ETHICS COMMITTEE Report No. 123 Matter of Privilege Referred by the Speaker on 7 June 2012 Regarding the Failure to Pay a Fine F

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

ETHICS COMMITTEE Report No. 123 Matter of Privilege Referred by the Speaker on 7 June 2012 Regarding the Failure to Pay a Fine F ETHICS COMMITTEE Report No. 123 Matter of privilege referred by the Speaker on 7 June 2012 regarding the failure to pay a fine for contempt of Parliament Introduction 1. The Ethics Committee (the committee) is a statutory committee of the Queensland Parliament established under section 102 of the Parliament of Queensland Act 2001 (the POQA). The current committee was appointed by resolution of the Legislative Assembly on 17 May 2012. 2. The committee’s area of responsibility includes dealing with complaints about the ethical conduct of particular members and dealing with alleged breaches of parliamentary privilege by members of the Assembly and other persons.1 The committee investigates and reports on matters of privilege and possible contempts of parliament referred to it by the Speaker or the House. 3. This report relates to a matter referred to the committee on 7 June 2012 regarding an alleged contempt of wilfully disobeying an order of the Assembly by the failure to pay a fine for contempt of Parliament. Background 4. On 17 May 2012, the Clerk advised the House of the following:2 Honourable members, I advise that on 12 May 2011 the Legislative Assembly found Mr Gordon Nuttall guilty of 41 instances of contempt and ordered that Mr Nuttall be fined $2,000 on each count and that the sum be paid within 12 months of 12 May 2011. I further advise that, as required, notice of the Legislative Assembly’s order of 12 May 2011 was served upon Mr Nuttall by the Sergeant-at-Arms on 19 May 2011. I table an affidavit of the Sergeant-at-Arms as to the service of documents and copies of documents served upon Mr Nuttall. Tabled paper: Affidavit of Service, dated 19 May 2011, served by the Sergeant-at-Arms on Mr Gordon Richard Nuttall at Wolston Correctional Centre and attachments A to D [117]. I further advise that, as of today’s date, payment has not been received. Finally, I table a copy of items of correspondence received by me from Mr Nuttall, solicitors acting on Mr Nuttall’s behalf and solicitors acting on behalf of Mrs Nuttall. Tabled paper: Letter, dated 14 May 2012, from Mr Gordon Richard Nuttall to the Clerk of the Parliament attaching a letter dated 30 April 2012 from Mr Nuttall to the Clerk regarding payment of fine [118]. 1 S.104B Parliament of Queensland Act 2001. 2 Queensland Legislative Assembly, Record of Proceedings (Hansard), 17 May 2012, at 64-65. Page 1 Tabled paper: Letter, dated 16 May 2012, from Richardson McGhie, solicitors to the Clerk of the Parliament, regarding the fine imposed on Mr Gordon Richard Nuttall [119]. Tabled paper: Letter, dated 17 May 2012, from Alex Mackay & Co., solicitors and attorneys, to the Clerk of the Parliament regarding the fine imposed on Mr Gordon Richard Nuttall [120]. 5. In his letter to the Clerk of the Parliament dated 30 April 2012, Mr Nuttall stated, ‘while I am mindful of my obligations to the Parliament following this decision, I wish to advise that due to various court proceedings by the CMC regarding sale assets and significant outstanding legal debts I am unable to pay the fine which was imposed.’ 6. Mr Nuttall also requested that the Parliament reconsider his submission made during his appearance at the Bar of the House on 12 May 2011, and take ‘…into account the severe punishment which has already been imposed upon [him] by way of imprisonment and forfeiture of assets.’3 The referral 7. On 7 June 2012, the Speaker referred the matter to the committee and made the following statement to the House:4 Honourable members, I refer to the Clerk’s advice to the House on 17 May 2012 that payment of fines for contempt imposed by the Legislative Assembly on 12 May 2011 had not been received from Mr Gordon Nuttall. I have considered this matter, including advice from Senior Counsel and the Clerk, and decided to treat the failure to pay the fines as a matter of privilege and refer the matter to the Ethics Committee. I will be requesting the Ethics Committee to investigate Mr Nuttall’s exact financial situation, so that the Legislative Assembly is aware of all relevant information before considering the options available. Definition of contempt 8. Section 37 of the POQA defines the meaning of “contempt” of the Assembly as follows: (1) “Contempt” of the Assembly means a breach or disobedience of the powers, rights or immunities, or a contempt, of the Assembly or its members or committees. (2) Conduct, including words, is not contempt of the Assembly unless it amounts, or is intended or likely to amount, to an improper interference with–– (a) the free exercise by the Assembly or a committee of its authority or functions; or (b) the free performance by a member of the member’s duties as a member. 