Print Friendly, PDF & Email

The Government continues to make changes to the Senate that impact especially crossbenchers being able to speak out on issues. I’m sure the government would love us to be gone, but this is a democracy.

Transcript

I’ll just make a few remarks. I heard Senator Birmingham use the word ‘reform’. I’ve come to realise, over many years of listening to governments in this country, that that word is used to misrepresent what is going to happen. It implies it is good for us all. It is not. It is misrepresenting. The second point I make is: how can we assess the feelings of our constituents and then not express them here any more? The government does not want to assess, and neither do the Labor party, the feelings of our constituents. The third point I want to make is that we’ve had no notice on this, and there is control. That’s what this is about: control. And, always, beneath control there is fear.

We don’t like what happened with formal motions. Our response was not to run away, not to shut down, but to stand up and speak out. Even though it was only one minute, that’s what we’ve done. We spoke. We held people accountable. It doesn’t matter whether it’s the Greens and we disagreed or agreed with them; we had the guts to speak up. The core issue that’s driving this is decades of weak governance and no accountability, and this change continues that. We will continue to tell the truth and calmly speak up and rely on data, and round you lot up.