appoint the Nacc commissioner and inspector, meaning the government will need one non-government MP or senator to approve its pick.
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