9. Standing Order 266(22) provides wilfully disobeying an order of the House or disrupting the orderly conduct of the business of the House or a Committee as an example of contempt. Requests for further information 10. Upon receipt of the referral by the Speaker, the committee resolved to seek further information before determining whether to investigate the alleged contempt. 3 See: Queensland Legislative Assembly, Record of Proceedings (Hansard), 12 May 2011, at 1468-1474. 4 Queensland Legislative Assembly, Record of Proceedings (Hansard), 7 June 2012, at 662. Page 2 Advice from the Attorney-General 11. On 21 June 2012, the committee wrote to the Attorney-General to determine the state of Mr Nuttall’s financial affairs and sought information on the action taken by the State in relation to the confiscation of Mr Nuttall’s assets following convictions in July 2009 and October 2010. 12. The Attorney-General responded on 20 July 2012, (Appendix D) and advised that confiscation proceedings against Mr Nuttall pursuant to Chapter 2 of the Criminal Proceeds Confiscation Act 2002 were commenced by the State on instruction from the Crime and Misconduct Commission on 19 February 2007 and 24 September 2009. 13. Two Proceeds Assessment Orders were made against Mr Nuttall in the Supreme Court of Queensland on 12 July 2010 ($454,480.04 together with $42,000 in costs) and 28 March 2011 ($141,500.00 together with $5,000 in costs). When payment of those debts was not received, Enforcement Warrants were obtained for the seizure and sale of Mr Nuttall’s property at Woodgate.5 14. The sum of $721,694.79 has been paid to the State as a result of the sale of the Woodgate property which satisfied Court Orders against Mr Nuttall. The balance of approximately $37,600 was paid to the Public Trustee as the manager of Mr Nuttall’s estate. 15. Net proceeds of $668,769.79 (after reimbursement of legal costs and bailiff expenses) were paid to the Consolidated Fund. Advice from the Treasurer 16. The Attorney-General advised that the committee’s correspondence was referred to the Treasurer as the Minister responsible for the Public Officers Superannuation Recovery Act 1988 (the Act). The Treasurer wrote to the committee on 14 August 2012 (Appendix E) and advised that the State may recover some or all of the employer-sponsored component of a superannuation benefit if a public officer has been found guilty of a ‘prescribed offence’. 17. The Treasurer indicated he was seeking further advice as to whether any of the offences committed by Mr Nuttall were ‘prescribed offences’ for the purposes of the Act, and the quantum of any amount that might be recoverable by the state. However, the Treasurer considered it unlikely that the contempt of parliament charge would meet the required definition and therefore the outstanding fine may not be able to be included in any recovery action of this nature. Advice from the Public Trustee of Queensland 18. The committee received correspondence from the Clerk of the Parliament dated 5 July 2012, enclosing correspondence received from the Official Solicitor to the Public Trustee of Queensland, as the manager of Mr Nuttall’s estate (Appendix B). 19. The Public Trustee of Queensland is the manager of the estate of Mr Nuttall pursuant to Part 7 of the Public Trustee Act 1978.6 20. On 12 July 2012, The Public Trustee formally advised the committee that Mr Nuttall’s current debts total approximately $575,000, and the amount of ‘ready cash’ held by the Public Trustee to pay Mr Nuttall’s creditors is limited (Appendix C). 21. The Public Trustee advised the committee that a small interim payment from the current funds held by the Public Trustee could be made to all creditors and was in the process of seeking 5 The Woodgate property was auctioned by the bailiff on Saturday, 24 September 2011 for $760,000. Settlement was completed on Friday, 28 October 2011. 6 By virtue of sections 90 and 91 of the Public Trustee Act 1978, the Public Trustee is to manage the estate of certain prisoners which includes those serving a period of imprisonment for an indictable offence exceeding three (3) years. Page 3 evidence regarding Mr Nuttall’s creditors in order to form a view as to the amount properly due and owing to each party.7 22. The Public Trustee indicated that Mr Nuttall’s significant remaining asset is a property at Sandgate. However, the Public Trustee advised that a property settlement between Mr and Mrs Nuttall will need to be resolved before any significant funds will be received. The committee was further advised that once Mr Nuttall’s assets are liquidated and received by the Public Trustee there should be sufficient funds to pay all of Mr Nuttall’s debts including the fine to the Parliament.
