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Appendix G - Resume of reports of Committee of Privileges
1. Report upon Articles in the Sunday Australian
and the Sunday Review of 2 May 1971
(PP
No. 163/1971)
Reference: Motion moved by Chairman of Select
Committee on Drug Trafficking and Drug Abuse (Senator Marriott) and agreed to
4/5/71 (J.555).
Action: Report tabled and adopted 13/5/71
(J.605-6); persons attended and reprimanded 14/5/71 (J.612).
Persons/organisations
involved: Mr J.R. Walsh; Mr
H.B. Rothwell; the Sunday Review; the
Sunday Australian; Select Committee
on Drug Trafficking.
Resum: On 2 May 1971, articles dealing with the
proposed report of the Select Committee on Drug Trafficking and Drug Abuse
appeared in the Sunday Review and the
Sunday Australian. The Committee held
six meetings and heard evidence from Senator Marriott and the two editors but
did not consider itself entitled to inquire into the source of the information
they published.
Findings: That publication prior to presentation to
the Senate of the contents of a report constituted a breach of the privileges
of the Senate; that the editor and publisher of each newspaper were responsible
and culpable for the breach of privilege; that the Senate has the power to
commit to prison, to fine, to reprimand or admonish or otherwise withdraw
facilities held in and around its precincts; and that any such breach of
privilege should in future be met with a heavier penalty.
Recommendation: That Messrs Walsh and Rothwell be required
to attend before the Senate to be reprimanded by the Presiding Officer.
2. Report on Matters referred by
Senate Resolution of 17 July 1975 [Executive Government Claim of
Privilege] (PP No. 215/1975)
Reference: Motion moved by Leader of the Opposition in
the Senate (Senator Withers); amendment moved by Leader of the Government in
the Senate (Senator Wriedt); amendment negatived; motion agreed to 17/7/75
(J.836).
Action: Report tabled 7/10/75 (J.936); motion for
adoption of dissenting report debated 17/2/77 (J.571).
Persons/organisations
involved: Senator Wriedt;
Senator Withers; the Prime Minister; the Treasurer; the Attorney-General; the
Minister for Minerals and Energy.
Resum: The Committee considered the directions
dated 15 July 1975 of the Prime Minister, the Treasurer, the Attorney-General
and the Minister for Minerals and Energy that public servants called to the Bar
of the Senate to answer questions and produce documents on the ‘loans affair’
claim privilege. The claim of privilege was asserted in the public interest, on
the basis that officers do not decide, and are not responsible for, Government
policy or action.
Findings: The majority report found that no breach of
privilege was involved; the dissenting report found that the claims of
executive privilege were misconceived but that no action should be taken by the
Senate.
- Report on the Appropriate Means of
Ensuring the Security of Parliament House
(PP No. 22/1978)
Reference: Motion moved by Senator Button; amendment
moved by Senator Chaney agreed to; motion as amended agreed to 4/4/78 (J.88-9).
Action: Public hearings 12/4/78, 2/5/78; report
tabled 30/5/78 (J.207); noted 17/8/78 (J.310).
Persons/organisations
involved: Clerk and Deputy Clerk of the Senate; Usher of the Black Rod; Clerk
of the House of Representatives; Serjeant-at-Arms; Commonwealth and ACT Police
Forces; Director, Protective Services Co-ordination Centre, Department of
Administrative Services; Interim Security Co-ordinator, Parliament House.
Resum: After considering the evidence, the
Committee concluded that there was a need for protective services.
Recommendations: Resolutions should be passed by both Houses
to establish the police authority for Parliament’s protection; external and
internal policing of Parliament should be within the jurisdiction of one force;
a position of security coordinator, directly responsible to the Presiding
Officers, should be permanently created; methods of identification of members
and visitors should be instituted; an effective protection system is necessary
for Parliament House; details of the agreed system should be incorporated in
standing orders.
