Transcript Chapter 2

Foundations of
Australian Law
Fourth Edition
Chapter 2 of
Cornerstones
Australian
Law
The Australian
parliamentary
system
Copyright © 2013 Tilde Publishing and Distribution
Chapter overview
This chapter looks at the concepts of
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The Australian Parliament
State parliaments
Separation of powers
Representative and responsible government
Limitations on powers
Legislation, Bills and Acts
Parliament
• Supreme law making body derived from the
British Westminster System
• Supreme position of parliament is referred to
as sovereignty of parliament
• Australia has a national Federal Parliament as
well as state and territory parliaments.
Australian parliaments
• Commonwealth Parliament - Canberra
(bicameral)
• ACT Parliament (unicameral)
• NT Parliament (unicameral)
• Queensland Parliament (unicameral)
• NSW Parliament (bicameral)
• Victorian Parliament (bicameral)
• Tasmanian Parliament (bicameral)
• South Australian Parliament (bicameral)
• Western Parliament (bicameral)
Parliamentary system
• Parliament is comprised of one or
two houses
• A house is an assembly of elected
members of parliament
• Bicameral parliamentary system
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two houses
• Unicameral parliamentary system
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one house
British Westminster system
• Head of State
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Queen Elizabeth II
• Lower House
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House of Commons
• Upper House
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House of Lords
Main functions of parliament
• Form government
• Enact and abolish laws
• Establish committees to investigate
issues of concern and scrutinise the
government in power
History of Australian Federation
• Federal Council of Australasia Act
1885 passed to allow the colonies to
confer every two years and pass laws
of common interest
Historical timeline
Late 1800s
Idea of an Australian Federation was born
1891 -1898
A number of conventions were held to
draft the Australian Constitution
1899
The Commonwealth of Australia
Constitution was passed to form the
Commonwealth of Australia
The colonies formed six states and two
territories
1901
Lord Hopetoun was appointed as
Australia’s first Governor General
Commonwealth Parliament
• Commonwealth of Australia
Constitution Act 1900
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referred to as the Commonwealth
Constitution
• Constitution
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established Commonwealth
Parliament
set out the law making powers
between the Commonwealth and
the States
Commonwealth Parliament
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King or Queen (i.e. the Crown)
Upper House
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Senate
Lower House
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House of Representatives
C’wealth Government
• Government
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political party in power
• Prime Minister
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head of the government
Cabinet
• Cabinet comprised of senior and
junior ministers
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Senior ministers in charge of
important portfolios
Junior ministers in
charge of less
important portfolios
Cabinet functions
• Constructing policy
• Approving bills
• Prioritising bills for introduction to
parliament
• Senior ministers supervise the
administration of their respective
government departments
Executive Council
• Consists of
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Governor General
Prime Minister
Ministers in Cabinet
• Role is to formally ratify decisions
made by the ministers in relation to
administration of government
Opposition
• Party with the next largest number
of seats
State & territory parliaments
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Structure
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King or Queen
Upper House
- usually called Legislative Council
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Lower House
- usually called Legislative Assembly
State & territory governments
• Leader of the governing party
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Premier of that state
• State parliaments have cabinets,
Ministers, and Executive Councils
• Executive Councils called
Governors in Council in all states
and territories
Parliaments
Separation of powers
Separation of powers
• Law-making powers exercised
within society can be classified in
three ways
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legislative power
executive power
judicial power
Legislative power
• Given to Australian parliaments by
the Commonwealth Constitution to
make legislation
Executive power
• Power to administer laws
• Exercised by
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Executive Council in the
Commonwealth of Australia
Governor in Council in all states and
territories of Australia
Judicial power
• Power exercised by the Courts
• Involves
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hearing and determining legal
questions
interpreting the law and its
application in particular cases
Representative Government
• Every member of each parliament in
Australia represents the people within
the electorate that elected that
member
• Every Member of Parliament is
answerable to his/her electorate
• If majority of voters in an electorate are
dissatisfied with the local member/local
member’s political party, a new person
may be elected to represent that
electorate in parliament
Powers of parliament
• Constitution divides the legislative
powers between the Commonwealth
