

- Title
MOTIONS
Suspension of Standing Orders
- Database
Senate Hansard
- Date
13-09-2011
- Source
Senate
- Parl No.
43
- Electorate
- Interjector
- Page
5914
- Party
Nats
- Presenter
- Status
Final
- Question No.
- Questioner
- Responder
- Speaker
Boswell, Sen Ronald
- Stage
- Type
- Context
MOTIONS
- System Id
chamber/hansards/5b24bb76-55c2-4688-8430-e6687ef5a346/0116
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-
Hansard
- Start of Business
- NOTICES
-
BILLS
-
Telecommunications Legislation Amendment (Fibre Deployment) Bill 2011
-
In Committee
- Parry, Sen Stephen
- Birmingham, Sen Simon
- Conroy, Sen Stephen
- Birmingham, Sen Simon
- Conroy, Sen Stephen
- Birmingham, Sen Simon
- Macdonald, Sen Ian
- Conroy, Sen Stephen
- Macdonald, Sen Ian
- Conroy, Sen Stephen
- Macdonald, Sen Ian
- Conroy, Sen Stephen
- Birmingham, Sen Simon
- Macdonald, Sen Ian
- Conroy, Sen Stephen
- Birmingham, Sen Simon
- Macdonald, Sen Ian
- Birmingham, Sen Simon
- Macdonald, Sen Ian
- Conroy, Sen Stephen
- Birmingham, Sen Simon
- Procedural Text
-
In Committee
-
Telecommunications Legislation Amendment (Fibre Deployment) Bill 2011
-
QUESTIONS WITHOUT NOTICE
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Gillard Government
(Abetz, Sen Eric, Evans, Sen Christopher) -
Parliamentary Budget Office
(Stephens, Sen Ursula, Wong, Sen Penny) -
Carbon Pricing
(Brandis, Sen George, Evans, Sen Christopher) -
Tarkine Wilderness
(Milne, Sen Christine, Conroy, Sen Stephen) -
Carbon Pricing
(Birmingham, Sen Simon, Wong, Sen Penny) -
Mining
(Urquhart, Sen Anne, Sherry, Sen Nick) -
Asylum Seekers
(Eggleston, Sen Alan, Carr, Sen Kim) -
Western Australian Offshore Constitutional Settlement
(Siewert, Sen Rachel, Ludwig, Sen Joe) -
Asylum Seekers
(Humphries, Sen Gary, Carr, Sen Kim) - QUESTIONS WITHOUT NOTICE: TAKE NOTE OF ANSWERS, Carbon Pricing
- Western Australian Offshore Constitutional Settlement
-
Gillard Government
- PETITIONS
- NOTICES
- BUSINESS
- BILLS
- COMMITTEES
- MOTIONS
- COMMITTEES
- MOTIONS
- PERSONAL EXPLANATIONS
- MATTERS OF PUBLIC IMPORTANCE
- MINISTERIAL STATEMENTS
-
COMMITTEES
- Public Accounts and Audit Committee
-
Telecommunications Legislation Amendment (Fibre Deployment) Bill 2011
- Back, Sen Chris
- Macdonald, Sen Ian
- Birmingham, Sen Simon
- Conroy, Sen Stephen
- Birmingham, Sen Simon
- Conroy, Sen Stephen
- Birmingham, Sen Simon
- Conroy, Sen Stephen
- Birmingham, Sen Simon
- Conroy, Sen Stephen
- Birmingham, Sen Simon
- Conroy, Sen Stephen
- Birmingham, Sen Simon
- Division
- Birmingham, Sen Simon
- Conroy, Sen Stephen
- Ludlam, Sen Scott
- Birmingham, Sen Simon
- Third Reading
- DOCUMENTS
- STATEMENT BY THE PRESIDENT
-
ADJOURNMENT
- Hogg, Sen John
- Australian Women's Land Army
- Australian Manufacturing
- Human Trafficking
- Nippon Paper Group, Bushfires
- Desalination in Western Australia
- Regional Development Australia Fund
- National Child Protection Week
- Learn Earn Legend
- Illawarra Local Government Elections
- Uranium Mining
- Asia-Pacific Region
- South Australia: Catholic Church
- DOCUMENTS
-
QUESTIONS ON NOTICE
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Housing Supply and Affordability Reform (Question No. 593)
(Ludlam, Sen Scott, Wong, Sen Penny) -
Mining Projects (Question No. 723)
(Ludlam, Sen Scott, Conroy, Sen Stephen) -
Macquarie Island: Baiting Program (Question No. 832)
(Abetz, Sen Eric, Conroy, Sen Stephen) -
Job Services Australia: Providers (Question No. 899)
(Abetz, Sen Eric, Evans, Sen Christopher) -
Member for Dobell (Question No. 905)
(Ronaldson, Sen Michael, Evans, Sen Christopher) -
Water Policy (Question No. 919)
(Joyce, Sen Barnaby, Wong, Sen Penny) -
Australian Competition and Consumer Commission (Question No. 983)
(Cormann, Sen Mathias, Wong, Sen Penny) -
Inspector General of Taxation (Question No. 995)
(Cormann, Sen Mathias, Wong, Sen Penny) -
Inspector General of Taxation (Question No. 1001)
