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Parliament of Australia

The Parliament of Australia (officially the Federal Parliament,[1] also called the Commonwealth Parliament) is the legislative branch of the government of Australia. It consists of three elements: the monarch (represented by the governor-general), the Senate and the House of Representatives.[1][2] The combination of two elected chambers, in which the members of the Senate represent the states and territories while the members of the House represent electoral divisions according to population, is modelled on the United States Congress. Through both chambers, however, there is a fused executive, drawn from the Westminster system.[3]

Parliament of Australia
47th Parliament of Australia
Type
Type
HousesSenate
House of Representatives
History
Founded9 May 1901; 121 years ago (1901-05-09)
Leadership
Charles III
since 9 September 2022
David Hurley
since 1 July 2019
Sue Lines, Labor
since 26 July 2022
Milton Dick, Labor
since 26 July 2022
Structure
Seats227 (151 MPs, 76 Senators)
House of Representatives political groups
Government (78)

  Labor (78)

Opposition (56)
Coalition
  Liberal (41)[a]
  National (15)[b]

Crossbench (17)
  Greens (4)
  Katter's Australian (1)
  Centre Alliance (1)

  Independent (11)[c]
Senate political groups
Government (26)

  Labor (26)

Opposition (32)
Coalition
  Liberal (26)[d]
  National (6)[e]

Crossbench (18)
  Greens (11)
  One Nation (2)
  Lambie Network (2)
  United Australia (1)

  Independent (2)[f]
Length of term
House: 3 years (maximum)
Senate: 6 years (fixed except under double dissolution)
Elections
Instant-runoff voting
Single transferable vote
21 May 2022
Senate last election
21 May 2022 (half)
by 2025
Senate next election
2025 (half)
RedistrictingRedistributions are carried out on a state-by-state basis by the Australian Electoral Commission.
Meeting place
Parliament House
Canberra, Australian Capital Territory
Australia
Website
aph.gov.au

The upper house, the Senate, consists of 76 members: twelve for each state, and two each for the territories, Northern Territory (including Christmas Island and the Cocos (Keeling) Islands) and the Australian Capital Territory (including Norfolk Island and the Jervis Bay Territory). Senators are elected using the single transferable vote proportional representation system and as a result, the chamber features a multitude of parties vying for power.[4] The governing party or coalition has not held a majority in the Senate since 1981 (except between 2005 and 2007) and usually needs to negotiate with other parties and Independents to get legislation passed.[5]

The lower house, the House of Representatives, currently consists of 151 members, each elected using full-preference instant-runoff voting from single-member constituencies known as electoral divisions (and commonly referred to as "electorates" or "seats").[6][7] This tends to lead to the chamber being dominated by two major political groups, the centre-right Coalition (consisting of the Liberal and National Parties) and the centre-left Labor Party. The government of the day must achieve the confidence of this House in order to gain and remain in power.

The House of Representatives has a maximum term of three years, although it can be dissolved early. The Senate has fixed terms, with 36 Senators' terms expiring every three years (the terms of the four territory senators are linked to House elections). As a result, House and Senate elections almost always coincide. A deadlock-breaking mechanism known as a double dissolution can be used to dissolve the full Senate as well as the House if the Senate refuses to pass a piece of legislation passed by the House.[8]

The two Houses meet in separate chambers of Parliament House (except in a rare joint sitting) on Capital Hill in Canberra, Australian Capital Territory.

History

Temporary home in Melbourne (1901–1927)

The Commonwealth of Australia came into being on 1 January 1901 with the federation of the six Australian colonies. The inaugural election took place on 29 and 30 March and the first Australian Parliament was opened on 9 May 1901 in Melbourne by Prince George, Duke of Cornwall and York, later King George V.[9] The only building in Melbourne that was large enough to accommodate the 14,000 guests was the western annexe of the Royal Exhibition Building.[10] After the official opening, from 1901 to 1927 the Parliament met in Parliament House, Melbourne, which it borrowed from the Parliament of Victoria (which sat, instead, in the Royal Exhibition Building until 1927).

 
The Big Picture, opening of the Parliament of Australia, 9 May 1901, by Tom Roberts
 
Victorian Parliament House, where the Federal Parliament met until 1927

Old Parliament House (1927–1988)

It had always been intended that the national Parliament would sit in a new national capital.[11] This was a compromise at Federation due to the rivalry between the two largest Australian cities, Sydney and Melbourne, which both wished to become the new capital. The site of Canberra was selected for the location of the nation's capital city in 1908.[12] A competition was announced on 30 June 1914 to design Parliament House, with prize money of £7,000. However, due to the start of World War I the next month, the competition was cancelled. It was re-announced in August 1916, but again postponed indefinitely on 24 November 1916. In the meantime, John Smith Murdoch, the Commonwealth's Chief Architect, worked on the design as part of his official duties. He had little personal enthusiasm for the project, as he felt it was a waste of money and expenditure on it could not be justified at the time. Nevertheless, he designed the building by default.[13]

The construction of Old Parliament House, as it is called today, commenced on 28 August 1923[14] and was completed in early 1927. It was built by the Commonwealth Department of Works, using tradesmen and materials from all over Australia. The final cost was about £600,000, which was more than three times the original estimate. It was designed to house the parliament for a maximum of 50 years until a permanent facility could be built, but was actually used for more than 60 years.

 
Old Parliament House as viewed from the front

The building was opened on 9 May 1927 by the Duke and Duchess of York (later King George VI and Queen Elizabeth The Queen Mother). The opening ceremonies were both splendid and incongruous, given the sparsely built nature of Canberra of the time and its small population. The building was extensively decorated with British Empire and Australian flags and bunting. Temporary stands were erected bordering the lawns in front of the Parliament and these were filled with crowds. A Wiradjuri elder, Jimmy Clements, was one of only two aboriginal Australians present, having walked for about a week from Brungle Station (near Tumut) to be at the event.[15] Dame Nellie Melba sang the National anthem (at that time God Save the King). The Duke of York unlocked the front doors with a golden key, and led the official party into King's Hall where he unveiled the statue of his father, King George V. The Duke then opened the first parliamentary session in the new Senate Chamber.[16]

New Parliament House (1988–present)

In 1978 the Fraser government decided to proceed with a new building on Capital Hill, and the Parliament House Construction Authority was created.[17] A two-stage competition was announced, for which the Authority consulted the Royal Australian Institute of Architects and, together with the National Capital Development Commission, made available to competitors a brief and competition documents. The design competition drew 329 entries from 29 countries.[18]

The competition winner was the Philadelphia-based architectural firm of Mitchell/Giurgola, with the on-site work directed by the Italian-born architect Romaldo Giurgola,[19] with a design which involved burying most of the building under Capital Hill, and capping the edifice with an enormous spire topped by a large Australian flag. The façades, however, included deliberate imitation of some of the patterns of the Old Parliament House, so that there is a slight resemblance despite the massive difference of scale. The building was also designed to "sit above" Old Parliament House when seen from a distance.[18]

Construction began in 1981, and the House was intended to be ready by Australia Day, 26 January 1988, the 200th anniversary of European settlement in Australia.[18] It was expected to cost A$220 million. Neither the deadline nor the budget was met. In the end it cost more than A$1.1 billion to build.[20]

The New Parliament House was finally opened by Elizabeth II, Queen of Australia, on 9 May 1988,[21] the anniversary of the opening of both the first Federal Parliament in Melbourne on 9 May 1901[22] and the Provisional Parliament House in Canberra on 9 May 1927.[23]

In March 2020, the 46th Parliament of Australia was suspended due to the COVID-19 pandemic in Australia; an adjournment rather than prorogation. Its committees would continue to operate using technology. This unprecedented move was accompanied by two motions raised by the Attorney-General of Australia, Christian Porter, and passed on 23 March 2020. One motion was designed to allow MPs to participate in parliament by electronic means, if agreed by the major parties and the speaker; the second determined that with the agreement of the two major parties, the standing orders could be amended without requiring an absolute majority.[24]

Shortly before this, on 18 March, the Prime Minister formed a National Cabinet (the first in Australian history), composed of the Prime Minister and the premiers and chief ministers of the Australian states and territories, to coordinate the national response to the pandemic.[25][26][27]

 
New Parliament House, opened in 1988, was built into Capital Hill behind Old Parliament House

Composition and electoral systems

The Constitution establishes the Commonwealth Parliament, consisting of three components: the King of Australia, the Senate and the House of Representatives.[1]

Monarch

Most of the constitutional functions of the Crown are given to the Governor-General, whom the King appoints on the advice of the Prime Minister to act as his representative in Australia. However, by convention, the Governor-General usually exercises these powers only upon the advice of the Prime Minister.

Senate

 
Senate ballot paper used in Victoria for 2016

The upper house of the Australian Parliament is the Senate, which consists of 76 members. Like the United States Senate, on which it was partly modelled, the Australian Senate includes an equal number of senators from each state, regardless of population. Unlike it, however, the Australian Senate has always been directly elected. (The US Senate has been directly elected only from 1913.)[28]

The Constitution allows Parliament to determine the number of senators by legislation, provided that the six original states are equally represented. Furthermore, the Constitution provides that each original state is entitled to at least six senators. However, neither of these provisions applies to any newly admitted states, or to territories. Pursuant to an Act of Parliament passed in 1973, Senators are elected to represent the territories.[29] Currently, the two Northern Territory Senators represent the residents of the Northern Territory as well as the Australian external territories of Christmas Island and the Cocos (Keeling) Islands. The two Australian Capital Territory Senators represent the Australian Capital Territory, the Jervis Bay Territory and since 1 July 2016, Norfolk Island.[30] While only half of the State Senate seats go up for re-election each three years (except in the case of a double dissolution) as they serve six-year terms, all of the Territory Senators must face the voters every three years.

Until 1949, each state elected the constitutional minimum of six senators. This number increased to ten from the 1949 election, and was increased again to twelve from the 1984 election. The system for electing senators has changed several times since Federation. The original arrangement used a first-past-the-post block voting or "winner takes all" system, on a state-by-state basis. This was replaced in 1919 by preferential block voting. Block voting tended to produce landslide majorities and even "wipe-outs". For instance, from 1920 to 1923 the Nationalist Party had 35 of the 36 senators, and from 1947 to 1950, the Australian Labor Party had 33 of the 36 senators.[31]

In 1948, single transferable vote proportional representation on a state-by-state basis became the method for electing senators. This change has been described as an "institutional revolution" that has led to the rise of a number of minor parties such as the Democratic Labor Party, Australian Democrats and Australian Greens who have taken advantage of this system to achieve parliamentary representation and the balance of power.[4][32] From the 1984 election, group ticket voting was introduced in order to reduce a high rate of informal voting but in 2016, group tickets were abolished to avoid undue influence of preference deals amongst parties that were seen as distorting election results[33] and a form of optional preferential voting was introduced.

In 1984, legislation was passed with the intention of changing the way long and short term seats are allocated following a double dissolution election, however the method has not been used, despite two bipartisan senate resolutions in favour of change.

Section 15 of the Constitution provides that a casual vacancy of a State Senator shall be filled by the State Parliament. If the previous Senator was a member of a particular political party the replacement must come from the same party, but the State Parliament may choose not to fill the vacancy, in which case Section 11 requires the Senate to proceed regardless. If the State Parliament happens to be in recess when the vacancy occurs, the Constitution provides that the State Governor can appoint someone to fill the place until fourteen days after the State Parliament resumes sitting. The State Parliament can also be recalled to ratify a replacement.

House of Representatives

 
2016 House of Representatives ballot paper used in the Division of Higgins

The lower house of the Australian Parliament, the House of Representatives, is made up of single member electorates with a population of roughly equal size. As is convention in the Westminster system, the party or coalition of parties that has the majority in this House forms the Government with the leader of that party or coalition becoming the Prime Minister. If the government loses the confidence of the House, they are expected to call a new election or resign.

Parliament may determine the number of members of the House of Representatives but the Constitution provides that this number must be "as nearly as practicable, twice the number of Senators"; this requirement is commonly called the "nexus clause". Hence, the House presently consists of 151 members. Each state is allocated seats based on its population; however, each original state, regardless of size, is guaranteed at least five seats. The Constitution does not guarantee representation for the territories. Parliament granted a seat to the Northern Territory in 1922, and to the Australian Capital Territory in 1948; these territorial representatives, however, had only limited voting rights until 1968.[34] Federal electorates have their boundaries redrawn or redistributed whenever a state or territory has its number of seats adjusted, if electorates are not generally matched by population size or if seven years have passed since the most recent redistribution.[35]

From 1901 to 1949, the House consisted of either 74 or 75 members (the Senate had 36). Between 1949 and 1984, it had between 121 and 127 members (the Senate had 60 until 1975, when it increased to 64). In 1977, the High Court ordered that the size of the House be reduced from 127 to 124 members to comply with the nexus provision.[36] In 1984, both the Senate and the House were enlarged; since then the House has had between 148 and 151 members (the Senate has 76).