and the states
Powers of Commonwealth
Parliament
• Constitution has given the
Commonwealth Parliament the
right to exercise specific powers
• Two categories of specific powers
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Exclusive
Concurrent
Exclusive powers
• Constitution has allocated the
Commonwealth Parliament
exclusive powers to legislate in
particular areas
• Allow only the Commonwealth
Parliament to make laws in areas
that affect the nation
Exclusive powers
• S114 – the raising and maintaining
of any naval or military force
• S 115 – the coining of money
• S 90 – the granting of bounties on
the production or export of goods
• S 52 (ii) – the Commonwealth
Public Services
Concurrent powers
• Shared between Commonwealth
and state parliaments
• Allow both parliaments to legislate
in the same areas such as
quarantine and taxation
Concurrent powers
• S109 of the Constitution provides that
where a state law is inconsistent with a
Commonwealth law the later will stand
• Commonwealth laws always prevail
over state laws
Residual powers
• Given to state parliaments to make
laws in relation to state matters
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roads, railways, hospitals etc
• Powers are not specifically stated
in the constitution but are left over
powers
Limits on
Commonwealth power
• Limited by the Constitution
• Commonwealth
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must not prefer one state over
another in relation to trade,
commerce or revenue (s 99), or in
relation to taxation (s 51(ii))
must protect every state against
invasion (s 119)
cannot restrict free trade between
states (s 92)
Limits on state powers
• Limited by the Constitution
• States
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cannot levy customs & excise duties (s 90)
trade between states must be free (s 92)
prohibited from raising military forces (s 114)
prohibited from coining money (s 115)
• Federal law will always prevail over state
use of a concurrent power to the extent of
any inconsistency (s 109)
Overcoming constitution
limitations
• The Commonwealth may overcome its
constitutional limitations in two ways
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making an agreement with states
change the constitution
Agreement with the states
• S 51 (xxxvii) of the Constitution allows
state parliaments to refer a residual
power to the Commonwealth in relation
to passing legislation in a particular
area
• S 61 of the Constitution allows the
Commonwealth to give the states funds
to spent in a particular way, e.g.
maintenance of roads
• Encourage all the states to enact the
same legislation in a particular area
thus uniforming the law
Changing the constitution
• The Constitution may be changed
in two ways
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Referendum method
High Court method
Referendum method
• Section 128 of the Constitution allows
itself to be changed only in accordance to
the process of a referendum
• A referendum allows wording of the
Constitution to be changed through
adding, deleting or amending words,
sentences or sections
High Court method
• High Court
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Does not change the words of the Constitution
It’s role is only to interpret its words
Resolves disputes between the Commonwealth
and a state
Its interpretation of particular sections of the
Constitution may alter the balance of power
between the states and the Commonwealth
• See Franklin Dam Case on page 50
Delegated legislation
• Parliaments delegate some of their law
making powers to expert bodies to
make laws in their specialised areas
• Expert bodies known as subordinate
authorities
• Laws made by these bodies are
referred to as delegated legislation
How are law making powers
delegated?
• By way of an enabling act or a parent act
• Enables a subordinate authority to make
laws in the form of regulations, by-laws,
orders, statutes, and/or rules
• Sets strict guidelines to be followed by
the particular subordinate authority
Ultra vires
• Regulations passed by subordinate
authorities that are beyond the powers
granted by parliament can be
challenged as being ultra vires
(‘beyond power’)
• Regulations declared ultra vires are not
enforceable
Examples of bodies that
make delegated legislation
• Subordinate authorities
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local governments
government departments
Executive Council
• Statutory bodies
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educational institutions
public utility corporations
administrative tribunals
some courts
sporting & other public purpose institutions
Advantages of delegated
legislation
• Subordinate authorities
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have more time, in comparison to
Parliaments, to make laws
have more expertise (especially
local)
can take swifter action
allow greater public participation
through the empowerment of local
authorities
Disadvantages of delegated
legislation
• Laws and regulations are made by unelected
public officials
• Quality of checks on subordinate authorities
can at times be questionable
• Subordinate authorities may at times infringe
upon basic human rights
• Use of subordinate authorities may contribute
to over-government and the fragmentation of
law-making
Checks on delegated
legislation
• Main methods of checking
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committee system
parliamentary supervision through
tabling
Legislative process
• Refers to the law making by which
parliaments make Acts
• Commonwealth and state
Parliaments have the same
legislative process
Tabling of proposed law
• The Minister advises one of the
Houses of Parliament of the issues
raised in the report to place it before