4. Quotation of Unparliamentary Language in
Debate (PP No. 214/1979)
Reference: Motion moved by Senator Georges and agreed
to 29/5/79 (J.748).
Action: Report tabled and adopted 20/9/79 (J.936).
Persons/organisations
involved: Senator McLaren;
Senator Georges.
Resum: During debate on Appropriation Bill (No. 3)
1979, Senator McLaren quoted from the Illawarra
Mercury words which the Acting Deputy-President ruled to be
unparliamentary. Senator Georges moved a motion for dissent from the ruling. It
was defeated. Thereupon Senator Georges raised the matter as one of privilege,
on the basis that Senator McLaren was restricted in what he could say within
the chamber, although the same words could be used outside. The Committee
concluded that the question was not one for the Privileges Committee, but rather for the Standing Orders
Committee to consider.
Finding: Question not a matter of privilege.
Recommendation: Matter should be referred to Standing
Orders Committee.
5. Fifth Report - Imprisonment of a Senator (PP
No. 273/1979)
Reference: Motion moved by Senator Georges and agreed
to 30/8/79 (J.901-2).
Action: Report tabled 25/10/79 (J.1000);
resolutions agreed to 26/2/80 (J.1153).
Persons/organisations
involved: Senator Georges;
Brisbane Magistrates’ Court.
Resum: On 27 July 1979, Senator Georges was
charged in the Brisbane Magistrates’ Court with committing two offences,
relating to taking part in an unauthorised public protest. He pleaded guilty
and was fined $25 on each count, but did not pay the fines and was arrested and
imprisoned on 15 August 1979. He was released on 16 August, after the fines
were paid. The Committee considered the privilege of freedom from arrest as
such, before turning to the specific matter of the failure of the appropriate
authority in Queensland to advise the President of the Senate of the arrest and
imprisonment of Senator Georges. The Committee concluded that it would be
premature for the Senate to treat this failure as a contempt. The Committee
further concluded that the imprisonment of Senator Georges was for a
quasi-criminal matter and not one which would attract the privilege of freedom
from arrest.
Finding: That the imprisonment of Senator Georges
did not attract the privilege of freedom from arrest.
Recommendation: That the Senate agree to resolutions that
it is the right of the Senate to receive notification of the detention of its
members, and that courts (or the Governor-General, in the case of a court
martial) ought to notify the President of the Senate of the fact and cause of
the senator’s being placed in custody; if the resolutions are agreed to, that
the Commonwealth and State Presiding Officers and Attorneys-General confer upon
action to be taken to ensure compliance.
6. Sixth Report [Harassment
of a Senator] (PP No. 137/1981)
Reference: Motion moved by Senator Harradine and
agreed to 26/5/81 (J.271-2).
Action: Report tabled 11/6/81 (J.388); adopted
22/10/81 (J.591).
Persons/organisations
involved: Senator Brian
Harradine; Ms Harriet Swift.
Resum: The Committee heard evidence that, early in
the morning of 8 and 10 April 1981, Senator Harradine received a number of
offensive phone calls at his office in Parliament House. Telecom traced the
later calls to a telephone held in the name of Ms Harriet Swift. In
evidence to the Committee, Ms Swift indicated that there had been a party on
her premises on the night of 9 April, which continued into the early hours of
10 April. A number of people, including herself, had become intoxicated and
could have made abusive phone calls. She was unable to remember who had made
any such call.
Finding: Contempt found, but no action by the Senate
recommended, other than the adoption of the report.
7. First Report October 1984 (7th
Report of the Series) [Unauthorised Publication of Committee
Evidence taken in camera] (PP No. 298/1984)
Reference: Motion moved by Chairman of Select
Committee on the Conduct of a Judge (Senator Tate) and agreed to 14/6/84
(J.992); on 22 August 1984 the Senate agreed to a motion of the Chairman of the
Committee of Privileges to extend the reference (J.1029).
Action: Public hearings 12, 26 September 1984;
report tabled 17/10/84 (J.1243); adopted 24/10/84 (J.1295).