First-past-the-post voting was used to elect members of the House of Representatives until in 1918 the Nationalist Party government, a predecessor of the modern-day Liberal Party of Australia, changed the lower house voting system to Instant-runoff voting, which in Australia is known as full preferential voting, as of the subsequent 1919 election. (Labor had unexpectedly won the 1918 Swan by-election with the largest primary vote, due to vote splitting among the conservative parties.)[6][7] This system has remained in place ever since, allowing the Coalition parties to safely contest the same seats.[37] Full-preference preferential voting re-elected the Bob Hawke government at the 1990 election, the first time in federal history that Labor had obtained a net benefit from preferential voting.[38]

Both Houses

 
Canberra from Mount Ainslie: across the lake is Old Parliament House and behind it the new Parliament House

It is not possible to be simultaneously a member of both the Senate and the House of Representatives,[39] but a number of people have been members of both Houses at different times in their parliamentary career (see List of people who have served in both Houses of the Australian Parliament).

Only Australian citizens are eligible for election to either house.[40] They must not also hold citizenship of a "foreign power".[41] When the Constitution was drafted, all Australians were British subjects, so the word "foreign" meant non-British. But, in the landmark case Sue v Hill (1999), the High Court of Australia ruled that, at least since the Australia Act 1986, Britain has been a "foreign power", so that British citizens are also excluded.[42]

Compulsory voting was introduced for federal elections in 1924. The immediate justification for compulsory voting was the low voter turnout (59.38%) at the 1922 federal election, down from 71.59% at the 1919 federal election. Compulsory voting was not on the platform of either the Stanley Bruce-led Nationalist/Country party coalition government or the Matthew Charlton-led Labor opposition. The actual initiative for change was made by Herbert Payne, a backbench Tasmanian Nationalist Senator who on 16 July 1924 introduced a private Senator's bill in the Senate. Payne's bill was passed with little debate (the House of Representatives agreeing to it in less than an hour), and in neither house was a division required, hence no votes were recorded against the bill.[43] The 1925 federal election was the first to be conducted under compulsory voting, which saw the turnout figure rise to 91.4%. The turnout increased to about 95% within a couple of elections and has stayed at about that level since.[44]

Since 1973, citizens have had the right to vote upon turning 18. Prior to this it was 21.[45]

Australian Federal Police officers armed with assault rifles have been situated in the Federal Parliament since 2015. It is the first time in Australian history that a parliament has possessed armed personnel.[46]

Procedure

 
The Australian Senate chamber
 
The Senate chamber at Old Parliament House
 
The House of Representatives chamber at Old Parliament House
 
Typical bill process of the Australian Parliament.

Each of the two Houses elects a presiding officer. The presiding officer of the Senate is called the President; that of the House of Representatives is the Speaker. Elections for these positions are by secret ballot. Both offices are conventionally filled by members of the governing party, but the presiding officers are expected to oversee debate and enforce the rules in an impartial manner.[47]

The Constitution authorises Parliament to set the quorum for each chamber. The quorum of the Senate is one-quarter of the total membership (nineteen); that of the House of Representatives is one-fifth of the total membership (thirty-one). In theory, if a quorum is not present, then a House may not continue to meet. In practice, members usually agree not to notice that a quorum is not present, so that debates on routine bills can continue while other members attend to other business outside the chamber.[48] Sometimes the Opposition will "call a quorum" as a tactic to annoy the Government or delay proceedings, particularly when the Opposition feels it has been unfairly treated in the House. Proceedings are interrupted until a quorum is present.[citation needed] It is the responsibility of the government whip to ensure that, when a quorum is called, enough government members are present to form a quorum.

Both Houses may determine motions by voice vote: the presiding officer puts the question, and, after listening to shouts of "Aye" and "No" from the members, announces the result. The announcement of the presiding officer settles the question, unless at least two members demand a "division", or a recorded vote. In that case the bells are rung throughout Parliament House summoning Senators or Members to the chamber. During a division, members who favour the motion move to the right side of the chamber (the side to the Speaker's or President's right), and those opposed move to the left. They are then counted by "tellers" (government and opposition whips), and the motion is passed or defeated accordingly. In the Senate, in order not to deprive a state of a vote in what is supposed to be a states' house, the President is permitted a vote along with other senators (however, that right is rarely exercised); in the case of a tie, the President does not have a casting vote and the motion fails.[49] In the House of Representatives, the Speaker does not vote, but has a casting vote if there is a tie.[47]

Most legislation is introduced into the House of Representatives and goes through a number of stages before it becomes law. The legislative process occurs in English, although other Australian parliaments have permitted use of Indigenous languages with English translation.[50] Government bills are drafted by the Office of Parliamentary Counsel.

The first stage is a first reading, where the legislation is introduced to the chamber, then there is a second reading, where a vote is taken on the general outlines of the bill. Although rare, the legislation can then be considered by a House committee, which reports back to the House on any recommendations. This is followed by a consideration in detail stage, where the House can consider the clauses of the bill in detail and make any amendments. This is finally followed by a third reading, where the bill is either passed or rejected by the House. If passed, the legislation is then sent to the Senate, which has a similar structure of debate and passage except that consideration of bills by Senate committees is more common than in the House and the consideration in detail stage is replaced by a committee of the whole. Once a bill has been passed by both Houses in the same form, it is then presented to the Governor-General for royal assent.[51]

Functions

 
The Constitution of Australia, where the functions and powers of Parliament are outlined

The principal function of the Parliament is to pass laws, or legislation. Any Senator or Member may introduce a proposed law (a bill), except for a money bill (a bill proposing an expenditure or levying a tax), which must be introduced in the House of Representatives.[52] In practice, the great majority of bills are introduced by ministers. Bills introduced by other Members are called private members' bills. All bills must be passed by both Houses and assented to by the Governor-General to become law. The Senate has the same legislative powers as the House, except that it may not amend or introduce money bills, only pass or reject them. The enacting formula for Acts of Parliament is simply "The Parliament of Australia enacts:".[53]

The Commonwealth legislative power is limited to that granted in the Constitution. Powers not specified are considered "residual powers", and remain the domain of the states. Section 51 grants the Commonwealth power over areas such as taxation, external affairs, defence and marriage. Section 51 also allows State parliaments to refer matters to the Commonwealth to legislate.[54]

Section 96 of the Australian Constitution gives the Commonwealth Parliament the power to grant money to any State, "on such terms and conditions as the Parliament thinks fit". In effect, the Commonwealth can make grants subject to States implementing particular policies in their fields of legislative responsibility. Such grants, known as "tied grants" (since they are tied to a particular purpose), have been used to give the federal parliament influence over state policy matters such as public hospitals and schools.[55]

The Parliament performs other functions besides legislation. It can discuss urgency motions or matters of public importance: these provide a forum for debates on public policy matters.[56] Senators and Members can move motions on a range of matters relevant to their constituents, and can also move motions of censure against the government or individual ministers. On most sitting days in each House there is a session called Question time at which senators and members address questions without notice to the prime minister and other ministers.[57] Senators and Members can also present petitions from their constituents.[58] Both Houses have an extensive system of committees in which draft bills are debated, matters of public policy are inquired into, evidence is taken and public servants are questioned. There are also joint committees, composed of members from both Houses.

Conflict between the Houses

In the event of conflict between the two Houses over the final form of legislation, the Constitution provides for a simultaneous dissolution of both Houses – known as a double dissolution.[8] Section 57 of the Constitution states that, "If the House of Representatives passes any proposed law, and the Senate rejects or fails to pass it, or passes it with amendments to which the House of Representatives will not agree, and if after an interval of three months the House of Representatives, in the same or the next session, again passes the proposed law with or without any amendments which have been made, suggested, or agreed to by the Senate, and the Senate rejects or fails to pass it, or passes it with amendments to which the House of Representatives will not agree, the Governor-General may dissolve the Senate and the House of Representatives simultaneously."[59]

In an election following a double dissolution, each state elects their entire 12-seat Senate delegation, while the two territories represented in the Senate each elect their two senators as they would in a regular federal election. Because all seats are contested in the same election, it is easier for smaller parties to win seats under the single transferable vote system: the quota for the election of each senator in each Australian state in a full Senate election is 7.69% of the vote, while in a normal half-Senate election the quota is 14.28%.[60]

If the conflict continues after such an election, the Governor-General may convene a joint sitting of both Houses to consider the bill or bills, including any amendments which have been previously proposed in either House, or any new amendments. If a bill is passed by an absolute majority of the total membership of the joint sitting, it is treated as though it had been passed separately by both Houses, and is presented for royal assent. With proportional representation, and the small majorities in the Senate compared to the generally larger majorities in the House of Representatives, and the requirement that the number of members of the House be "nearly as practicable" twice that of the Senate, a joint sitting after a double dissolution is more likely than not to lead to a victory for the House over the Senate. This provision has only been invoked on one occasion, after the election following the 1974 double dissolution.[61] However, there are other occasions when the two Houses meet as one: see Joint meetings of the Australian Parliament.

Committees

 
A Senate committee room in Parliament House, Canberra
A short video on Australian Parliamentary Committees

In addition to the work of the main chambers, both the Senate and the House of Representatives have a large number of investigatory and scrutiny committees which deal with matters referred to them by their respective Houses or ministers. They provide the opportunity for all Members and Senators to ask questions of witnesses, including ministers and public officials, as well as conduct inquiries, and examine policy and legislation.[62] Once a particular inquiry is completed the members of the committee can then produce a report, to be tabled in Parliament, outlining what they have discovered as well as any recommendations that they have produced for the Government or House to consider.[63]

The ability of the Houses of Parliament to establish committees is referenced in Section 49 of the Constitution, which states that, "The powers, privileges, and immunities of the Senate and of the House of Representatives, and of the members and the committees of each House, shall be such as are declared by the Parliament, and until declared shall be those of the Commons House of Parliament of the United Kingdom, and of its members and committees, at the establishment of the Commonwealth."[63][64]

Parliamentary committees can be given a wide range of powers. One of the most significant powers is the ability to summon people to attend hearings in order to give evidence and submit documents. Anyone who attempts to hinder the work of a Parliamentary committee may be found to be in contempt of Parliament. There are a number of ways that witnesses can be found in contempt, these include; refusing to appear before a committee when summoned, refusing to answer a question during a hearing or to produce a document, or later being found to have lied to or misled a committee. Anyone who attempts to influence a witness may also be found in contempt.[65] Other powers include, the ability to meet throughout Australia, to establish subcommittees and to take evidence in both public and private hearings.[63]

Proceedings of committees are considered to have the same legal standing as proceedings of Parliament, they are recorded by Hansard, except for private proceedings, and also operate under the protections of Parliamentary privilege. Every participant, including committee members and witnesses giving evidence, is protected from being prosecuted under any civil or criminal action for anything they may say during a hearing. Written evidence and documents received by a committee are also protected.[63][65]

Types of committees include:[65]

Standing Committees, which are established on an ongoing basis and are responsible for scrutinising bills and topics referred to them by the chamber or minister; examining the government's budget and activities (in what is called the budget estimates process); and for examining departmental annual reports and activities.

Select Committees, which are temporary committees, established in order to consider a particular matter. A select committee expires when it has published its final report on an inquiry.

Domestic Committees, which are responsible for administering aspects of the Parliament's own affairs. These include the Selection Committees of both Houses that determine how the Parliament will deal with particular pieces of legislation and private members' business, and the Privileges Committees that deal with matters of parliamentary privilege.

Legislative Scrutiny Committees, which examine legislation and regulations to determine their impact on individual rights and accountability.

Joint Committees are also established to include both members of the House of Representatives and the Senate. Joint committees may be standing (ongoing) or select (temporary) in nature.

Relationship with the Government

 
Governor-General Sir Peter Cosgrove with members of the Second Turnbull Ministry

Under the Constitution, the Governor-General has the power to appoint and dismiss "Ministers of State" who administer government departments. In practice, the Governor-General chooses ministers in accordance with the traditions of the Westminster system. The Governor-General appoints as Prime Minister the leader of the party that has a majority of seats in the House of Representatives; the Governor-General then, on the advice of the Prime Minister, appoints the other Ministers, chosen from the majority party or coalition of parties.

