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Morrison government defeated on medical bill, despite constitution play - The Conversation AU

The government has suffered a historic defeat in the House of Representatives, with Labor and crossbenchers passing the legislation facilitating medical transfers from Manus and Nauru by 75-74.

This came after a dramatic last-minute government ploy to try to head off the bill by declaring it was unconstitutional and so should not be considered by the House.

But Labor and the crossbench pressed on, with six of the seven crossbenchers backing the ALP amendment to the bill that had come from the Senate.

They were Kerryn Phelps, on whose proposal the legislation is based, Andrew Wilkie, Cathy McGowan, Rebekha Sharkie, Julia Banks and the Greens Adam Bandt. The other crossbencher Bob Katter voted with the government.

Before the bill was considered Speaker Tony Smith tabled correspondence from Attorney-General Christian Porter saying the bill, passed by the Senate last year, contravened the constitution's Section 53.

This provides that the Senate "may not amend any proposed law so as to increase any proposed charge or burden on the people".

The Solicitor-General, Stephen Donaghue, said in an opinion that the bill breached Section 53 because the medical panel it would set up would be paid.

But the opinion also said it was "ultimately for the House of Representatives to decide whether it considers the Senate amendments to be consistent" with Section 53, and the matter was not justiciable.

In his letter to Smith, Porter asked the Speaker to keep the Solicitor-General's opinion confidential but Smith said the House should have it and tabled it with Porter's letter.

The vote culminated a day of drama as Labor negotiated its amendments to the bill as passed by the Senate with its support.


Read more: Why a government would be mad to advise the refusal of royal assent to a bill passed against its will


These widen the grounds on which a minister could refuse a transfer to cover those with a substantial criminal record, allow the minister up to 72 hours (instead of 24) for making a decision on transfers, and confine the application of the legislation to the present cohort of refugees and asylum seekers.

Labor moved to circumvent the Section 53 issue by adding a further amendment providing that members of the medical panel not be paid.

Leader of the House Christopher Pyne declared Labor and the crossbenchers "don't care about the Australian constitution". "The English fought a civil war over this matter," he said.

Labor argued the bill was about "Australia's character" - how it treated sick people.

Scott Morrison said Labor was "failing the test of mettle … failing the test of duty to the Australian people. This is now on your head, Leader of the Opposition."

The final vote came after the government lost procedural votes by the same margin.

The bill has to go back to the Senate to approve the amendments passed in the House.

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