Persons/organisations
involved: Mr Brian Toohey;
Ms Wendy Bacon; the National Times;
John Fairfax and Sons Ltd; members and staff of the Select Committee on the
Conduct of a Judge.
Resum: In the National
Times of 8-14 June 1984, an article purported to report evidence given in
camera before the Select Committee on the Conduct of a Judge. Following the
referral of the matter to the Committee of Privileges, three further articles
in the same vein were published, which were also referred to the committee. The
committee sought submissions and heard evidence from relevant persons and legal
counsel, including the chairman of the select committee who indicated that the
publication could impede the work of that committee, as well as that of other
Senate committees. It was unable to discover, however, whether the disclosure
was deliberate or inadvertent. It also noted that Mr Toohey defended the
publication on the grounds of the public interest, and that neither he nor Ms
Bacon expressed any regret for their actions.
Findings: That the publication of purported reports
of in camera proceedings of the Select Committee on the Conduct of a Judge
constituted a serious contempt of the Senate; that the editor and publisher of
the National Times should be held
responsible and culpable for the publication and the author culpable for contempt;
that the unauthorised disclosure of the proceedings also constituted a serious
contempt, if wilfully and knowingly made; and that the Committee would report
on the question of penalty after the persons affected had placed submissions
before it.
8. Question of Appropriate
Penalties Arising from the Report of the Committee of Privileges of 17 October 1984 (PP No. 239/1985)
Reference: Motion moved by Chairman of Standing
Committee of Privileges (Senator Childs) and agreed to 27/2/85 (J.64).
Action: Two public hearings 3 and 30/4/85; report
tabled 23/5/85 (J.317).
Persons/organisations
involved: The National Times; John Fairfax and Sons
Ltd; Mr Brian Toohey; Ms Wendy Bacon; Senate Select Committee on the
Conduct of a Judge.
Resum: In the 7th Report of the Committee, serious
contempts of the Senate were found in respect of certain publications in the National Times by the publisher, John
Fairfax, editor Mr Toohey and journalist Ms Bacon on the purported
evidence taken, and proceedings of, the Select Committee on the Conduct of a
Judge. In considering the question of penalty, the Comittee noted that
Mr Toohey and Ms Bacon continued to maintain that they were not guilty of
contempt, on the ground that the publication was in the national interest; that
they did not express regret; and that the source of the disclosure of the
information was unknown. The Committee concluded that a substantial fine would be appropriate for
organisations in contempt of the Parliament. In this case, however, the
Committee recognised that it was difficult to contemplate imposing a penalty on
the publishers of information while the informant remained undetected. It noted
too the question of the efficacy of fines as a deterrent, and took into
consideration the expenses already incurred by the company in the legal defence
of its actions.
Recommendations: That no penalty be imposed at the time but,
if a similar offence were to be committed within the life of the Parliament,
the Senate should impose an appropriate penalty for the initial offence; that
legislation be introduced to put the power of the Houses of Parliament to fine
beyond doubt.
9. The Improper Disclosure and Misrepresentation
by a Departmental Officer of an Amendment
Prepared for Moving in the Senate (PP No. 506/1985)
Reference: Motion moved by Senator Haines and agreed
to 23/4/85 (J.193).
Action: Report tabled 16/9/85 (J.454); adopted
18/9/85 (J.470).
Persons/organisations
involved: Senator Tony
Messner; Senator Janine Haines; Department of Community Services.
Resum: On 22 April 1985 during debate on the
Supported Accommodation Assistance Bill, Senator Messner discussed a proposed
opposition amendment. Senator Haines indicated privately to both government and
opposition spokesmen a proposed Democrat amendment to Senator Messner’s
amendment. In the course of the following day, Democrat offices were lobbied by
non-government groups who opposed the proposed Democrat amendment, citing an
officer of the Department of Community Services as the source of their information.