Recommended publications
  • Queensland Election 2006
    Parliament of Australia Department of Parliamentary Services Parliamentary Library RESEARCH BRIEF Information analysis and advice for the Parliament 16 November 2006, no. 3, 2006–07, ISSN 1832-2883 Queensland Election 2006 The Queensland election of September 2006 saw the Beattie Labor Government win a fourth term of office, continuing the longest period of ALP government in the state since 1957. The Coalition parties’ share of the vote puts them within reach of victory, but the way in which they work towards the next election—particularly in the area of policy development—will be crucial to them if they are to succeed. Scott Bennett, Politics and Public Administration Section Stephen Barber, Statistics and Mapping Section Contents Executive summary ................................................... 1 Introduction ........................................................ 2 An election is called .................................................. 2 The Government’s travails............................................ 2 The Coalition ..................................................... 4 Might the Government be defeated? ..................................... 6 Over before it started? ................................................. 6 Party prospects ...................................................... 7 The Coalition parties ................................................ 7 The Government ................................................... 8 Campaigning........................................................ 8 The Government................................................
    [Show full text]
  • Allegations Concerning the Honourable Gordon Nuttall MP: Report Ofa CMC Investigation Abbreviations
    Allegations concern ing the Honourable Gordon Nuttall MP REPORT OF A CMC INVESTIGATION December 2005 CR1ME AND M1SCONDUCT COMM1SSlON ~ QUEENSLAND Contents Introduction 1 legal opinions 2 Reporting 3 Background 4 The Lennox report 4 Complaint 13 Extent of the investigation 14 Delays 15 The minister's explanation 16 Briefing papers 20 Summaries of interviews 32 Mr Hedley Thomas 32 Dr john Scott 33 Dr Stephen Buckland 34 Mr Cameron Milliner " 36 Mr David Potter " 37 Ms julie Dahl 38 Ms Leisa Elder (nee Shultz) 39 Issues and findings open on the evidence 41 Lawful and relevant " 41 The nature ofthe answer 43 Appendixes Appendix 1 - Hansard Transcript of Estimates Committee 0 for Health on 8 july 2005 Appendix 2 - The letter from the minister to the Chair of Estimates Committee Of dated 11 july 2005 Appendix 3 - Letter from Dr Cotton to minister dated 6 December 2004 and the minister's reply dated 4 February 2005 Append ix 4 - Witness statements and attachments Appendix 5 - Legal opinions Appendix 6 - Statement of Minister Nuttall to Queensland Public Hospitals Commission of Inquiry Allegations concerning the Honourable Gordon Nuttall MP: report ofa CMC investigation Abbreviations AHMAC Australian Health Minister's Advisory Committee AMA Australian Medical Association AMAQ Australian Medical Association of Queensland ASMOFQ Australian Salaried Medical Officers Federation, Queensland COTD Centre for Overseas Trained Doctors OTD overseas-trained doctors QH Queensland Health RACGP Royal Australian College of General Practitioners RDAQ Rural Doctors Association of Queensland TRD temporary resident doctors Introduction This report details an investigation conducted by the Crime and Misconduct Commission (CMC) into a complaint made by the Leader of the Opposition concerning the possibility that the Honourable Gordon Nuttall MP, Minister for Health, gave false answers to questions asked of him by a member of an estimates committee of the Legislative Assembly.
