

- Title
MATTERS OF PUBLIC IMPORTANCE
- Database
Senate Hansard
- Date
01-11-2011
- Source
Senate
- Parl No.
43
- Electorate
- Interjector
- Page
7791
- Party
ALP
- Presenter
- Status
Final
- Question No.
- Questioner
- Responder
- Speaker
Faulkner, Sen John
- Stage
- Type
- Context
MATTERS OF PUBLIC IMPORTANCE
- System Id
chamber/hansards/7864bf6c-00f9-409b-a61c-0c9141671221/0110
Previous Fragment Next Fragment
-
Hansard
- Start of Business
- BILLS
-
QUESTIONS WITHOUT NOTICE
-
Qantas
(Abetz, Sen Eric, Evans, Sen Christopher) -
Small Business
(Bishop, Sen Mark, Sherry, Sen Nick) -
Qantas
(Ronaldson, Sen Michael, Evans, Sen Christopher) -
Forestry
(Milne, Sen Christine, Ludwig, Sen Joe) -
Qantas
(Brandis, Sen George, Evans, Sen Christopher) -
Interest Rates
(Brown, Sen Carol, Wong, Sen Penny) -
Carbon Pricing
(Birmingham, Sen Simon, Wong, Sen Penny) -
Indonesian National Police
(Di Natale, Sen Richard, Ludwig, Sen Joe)
-
Qantas
- QUESTIONS WITHOUT NOTICE: ADDITIONAL ANSWERS
- QUESTIONS WITHOUT NOTICE: TAKE NOTE OF ANSWERS
- NOTICES
- BUSINESS
- COMMITTEES
- NOTICES
- BUSINESS
- MOTIONS
- COMMITTEES
- BILLS
- MOTIONS
- COMMITTEES
- MOTIONS
- DOCUMENTS
- COMMITTEES
- MATTERS OF PUBLIC IMPORTANCE
- COMMITTEES
- DOCUMENTS
- BILLS
- COMMITTEES
- BILLS
- ADJOURNMENT
- DOCUMENTS
-
QUESTIONS ON NOTICE
-
Office of the Australian Building and Construction Commissioner (Question No. 699)
(Abetz, Sen Eric, Evans, Sen Christopher) -
Defence: Naval Vessels (Question No. 759)
(Johnston, Sen David, Evans, Sen Christopher) -
Fair Work Australia and Office of the Australian Building and Construction Commissioner: Travel (Question No. 847)
(Abetz, Sen Eric, Evans, Sen Christopher) -
Attorney-General, Home Affairs and Justice: Code of Conduct Investigations (Question No. 1059, 1068 and 1069)
(Abetz, Sen Eric, Ludwig, Sen Joe) -
Families, Housing, Community Services and Indigenous Affairs (Question No. 1099)
(Siewert, Sen Rachel, Arbib, Sen Mark) -
Defence (Question No. 1100)
(Brown, Sen Bob, Evans, Sen Christopher) -
Christmas Island Detention Centre (Question No. 1104)
(Cormann, Sen Mathias, Carr, Sen Kim) -
Pontville Detention Centre (Question No. 1106)
(Abetz, Sen Eric, Carr, Sen Kim) -
Sustainability, Environment, Water, Population and Communities (Question No. 1109)
(Birmingham, Sen Simon, Conroy, Sen Stephen) -
Tertiary Education, Skills, Jobs and Workplace Relations, School Education, Early Childhood and Youth, Employment Participation and Childcare, and Indigenous Employment and Economic Development: Staffing (Question Nos 1113, 1125, 1138 and 1141)
(Humphries, Sen Gary, Evans, Sen Christopher) -
Defence: Staffing (Question Nos 1118, 1145 and 1150)
(Humphries, Sen Gary, Evans, Sen Christopher) -
Immigration and Citizenship: Staffing (Question No. 1119)
(Humphries, Sen Gary, Carr, Sen Kim) -
Sustainability, Environment, Water, Population and Communities: Staffing (Question No. 1123)
(Humphries, Sen Gary, Conroy, Sen Stephen) -
Resources and Energy, and Tourism: Staffing (Question Nos 1129 and 1130)
(Humphries, Sen Gary, Sherry, Sen Nick) -
Social Inclusion: Staffing (Question No. 1133)
(Humphries, Sen Gary, Arbib, Sen Mark) -
Human Services: Staffing (Question No. 1134)
(Humphries, Sen Gary, Arbib, Sen Mark) -
Privacy and Freedom of Information: Staffing (Question No. 1135)
(Humphries, Sen Gary, Ludwig, Sen Joe) -
Status of Women: Staffing (Question No. 1139)
(Humphries, Sen Gary, Wong, Sen Penny) -
Sport: Staffing (Question No. 1140)
(Humphries, Sen Gary, Arbib, Sen Mark) -
Social Housing and Homelessness: Staffing (Question No. 1142)
(Humphries, Sen Gary, Arbib, Sen Mark) -
Veterans' Affairs: Staffing (Question No. 1144)
(Humphries, Sen Gary, Evans, Sen Christopher) -
Status of Women: Staffing (Question No. 1154)
(Cash, Sen Michaelia, Wong, Sen Penny) -
Status of Women (Question No. 1155)
(Cash, Sen Michaelia, Wong, Sen Penny) -
Status of Women (Question No. 1156)
(Cash, Sen Michaelia, Wong, Sen Penny) -
Status of Women (Question No. 1157)
(Cash, Sen Michaelia, Wong, Sen Penny) -