The officer wrote to Senator Haines to reassure her that she had been unaware
of the Democrat amendment and had merely recommended that lobby groups contact
the Democrats’ spokesperson for clarification of the party’s stance.
Recommendation: That the matter be not further pursued.
10. Detention of a Senator (PP No. 433/1986)
Reference: Motion moved by Senator Reynolds and agreed
to 13/11/85 (J.594).
Action: Oral evidence received from Senator
Georges; report tabled 5/12/86 (J.1571); resolutions agreed to 18/3/87
(J.1693-4).
Persons/organisations
involved: Senator George
Georges; Queensland Police.
Resum: On 11 November 1985, Senator Georges and a
number of other persons were arrested at a protest meeting at the SEQEB
Building in Brisbane and charged with offences under s.4A of the Vagrants
Gaming and Other Offences Act. Senator
Georges declined to have his fingerprints or photograph taken before being
released on bail; he was therefore charged with obstructing a police officer in
the exercise of his duty, and held in custody overnight before appearing before
a magistrate and being granted bail. The Queensland Police initially attempted
only indirectly to notify the President of the Senate of Senator Georges’
arrest. The Committee concluded that there was no intention on the part of the
police to harass Senator Georges.
Recommendations: That the Senate reaffirm its right to
receive notification of the detention of its members, and related matters; that
the Senate give consideration to the alteration of the immunity from arrest and
detention.
11. The Circulation of Petitions (PP No. 46/1988)
Reference: President determined precedence to notice
of motion 15/3/88; motion moved by Leader of the Opposition in the Senate
(Senator Chaney) 16/3/88; amendment moved by Senator Collins agreed to; motion
as amended agreed to 16/3/88 (J.556).
Action: Report (including a dissenting report from
Senator Durack) tabled 2/6/88 (J.843); noted 2/11/88 (J.1065).
Persons/organisations
involved: The Hon. Brian
Burke; Mr R.M Strickland; Senator Fred Chaney.
Resum: Senator Chaney’s motion referred to a
specific incident relating to petitions, namely, whether a petition prepared by
Mr Strickland was suppressed in consequence of a threat of legal proceedings by
the Hon. Brian Burke; the motion, as agreed to, related to whether the
circulation of a petition containing defamatory material was, or ought to be,
privileged. The Committee treated the questions of the circulation of petitions
and of defamation separately.
Findings: That the circulation of petitions is not
absolutely privileged and is probably not subject to any form of qualified
privilege; if Parliament were to determine that the circulation of a petition
be privileged, a change to the law would be required; that the circulation of
petitions containing defamatory matter should not be privileged; that the
circulation of other petitions requires no special protection and therefore no
change to the law is required.
Dissent: Senator Durack, in his dissenting report,
included the text of the petition to which Senator Chaney referred: it sought
to have deferred the appointment of the Hon. Brian Burke as Ambassador to
Ireland. Senator Durack dissented from the findings that the circulation of a
petition containing defamatory material should not be protected by
parliamentary privilege and that no change to the law was warranted.
12. Person Referred to in the Senate (Mr T.
Motion) (PP No. 385/1988)
Reference: Referred by President 30/11/88.
Action: Report tabled 7/12/88 (J.1264); adopted
13/12/88 (J.1297).
Persons/organisations
involved: Mr Tony Motion;
Senator Peter Walsh.
Resum: In question time on 10 November 1988, in
response to a question on a proposed gold tax, Senator Walsh referred to
certain named individuals who opposed the tax as ‘spivs’ who ‘lounged’ around
Perth. His remarks were repeated in the West
Australian newspaper. In his response, Mr Motion rebutted Senator Walsh’s
description and stated that his remarks had caused considerable unjustifiable
distress to Mr Motion and his family.
Recommendation: That the response be incorporated in Hansard.
13. Person Referred to in the Senate (Mr I.R.
Cornelius) (PP No. 386/1988)
Reference: Referred by President 12/12/88.
Action: Report tabled and adopted 14/12/88 (J.1314).