    [Show full text]
  • The Neville Report (June 2006): an Investigation Into the Adequacy of the Health Complaint Mechanisms In
    Report of the Queensland Ombudsman The Neville Report An investigation into the adequacy of the health complaint mechanisms in Queensland, and other systemic issues identified as a result of the death of Elise Neville, aged 10 years. June 2006 © Queensland Ombudsman, 2006 Apart from any fair dealing for purposes related to the functions of the Ombudsman or the purpose of private study, research, criticism or review, as permitted under the Copyright Act, no part of this document may be reproduced by any process without permission. Inquiries should be made to the publishers, Queensland Ombudsman. Queensland Ombudsman Level 25, 288 Edward Street Brisbane Qld 4000 GPO Box 3314 Brisbane Qld 4001 Tel: (07) 3005 7000 Fax: (07) 3005 7067 Email: [email protected] Web: www.ombudsman.qld.gov.au Contents ABBREVIATIONS AND DICTIONARY .................................................................................................. III EXECUTIVE SUMMARY ............................................................................................................................ V 1 BACKGROUND ............................................................................................................................ 1 1.1 INTRODUCTION ................................................................................................................................. 1 1.2 THE ROLE OF THE QUEENSLAND OMBUDSMAN ................................................................................ 1 1.3 PROCEDURE FOR GATHERING EVIDENCE ..........................................................................................
    [Show full text]
  • Senate Official Hansard No
    COMMONWEALTH OF AUSTRALIA PARLIAMENTARY DEBATES Senate Official Hansard No. 18, 2005 WEDNESDAY, 30 NOVEMBER 2005 FORTY-FIRST PARLIAMENT FIRST SESSION—FOURTH PERIOD BY AUTHORITY OF THE SENATE INTERNET The Journals for the Senate are available at http://www.aph.gov.au/senate/work/journals/index.htm Proof and Official Hansards for the House of Representatives, the Senate and committee hearings are available at http://www.aph.gov.au/hansard For searching purposes use http://parlinfoweb.aph.gov.au SITTING DAYS—2005 Month Date February 8, 9, 10 March 7, 8, 9, 10, 14, 15, 16, 17 May 10, 11, 12 June 14, 15, 16, 20, 21, 22, 23 August 9, 10, 11, 16, 17, 18 September 5, 6, 7, 8, 12, 13, 14, 15 October 4, 5, 6, 10, 11, 12, 13 November 3, 7, 8, 9, 10, 28, 29, 30 December 1, 2, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9 RADIO BROADCASTS Broadcasts of proceedings of the Parliament can be heard on the following Parliamentary and News Network radio stations, in the areas identified. CANBERRA 103.9 FM SYDNEY 630 AM NEWCASTLE 1458 AM GOSFORD 98.1 FM BRISBANE 936 AM GOLD COAST 95.7 FM MELBOURNE 1026 AM ADELAIDE 972 AM PERTH 585 AM HOBART 747 AM NORTHERN TASMANIA 92.5 FM DARWIN 102.5 FM FORTY-FIRST PARLIAMENT FIRST SESSION—FOURTH PERIOD Governor-General His Excellency Major-General Michael Jeffery, Companion in the Order of Australia, Com- mander of the Royal Victorian Order, Military Cross Senate Officeholders President—Senator the Hon. Paul Henry Calvert Deputy President and Chairman of Committees—Senator John Joseph Hogg Temporary Chairmen of Committees—Senators Guy Barnett, George Henry Brandis, Hedley Grant Pearson Chapman, Patricia Margaret Crossin, Alan Baird Ferguson, Michael George Forshaw, Stephen Patrick Hutchins, Linda Jean Kirk, Philip Ross Lightfoot, Gavin Mark Mar- shall, Claire Mary Moore, Andrew James Marshall Murray, Hon.