These ministers then meet in a council known as Cabinet. Cabinet meetings are strictly private and occur once a week where vital issues are discussed and policy formulated. The Constitution does not recognise the Cabinet as a legal entity; it exists solely by convention. Its decisions do not in and of themselves have legal force. However, it serves as the practical expression of the Federal Executive Council, which is Australia's highest formal governmental body.[66] In practice, the Federal Executive Council meets solely to endorse and give legal force to decisions already made by the Cabinet. All members of the Cabinet are members of the Executive Council. While the Governor-General is nominal presiding officer, she or he almost never attends Executive Council meetings. The Governor-General is bound by convention to follow the advice of the Executive Council on almost all occasions, giving it de facto executive power.[67] A senior member of the Cabinet holds the office of vice-president of the Executive Council and acts as presiding officer of the Executive Council in the absence of the Governor-General. The Federal Executive Council is the Australian equivalent of the Executive Councils and privy councils in other Commonwealth realms such as the King's Privy Council for Canada and the Privy Council of the United Kingdom.[68]

A minister is not required to be a Senator or Member of the House of Representatives at the time of their appointment, but their office is forfeited if they do not become a member of either house within three months of their appointment. This provision was included in the Constitution (section 64) to enable the inaugural Ministry, led by Edmund Barton, to be appointed on 1 January 1901, even though the first federal elections were not scheduled to be held until 29 and 30 March.[69]

After the 1949 election, John Spicer and Bill Spooner became ministers in the Menzies Government on 19 December, despite their terms in the Senate not beginning until 22 February 1950.[70]

The provision was also used after the disappearance and presumed death of the Liberal Prime Minister Harold Holt in December 1967. The Liberal Party elected John Gorton, then a Senator, as its new leader, and he was sworn in as Prime Minister on 10 January 1968 (following an interim ministry led by John McEwen). On 1 February, Gorton resigned from the Senate to stand for the 24 February by-election in Holt's former House of Representatives electorate of Higgins due to the convention that the Prime Minister be a member of the lower house. For 22 days (2 to 23 February inclusive) he was Prime Minister while a member of neither house of parliament.[71]

On a number of occasions when Ministers have retired from their seats prior to an election, or stood but lost their own seats in the election, they have retained their Ministerial offices until the next government is sworn in.

Role of the Senate

 
The Australian Senate

The Constitution of Australia established the Senate as part of the new system of dominion government in newly federated Australia. From a comparative governmental perspective, the Australian Senate exhibits distinctive characteristics. Unlike upper Houses in other Westminster system governments, the Senate is not a vestigial body with limited legislative power. Rather it was intended to play – and does play – an active role in legislation. Rather than being modelled solely after the House of Lords, as the Canadian Senate was, the Australian Senate was in part modelled after the United States Senate, by giving equal representation to each state. The Constitution intended to give less populous states added voice in a Federal legislature, while also providing for the revising role of an upper house in the Westminster system.[72]

One of the functions of the Senate, both directly and through its committees, is to scrutinise government activity. The vigour of this scrutiny has been fuelled for many years by the fact that the party in government has seldom had a majority in the Senate. Whereas in the House of Representatives the government's majority has sometimes limited that chamber's capacity to implement executive scrutiny, the opposition and minor parties have been able to use their Senate numbers as a basis for conducting inquiries into government operations.[73]

The constitutional text denies the Senate the power to originate or amend appropriation bills, in deference to the conventions of the classical Westminster system. Under a traditional Westminster system, the executive government is responsible for its use of public funds to the lower house, which has the power to bring down a government by blocking its access to supply – i.e. revenue appropriated through taxation. The arrangement as expressed in the Australian Constitution, however, still leaves the Senate with the power to reject supply bills or defer their passage – undoubtedly[weasel words] one of the Senate's most powerful abilities.[74]

Because of the federal nature of our Constitution and because of its provisions the Senate undoubtedly has constitutional power to refuse or defer supply to the Government. Because of the principles of responsible government a Prime Minister who cannot obtain supply, including money for carrying on the ordinary services of government, must either advise a general election or resign. If he refuses to do this I have the authority and indeed the duty under the Constitution to withdraw his Commission as Prime Minister. The position in Australia is quite different from a position in the United Kingdom. Here the confidence of both Houses on supply is necessary to ensure its provision. In United Kingdom the confidence of the House of Commons alone is necessary. But both here and in the United Kingdom the duty of the Prime Minister is the same in a most important aspect – if he cannot get supply he must resign or advise an election.

— Governor-General Sir John Kerr, Statement (dated 11 November 1975)[75]

The ability to block supply was the origin of the 1975 Australian constitutional crisis. The Opposition used its numbers in the Senate to defer supply bills, refusing to deal with them until an election was called for both Houses of Parliament, an election which it hoped to win. The Prime Minister of the day, Gough Whitlam, contested the legitimacy of the blocking and refused to resign. The crisis brought to a head two Westminster conventions that, under the Australian constitutional system, were in conflict – firstly, that a government may continue to govern for as long as it has the support of the lower house, and secondly, that a government that no longer has access to supply must either resign or be dismissed. The crisis was resolved in November 1975 when Governor-General Sir John Kerr dismissed Whitlam's government and appointed a caretaker government on condition that elections for both Houses of parliament be held.[75] This action in itself was a source of controversy and debate continues on the proper usage of the Senate's ability to block supply and on whether such a power should even exist.[76]

The blocking of supply alone cannot force a double dissolution. There must be legislation repeatedly blocked by the Senate which the government can then choose to use as a trigger for a double dissolution.[77]

Parliamentary departments

There are four parliamentary departments supporting the Australian Parliament:[78]

  • Department of the Senate, which consists of seven Offices and whose work is determined by the Senate and its committees.[79]
  • Department of the House of Representatives, which provides various services to support the smooth operation of the House of Representatives, its committees and certain joint committees.
  • Department of Parliamentary Services (DPS), which performs diverse support functions, such as research; the Parliamentary Library of Australia; broadcasting on radio and TV; Hansard transcripts; computing services; and general maintenance and security.
  • Parliamentary Budget Office (PBO), which "improves transparency around fiscal and budget policy issues" and provides costing services to parliamentarians.

Privileges

Members of the Australian Parliament do not have legal immunity: they can be arrested and tried for any offence. They do, however, have Parliamentary privilege: they cannot be sued for anything they say in Parliament about each other or about persons outside the Parliament.[80] This privilege extends to reporting in the media of anything a Senator or Member says in Parliament. The proceedings of parliamentary committees, wherever they meet, are also covered by privilege, and this extends to witnesses before such committees.

From the beginning of Federation until 1987, Parliamentary privilege operated under Section 49 of the Constitution, which established the privileges of both Houses and their members to be the same as the House of Commons of the United Kingdom at the time of the Constitution's enactment. The Parliament was also given the power to amend its privileges.[64] In 1987, the Parliament passed the "Parliamentary Privileges Act", which clarified the meaning and extent of privilege as well as how the Parliament deals with breaches.[81]

There is a legal offence called contempt of Parliament. A person who speaks or acts in a manner contemptuous of the Parliament or its members can be tried and, if convicted, imprisoned. The Parliament previously had the power to hear such cases itself, and did so in the Browne–Fitzpatrick privilege case, 1955. This power has now been delegated to the courts. There have been few convictions. In May 2007, Harriet Swift, an anti-logging activist from New South Wales was convicted and reprimanded for contempt of Parliament, after she wrote fictitious press releases and letters purporting to be from Federal MP Gary Nairn as an April Fools' Day prank.[82]

Broadcasting

Radio broadcasts of Parliamentary proceedings began on 10 July 1946.[83] They were originally broadcast on Radio National. Since August 1994 they have been broadcast on ABC News, a government-owned channel set up specifically for this function. It operates 24 hours a day and broadcasts other news items when parliament is not sitting.

The first televised parliamentary event was the historic 1974 Joint Sitting.[84] Regular free-to-air television broadcasts of Question Time began in August 1990 from the Senate and February 1991 from the House of Representatives. Question Time from the House of Representatives is televised live, and the Senate Question Time is recorded and broadcast later that day. Other free-to-air televised broadcasts include: the Treasurer's Budget speech and the Leader of the Opposition's reply to the Budget two days later; the opening of Parliament by the Governor-General; the swearing-in of Governors-General; and addresses to the Parliament by visiting heads of state.

In 2009, the Pay TV company Foxtel launched A-SPAN, now called Sky News Extra, which broadcasts live sittings of the House of Representatives and the Senate, parliamentary Committee meetings and political press conferences.[85]

The Parliament House official website provides free extensive daily proceedings of both chambers as well as committee hearings live on the Internet.[86]

Current parliament

The current Parliament is the 47th Australian Parliament. The most recent federal election was held on 21 May 2022 and the 47th Parliament first sat on 26 July.

The outcome of the 2022 election saw the Labor Party return to government for the first time in nine years, winning 77 seats in the 151-seat House of Representatives (an increase of 9 seats compared to the 2019 election), a majority government. The Liberal/National Coalition, which had been in power since the 2013 election, lost 19 seats compared to the previous election to finish with 58 seats, and went into opposition. The crossbench grew to its largest ever size, with 16 members; 4 Greens, 1 Centre Alliance MP, 1 Katter's Australian Party MP, and 12 independents.

In the Senate, the Labor government retained 26 seats, the Liberal/National Coalition dropped to 32 seats, the Greens increased to 12 seats, the Jacqui Lambie Network had 2 seats, One Nation had 2 seats, the United Australia Party won 1 seat, and independent David Pocock won 1 seat in the Australian Capital Territory.

On 17 February 2023, the member for the Federal Division of Aston Alan Tudge announced his retirement from parliament.[5] This triggered a by-election held on 1 April 2023, contested by Liberal Roshena Campbell and Labor's Mary Doyle. Doyle was declared elected, marking the first time in 103 years that a government won a by-election in a seat held by the opposition.[5] This increased the balance of the Government's power by one in the lower house from 77 to 78.

Historical compositions

Senate

The Senate has included representatives from a range of political parties, including several parties that have seldom or never had representation in the House of Representatives, but which have consistently secured a small but significant level of electoral support, as the table shows.

Results represent the composition of the Senate after the elections. The full Senate has been contested on eight occasions; the inaugural election and seven double dissolutions. These are underlined and highlighted in puce.[87]

Election
Year
Labor Liberal[g] National[h] Democratic
Labor
Democrats Greens CLP Independent Other
parties
Total
seats
Electoral
system
1st 1901 8 11[i] 17               36 Plurality-at-large voting
2nd 1903 8 12[i] 14           1 1 Revenue Tariff 36 Plurality-at-large voting
3rd 1906 15 6[i] 13           2   36 Plurality-at-large voting
4th 1910 22 14               36 Plurality-at-large voting
5th 1913 29 7               36 Plurality-at-large voting
6th 1914 31 5               36 Plurality-at-large voting
7th 1917 12 24               36 Plurality-at-large voting
8th 1919 1 35               36 Preferential block voting
9th 1922 12 24               36 Preferential block voting
10th 1925 8 25 3             36 Preferential block voting
11th 1928 7 24 5             36 Preferential block voting
12th 1931 10 21 5             36 Preferential block voting
13th 1934 3 26 7             36 Preferential block voting
14th 1937 16 16 4             36 Preferential block voting
15th 1940 17 15 4             36 Preferential block voting
16th 1943 22 12 2             36 Preferential block voting
17th 1946 33 2 1             36 Preferential block voting
18th 1949 34 21 5             60 Single transferable vote (Full preferential voting)
19th 1951 28 26 6             60 Single transferable vote
20th 1953 29 26 5             60 Single transferable vote
21st 1955 28 24 6 2           60 Single transferable vote
22nd 1958 26 25 7 2           60 Single transferable vote
23rd 1961 28 24 6 1       1   60 Single transferable vote
24th 1964 27 23 7 2       1   60 Single transferable vote
25th 1967 27 21 7 4       1   60 Single transferable vote
26th 1970 26 21 5 5       3   60 Single transferable vote
27th 1974 29 23 6         1 1 Liberal Movement 60 Single transferable vote
28th 1975 27 26 6       1 1 1 Liberal Movement 64 Single transferable vote
29th 1977 27 27 6   2   1 1   64 Single transferable vote
30th 1980 27 28 3   5   1 1   64 Single transferable vote
31st 1983 30 23 4   5   1 1   64 Single transferable vote
32nd 1984 34 27 5   7   1 1 1 Nuclear Disarmament 76 Single transferable vote (Group voting ticket)
33rd 1987 32 26 7   7   1 2 1 Nuclear Disarmament 76 Single transferable vote (Group voting ticket)
34th 1990 32 28 5   8   1 1 1 Greens (WA) 76 Single transferable vote (Group voting ticket)
35th 1993 30 29 6   7   1 1 2 Greens (WA) (2) 76 Single transferable vote (Group voting ticket)
36th 1996 29 31 5   7   1 1 2 Greens (WA), Greens (Tas) 76 Single transferable vote (Group voting ticket)
37th 1998 29 31 3   9 1 1 1 1 One Nation 76 Single transferable vote (Group voting ticket)
38th 2001 28 31 3   8 2 1 2 1 One Nation 76 Single transferable vote (Group voting ticket)
39th 2004 28 33 5   4 4 1   1 Family First 76 Single transferable vote (Group voting ticket)
40th 2007 32 32 4     5 1 1 1 Family First 76 Single transferable vote (Group voting ticket)
41st 2010 31 28 + (3 LNP) 2 1   9 1 1   76 Single transferable vote (Group voting ticket)
42nd 2013 25 23 + (5 LNP) 3 + (1 LNP) 1   10 1 1 6 Family First,
Liberal Democrats,
Motoring Enthusiast,
Palmer United (3)
76 Single transferable vote (Group voting ticket)
43rd 2016 26 21 + (3 LNP) 3 + (2 LNP)   9 1 11 Family First,
Jacqui Lambie,
Justice Party,
Liberal Democrats,
Nick Xenophon Team (3),
One Nation (4)
76 Single transferable vote (Optional preferential voting)
44th 2019 26 26 + (4 LNP) 2 + (2 LNP)   9 1 1 5 Centre Alliance (2),
Jacqui Lambie,
One Nation (2),
76 Single transferable vote (Optional preferential voting)
45th 2022 26 23 + (3 LNP) 3 + (2 LNP) 12 1 1 5 Lambie Network (2),

One Nation (2),

United Australia (1)

76 Single transferable vote (Optional preferential voting)

House of Representatives

A two-party system has existed in the Australian House of Representatives since the two non-Labor parties merged in 1909. The 1910 election was the first to elect a majority government, with the Australian Labor Party concurrently winning the first Senate majority. Prior to 1909 a three-party system existed in the chamber. A two-party-preferred vote (2PP) has been calculated since the 1919 change from first-past-the-post to preferential voting and subsequent introduction of the Coalition. ALP = Australian Labor Party, L+NP = grouping of Liberal/National/LNP/CLP Coalition parties (and predecessors), Oth = other parties and independents.