Persons/organisations
involved: Mr Ian Cornelius;
Senator Peter Walsh.
Resum: On 10 November 1988 in question time in the
Senate, Senator Walsh described Mr Cornelius as a ‘spiv’ who had conspired
to defraud the Commonwealth and who had been gaoled. In his response, Mr
Cornelius denied the allegations, pointing out that he was not the Cornelius
who had been gaoled and also pointing to the hurt and embarrassment the
Senator’s comments had caused personally and to the companies on whose boards
Mr Cornelius sat.
Recommendation: That the response be incorporated in Hansard.
14. Possible False or Misleading
Evidence and Manipulation of Evidence before Senate Committees - Travel by
Aboriginal Community Representatives (PP No. 461/1989)
Reference: President determined precedence to notice
of motion 7/11/88; motion moved by Leader of Opposition in the Senate (Senator
Chaney) and agreed to 8/11/88 (J.1098-9).
Action: Report tabled 28/2/89 (J.1385); noted
12/4/89 (J.1549).
Persons/organisations
involved: Mr Ray Robinson;
Mr Darby McCarthy; Mr Norman Johnson; Mr Charles Perkins; Senator John
Coulter; Senator Bob Collins; Estimates Committee E; Select Committee on the
Administration of Aboriginal Affairs.
Resum: In estimates hearings on 25-26 October
1988, it was asserted that the Department of Aboriginal Affairs had not
committed funds for persons to prepare or present submissions to the Select
Committee on the Administration of Aboriginal Affairs and that Messrs Robinson,
McCarthy and Johnson, whose expenses for a visit to Canberra on 1-2 September
1988 had been paid by the Department, had come primarily to discuss sporting
matters with the Secretary. In responses to the Committee, Messrs Robinson,
McCarthy and Johnson indicated that their giving evidence to the Select
Committee on 2 September was merely opportunistic.
Findings: That on evidence available to the Committee
no false or misleading evidence was given to Estimates Committee E in relation
to the attendance in Canberra of Messrs Robinson, McCarthy and Johnson on 1 and
2 September 1988; there was no attempt to manipulate the evidence laid before
the Select Committee; therefore, no contempt was committed.
15. Possible False or Misleading
Evidence before a Senate Estimates Committee - Department of Defence Project
Parakeet (PP No. 461/1989)
Reference: President determined precedence to notice
of motion 5/12/88; motion moved by Senator MacGibbon and agreed to 6/12/88
(J.1247).
Action: Report tabled 6/3/89 (J.1433-4); noted
12/4/89 (J.1549).
Persons/organisations
involved: Dr Malcolm
McIntosh; Senator Jocelyn Newman; Department of Defence; Estimates Committee E.
Resum: On 29 November 1988 during debate on the
Appropriation Bills, Senator MacGibbon indicated that he believed Dr McIntosh,
Chief of Capital Procurement in the Department of Defence, had provided false
or misleading information to senators in response to their questions about
Project Parakeet, a trunk communications system, in the Additional Estimates
hearings in May of that year. The information centred on supposed technical
problems, cost overruns and delays, and whether the later stages of the project
would go to open tender. The response from Dr McIntosh indicated that
discussion of the project was of a partial nature so as not to preempt ministers;
if senators were misled, it was not deliberate and he apologised. The Committee
concluded that Dr McIntosh’s responses to questioning could have been more
helpful.
Finding: The response could have been more helpful.
As there was no intention to give false or misleading evidence to a Senate
estimates committee, no contempt was committed.
16. Person Referred to in the Senate (Mr C.
Wyatt) (PP No. 461/1989)
Reference: Referred by President 11/4/89.
Action: Report tabled and adopted 5/5/89 (J.1606)
Persons/organisations
involved: Mr Cedric Wyatt;
Senator Noel Crichton-Browne.