    [Show full text]
  • Vicky Darling
    Speech by Vicky Darling MEMBER FOR SANDGATE Hansard Wednesday, 11 October 2006 MAIDEN SPEECH Ms DARLING (Sandgate—ALP) (4.48 pm): Firstly, Mr Deputy Speaker, I would like to congratulate the Speaker on his appointment. This Assembly has chosen well. I know that he will provide excellent guidance to the new members of parliament. I feel honoured and proud to be the representative of the people of the electorate of Sandgate in this Assembly. I thank the voters of Sandgate for putting their faith in me and I pay tribute to my predecessor, Gordon Nuttall. The electorate of Sandgate is a truly special part of Queensland. It takes in the suburbs of Taigum, Bracken Ridge, Fitzgibbon, Deagon, Brighton, Sandgate and Shorncliffe. It is bounded by Bramble Bay to the east, the electorate of Aspley to the west and the electorate of Nudgee to the south. I would like to acknowledge the traditional custodians of the land which makes up the Sandgate electorate. The local Turrbul people have lived in the region for thousands of years. They referred to the land we now call Brighton, Sandgate and Shorncliffe as Warra, which means an open sheet of water. Lieutenant John Oxley first sailed past Warra and saw its people on 29 November 1823. The first government auction of land occurred in 1853, and by the summer of 1866 Sandgate was a growing seaside holiday village with three- bedroom seaside cottages renting for three pounds a week. Sandgate State School, which my children now attend, was opened in 1873 and in 1882 the Sandgate rail line opened.
    [Show full text]
  • Water Fluoridation in Queensland (1996-2006)
    1 A paralysis in public health policy: water fluoridation in Queensland (1996-2006). By HF Akers and MP Jackman By focusing on developments between 1996 and 2006, this paper explains the reasons for one of Australia’s public health inconsistencies, the comparatively low adoption of adjusted water fluoridation in Queensland. In Queensland, parliamentary support for water fluoridation is conditional on community approval. Political ambivalence and the constraints of the “Fluoridation of Public Water Supplies Act (1963)” Qld have hindered the advocacy of water fluoridation. The political circumstance surrounding the “Lord Mayor’s Taskforce on Fluoridation Report” (1997) influenced its findings and confirms that Australia’s biggest local authority, the Brisbane City Council, failed to authoritatively analyse water fluoridation. In 2004, a private member’s bill to mandate fluoridation failed in a spectacular fashion. In 2005, an official systems review of Queensland Health recommended public debate about water fluoridation. Our principal conclusion is that without mandatory legislation, widespread implementation of water fluoridation in Queensland is most unlikely. Within the last decade, several political developments have focused on Queensland’s low adoption of adjusted water fluoridation. As a consequence, Queensland Health (QH), the Australian Dental Association Queensland Branch (ADAQ) and other professional bodies have highlighted the contradiction between the government’s high expenditures on public dentistry and Queenslanders’ comparatively lower standard of oral health. This paper explains how Queensland campaigns to promote water fluoridation meet a mix of legislative and administrative obstacles, which allow continuous procrastination between the state government and local authorities. Formal concerns about the standards of surgical competence at the Bundaberg Base Hospital surfaced in the Queensland Parliament in early 2005.