House of Representatives results
Election
Year
Labor Free Trade Protectionist Independent Other
parties
Total
seats
1st 1901 14 28 31 2   75
Election
Year
Labor Free Trade Protectionist Independent Other
parties
Total
seats
2nd 1903 23 25 26   1 Revenue Tariff 75
Election
Year
Labor Anti-Socialist Protectionist Independent Other
parties
Total
seats
3rd 1906 26 26 21 1 1 Western Australian 75
Primary vote 2PP vote Seats
Election ALP L+NP Oth. ALP L+NP ALP L+NP Oth. Total
1910 50.0% 45.1% 4.9% 42 31 2 75
1913 48.5% 48.9% 2.6% 37 38 0 75
1914 50.9% 47.2% 1.9% 42 32 1 75
1917 43.9% 54.2% 1.9% 22 53 0 75
1919 42.5% 54.3% 3.2% 45.9% 54.1% 25 38 2 75
1922 42.3% 47.8% 9.9% 48.8% 51.2% 29 40 6 75
1925 45.0% 53.2% 1.8% 46.2% 53.8% 23 50 2 75
1928 44.6% 49.6% 5.8% 48.4% 51.6% 31 42 2 75
1929 48.8% 44.2% 7.0% 56.7% 43.3% 46 24 5 75
1931 27.1% 48.4% 24.5% 41.5% 58.5% 14 50 11 75
1934 26.8% 45.6% 27.6% 46.5% 53.5% 18 42 14 74
1937 43.2% 49.3% 7.5% 49.4% 50.6% 29 43 2 74
1940 40.2% 43.9% 15.9% 50.3% 49.7% 32 36 6 74
1943 49.9% 23.0% 27.1% 58.2% 41.8% 49 19 6 74
1946 49.7% 39.3% 11.0% 54.1% 45.9% 43 26 5 74
1949 46.0% 50.3% 3.7% 49.0% 51.0% 47 74 0 121
1951 47.6% 50.3% 2.1% 49.3% 50.7% 52 69 0 121
1954 50.0% 46.8% 3.2% 50.7% 49.3% 57 64 0 121
1955 44.6% 47.6% 7.8% 45.8% 54.2% 47 75 0 122
1958 42.8% 46.6% 10.6% 45.9% 54.1% 45 77 0 122
1961 47.9% 42.1% 10.0% 50.5% 49.5% 60 62 0 122
1963 45.5% 46.0% 8.5% 47.4% 52.6% 50 72 0 122
1966 40.0% 50.0% 10.0% 43.1% 56.9% 41 82 1 124
1969 47.0% 43.3% 9.7% 50.2% 49.8% 59 66 0 125
1972 49.6% 41.5% 8.9% 52.7% 47.3% 67 58 0 125
1974 49.3% 44.9% 5.8% 51.7% 48.3% 66 61 0 127
1975 42.8% 53.1% 4.1% 44.3% 55.7% 36 91 0 127
1977 39.7% 48.1% 12.2% 45.4% 54.6% 38 86 0 124
1980 45.2% 46.3% 8.5% 49.6% 50.4% 51 74 0 125
1983 49.5% 43.6% 6.9% 53.2% 46.8% 75 50 0 125
1984 47.6% 45.0% 7.4% 51.8% 48.2% 82 66 0 148
1987 45.8% 46.1% 8.1% 50.8% 49.2% 86 62 0 148
1990 39.4% 43.5% 17.1% 49.9% 50.1% 78 69 1 148
1993 44.9% 44.3% 10.7% 51.4% 48.6% 80 65 2 147
1996 38.7% 47.3% 14.0% 46.4% 53.6% 49 94 5 148
1998 40.1% 39.5% 20.4% 51.0% 49.0% 67 80 1 148
2001 37.8% 43.0% 19.2% 49.0% 51.0% 65 82 3 150
2004 37.6% 46.7% 15.7% 47.3% 52.7% 60 87 3 150
2007 43.4% 42.1% 14.5% 52.7% 47.3% 83 65 2 150
2010 38.0% 43.3% 18.7% 50.1% 49.9% 72 72 6 150
2013 33.4% 45.6% 21.0% 46.5% 53.5% 55 90 5 150
2016 34.7% 42.0% 23.3% 49.6% 50.4% 69 76 5 150
2019 33.3% 41.4% 25.2% 48.5% 51.5% 68 77 6 151
2022 32.6% 35.7% 31.7% 52.1% 47.9% 77 58 16 151

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Including 15 Liberal National Party of Queensland (LNP) MPs who sit in the Liberals party room
  2. ^ Including 6 Liberal National Party of Queensland (LNP) MPs who sit in the Nationals party room
  3. ^
  4. ^ Including three Liberal National Party of Queensland (LNP) senators who sit in the Liberals party room.
  5. ^ Including two Liberal National Party of Queensland (LNP) senators and one Country Liberal Party senator who sit in the Nationals party room.
  6. ^ David Pocock and Lidia Thorpe
  7. ^ Includes results for the Free Trade Party for 1901 and 1903, the Anti-Socialist Party for 1906, the Commonwealth Liberal Party for 1910—1914, the Nationalist Party for 1917—1929, and the United Australia Party for 1931—1943.
  8. ^ Used the name Country Party for 1919—1974 and National Country Party for 1975—1980.
  9. ^ a b c Protectionist Party

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  86. ^ "Watch Parliament". Parliament of Australia. aph.gov.au. Archived from the original on 15 March 2015. Retrieved 22 February 2017.
  87. ^ "A database of elections, governments, parties and representation for Australian state and federal parliaments since 1890". University of Western Australia. Archived from the original on 27 June 2008. Retrieved 15 February 2009.

Further reading

  • Souter, Gavin (1988). Acts of Parliament: A narrative history of the Senate and House of Representatives, Commonwealth of Australia. Carlton: Melbourne University Press. ISBN 0-522-84367-0.
  • Quick, John & Garran, Robert (1901). The Annotated Constitution of the Australian Commonwealth. Sydney: Angus & Robertson. ISBN 0-9596568-0-4 – via Internet Archive.
  • Warden, James (1995). A bunyip democracy: the Parliament and Australian political identity. Department of the Parliamentary Library. ISBN 0-644-45191-2.
  • Bach, Stanley (2003). Platypus and Parliament: The Australian Senate in Theory and Practice. Department of the Senate. ISBN 0-642-71291-3.
  • Hamer, David (2004). The executive government (PDF). Department of the Senate (Australia). ISBN 0-642-71433-9.
  • Prosser, Brenton & Denniss, Richard (2015). Minority Policy: Rethinking Governance when Parliament Matters. Melbourne: Melbourne University Publishing. ISBN 978-0-522-86762-6.
  • Harry Evans, Odgers' Australian Senate Practice, A detailed reference work on all aspects of the Senate's powers, procedures and practices.
  • B.C. Wright, House of Representatives Practice (6th Ed.), A detailed reference work on all aspects of the House of Representatives' powers, procedures and practices.
  • Sawer, Marian & Miskin, Sarah (1999). Papers on Parliament No. 34 Representation and Institutional Change: 50 Years of Proportional Representation in the Senate (PDF). Department of the Senate. ISBN 0-642-71061-9.
  • Brett, Judith (2019). From Secret Ballot to Democracy Sausage: How Australia Got Compulsory Voting. Text Publishing Co. ISBN 9781925603842.
  • Viglianti-Northway, Karena (2020). The Intentions of the Framers of the Australian Constitution Regarding Responsible Government and Accountability of the Commonerslth Executive to the Australian Senate (PDF). University of Technology Sydney.

External links

  • Australian House of Representatives YouTube official channel
  • The Parliament of Australia's website
  • The Australian Constitution from the Federal Register of Legislation
  • Australian Parliament – live broadcasting
  • Parliament of Australia Committees

Coordinates: 35°18′25″S 149°07′32″E / 35.30694°S 149.12556°E / -35.30694; 149.12556