Resum: During debate in the Senate on 9 March 1989
on the special audit report on the Aboriginal Development Commission and the
Department of Aboriginal Affairs, Senator Crichton-Browne implied that, during
Mr Wyatt’s tenure as WA head of the Department of Aboriginal Affairs, funds may
have been used for purposes for which they were not intended, and that Mr
Wyatt’s appointment to the ADC was inappropriate. In his response, Mr Wyatt
rejected the allegations.
Recommendation: That the response be incorporated in Hansard.
17. Possible Improper Interference
with a Witness - Drugs in Sport Inquiry
(PP
No. 461/1989)
Reference: President determined precedence to notice
of motion 8/12/88; motion moved by Chairman of Environment, Recreation and the
Arts Committee (Senator Black), by leave, and agreed to 8/12/88 (J.1276-7).
Action: Public hearing 10 May 1989; finding
reported to the Senate 11/5/89 (J.1662); report tabled 5/6/89 (J.1792); finding
endorsed 4/10/89 (J.2087-8).
Persons/organisations
involved: Ms Suzanne
Howland; Mr Greg Blood; Australian Institute of Sport; Standing Committee on
Environment, Recreation and the Arts.
Resum: On 30 November 1988, Ms Howland gave
evidence, as a summoned witness, to the Standing Committee on Environment,
Recreation and the Arts inquiry into drugs in sport. On the following day, she
was asked by her landlord, Mr Blood, a librarian at the Australian Institute of
Sport, to leave the house in which she was living. The committee concluded that Mr Blood was
stressed by the whole issue of drugs in sport and that he had not intended to
interfere with Ms Howland’s giving of evidence or to penalise her for it.
Finding: Because the requisite intention was not established,
no contempt was committed.
18. Possible Interference with
Witnesses in Consequence of their giving Evidence before the Senate Select
Committee on Aboriginal Affairs (PP No. 461/1989)
Reference: President determined precedence to notice
of motion 2/11/88; motion moved by Leader of Opposition in the Senate (Senator
Chaney) and agreed to 3/11/88 (J.1070).
Action: Report tabled 16/6/89 (J.1921); findings
endorsed 4/10/89 (J.2087).
Persons/organisations
involved: Mr Charles
Perkins; Mrs Shirley McPherson; Mr Michael O’Brien; Aboriginal Development
Commission; Select Committee on the Administration of Aboriginal Affairs.
Resum: In May 1988, the Aboriginal Development
Commission (ADC) passed a resolution that no public statements on behalf of the
Commission be made by Commissioners or officers without the prior approval of
the Board; in October the ADC Board resolved that papers or submissions of
whatever kind should not be presented to any parliamentary committee without
prior approval; it passed a motion of no confidence in the Chairman, Mrs
McPherson, for, inter alia, appearing before the Select Committee on the
Administration of Aboriginal Affairs without notifying the Commissioners; the
ADC also transferred Mr O’Brien from his position of General Manager to a
newly-created position. After examining copious documentation, the committee
concluded that Mrs McPherson had given her evidence to the Select Committee in
a private capacity and that she had, in fact, notified the Board of her
intention to do so; and that Mr O’Brien’s evidence was also given in a private
capacity. The committee concluded that the actions taken were reprisals but
that any penalty or injury was not inflicted solely in consequence of the
giving of evidence to the select committee.
Findings: In relation to the resolutions of May and
October 1988, no contempt committed; in relation to the no confidence motion,
in the particular circumstances a finding of contempt should not be made; in
relation to the proposed transfer of Mr O’Brien, no contempt committed.
19. Person Referred to in the Senate (Sir Charles
Court) (PP No. 461/1989)
Reference: Referred by the President 25/9/89.
Action: Report tabled and adopted 27/10/89
(J.2171).
Persons/organisations
involved: Sir Charles Court;
Senator the Hon. Peter Walsh.
Resum: In question time on 6 September 1989,
Senator Walsh, the Minister for Finance, commented on the North West Shelf
Natural Gas Project and Sir Charles Court’s role in it. Sir Charles objected
that the Minister’s comments were both offensive and inaccurate.