    [Show full text]
  • Queensland July to December 2005
    304 Political Chronicles Queensland July to December 2005 PAUL D. WILLIAMS Grth University Observers of Queensland politics could be forgiven for thinking only one issue occupied the state's public sphere in the latter half of 2005: the management (or mismanagement) of health policy. Indeed, the allegations that an allegedly negligent, overseas-trained surgeon caused numerous patient deaths at Bundaberg Hospital (first raised in April 2005 — see previous chronicle) were so convulsive in their effect on the public mood that we may remember 2005's "Dr Death" saga as the principal turning point downwards in the electoral fortunes of Premier Peter Beattie. Moreover, damaging accusations of a "culture" of secrecy within Queensland Health that obfuscated evidence of malpractice directly or indirectly spawned a series of significant events, including four inquiries (of which three were judicial), a ministerial dismissal, two lost by-elections, a reformed Liberal-National coalition and, of course, a collapse in the government's and the Premier's public opinion leads. The Economy The state of the Queensland economy, while generally good, was perhaps less sanguine than many had hoped. While unemployment mid-year stood at just 3.9 per cent, then the second lowest in the nation (Courier- Mail, 8 July 2006), by year's close it once again had climbed toward 5 per cent (http://www.abs.gov.au/ausstats/abs%40.nsf/mf/6202.0) . Inflation, too, proved challenging, with the consumer price index increasing 0.8 percentage points in the December quarter (http://www.abs.gov.au/ausstats/ abs%40.nsf/mf/6401.0).
    [Show full text]
  • Guarding Mps' Integrity in the UK and Australia
    David Solomon is Queensland Integrity Commissioner Guarding MPs’ integrity in the UK and Australia David Solomon Following the 2010 federal election, Prime Minister Julia Gillard signed several agreements with various independents and the Greens that included undertakings to introduce a Code of Conduct for members of the Commonwealth Parliament and appoint a Parliamentary Integrity Commissioner who, under the supervision of the House and Senate Privileges Committees, would have functions that would include providing advice to MPs and Senators and investigating complaints against them. The proposals have not been implemented at the time of writing but are still alive. These and other integrity proposals were part of the policy agendas of the Greens and some of the independent MPs either before the election, or immediately afterwards. It is interesting to note that Parliament took its time to consider and debate their adoption: that there was no urgency suggests that there was little external pressure to settle the issues that had been raised. These proposals were not a response to public outrage over any scandalous events, of which there have been very few at the national level in Australia. The same can be said about the slow implementation by the Baillieu Government in Victoria of changes to that State’s integrity system. While the new Coalition Gov- ernment had policies about these matters going into the election in 2010 it has been under little external pressure to put them into effect with any degree of urgency. Recent history suggests that changes to integrity systems, particularly when they directly affect Ministers and Members of Parliament, are undertaken or expedited mainly in the wake of either public scandals or strongly growing concern at a diminution in public confidence about government, parliament and parlia- mentarians.
    [Show full text]
  • Parliamentary Privilege in Queensland
    AIAL FORUM No. 59 PARLIAMENTARY PRIVILEGE IN QUEENSLAND Daniel Morgan* The modern era of parliamentary privilege began with the establishment of parliamentary supremacy through the Bill of Rights 16881. Although the concept of privilege had been known since the Middle Ages, the reality of the parliamentary experience had been that privilege was allowed only the extent to which the monarch had been prepared to suffer. Absolutist abuses reached their zenith during the Stuarts, and played a significant part in the outbreak of the English Civil War. The courts had been used as an instrument of royal domination and Art. 9 of the Bill of Rights was designed to ensure that the balance swung the other way. Remarkably, it was not until the 19th century that the courts asserted their jurisdiction, culminating in an institutional clash between the courts and parliament in Stockdale v Hansard (1839) 9 Ad & El 1; (1839) 112 ER 11122. In the intervening period, parliamentarians had abused privilege to perpetuate an oligarchy of their own, by operating above the common law and ousting the jurisdiction of the common law courts. The abuses and the underlying cause of the tensions between the courts and parliament were destroyed at a theoretical level in Burdett v Abbott (1811) 104 ER 501 although it took until the Stockdale crisis for a settlement to be implemented whereby each institution respected the other’s constitutional role: it was for the courts to determine if a certain privilege existed and for the parliament to determine the occasion and manner of its exercise. The Stockdale settlement was appropriate to the circumstances which existed at a specific time and place and with respect to the Westminster parliament which as a result of its historical development, is a unique institution.