(Cormann, Sen Mathias, Wong, Sen Penny) -
Prime Minister and Cabinet: Media Staffing (Question No. 1028)
(Abetz, Sen Eric, Evans, Sen Christopher)
-
Housing Supply and Affordability Reform (Question No. 593)
Page: 5914
Senator BOSWELL (Queensland) (16:11): The motion I moved was actually congratulating one of Senator Brown's members of parliament. How anyone can construe that as an unmitigated attack on the Greens is beyond comprehension. Senator Brown is floundering, and he is as guilty as sin on this. I have in my possession photographs taken with a swastika superimposed on a Jewish flag. I have here a Star of David superimposed over a pig on a placard. That is shameful from anyone's perspective. I know Senator Milne is terrified about this and worried about it. She is a decent woman and does not want to be associated with this. I do not blame her for one minute.
This matter has to be debated. We have to find out one way or the other whether Senator Brown and his party believe in a BDS—a sanction over all Israeli businesses and all trade with Israel and all sporting connections. Senator Brown says he does not but every time he is put to the test he goes down. Every time he is requested to make a decision in the Senate he votes against it. He voted against it again today. It is no good going out there and every time you meet the press saying you have pulled Senator Rhiannon into line and you have spoken harshly with her and you have had vigorous debates. She thumbs her nose at you continually. She has said there has never, ever been a decision on the BDS in the Greens—it has never been voted on. If you do not have the guts to put a proposition to your own party, if you cannot go to your own party and put up a motion without fear of it being defeated, then you are not a leader's bootlace. You are a chameleon—you do not know whether you are for something or you are against something. You are being exposed as a great fraud.
The DEPUTY PRESIDENT: Senator Boswell, please address your remarks through the chair, not directly across the chamber.
Senator BOSWELL: I am sorry, Mr Deputy President. This has been an ongoing problem for this parliament and this chamber. Senator Brown attracts eight or nine per cent of the vote. What the people who support the Greens want to know is whether the Greens are an environment party, a green party, or whether they are an anti-Semitic, extreme Labor party—more than Labor; more than Dougie Cameron; he is to the left but the Greens are to the left of the left of the left of the Left. We have to know, and this is why this motion of censure has to be put to the Senate. It is going to be interesting to see where the Labor Party goes on this. I know they are going to be stuck between a rock and hard place. I hope they have the courage of their convictions and vote the same way as they voted in the last motion. I have warned the Labor Party time and time again. In fact the last time I warned them I said: 'Your vote is going down like a lift. You're on 34 per cent. It's time you stood up to the Greens. It's time you threw out the anchor. It's time to reclaim your own territory.' There was no acceptance of me warning them. Now their vote is down to 25 per cent or, if you take the Greens two per cent that has been transferred, it is 27 per cent. You are going down like a brick. You have been warned to disassociate yourselves from the Greens and you are paying the price now because you will not take any notice of the warning.
We need this motion to be determined by this parliament of whether the Greens should be censured for the racist, anti-Semitic carryings-on over the last six months when their members of parliament have addressed anti-Israel rallies. We want to know what the parliament wants and whether the parliament condemns them. I certainly condemn them. I believe the parliament should condemn them in the strongest possible terms.