Recommendation: That the response be incorporated in Hansard.
20. Possible Unauthorised Disclosure of Senate
Committee Report (PP No. 461/1989)
Reference: President gave precedence to notice of
motion 17/8/89; motion moved by Senator Hamer at the request of Senator Teague
and agreed to 18/8/89 (J.1961).
Action: Report tabled 21/12/89 (J.2445); finding
endorsed and recommendations adopted 16/5/90 (J.96-7).
Persons/organisations
involved: Senator Irina
Dunn; Standing Committee on Foreign Affairs, Defence and Trade.
Resum: On the morning of 16 August, three
newspapers carried articles reflecting the contents of the report of the
Standing Committee on Foreign Affairs, Defence and Trade on its inquiry into
visiting nuclear-powered ships. The report was tabled later that day. The
tabling of the report had been delayed, owing to pressure of business in the
Senate chamber. After inquiries to all senators and staff concerned, the
Committee was informed that a member of the standing committee, Senator Dunn,
had prepared media releases and briefed the press on 15 August, the day on
which the report was scheduled to be tabled. The Committee concluded that
Senator Dunn had knowingly briefed the media, but had done so in the belief that
the tabling of the report was imminent; it also noted her apology. It also
suggested that committees should examine matters themselves before referring
them to the Committee of Privileges.
Findings: That in the light of all the circumstances,
a finding of contempt not be made; that no further action be taken.
Recommendations: That the President draw to the attention of
all senators paragraph 6(16) of the Privilege Resolutions and Standing Order
37; that the Procedure Committee consider a proposal to schedule the tabling of
committee reports early in the day.
21. Possible Adverse Treatment of a
Witness before the Select Committee on the Administration of Aboriginal Affairs
(PP No. 461/1989)
Reference: President gave precedence to notice of
motion 9/3/89; motion moved by Senator Baume; debated and agreed to 9/3/89
(J.1458-9).
Action: Public hearing 29 November 1989; report
tabled 22/12/89 (J.2465); notice of motion given for next day of sitting not
less than 7 days after the day on which notice given - that the Senate endorse
findings 22/12/89 (J.2466); fresh notice given 9/5/90 (J.37); findings endorsed
16/5/90 (J.97).
Persons/organisations
involved: Mr Michael Pope;
Mr Cedric Wyatt; Mr Michael Stewart; Aboriginal Development Commission, Senate
Select Committee on the Administration of Aboriginal Affairs.
Resum: Mr Pope was a senior officer in the
Aboriginal Development Commission (ADC) until his resignation on 4 November
1988. He gave evidence critical of the ADC to the Select Committee on the
Administration of Aboriginal Affairs on 9 December 1988, as a private
citizen. On 4 January 1989, at the instigation of the Acting General Manager,
Mr Wyatt, a letter was sent to Mr Pope, advising him that, in the light of
his evidence to the select committee, he was not to enter the Bonner House
premises of the ADC, without first seeking and obtaining the permission of the
General Manager. Mr Stewart issued a staff circular dated 20 February 1989,
broadening the proscription to all ADC premises. The ADC explanation for these
actions was that it was concerned about the extent of leakage of information
from its premises.
Findings: The committee found that there was adverse
treatment of Mr Pope, though not of a serious nature; that it was partially in
consequence of his giving evidence to the select committee; that contempts had
been committed, although not of a serious nature; and that, in the light of the
ADC apology to Mr Pope and the Senate, no penalty should be imposed.
22. Possible Unauthorised Disclosure of Senate
Committee Submission (PP No. 45/1990)
Reference: President gave precedence to notice of
motion 5/12/89; motion moved by Chairman of the Select Committee on Health
Legislation and Health Insurance (Senator Crowley) and agreed to, 6/12/89
(J.2321).
Action: Report tabled 9/5/90 (J.41); finding
endorsed and recommendations adopted 23/5/90 (J.130).