the House
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called tabling
Policy
• The Minister prepares a number of policies based
on the recommendations made in the report
• Cabinet consider and debate the proposed
policies and decide whether government should
legislate the policy
• If Cabinet decides to adopt the policy, usually the
Minister would announce that policy
Drafting a Bill
• Cabinet instructs Parliamentary Counsel to
prepare a draft of the proposed legislation
• Proposed legislation is referred to as a Bill
• The draft Bill must receive the approval of
the party before it can be processed
through Parliament to become law
Houses of parliament and
law making
• The house in which the bill is initiated called
the House of Origin
• House of Origin - usually the Lower House
• Once the bill approved by the House of
Origin it proceeds to the opposite house to be
examined and scrutinised
• This house is called the House of Review usually the Upper House
• Names of the houses vary according to the
level of parliament
House of Origin
• The bill begins the legislative
process in the House of Origin by
progressing through stages
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initiation
first reading
second reading
third reading
Initiation
• Relevant Minister advises the Clerk of
that House that he/she intends to
introduce a Bill
• Clerk then lists the Bill for its first reading
in the House
First reading
• Permission is granted to introduce
the Bill to the House
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In Commonwealth Parliament the Clerk
reads out the Bill’s long title
In state parliaments the Minister introducing
the Bill reads out the Bill’s long title
• No debate takes place during this first
reading and a date is allocated for the
second reading of the Bill
Second reading
• Members of the House of Origin are given
a copy of the Bill
• The Minister identifies the general
purposes and effects of the Bill
• Debate may then take place dealing with
any issues relating to the Bill
• House votes on whether the Bill will be
read a second time
• If the vote is in favour, the clerk reads the
Bill’s long title for a second time
Committee stage
• If the House wishes to examine the Bill in more
detail, the Bill enters Committee Stage
• Committee Stage takes place in one of the following
forms:
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a committee of the whole – where all Members of the
House consider in detail each of the Bill’s clauses and
make any necessary amendments
a select or standing committee - the Bill is referred to a
committee of some of the Members of the House which
then considers the Bill in detail and makes any necessary
amendments
Committee stage
• The committee makes a report on its
progress to the House
• The House may then either
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consider the Bill further at the committee
stage, or
the Bill may pass to the third reading
Third reading
• Minister moves a motion that the Bill be
read a third and final time in the house
• Usually there is no debate
• When the House agrees to the
Minister’s motion, the Bill’s long title is
read a third time
• The Bill passes the House
House of review
• The Bill again passes through a series of
three readings identical to those which take
place in the house of origin
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First reading
Second reading
Third reading
• If the House of Review makes amendments
to the Bill, the House of Origin may accept or
reject the amendments
Double dissolution
• If a Bill is rejected twice by either house
over a certain period of time, a double
dissolution has occurred and an
election is usually called
Royal Assent
• Once both Houses have passed a Bill in
identical forms, the Bill is presented for Royal
Assent
• Royal Assent is the approval given to a Bill by
the Queen’s representative
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Commonwealth - Governor General
State Parliament - State’s Governor
• Once a Bill receives Royal Assent, it is called
an Act of Parliament
Commencement date
• The day an Act becomes law is known as the
commencement date
• The Act states when it comes into effect
• If there is no commencement date provided in an
act, it becomes law 28 days after receiving Royal
Assent
• After the commencement date, the Act is enacted
Private Members’ Bill
• Initiated in Parliament without the
sanction of the Government
• May be initiated by
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a Member of the Opposition
an independent member
a government back-bench member
• Follow the same parliamentary process
as government Bills
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except they are not drafted by Parliamentary
Counsel
Types of Acts
• Amending Act
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Makes changes to existing law
• Repealing Act
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Stops existing law from having any legal effect
• Explanatory Act
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Describes the meaning of the Act
• Declaratory Act
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Declares, clarifies and identifies actual law
• Consolidating Act
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Combines Acts that address same issues and laws
• Enabling Act
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Passes law making powers to subordinate
authorities
Chapter review
In this chapter you have looked at
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The Australian Parliament
State parliaments
Separation of powers
Representative and responsible
government
Limitations on powers
Legislation, Bills and Acts