Prime Minister (Question No. 1158)
(Abetz, Sen Eric, Evans, Sen Christopher) -
Tertiary Education, Skills, Jobs and Workplace Relations, School Education, Early Childhood and Youth, Employment Participation and Childcare, and Indigenous Employment and Economic Development (Question Nos 1160, 1172, 1185 and 1188)
(Abetz, Sen Eric, Evans, Sen Christopher) -
Arts (Question No. 1163)
(Abetz, Sen Eric, Arbib, Sen Mark) -
Defence (Question Nos 1165, 1192 and 1199)
(Abetz, Sen Eric, Evans, Sen Christopher) -
Sustainability, Environment, Water, Population and Communities (Question No. 1170)
(Abetz, Sen Eric, Conroy, Sen Stephen) -
Innovation, Industry, Science and Research (Question No. 1173)
(Abetz, Sen Eric, Carr, Sen Kim) -
Attorney-General (Question Nos 1174, 1183 and 1184)
(Abetz, Sen Eric, Ludwig, Sen Joe) -
Agriculture, Fisheries and Forestry (Question No. 1175)
(Abetz, Sen Eric, Ludwig, Sen Joe) -
Resources and Energy (Question Nos 1176 and 1177)
(Abetz, Sen Eric, Sherry, Sen Nick)
-
Office of the Australian Building and Construction Commissioner (Question No. 699)
Page: 7791
Senator FAULKNER (New South Wales) (16:55): This afternoon the Senate debates a so-called matter of public importance. This is not a matter of public importance; it is a deliberately designed matter of political impediment. This is a device to waste the parliament's time, a device by an exclusively negative opposition to focus solely on politics, a device to enable more carping criticism of the government. Mr Abbott's strategy is clear for all to see. I will share it, with due apologies to Johnny Mercer, with the Senate: 'You've got to eliminate the positive, accentuate the negative, let go of the affirmative, don't mess with Mister In-Between.' As I said: due apologies to Johnny Mercer.
I have to acknowledge that this is the best tactic the opposition can adopt, because they do not have any policies themselves. Everybody knows what the opposition are against; no-one has a clue what they are for. How could they? No-one in the Liberal Party has a clue what their own party actually stands for, but they know they are against the minerals resource rent tax, they are against 12 per cent superannuation for workers, they are against tackling global warming by pricing carbon, they are against investing in the NBN, they are against any health reform, they are against a fair industrial relations system that has basic protections for workers, they are against the GFC stimulus that saved 200,000 jobs in Australia, they are against the banning of exit fees on home mortgages by banks and they are against the flood recovery packages for Queensland and Victoria. That is just a small sample of the things we know that the Liberals are against. While we do not know what they would actually do if they formed government, leaked internal coalition documents show the Liberal Party will have to make up $70 billion in cuts to the budget over four years to pay for not what they want to do but what they actually want to undo. That is what we know about the Liberal Party.
I acknowledge that the minority government faces particular challenges, certainly with ensuring the passage of its legislative program. So far in this 43rd Parliament 222 government bills have been passed by the House of Representatives. I actually think that the Prime Minister and the government have proved skilful negotiators with crossbenchers. In fact, I think the hung parliament has worked far better than most predicted it would. Major reforms have been passed, including the structural separation of Telstra, the NBN, national health reform, cyclone and flood reconstruction, plain packaging for tobacco, improvements to higher education and, of course, our budget measures. Perhaps it is now time for the opposition to accept that it did not form a government after the last election and perhaps it is time for it just to play a more constructive role into the future.
The ACTING DEPUTY PRESIDENT ( Senator Ludlam ): The time for the discussion is concluded.