parliament, australia, commonwealth, parliament, redirects, here, other, uses, commonwealth, parliament, disambiguation, australian, legislature, redirects, here, subnational, legislatures, parliaments, australian, states, territories, officially, federal, par. Commonwealth Parliament redirects here For other uses see Commonwealth Parliament disambiguation Australian legislature redirects here For the subnational legislatures see parliaments of the Australian states and territories The Parliament of Australia officially the Federal Parliament 1 also called the Commonwealth Parliament is the legislative branch of the government of Australia It consists of three elements the monarch represented by the governor general the Senate and the House of Representatives 1 2 The combination of two elected chambers in which the members of the Senate represent the states and territories while the members of the House represent electoral divisions according to population is modelled on the United States Congress Through both chambers however there is a fused executive drawn from the Westminster system 3 Parliament of Australia47th Parliament of AustraliaTypeTypeBicameralHousesSenateHouse of RepresentativesHistoryFounded9 May 1901 121 years ago 1901 05 09 LeadershipMonarchCharles III since 9 September 2022Governor GeneralDavid Hurley since 1 July 2019President of the SenateSue Lines Labor since 26 July 2022Speaker of the House of RepresentativesMilton Dick Labor since 26 July 2022StructureSeats227 151 MPs 76 Senators House of Representatives political groupsGovernment 78 Labor 78 Opposition 56 Coalition Liberal 41 a National 15 b Crossbench 17 Greens 4 Katter s Australian 1 Centre Alliance 1 Independent 11 c Senate political groupsGovernment 26 Labor 26 Opposition 32 Coalition Liberal 26 d National 6 e Crossbench 18 Greens 11 One Nation 2 Lambie Network 2 United Australia 1 Independent 2 f Length of termHouse 3 years maximum Senate 6 years fixed except under double dissolution ElectionsHouse of Representatives voting systemInstant runoff votingSenate voting systemSingle transferable voteHouse of Representatives last election21 May 2022Senate last election21 May 2022 half House of Representatives next electionby 2025Senate next election2025 half RedistrictingRedistributions are carried out on a state by state basis by the Australian Electoral Commission Meeting placeParliament HouseCanberra Australian Capital TerritoryAustraliaWebsiteaph wbr gov wbr auThe upper house the Senate consists of 76 members twelve for each state and two each for the territories Northern Territory including Christmas Island and the Cocos Keeling Islands and the Australian Capital Territory including Norfolk Island and the Jervis Bay Territory Senators are elected using the single transferable vote proportional representation system and as a result the chamber features a multitude of parties vying for power 4 The governing party or coalition has not held a majority in the Senate since 1981 except between 2005 and 2007 and usually needs to negotiate with other parties and Independents to get legislation passed 5 The lower house the House of Representatives currently consists of 151 members each elected using full preference instant runoff voting from single member constituencies known as electoral divisions and commonly referred to as electorates or seats 6 7 This tends to lead to the chamber being dominated by two major political groups the centre right Coalition consisting of the Liberal and National Parties and the centre left Labor Party The government of the day must achieve the confidence of this House in order to gain and remain in power The House of Representatives has a maximum term of three years although it can be dissolved early The Senate has fixed terms with 36 Senators terms expiring every three years the terms of the four territory senators are linked to House elections As a result House and Senate elections almost always coincide A deadlock breaking mechanism known as a double dissolution can be used to dissolve the full Senate as well as the House if the Senate refuses to pass a piece of legislation passed by the House 8 The two Houses meet in separate chambers of Parliament House except in a rare joint sitting on Capital Hill in Canberra Australian Capital Territory Contents 1 History 1 1 Temporary home in Melbourne 1901 1927 1 2 Old Parliament House 1927 1988 1 3 New Parliament House 1988 present 2 Composition and electoral systems 2 1 Monarch 2 2 Senate 2 3 House of Representatives 2 4 Both Houses 3 Procedure 4 Functions 5 Conflict between the Houses 6 Committees 7 Relationship with the Government 8 Role of the Senate 9 Parliamentary departments 10 Privileges 11 Broadcasting 12 Current parliament 13 Historical compositions 13 1 Senate 13 2 House of Representatives 14 See also 15 Notes 16 References 17 Further reading 18 External linksHistory EditTemporary home in Melbourne 1901 1927 Edit The Commonwealth of Australia came into being on 1 January 1901 with the federation of the six Australian colonies The inaugural election took place on 29 and 30 March and the first Australian Parliament was opened on 9 May 1901 in Melbourne by Prince George Duke of Cornwall and York later King George V 9 The only building in Melbourne that was large enough to accommodate the 14 000 guests was the western annexe of the Royal Exhibition Building 10 After the official opening from 1901 to 1927 the Parliament met in Parliament House Melbourne which it borrowed from the Parliament of Victoria which sat instead in the Royal Exhibition Building until 1927 The Big Picture opening of the Parliament of Australia 9 May 1901 by Tom Roberts Victorian Parliament House where the Federal Parliament met until 1927Old Parliament House 1927 1988 Edit Main article Old Parliament House Canberra It had always been intended that the national Parliament would sit in a new national capital 11 This was a compromise at Federation due to the rivalry between the two largest Australian cities Sydney and Melbourne which both wished to become the new capital The site of Canberra was selected for the location of the nation s capital city in 1908 12 A competition was announced on 30 June 1914 to design Parliament House with prize money of 7 000 However due to the start of World War I the next month the competition was cancelled It was re announced in August 1916 but again postponed indefinitely on 24 November 1916 In the meantime John Smith Murdoch the Commonwealth s Chief Architect worked on the design as part of his official duties He had little personal enthusiasm for the project as he felt it was a waste of money and expenditure on it could not be justified at the time Nevertheless he designed the building by default 13 The construction of Old Parliament House as it is called today commenced on 28 August 1923 14 and was completed in early 1927 It was built by the Commonwealth Department of Works using tradesmen and materials from all over Australia The final cost was about 600 000 which was more than three times the original estimate It was designed to house the parliament for a maximum of 50 years until a permanent facility could be built but was actually used for more than 60 years Old Parliament House as viewed from the front The building was opened on 9 May 1927 by the Duke and Duchess of York later King George VI and Queen Elizabeth The Queen Mother The opening ceremonies were both splendid and incongruous given the sparsely built nature of Canberra of the time and its small population The building was extensively decorated with British Empire and Australian flags and bunting Temporary stands were erected bordering the lawns in front of the Parliament and these were filled with crowds A Wiradjuri elder Jimmy Clements was one of only two aboriginal Australians present having walked for about a week from Brungle Station near Tumut to be at the event 15 Dame Nellie Melba sang the National anthem at that time God Save the King The Duke of York unlocked the front doors with a golden key and led the official party into King s Hall where he unveiled the statue of his father King George V The Duke then opened the first parliamentary session in the new Senate Chamber 16 New Parliament House 1988 present Edit Main article Parliament House Canberra In 1978 the Fraser government decided to proceed with a new building on Capital Hill and the Parliament House Construction Authority was created 17 A two stage competition was announced for which the Authority consulted the Royal Australian Institute of Architects and together with the National Capital Development Commission made available to competitors a brief and competition documents The design competition drew 329 entries from 29 countries 18 The competition winner was the Philadelphia based architectural firm of Mitchell Giurgola with the on site work directed by the Italian born architect Romaldo Giurgola 19 with a design which involved burying most of the building under Capital Hill and capping the edifice with an enormous spire topped by a large Australian flag The facades however included deliberate imitation of some of the patterns of the Old Parliament House so that there is a slight resemblance despite the massive difference of scale The building was also designed to sit above Old Parliament House when seen from a distance 18 Construction began in 1981 and the House was intended to be ready by Australia Day 26 January 1988 the 200th anniversary of European settlement in Australia 18 It was expected to cost A 220 million Neither the deadline nor the budget was met In the end it cost more than A 1 1 billion to build 20 The New Parliament House was finally opened by Elizabeth II Queen of Australia on 9 May 1988 21 the anniversary of the opening of both the first Federal Parliament in Melbourne on 9 May 1901 22 and the Provisional Parliament House in Canberra on 9 May 1927 23 In March 2020 the 46th Parliament of Australia was suspended due to the COVID 19 pandemic in Australia an adjournment rather than prorogation Its committees would continue to operate using technology This unprecedented move was accompanied by two motions raised by the Attorney General of Australia Christian Porter and passed on 23 March 2020 One motion was designed to allow MPs to participate in parliament by electronic means if agreed by the major parties and the speaker the second determined that with the agreement of the two major parties the standing orders could be amended without requiring an absolute majority 24 Shortly before this on 18 March the Prime Minister formed a National Cabinet the first in Australian history composed of the Prime Minister and the premiers and chief ministers of the Australian states and territories to coordinate the national response to the pandemic 25 26 27 New Parliament House opened in 1988 was built into Capital Hill behind Old Parliament HouseComposition and electoral systems EditSee also Electoral system of Australia The Constitution establishes the Commonwealth Parliament consisting of three components the King of Australia the Senate and the House of Representatives 1 Monarch Edit Most of the constitutional functions of the Crown are given to the Governor General whom the King appoints on the advice of the Prime Minister to act as his representative in Australia However by convention the Governor General usually exercises these powers only upon the advice of the Prime Minister Senate Edit Senate ballot paper used in Victoria for 2016 The upper house of the Australian Parliament is the Senate which consists of 76 members Like the United States Senate on which it was partly modelled the Australian Senate includes an equal number of senators from each state regardless of population Unlike it however the Australian Senate has always been directly elected The US Senate has been directly elected only from 1913 28 The Constitution allows Parliament to determine the number of senators by legislation provided that the six original states are equally represented Furthermore the Constitution provides that each original state is entitled to at least six senators However neither of these provisions applies to any newly admitted states or to territories Pursuant to an Act of Parliament passed in 1973 Senators are elected to represent the territories 29 Currently the two Northern Territory Senators represent the residents of the Northern Territory as well as the Australian external territories of Christmas Island and the Cocos Keeling Islands The two Australian Capital Territory Senators represent the Australian Capital Territory the Jervis Bay Territory and since 1 July 2016 Norfolk Island 30 While only half of the State Senate seats go up for re election each three years except in the case of a double dissolution as they serve six year terms all of the Territory Senators must face the voters every three years Until 1949 each state elected the constitutional minimum of six senators This number increased to ten from the 1949 election and was increased again to twelve from the 1984 election The system for electing senators has changed several times since Federation The original arrangement used a first past the post block voting or winner takes all system on a state by state basis This was replaced in 1919 by preferential block voting Block voting tended to produce landslide majorities and even wipe outs For instance from 1920 to 1923 the Nationalist Party had 35 of the 36 senators and from 1947 to 1950 the Australian Labor Party had 33 of the 36 senators 31 In 1948 single transferable vote proportional representation on a state by state basis became the method for electing senators This change has been described as an institutional revolution that has led to the rise of a number of minor parties such as the Democratic Labor Party Australian Democrats and Australian Greens who have taken advantage of this system to achieve parliamentary representation and the balance of power 4 32 From the 1984 election group ticket voting was introduced in order to reduce a high rate of informal voting but in 2016 group tickets were abolished to avoid undue influence of preference deals amongst parties that were seen as distorting election results 33 and a form of optional preferential voting was introduced In 1984 legislation was passed with the intention of changing the way long and short term seats are allocated following a double dissolution election however the method has not been used despite two bipartisan senate resolutions in favour of change Section 15 of the Constitution provides that a casual vacancy of a State Senator shall be filled by the State Parliament If the previous Senator was a member of a particular political party the replacement must come from the same party but the State Parliament may choose not to fill the vacancy in which case Section 11 requires the Senate to proceed regardless If the State Parliament happens to be in recess when the vacancy occurs the Constitution provides that the State Governor can appoint someone to fill the place until fourteen days after the State Parliament resumes sitting The State Parliament can also be recalled to ratify a replacement House of Representatives Edit 2016 House of Representatives ballot paper used in the Division of Higgins The lower house of the Australian Parliament the House of Representatives is made up of single member electorates with a population of roughly equal size As is convention in the Westminster system the party or coalition of parties that has the majority in this House forms the Government with the leader of that party or coalition becoming the Prime Minister If the government loses the confidence of the House they are expected to call a new election or resign Parliament may determine the number of members of the House of Representatives but the Constitution provides that this number must be as nearly as practicable twice the number of Senators this requirement is commonly called the nexus clause Hence the House presently consists of 151 members Each state is allocated seats based on its population however each original state regardless of size is guaranteed at least five seats The Constitution does not guarantee representation for the territories Parliament granted a seat to the Northern Territory in 1922 and to the Australian Capital Territory in 1948 these territorial representatives however had only limited voting rights until 1968 34 Federal electorates have their boundaries redrawn or redistributed whenever a state or territory has its number of seats adjusted if electorates are not generally matched by population size or if seven years have passed since the most recent redistribution 35 From 1901 to 1949 the House consisted of either 74 or 75 members the Senate had 36 Between 