    [Show full text]
  • The Queensland Rural Generalist Program 2005-2015
    Darling Downs Hospital and Health Service Delivering quality healthcare in partnership with our communities The Queensland Rural Generalist Program 2005–15 Our Vision • To deliver excellence in rural and regional healthcare. Our Purpose • Delivering quality healthcare in partnership with our communities. Our Values • Caring – We deliver care, we care for each other and we care about the service we provide. • Doing the right thing – We respect the people we serve and try our best. We treat each other respectfully and we respect the law and standards. • Openness to learning and change – We continually review practice and the services we provide. • Being safe, effective and efficient – We will measure and own our performance and use this information to inform ways to improve our services. We will manage public resources effectively, efficiently and economically. • Being open and transparent – We work for the public and we will inform and consult with our patients, clients, staff, stakeholders and community. Darling Downs Hospital and Health Service The Queensland Rural Generalist Pathway 2005–15 v1.00 | 08/2015 www.health.qld.gov.au/darlingdowns | ABN 64 109 516 141 Copyright © Darling Downs Hospital and Health Service, The State of Queensland, 2015 This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial 3.0 Australia licence. To view a copy of this licence, visit http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/3.0/au/deed.en/ In essence, you are free to copy, communicate and adapt the work for non-commercial purposes, as long as you attribute Darling Downs Hospital and Health Service and abide by the licence terms.
    [Show full text]
  • Interim Report
    The Senate Select Committee on the Establishment of a National Integrity Commission Interim report May 2016 © Commonwealth of Australia 2016 ISBN 978-1-76010-408-5 This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 Australia License. The details of this licence are available on the Creative Commons website: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/au/ Printed by the Senate Printing Unit, Parliament House, Canberra. Select Committee into the Establishment of a National Integrity Commission Members Senator Zhenya Wang (Chair) Western Australia, PUP Senator the Hon Jacinta Collins (Deputy Chair) Victoria, ALP Senator the Hon Eric Abetz Tasmania, LP Senator the Hon David Johnston Western Australia, LP Senator the Hon Joseph Ludwig Queensland, ALP Senator John Madigan Victoria, IND Secretariat Dr Jane Thomson, Secretary Mr CJ Sautelle, Principal Research Officer Mr Jarrod Baker, Senior Research Officer Dr Mark Bode, Senior Research Officer Ms Ophelia Tynan, Research Officer Ms Margaret Jones, Administrative Officer PO Box 6100 Parliament House Canberra ACT 2600 Ph: 02 6277 3585 Fax: 02 6277 5794 E-mail: [email protected] Internet: http://www.aph.gov.au/Parliamentary_Business/Committees/Senate/Establishment_of _a_National_Integrity_Commission TABLE OF CONTENTS Membership of the Committee ........................................................................ iii Chapter 1.............................................................................................................. 1 Introduction
    [Show full text]
  • Political Chronicles Commonwealth of Australia
    Australian Journal of Politics and History: Volume 53, Number 2, 2007, pp. 281-336. Political Chronicles Commonwealth of Australia July to December 2006 JOHN WANNA Australian National University and Griffith University Howard’s Divisive Style Comes to the Fore: Never Recant, Never Stand-down, Gradually Give Ground Questioned in late 2006 over the wisdom of invading Iraq, Prime Minister John Howard insisted he did not agree with those who went about “recanting everything they supported when they were in positions of authority”. He argued that […] in public life you take a position, and I think particularly of the decisions I have taken in the time I have been prime minister. I have to live with the consequences of those both now and into the future. And if I ever develop reservations, I hope I would have the grace to keep them to myself, because I think you take a position and you have got to live by that and be judged by it (Australian, 22 November 2006). His message was simple: if he had any personal reservations about invading Iraq he was not about to admit it or to say sorry. By late 2006, the Iraq occupation increasingly overshadowed the internal politics of both the US and the UK, but in Australia the quagmire of Iraq was a far less potent political factor. As one of the original “coalition of the willing”, Howard was implicated in the decision but had far less at stake than the other leaders and no list of casualties to inflict political pain. Moreover, the Labor opposition had not managed to turn the unpopular war into a political positive for itself.
    [Show full text]