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The trials and tribulations of the new Senate (Read 301 times)
juliar
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The trials and tribulations of the new Senate
Aug 23rd, 2016 at 6:40pm
 
Derryn Hinch opposes same-sex plebiscite he says will cost $250m

Incoming Victorian senator Derryn Hinch has found common cause with the Labor Party on same-sex marriage, vowing to side with the opposition against a “crazy” plebiscite that he says would cost taxpayers up to $250 million.

Mr Hinch, who is today attending “senate school” in Canberra, said he would pursue the expansion of organ donation, a national public register for convicted sex offenders, and the withdrawal of passports from sex offenders going on Asian child sex tours.

Although he agreed with the government’s proposed amendment to industrial law to protect the Country Fire Authority, the former broadcaster also hoped to “help influence changes” to the Coalition’s planned crackdown on superannuation tax concessions.

Mr Hinch, interviewed on Melbourne radio, also fired up on same-sex marriage, saying he hoped to block the Coalition’s plebiscite to “save $160m and put it somewhere else”.

“When John Howard tightened the Marriage Act and put the words ‘man’ and ‘woman’ in there, they didn’t go to the people; they were the elected government and, with the support of the Labor Party, they did it,” Mr Hinch, who has been married five times, told Triple M.


“They’re now saying maybe $250m and it is crazy and I hope there’s some way it could be avoided because that’s a heck of a lot of money.


“It should just be: bring it on, vote it in, and let’s get on with it.”

There was no legal definition of marriage until 2004 when Mr Howard, with the support of Mark Latham’s opposition, rewrote the Marriage Act to expressly exclude same-sex couples.


Mr Hinch said comparisons to Ireland’s referendum were a “red herring” as that country’s constitution expressly defined marriage, whereas it is not a constitutional issue in Australia.

Labor frontbencher Jim Chalmers said the opposition had “not given up on a parliamentary outcome” and would not commit to supporting or opposing legislation to establish the plebiscite.

“We’re putting all of our effort into that. We don’t think it should get to a plebiscite for a whole range of reasons including the divisive nature of a plebiscite and the waste of money,” he told ABC radio.

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juliar
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Re: The trials and tribulations of the new Senate
Reply #1 - Aug 23rd, 2016 at 6:41pm
 
Hinch backs bid to block CFA deal

Support is building within parliament for Malcolm Turnbull’s proposals to block the proposed Country Fire Authority deal, amid Mr Hinch’s support for the Prime Minister on the issue.

The Coalition’s proposed legislation was revealed yesterday, reigniting the dispute between the commonwealth and Victorian governments over a proposed industrial agreement that allegedly subjugates the CFA’s volunteers to the United Firefighters Union.

It also prompted an embarrassing backdown from federal Employment Minister Michaelia Cash, who was pilloried for misrepresenting one of the most controversial claims about the agreement.

Mr Turnbull yesterday accused Victorian Premier Daniel Andrews of having a “sinister ­purpose” in foisting the union-friendly deal on the CFA, while Mr Andrews’ deputy, James Merlino, said the Prime Minister and Senator Cash were not telling the truth.

The laws unveiled yesterday are designed to protect volunteers by ensuring that clauses in enterprise agreements that undermine volunteers would be unlawful under the Fair Work Act.

But is not clear they will pass the Senate and legal experts were divided yesterday on whether the commonwealth’s unorthodox move would succeed even it did pass the parliament.

Mr Hinch last night tweeted he supported “100 per cent” the government’s actions on the CFA issue.

“I had talks with Michaelia Cash about it last week in Melbourne and during the campaign I went to a lot of sausage sizzles and field days and I’m pleased that the government is going to do this to try to thwart Premier Andrews and the union,” Senator Hinch told the ABC today.


As Labor and the Greens oppose the government’s intervention, the Coalition will need support from nine of the 11 remaining crossbench senators, including Mr Hinch.

Mr Turnbull gave a press conference with Senator Cash at Coldstream in the fire-prone Yarra Valley, vowing he would do what he could to avoid the attempted takeover of the CFA by the militant United Firefighters Union.

“We will not stand by and let the discriminatory and offensive terms of this agreement undermine the effective use of the CFA’s volunteer firefighters,’’ he said.

But Mr Merlino, the state’s Emergency Services Minister, ­attacked Mr Turnbull and Senator Cash and warned their ­approach may have unforeseen consequences.

“I don’t know Michaelia Cash but today she admitted that she had not read the proposed agreement and she lied in regard to how the seven-on-the-ground clause works,’’ he said, referring to an opinion piece that the minister was forced to verbally correct ­yesterday.

“We always said the Liberal campaign was a campaign of lies and misinformation and today the Prime Minster and the federal Employment Minister have confirmed it.”

He said the agreement would deliver 25 extra firefighters to the fire-prone CFA District 13, in which the Prime Minister did his press conference yesterday, and he challenged Mr Turnbull to ­explain why he opposed this.

Mr Merlino, who fluffed his lines yesterday during his comments about the contentious “seven on the fireground” clause, also struggled with questions about the cost of the union-friendly deal his government wants to foist on the CFA.

He rejected the $700 million cost estimate attributed to CFA management and said $160m was the cost “over and above indexation” before adding “the Department of Treasury and Finance and the CFA continue to work through the costs of the agreement”.

The latest version of the proposed agreement states that seven professional firefighters have to be dispatched before volunteers can begin fighting a fire in areas where both volunteers and professionals operate.
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