1949 and 1984 it had between 121 and 127 members the Senate had 60 until 1975 when it increased to 64 In 1977 the High Court ordered that the size of the House be reduced from 127 to 124 members to comply with the nexus provision 36 In 1984 both the Senate and the House were enlarged since then the House has had between 148 and 151 members the Senate has 76 First past the post voting was used to elect members of the House of Representatives until in 1918 the Nationalist Party government a predecessor of the modern day Liberal Party of Australia changed the lower house voting system to Instant runoff voting which in Australia is known as full preferential voting as of the subsequent 1919 election Labor had unexpectedly won the 1918 Swan by election with the largest primary vote due to vote splitting among the conservative parties 6 7 This system has remained in place ever since allowing the Coalition parties to safely contest the same seats 37 Full preference preferential voting re elected the Bob Hawke government at the 1990 election the first time in federal history that Labor had obtained a net benefit from preferential voting 38 Both Houses Edit Canberra from Mount Ainslie across the lake is Old Parliament House and behind it the new Parliament House It is not possible to be simultaneously a member of both the Senate and the House of Representatives 39 but a number of people have been members of both Houses at different times in their parliamentary career see List of people who have served in both Houses of the Australian Parliament Only Australian citizens are eligible for election to either house 40 They must not also hold citizenship of a foreign power 41 When the Constitution was drafted all Australians were British subjects so the word foreign meant non British But in the landmark case Sue v Hill 1999 the High Court of Australia ruled that at least since the Australia Act 1986 Britain has been a foreign power so that British citizens are also excluded 42 Compulsory voting was introduced for federal elections in 1924 The immediate justification for compulsory voting was the low voter turnout 59 38 at the 1922 federal election down from 71 59 at the 1919 federal election Compulsory voting was not on the platform of either the Stanley Bruce led Nationalist Country party coalition government or the Matthew Charlton led Labor opposition The actual initiative for change was made by Herbert Payne a backbench Tasmanian Nationalist Senator who on 16 July 1924 introduced a private Senator s bill in the Senate Payne s bill was passed with little debate the House of Representatives agreeing to it in less than an hour and in neither house was a division required hence no votes were recorded against the bill 43 The 1925 federal election was the first to be conducted under compulsory voting which saw the turnout figure rise to 91 4 The turnout increased to about 95 within a couple of elections and has stayed at about that level since 44 Since 1973 citizens have had the right to vote upon turning 18 Prior to this it was 21 45 Australian Federal Police officers armed with assault rifles have been situated in the Federal Parliament since 2015 It is the first time in Australian history that a parliament has possessed armed personnel 46 Procedure Edit The Australian Senate chamber The Senate chamber at Old Parliament House The Australian House of Representatives chamber The House of Representatives chamber at Old Parliament House Typical bill process of the Australian Parliament Each of the two Houses elects a presiding officer The presiding officer of the Senate is called the President that of the House of Representatives is the Speaker Elections for these positions are by secret ballot Both offices are conventionally filled by members of the governing party but the presiding officers are expected to oversee debate and enforce the rules in an impartial manner 47 The Constitution authorises Parliament to set the quorum for each chamber The quorum of the Senate is one quarter of the total membership nineteen that of the House of Representatives is one fifth of the total membership thirty one In theory if a quorum is not present then a House may not continue to meet In practice members usually agree not to notice that a quorum is not present so that debates on routine bills can continue while other members attend to other business outside the chamber 48 Sometimes the Opposition will call a quorum as a tactic to annoy the Government or delay proceedings particularly when the Opposition feels it has been unfairly treated in the House Proceedings are interrupted until a quorum is present citation needed It is the responsibility of the government whip to ensure that when a quorum is called enough government members are present to form a quorum Both Houses may determine motions by voice vote the presiding officer puts the question and after listening to shouts of Aye and No from the members announces the result The announcement of the presiding officer settles the question unless at least two members demand a division or a recorded vote In that case the bells are rung throughout Parliament House summoning Senators or Members to the chamber During a division members who favour the motion move to the right side of the chamber the side to the Speaker s or President s right and those opposed move to the left They are then counted by tellers government and opposition whips and the motion is passed or defeated accordingly In the Senate in order not to deprive a state of a vote in what is supposed to be a states house the President is permitted a vote along with other senators however that right is rarely exercised in the case of a tie the President does not have a casting vote and the motion fails 49 In the House of Representatives the Speaker does not vote but has a casting vote if there is a tie 47 Most legislation is introduced into the House of Representatives and goes through a number of stages before it becomes law The legislative process occurs in English although other Australian parliaments have permitted use of Indigenous languages with English translation 50 Government bills are drafted by the Office of Parliamentary Counsel The first stage is a first reading where the legislation is introduced to the chamber then there is a second reading where a vote is taken on the general outlines of the bill Although rare the legislation can then be considered by a House committee which reports back to the House on any recommendations This is followed by a consideration in detail stage where the House can consider the clauses of the bill in detail and make any amendments This is finally followed by a third reading where the bill is either passed or rejected by the House If passed the legislation is then sent to the Senate which has a similar structure of debate and passage except that consideration of bills by Senate committees is more common than in the House and the consideration in detail stage is replaced by a committee of the whole Once a bill has been passed by both Houses in the same form it is then presented to the Governor General for royal assent 51 Functions Edit The Constitution of Australia where the functions and powers of Parliament are outlined The principal function of the Parliament is to pass laws or legislation Any Senator or Member may introduce a proposed law a bill except for a money bill a bill proposing an expenditure or levying a tax which must be introduced in the House of Representatives 52 In practice the great majority of bills are introduced by ministers Bills introduced by other Members are called private members bills All bills must be passed by both Houses and assented to by the Governor General to become law The Senate has the same legislative powers as the House except that it may not amend or introduce money bills only pass or reject them The enacting formula for Acts of Parliament is simply The Parliament of Australia enacts 53 The Commonwealth legislative power is limited to that granted in the Constitution Powers not specified are considered residual powers and remain the domain of the states Section 51 grants the Commonwealth power over areas such as taxation external affairs defence and marriage Section 51 also allows State parliaments to refer matters to the Commonwealth to legislate 54 Section 96 of the Australian Constitution gives the Commonwealth Parliament the power to grant money to any State on such terms and conditions as the Parliament thinks fit In effect the Commonwealth can make grants subject to States implementing particular policies in their fields of legislative responsibility Such grants known as tied grants since they are tied to a particular purpose have been used to give the federal parliament influence over state policy matters such as public hospitals and schools 55 The Parliament performs other functions besides legislation It can discuss urgency motions or matters of public importance these provide a forum for debates on public policy matters 56 Senators and Members can move motions on a range of matters relevant to their constituents and can also move motions of censure against the government or individual ministers On most sitting days in each House there is a session called Question time at which senators and members address questions without notice to the prime minister and other ministers 57 Senators and Members can also present petitions from their constituents 58 Both Houses have an extensive system of committees in which draft bills are debated matters of public policy are inquired into evidence is taken and public servants are questioned There are also joint committees composed of members from both Houses Conflict between the Houses Edit The Joint Sitting of the Australian Parliament of 1974 In the event of conflict between the two Houses over the final form of legislation the Constitution provides for a simultaneous dissolution of both Houses known as a double dissolution 8 Section 57 of the Constitution states that If the House of Representatives passes any proposed law and the Senate rejects or fails to pass it or passes it with amendments to which the House of Representatives will not agree and if after an interval of three months the House of Representatives in the same or the next session again passes the proposed law with or without any amendments which have been made suggested or agreed to by the Senate and the Senate rejects or fails to pass it or passes it with amendments to which the House of Representatives will not agree the Governor General may dissolve the Senate and the House of Representatives simultaneously 59 In an election following a double dissolution each state elects their entire 12 seat Senate delegation while the two territories represented in the Senate each elect their two senators as they would in a regular federal election Because all seats are contested in the same election it is easier for smaller parties to win seats under the single transferable vote system the quota for the election of each senator in each Australian state in a full Senate election is 7 69 of the vote while in a normal half Senate election the quota is 14 28 60 If the conflict continues after such an election the Governor General may convene a joint sitting of both Houses to consider the bill or bills including any amendments which have been previously proposed in either House or any new amendments If a bill is passed by an absolute majority of the total membership of the joint sitting it is treated as though it had been passed separately by both Houses and is presented for royal assent With proportional representation and the small majorities in the Senate compared to the generally larger majorities in the House of Representatives and the requirement that the number of members of the House be nearly as practicable twice that of the Senate a joint sitting after a double dissolution is more likely than not to lead to a victory for the House over the Senate This provision has only been invoked on one occasion after the election following the 1974 double dissolution 61 However there are other occasions when the two Houses meet as one see Joint meetings of the Australian Parliament Committees EditSee also Australian Senate committees and Australian House of Representatives committees A Senate committee room in Parliament House Canberra source source source source source source source source A short video on Australian Parliamentary Committees In addition to the work of the main chambers both the Senate and the House of Representatives have a large number of investigatory and scrutiny committees which deal with matters referred to them by their respective Houses or ministers They provide the opportunity for all Members and Senators to ask questions of witnesses including ministers and public officials as well as conduct inquiries and examine policy and legislation 62 Once a particular inquiry is completed the members of the committee can then produce a report to be tabled in Parliament outlining what they have discovered as well as any recommendations that they have produced for the Government or House to consider 63 The ability of the Houses of Parliament to establish committees is referenced in Section 49 of the Constitution which states that The powers privileges and immunities of the Senate and of the House of Representatives and of the members and the committees of each House shall be such as are declared by the Parliament and until declared shall be those of the Commons House of Parliament of the United Kingdom and of its members and committees at the establishment of the Commonwealth 63 64 Parliamentary committees can be given a wide range of powers One of the most significant powers is the ability to summon people to attend hearings in order to give evidence and submit documents Anyone who attempts to hinder the work of a Parliamentary committee may be found to be in contempt of Parliament There are a number of ways that witnesses can be found in contempt these include refusing to appear before a committee when summoned refusing to answer a question during a hearing or to produce a document or later being found to have lied to or misled a committee Anyone who attempts to influence a witness may also be found in contempt 65 Other powers include the ability to meet throughout Australia to establish subcommittees and to take evidence in both public and private hearings 63 Proceedings of committees are considered to have the same legal standing as proceedings of Parliament they are recorded by Hansard except for private proceedings and also operate under the protections of Parliamentary privilege Every participant including committee members and witnesses giving evidence is protected from being prosecuted under any civil or criminal action for anything they may say during a hearing Written evidence and documents received by a committee are also protected 63 65 Types of committees include 65 Standing Committees which are established on an ongoing basis and are responsible for scrutinising bills and topics referred to them by the chamber or minister examining the government s budget and activities in what is called the budget estimates process and for examining departmental annual reports and activities Select Committees which are temporary committees established in order to consider a particular matter A select committee expires when it has published its final report on an inquiry Domestic Committees which are responsible for administering aspects of the Parliament s own affairs These include the Selection Committees of both Houses that determine how the Parliament will deal with particular pieces of legislation and private members business and the Privileges Committees that deal with matters of parliamentary privilege Legislative Scrutiny Committees which examine legislation and regulations to determine their impact on individual rights and accountability Joint Committees are also established to include both members of the House of Representatives and the Senate Joint committees may be standing ongoing or select temporary in nature Relationship with the Government Edit Governor General Sir Peter Cosgrove with members of the Second Turnbull Ministry Under the Constitution the Governor General has the power to appoint and dismiss Ministers of State who administer government departments In practice the Governor General chooses ministers in accordance with the traditions of the Westminster system The Governor General appoints as Prime Minister the leader of the party that has a majority of seats in the House of Representatives the Governor General then on the advice of the Prime Minister appoints the other Ministers chosen from the majority party or coalition of parties These ministers then meet in a council known as Cabinet Cabinet meetings are strictly private and occur once a week where vital issues are discussed and policy formulated The Constitution does not recognise the Cabinet as a legal entity it exists solely by convention Its decisions do not in and of themselves have legal force However it serves as the practical expression of the Federal Executive Council which is Australia s highest formal governmental body 66 In practice the Federal Executive Council meets solely to endorse and give legal force to decisions already made by the Cabinet All members of the Cabinet are members of the Executive Council While the Governor General is nominal presiding officer she or he almost never attends Executive Council meetings The Governor General is bound by convention to follow the advice of the Executive Council on almost all occasions giving it de facto executive power 67 A senior member of the Cabinet holds the office of vice president of the Executive Council and acts as presiding officer of the Executive Council in the absence of the Governor General The Federal Executive Council is the Australian equivalent of the Executive Councils and privy councils in other Commonwealth realms such as the King s Privy Council for Canada and the Privy Council of the United Kingdom 68 A minister is not required to be a Senator or Member of the House of Representatives at the time of their appointment but their office is forfeited if they do not become a member of either house within three months of their appointment This provision was included in the Constitution section 64 to enable the inaugural Ministry led by Edmund Barton to be appointed on 1 January 1901 even though the first federal elections were not scheduled to be held until 29 and 30 March 69 After the 1949 election John Spicer and Bill Spooner became ministers in the Menzies Government on 19 December despite their terms in the Senate not beginning until 22 February 1950 70 The provision was also used after the disappearance and presumed death of the Liberal Prime Minister Harold Holt in December 1967 The Liberal Party elected John Gorton then a Senator as its new leader and he was sworn in as Prime Minister on 10 January 1968 following an interim ministry led by John McEwen On 1 February Gorton resigned from the Senate to stand for the 24 February by election in Holt s former House of Representatives electorate of Higgins due to the convention that the Prime Minister be a member of the lower house For 22 days 2 to 23 February inclusive he was Prime Minister while a member of neither house of parliament 71 On a number of occasions when Ministers have retired from their seats prior to an election or stood but lost their own seats in the election they have retained their Ministerial offices until the next government is sworn in Role of the Senate Edit The Australian Senate The Constitution of Australia established the Senate as part of the new system of dominion government in newly federated Australia From a comparative governmental perspective the Australian Senate exhibits distinctive characteristics Unlike upper Houses in other Westminster system governments the Senate is not a vestigial body with limited legislative power Rather it was intended to play and does play an active role in legislation Rather than being modelled solely after the House of Lords as the Canadian Senate was the Australian Senate was in part modelled after the United States Senate by giving equal representation to each state The Constitution intended to give less populous states added voice in a Federal legislature while also providing for the revising role of an upper house in the Westminster system 72 One of the functions of the Senate both directly and through its committees is to scrutinise government activity The vigour of this scrutiny has been fuelled for many years by the fact that the party in government has seldom had a majority in the Senate Whereas in the House of Representatives the government s majority has sometimes limited that chamber s capacity to implement executive scrutiny the opposition and minor parties have been able to use their Senate numbers as a basis for conducting inquiries into government operations 73 The constitutional text denies the Senate the power to originate or amend appropriation bills in deference to the conventions of the classical Westminster system Under a traditional Westminster system the executive government is responsible for its use of public funds to the lower house which has the power to bring down a government by blocking its access to supply i e revenue appropriated through taxation The arrangement as expressed in the Australian Constitution however still leaves the Senate with the power to reject supply bills or defer their passage undoubtedly weasel words one of the Senate s most powerful abilities 74 Because of the federal nature of our Constitution and because of its provisions the Senate undoubtedly has constitutional power to refuse or defer supply to the Government Because of the principles of responsible government a Prime Minister who cannot obtain supply including money for carrying on the ordinary services of government must either advise a general election or resign If he refuses to do this I have the authority and indeed the duty under the Constitution to withdraw his Commission as Prime Minister The position in Australia is quite different from a position in the United Kingdom Here the confidence of both Houses on supply is necessary to ensure its provision In United Kingdom the confidence of the House of Commons alone is necessary But both here and in the United Kingdom the duty of the Prime Minister is the same in a most important aspect if he cannot get supply he must resign or advise an election Governor General Sir John Kerr Statement dated 11 November 1975 75 The ability to block supply was the origin of the 1975 Australian constitutional crisis The Opposition used its numbers in the Senate to defer supply bills refusing to deal with them until an election was called for both Houses of Parliament an election which it hoped to win The Prime Minister of the day Gough Whitlam contested the legitimacy of the blocking and refused to resign The crisis brought to a head two Westminster conventions that under the Australian constitutional system were in conflict firstly that a government may continue to govern for as long as it has the support of the lower house and secondly that a government that no longer has access to supply must either resign or be dismissed The crisis was resolved in November 1975 when Governor General Sir John Kerr dismissed Whitlam s government and appointed a caretaker government on condition that elections for both Houses of parliament be held 75 This action in itself was a source of controversy and debate continues on the proper usage of the Senate s ability to block supply and on whether such a power should even exist 76 The blocking of supply alone cannot force a double dissolution There must be legislation repeatedly blocked by the Senate which the government can then choose to use as a trigger for a double dissolution 77 Parliamentary departments EditThere are four parliamentary departments supporting the Australian Parliament 78 Department of the Senate which consists of seven Offices and whose work is determined by the Senate and its committees 79 Department of the House of Representatives which provides various services to support the smooth operation of the House of Representatives its committees and certain joint committees Department of Parliamentary Services DPS which performs diverse support functions such as research the Parliamentary Library of Australia broadcasting on radio and TV Hansard transcripts computing services and general maintenance and security Parliamentary Budget Office PBO which improves transparency around fiscal and budget policy issues and provides costing services to parliamentarians Privileges EditMembers of the Australian Parliament do not have legal immunity they can be arrested and tried for any offence They do however have Parliamentary privilege they cannot be sued for anything they say in Parliament about each other or about persons outside the Parliament 80 This privilege extends to reporting in the media of anything a Senator or Member says in Parliament The proceedings of parliamentary committees wherever they meet are also covered by privilege and this extends to witnesses before such committees From the beginning of Federation until 1987 Parliamentary privilege operated under Section 49 of the Constitution which established the privileges of both Houses and their members to be the same as the House of Commons of the United Kingdom at the time of the Constitution s enactment The Parliament was also given the power to amend its privileges 64 In 1987 the Parliament passed the Parliamentary Privileges Act which clarified the meaning and extent of privilege as well as how the Parliament deals with breaches 81 There is a legal offence called contempt of Parliament A person who speaks or acts in a manner contemptuous of the Parliament or its members can be tried and if convicted imprisoned The Parliament previously had the power to hear such cases itself and did so in the Browne Fitzpatrick privilege case 1955 This power has now been delegated to the courts There have been few convictions In May 2007 Harriet Swift an anti logging activist from New South Wales was convicted and reprimanded for contempt of Parliament after she wrote fictitious press releases and letters purporting to be from Federal MP Gary Nairn as an April Fools Day prank 82 Broadcasting EditRadio broadcasts of Parliamentary proceedings began on 10 July 1946 83 They were originally broadcast on Radio National Since August 1994 they have been broadcast on ABC News a government owned channel set up specifically for this function It operates 24 hours a day and broadcasts other news items when parliament is not sitting The first televised parliamentary event was the historic 1974 Joint Sitting 84 Regular free to air television broadcasts of Question Time began in August 1990 from the Senate and February 1991 from the House of Representatives Question Time from the House of Representatives is televised live and the Senate Question Time is recorded and broadcast later that day Other free to air televised broadcasts include the Treasurer s Budget speech and the Leader of the Opposition s reply to the Budget two days later the opening of Parliament by the Governor General the swearing in of Governors General and addresses to the Parliament by visiting heads of state In 2009 the Pay TV company Foxtel launched A SPAN now called Sky News Extra which broadcasts live sittings of the House of Representatives and the Senate parliamentary Committee meetings and political press conferences 85 The Parliament House official website provides free extensive daily proceedings of both chambers as well as committee hearings live on the Internet 86 Current parliament EditMain article 47th Parliament of Australia See also 2022 Australian federal election Members of the Australian Senate 2022 2025 and Members of the Australian House of Representatives 2022 2025 The current Parliament is the 47th Australian Parliament The most recent federal election was held on 21 May 2022 and the 47th Parliament first sat on 26 July The outcome of the 2022 election saw the Labor Party return to government for the first time in nine years winning 77 seats in the 151 seat House of Representatives an increase of 9 seats compared to the 2019 election a majority government The Liberal National Coalition which had been in power since the 2013 election lost 19 seats compared to the previous election to finish with 58 seats and went into opposition The crossbench grew to its largest ever size with 16 members 4 Greens 1 Centre Alliance MP 1 Katter s Australian Party MP and 12 independents In the Senate the Labor government retained 26 seats the Liberal National Coalition dropped to 32 seats the Greens increased to 12 seats the Jacqui Lambie Network had 2 seats One Nation had 2 seats the United Australia Party won 1 seat and independent David Pocock won 1 seat in the Australian Capital Territory On 17 February 2023 the member for the Federal Division of Aston Alan Tudge announced his retirement from parliament 5 This triggered a by election held on 1 April 2023 contested by Liberal Roshena Campbell and Labor s Mary Doyle Doyle was declared elected marking the first time in 103 years that a government won a by election in a seat held by the opposition 5 This increased the balance of the Government s power by one in the lower house from 77 to 78 Historical compositions EditSenate Edit The Senate has included representatives from a range of political parties including several parties that have seldom or never had representation in the House of Representatives but which have consistently secured a small but significant level of electoral support as the table shows Results represent the composition of the Senate after the elections The full Senate has been contested on eight occasions the inaugural election and seven double dissolutions These are underlined and highlighted in puce 87 ElectionYear Labor Liberal g National h DemocraticLabor Democrats Greens CLP Independent Otherparties Totalseats Electoralsystem1st 1901 8 11 i 17 36 Plurality at large voting2nd 1903 8 12 i 14 1 1 Revenue Tariff 36 Plurality at large voting3rd 1906 15 6 i 13 2 36 Plurality at large voting4th 1910 22 14 36 Plurality at large voting5th 1913 29 7 36 Plurality at large voting6th 1914 31 5 36 Plurality at large voting7th 1917 12 24 36 Plurality at large voting8th 1919 1 35 36 Preferential block voting9th 1922 12 24 36 Preferential block voting10th 1925 8 25 3 36 Preferential block voting11th 1928 7 24 5 36 Preferential block voting12th 1931 10 21 5 36 Preferential block voting13th 1934 3 26 7 36 Preferential block voting14th 1937 16 16 4 36 Preferential block voting15th 1940 17 15 4 36 Preferential block voting16th 1943 22 12 2 36 Preferential block voting17th 1946 33 2 1 36 Preferential block voting18th 1949 34 21 5 60 Single transferable vote Full preferential voting 19th 1951 28 26 6 60 Single transferable vote20th 1953 29 26 5 60 Single transferable vote21st 1955 28 24 6 2 60 Single transferable vote22nd 1958 26 25 7 2 60 Single transferable vote23rd 1961 28 24 6 1 1 60 Single transferable vote24th 1964 27 23 7 2 1 60 Single transferable vote25th 1967 27 21 7 4 1 60 Single transferable vote26th 1970 26 21 5 5 3 60 Single transferable vote27th 1974 29 23 6 1 1 Liberal Movement 60 Single transferable vote28th 1975 27 26 6 1 1 1 Liberal Movement 64 Single transferable vote29th 1977 27 27 6 2 1 1 64 Single transferable vote30th 1980 27 28 3 5 1 1 64 Single transferable vote31st 1983 30 23 4 5 1 1 64 Single transferable vote32nd 1984 34 27 5 7 1 1 1 Nuclear Disarmament 76 Single transferable vote Group voting ticket 33rd 1987 32 26 7 7 1 2 1 Nuclear Disarmament 76 Single transferable vote Group voting ticket 34th 1990 32 28 5 8 1 1 1 Greens WA 76 Single transferable vote Group voting ticket 35th 1993 30 29 6 7 1 1 2 Greens WA 2 76 Single transferable vote Group voting ticket 36th 1996 29 31 5 7 1 1 2 Greens WA Greens Tas 76 Single transferable vote Group voting ticket 37th 1998 29 31 3 9 1 1 1 1 One Nation 76 Single transferable vote Group voting ticket 38th 2001 28 31 3 8 2 1 2 1 One Nation 76 Single transferable vote Group voting ticket 39th 2004 28 33 5 4 4 1 1 Family First 76 Single transferable vote Group voting ticket 40th 2007 32 32 4 5 1 1 1 Family First 76 Single transferable vote Group voting ticket 41st 2010 31 28 3 LNP 2 1 9 1 1 76 Single transferable vote Group voting ticket 42nd 2013 25 23 5 LNP 3 1 LNP 1 10 1 1 6 Family First Liberal Democrats Motoring Enthusiast Palmer United 3 76 Single transferable vote Group voting ticket 43rd 2016 26 21 3 LNP 3 2 LNP 9 1 11 Family First Jacqui Lambie Justice Party Liberal Democrats Nick Xenophon Team 3 One Nation 4 76 Single transferable vote Optional preferential voting 44th 2019 26 26 4 LNP 2 2 LNP 9 1 1 5 Centre Alliance 2 Jacqui Lambie One Nation 2 76 Single transferable vote Optional preferential voting 45th 2022 26 23 3 LNP 3 2 LNP 12 1 1 5 Lambie Network 2 One Nation 2 United Australia 1 76 Single transferable vote Optional preferential voting House of Representatives Edit A two party system has existed in the Australian House of Representatives since the two non Labor parties merged in 1909 The 1910 election was the first to elect a majority government with the Australian Labor Party concurrently winning the first Senate majority Prior to 1909 a three party system existed in the chamber A two party preferred vote 2PP has been calculated since the 1919 change from first past the post to preferential voting and subsequent introduction of the Coalition ALP Australian Labor Party L NP grouping of Liberal National LNP CLP Coalition parties and predecessors Oth other parties and independents House of Representatives results ElectionYear Labor Free Trade Protectionist Independent Otherparties Totalseats1st 1901 14 28 31 2 75ElectionYear Labor Free Trade Protectionist Independent Otherparties Totalseats2nd 1903 23 25 26 1 Revenue Tariff 75ElectionYear Labor Anti Socialist Protectionist Independent Otherparties Totalseats3rd 1906 26 26 21 1 1 Western Australian 75 Primary vote 2PP vote SeatsElection ALP L NP Oth ALP L NP ALP L NP Oth Total1910 50 0 45 1 4 9 42 31 2 751913 48 5 48 9 2 6 37 38 0 751914 50 9 47 2 1 9 42 32 1 751917 43 9 54 2 1 9 22 53 0 751919 42 5 54 3 3 2 45 9 54 1 25 38 2 751922 42 3 47 8 9 9 48 8 51 2 29 40 6 751925 45 0 53 2 1 8 46 2 53 8 23 50 2 751928 44 6 49 6 5 8 48 4 51 6 31 42 2 751929 48 8 44 2 7 0 56 7 43 3 46 24 5 751931 27 1 48 4 24 5 41 5 58 5 14 50 11 751934 26 8 45 6 27 6 46 5 53 5 18 42 14 741937 43 2 49 3 7 5 49 4 50 6 29 43 2 741940 40 2 43 9 15 9 50 3 49 7 32 36 6 741943 49 9 23 0 27 1 58 2 41 8 49 19 6 741946 49 7 39 3 11 0 54 1 45 9 43 26 5 741949 46 0 50 3 3 7 49 0 51 0 47 74 0 1211951 47 6 50 3 2 1 49 3 50 7 52 69 0 1211954 50 0 46 8 3 2 50 7 49 3 57 64 0 1211955 44 6 47 6 7 8 45 8 54 2 47 75 0 1221958 42 8 46 6 10 6 45 9 54 1 45 77 0 1221961 47 9 42 1 10 0 50 5 49 5 60 62 0 1221963 45 5 46 0 8 5 47 4 52 6 50 72 0 1221966 40 0 50 0 10 0 43 1 56 9 41 82 1 1241969 47 0 43 3 9 7 50 2 49 8 59 66 0 1251972 49 6 41 5 8 9 52 7 47 3 67 58 0 1251974 49 3 44 9 5 8 51 7 48 3 66 61 0 1271975 42 8 53 1 4 1 44 3 55 7 36 91 0 1271977 39 7 48 1 12 2 45 4 54 6 38 86 0 1241980 45 2 46 3 8 5 49 6 50 4 51 74 0 1251983 49 5 43 6 6 9 53 2 46 8 75 50 0 1251984 47 6 45 0 7 4 51 8 48 2 82 66 0 1481987 45 8 46 1 8 1 50 8 49 2 86 62 0 1481990 39 4 43 5 17 1 49 9 50 1 78 69 1 1481993 44 9 44 3 10 7 51 4 48 6 80 65 2 1471996 38 7 47 3 14 0 46 4 53 6 49 94 5 1481998 40 1 39 5 20 4 51 0 49 0 67 80 1 1482001 37 8 43 0 19 2 49 0 51 0 65 82 3 1502004 37 6 46 7 15 7 47 3 52 7 60 87 3 1502007 43 4 42 1 14 5 52 7 47 3 83 65 2 1502010 38 0 43 3 18 7 50 1 49 9 72 72 6 1502013 33 4 45 6 21 0 46 5 53 5 55 90 5 1502016 34 7 42 0 23 3 49 6 50 4 69 76 5 1502019 33 3 41 4 25 2 48 5 51 5 68 77 6 1512022 32 6 35 7 31 7 52 1 47 9 77 58 16 151See also Edit2022 Australian federal election Chronology of Australian federal parliaments List of legislatures by country List of official openings by Elizabeth II in Australia Members of the Australian House of Representatives 2022 2025 Members of the Australian Senate 2022 2025 List of longest serving members of the Parliament of AustraliaNotes Edit Including 15 Liberal National Party of Queensland LNP MPs who sit in the Liberals party room Including 6 Liberal National Party of Queensland LNP MPs who sit in the Nationals party room Kate Chaney Zoe Daniel Andrew Gee Helen Haines Dai Le Monique Ryan Sophie Scamps Allegra Spender Zali Steggall Kylea Tink Andrew Wilkie Including three Liberal National Party of Queensland LNP senators who sit in the Liberals party room Including two Liberal National Party of Queensland LNP senators and one Country Liberal Party senator who sit in the Nationals party room David Pocock and Lidia Thorpe Includes results for the Free Trade Party for 1901 and 1903 the Anti Socialist Party for 1906 the Commonwealth Liberal Party for 1910 1914 the Nationalist Party for 1917 1929 and the United Australia Party for 1931 1943 Used the name Country Party for 1919 1974 and National Country Party for 1975 1980 a b c Protectionist PartyReferences Edit a b c Constitution of Australia section 1 Constitution of Australia section 2 Williams George Brennan Sean Lynch Andrew 2014 Blackshield and Williams Australian Constitutional Law and Theory Commentary and Materials 6 ed Leichhardt NSW Federation P p 2 ISBN 978 1 86287 918 8 a b Odgers Australian Senate Practice Fourteenth Edition Chapter 4 Elections for the Senate Parliament of Australia 2017 Archived from the original on 9 May 2019 Retrieved 25 March 2017 a b c Williams George Brennan Sean Lynch Andrew 2014 Blackshield and Williams Australian constitutional law and theory commentary and materials 6th ed Annandale NSW Federation Press p 415 ISBN 9781862879188 a b House of Representatives Practice 6th Ed Chapter 3 Elections and the electoral system Parliament of Australia 2015 Archived from the original on 27 March 2022 Retrieved 25 March 2017 a b A Short History of Federal Election Reform in Australia Australian Electoral Commission 8 June 2007 Archived from the original on 4 March 2022 Retrieved 1 July 2007 a b Odgers Australian Senate Practice Fourteenth Edition Chapter 21 Relations with the House of Representatives Parliament of Australia 2017 Archived from the original on 16 March 2022 Retrieved 22 March 2017 Simms M ed 2001 1901 The forgotten election University of Queensland Press Brisbane ISBN 0 7022 3302 1 The western annexe was demolished in the 1960s Constitution of Australia section 125 The seat of Government of the Commonwealth shall be determined by the Parliament and shall be within territory which shall have been granted to or acquired by the Commonwealth and shall be vested in and belong to the Commonwealth and shall be in the State of New South Wales and be distant not less than one hundred miles from Sydney Such territory shall contain an area of not less than one hundred square miles and such portion thereof as shall consist of Crown lands shall be granted to the Commonwealth without any payment therefor The Parliament shall sit at Melbourne until it meet at the seat of Government Lewis Wendy Balderstone Simon Bowan John 2006 Events That Shaped Australia New Holland p 106 ISBN 978 1 74110 492 9 Messenger Robert 4 May 2002 Mythical thing to an iced reality in Old Parliament House 75 Years of History supplement The Canberra Times Australia s Prime Ministers Timeline National Archives of Australia 4 May 2002 Archived from the original on 5 June 2020 Retrieved 14 December 2015 Wright Tony 13 February 2008 Power of occasion best expressed by the names of those who were not there The Age Melbourne Archived from the original on 26 January 2010 Retrieved 13 February 2008 Museum of Australian Democracy The Building Events Museum of Australian Democracy Archived from the original on 4 March 2022 Retrieved 15 March 2017 Blenkin Max 1 January 2009 Parliament forced to build new Parliament House in Canberra Herald Sun a b c Cantor Steven L 1996 Contemporary Trends in Landscape Architecture John Wiley amp Sons pp 160 166 ISBN 0 471 28791 1 Retrieved 5 August 2013 Tony Stephens Like his work he ll blend into the landscape The Sydney Morning Herald 3 July 1999 Dunkerley Susanna 8 May 2008 Parliament House to mark 20th birthday The Sydney Morning Herald Archived from the original on 13 March 2017 Retrieved 13 March 2017 Lovell David W Ian MacAllister William Maley Chandran Kukathas 1998 The Australian Political System South Melbourne Addison Wesley Longman Australia Pty Ltd p 737 ISBN 0 582 81027 2 Cannon Michael 1985 Australia Spirit of a Nation South Melbourne Curry O Neil Ross Pty Ltd p 100 ISBN 0 85902 210 2 Cannon Michael 1985 Australia Spirit of a Nation South Melbourne Curry O Neil Ross Pty Ltd p 146 ISBN 0 85902 210 2 Twomey Anne 24 March 2020 A virtual Australian parliament is possible and may be needed during the coronavirus pandemic The Conversation Archived from the original on 25 March 2020 Retrieved 1 April 2020 Morrison Scott 15 March 2020 Transcript Press Conference Prime Minister of Australia Prime Minister of Australia Archived from the original on 9 March 2022 Retrieved 1 May 2022 Burton Tom 18 March 2020 National cabinet creates a new federal model Australian Financial Review Archived from the original on 18 March 2020 Retrieved 30 March 2020 Shoebridge Michael 18 March 2020 The national cabinet is key to our coronavirus response Here s how it will need to work The Canberra Times Retrieved 1 April 2020 Bybee Jay S 1997 Ulysses at the Mast Democracy Federalism and the Sirens Song of the Seventeenth Amendment Northwestern University Law Review Northwestern University School of Law 91 1 ISSN 0029 3571 Senate Representation of Territories Act 1973 No 39 1974 Austlii edu au 1974 Archived from the original on 16 September 2010 Retrieved 22 March 2017 Norfolk Island Electors Australian Electoral Commission 2016 Archived from the original on 15 June 2016 Retrieved 13 August 2016 Sawer Marian amp Miskin Sarah 1999 Papers on Parliament No 34 Representation and Institutional Change 50 Years of Proportional Representation in the Senate Department of the Senate ISBN 0 642 71061 9 Sawer Marian amp Miskin Sarah 1999 Papers on Parliament No 34 Representation and Institutional Change 50 Years of Proportional Representation in the Senate PDF Department of the Senate ISBN 0 642 71061 9 Anderson Stephanie 26 April 2016 Senate voting changes explained in AEC advertisements Australian Broadcasting Corporation Archived from the original on 6 May 2016 Retrieved 3 February 2017 Northern Territory Representation Act 1922 Documenting a Democracy 5 October 1922 Archived from the original on 1 August 2014 Retrieved 22 March 2017 Barber Stephen 25 August 2016 Electoral Redistributions during the 45th Parliament Parliament of Australia Archived from the 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original on 4 January 2013 Retrieved 16 June 2010 Compulsory Voting in Australia PDF Australian Electoral Commission 16 January 2006 Archived from the original on 17 February 2011 Retrieved 4 February 2011 Australia s major electoral developments Timeline 1900 Present Australian Electoral Commission Archived from the original on 19 March 2022 Retrieved 25 March 2017 Massola James 9 February 2015 Armed guards now stationed to protect Australian MPs and senators in both chambers of Federal Parliament The Sydney Morning Herald Archived from the original on 12 February 2015 Retrieved 3 February 2017 a b House of Representatives Practice 7th Ed Chapter 6 The Speaker Deputy Speakers and officers 2018 Archived from the original on 28 April 2022 Retrieved 26 May 2020 About Parliament House of Representatives Practice Quorum Parliament of Australia Archived from the original on 28 April 2022 Retrieved 23 February 2021 Senate Brief No 6 The President of the Senate Department of the Senate 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16 Committees 2017 Archived from the original on 20 March 2017 Retrieved 19 March 2017 a b Constitution of Australia section 49 a b c Infosheet 4 Committees Parliament of Australia aph gov au Archived from the original on 17 October 2016 Retrieved 22 February 2017 Federal Executive Council Handbook Department of the Prime Minister and Cabinet Archived from the original on 4 March 2017 Retrieved 3 March 2017 Democracy in Australia Australia s political system PDF Australian Collaboration Archived PDF from the original on 14 May 2013 Retrieved 25 January 2014 Hamer David 2004 The executive government PDF Department of the Senate Australia p 113 ISBN 0 642 71433 9 Rutledge Martha Sir Edmund 1849 1920 Australian Dictionary of Biography Australian National University Retrieved 8 February 2010 Starr Graeme 2000 Spooner Sir William Henry 1897 1966 Australian Dictionary of Biography National Centre of Biography Australian National University ISSN 1833 7538 Retrieved 7 January 2008 John Gorton Prime Minister from 10 January 1968 to 10 March 1971 National Museum of Australia Archived from the original on 7 March 2016 Retrieved 3 March 2017 Odgers Australian Senate Practice Fourteenth Edition Chapter 1 The Senate and its constitutional role The Senate bicameralism and federalism Parliament of Australia 2017 Archived from the original on 21 April 2017 Retrieved 17 March 2017 Bach Stanley 2003 Platypus and Parliament The Australian Senate in Theory and Practice Department of the Senate p 352 ISBN 0 642 71291 3 Odgers Australian Senate Practice Fourteenth Edition Chapter 1 The Senate and its constitutional role Legislative powers Parliament of Australia 2017 Archived from the original on 21 April 2017 Retrieved 17 March 2017 a b Kerr John Statement from John Kerr dated 11 November 1975 explaining his decisions WhitlamDismissal com Archived from the original on 23 February 2012 Retrieved 11 January 2017 Bach Stanley 2003 Platypus and Parliament The Australian Senate in Theory and Practice Department of the Senate p 300 ISBN 0 642 71291 3 Green Antony 19 May 2014 An Early Double Dissolution Don t Hold Your Breath Antony Green s Election Blog ABC Archived from the original on 19 April 2017 Retrieved 1 August 2016 Parliamentary Departments Parliament of Australia 19 June 2012 Archived from the original on 31 March 2020 Retrieved 30 May 2020 Department of the Senate Parliament of Australia 11 June 2015 Archived from the original on 14 March 2020 Retrieved 30 May 2020 House of Representatives Practice 6th Ed Chapter 19 Parliamentary privilege Parliament of Australia 2015 Archived from the original on 17 October 2016 Retrieved 3 March 2017 Odgers Australian Senate Practice Fourteenth Edition Chapter 2 Parliamentary privilege immunities and powers of the Senate Parliament of Australia 2017 Archived from the original on 21 April 2017 Retrieved 19 March 2017 Activist contempt over April Fools stunt The Sydney Morning Herald 31 May 2007 Archived from the original on 30 December 2012 Retrieved 1 June 2007 Parliamentary Library Australian Political Records Research Note 42 1997 98 Archived from the original on 3 February 1999 Retrieved 12 September 2008 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint unfit URL link The first joint sitting Whitlam Institute Western Sydney University Archived from the original on 23 March 2017 Retrieved 23 March 2017 Rudd hails new A Span TV network ABC News 8 December 2008 Archived from the original on 31 December 2012 Retrieved 8 December 2008 Watch Parliament Parliament of Australia aph gov au Archived from the original on 15 March 2015 Retrieved 22 February 2017 A database of elections governments parties and representation for Australian state and federal parliaments since 1890 University of Western Australia Archived from the original on 27 June 2008 Retrieved 15 February 2009 Further reading EditSouter Gavin 1988 Acts of Parliament A narrative history of the Senate and House of Representatives Commonwealth of Australia Carlton Melbourne University Press ISBN 0 522 84367 0 Quick John amp Garran Robert 1901 The Annotated Constitution of the Australian Commonwealth Sydney Angus amp Robertson ISBN 0 9596568 0 4 via Internet Archive Warden James 1995 A bunyip democracy the Parliament and Australian political identity Department of the Parliamentary Library ISBN 0 644 45191 2 Bach Stanley 2003 Platypus and Parliament The Australian Senate in Theory and Practice Department of the Senate ISBN 0 642 71291 3 Hamer David 2004 The executive government PDF Department of the Senate Australia ISBN 0 642 71433 9 Prosser Brenton amp Denniss Richard 2015 Minority Policy Rethinking Governance when Parliament Matters Melbourne Melbourne University Publishing ISBN 978 0 522 86762 6 Harry Evans Odgers Australian Senate Practice A detailed reference work on all aspects of the Senate s powers procedures and practices B C Wright House of Representatives Practice 6th Ed A detailed reference work on all aspects of the House of Representatives powers procedures and practices Sawer Marian amp Miskin Sarah 1999 Papers on Parliament No 34 Representation and Institutional Change 50 Years of Proportional Representation in the Senate PDF Department of the Senate ISBN 0 642 71061 9 Brett Judith 2019 From Secret Ballot to Democracy Sausage How Australia Got Compulsory Voting Text Publishing Co ISBN 9781925603842 Viglianti Northway Karena 2020 The Intentions of the Framers of the Australian Constitution Regarding Responsible Government and Accountability of the Commonerslth Executive to the Australian Senate PDF University of Technology Sydney External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Parliament of Australia Australian House of Representatives YouTube official channel The Parliament of Australia s website The Australian Constitution from the Federal Register of Legislation Australian Parliament live broadcasting Parliament of Australia Committees Coordinates 35 18 25 S 149 07 32 E 35 30694 S 149 12556 E 35 30694 149 12556 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Parliament of Australia amp oldid 1151139760, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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