Persons/organisations
involved: Mr Stuart
Hamilton, Secretary, Department of Community Services and Health; Australian
Private Hospitals Association; Select Committee on Health Legislation and
Health Insurance.
Resum: Towards the end of September 1989, the
Australian Private Hospitals Association (APHA) made a submission to the Select
Committee on Health Legislation and Health Insurance. On 22 October, the APHA became
aware that its submission was in the hands of a senior officer of the
Department of Community Services and Health, before the committee had
authorised its publication. The department indicated that it had received the
document from the minister’s senior private secretary, who was unaware how it
arrived in the minister’s office and who circulated it with many other such
submissions. The select committee published the submissions received on 3
November and the department apologised for its action. The Committee of
Privileges concluded that further investigations would be unlikely to discover
the source of the disclosure and therefore considered that the matter should
not be taken any further.
Finding: Although it would be open to the committee,
and to the Senate, to find that a contempt of the Senate had been committed by
the unauthorised distribution of the document, the committee concluded that, in
the particular circumstances of the case, such a finding should not be made.
Recommendations: That appropriate warnings about conditions
of disclosure be given in public advertisements calling for submissions, in
notes to witnesses, and in letters acknowledging receipt of submissions; that
persons making submissions be notified when submissions are publicly released
by a committee.
23. Person Referred to in the Senate (Mr A.E.
Harris) (PP No. 45/1990)
Reference: Referred by the President 26/2/90.
Action: Report tabled 25/5/90 (J.144); adopted and
noted 25/5/90 (J.146).
Persons/organisations
involved: Mr A.E. Harris;
Senator David MacGibbon.
Resum: During the adjournment debate on 19
December 1989, Senator MacGibbon referred to what he regarded as a threatening
letter from Mr Harris, then chairman of Australian Airlines. In his response,
Mr Harris included a copy of the letter, which detailed the airline’s approach
to the pilots’ dispute. He denied any part in the other letters received by the
Senator; pointed out the bipartisan nature of his public appointments; and
outlined the company’s profitability.
Recommendation: That the response be incorporated in Hansard.
24. Person Referred to in the Senate (Dr P.
Ingram Cromack) (PP No. 438/1990)
Reference: Referred by the President 18/7/90.
Action: Report tabled and adopted 19/9/90 (J.293).
Persons/organisations
involved: Dr P. Ingram
Cromack; Senator Jean Jenkins.
Resum: On 28 May 1990 in the adjournment debate,
Senator Jean Jenkins named Dr Cromack as an orthopaedic surgeon ‘noted for
being a hard-liner’ in the matter of supporting compensation claims for work-related
disabilities, particularly RSI. In his response, Dr Cromack claimed that he
suffered professional injury, financial loss and stress as a result of the
allegations and the associated media publicity and rejected Senator Jenkins’
assertions about RSI.
Recommendation: That the response be incorporated in Hansard.
25. Person Referred to in the Senate (Mr A.E.
Harris) (PP No. 438/1990)
Reference: Referred by the President 26/2/90.
Action: Report tabled, adopted and noted 17/10/90
(J.345).
Persons/organisations
involved: Mr A.E. Harris;
Senator David MacGibbon.
Resum: During debate in the Senate following the
adoption of the 23rd report of the Committee of Privileges, Senator MacGibbon
again made allegations about Mr Harris’ conduct, this time as chairman of the
Australian Sports Commission. Mr Harris responded, denying that his intention
had been to force Senator MacGibbon into silence or that he had been
discourteous or dishonest, and rejecting the allegations against him.
Recommendation: That the response be incorporated in Hansard.
26. Possible Misleading Evidence
before a Senate Estimates Committee - Department of Defence - Asbestos in Royal
Australian Navy Ships (PP No. 438/1990)
Reference: President gave precedence to notice of
motion 23/8/90; motion moved by Senator Newman and agreed to 24/8/90 (J.250-1).
Action: Report tabled 8/11/90 (J.398); finding
endorsed 14/11/90 (J.449).
Persons/organisations
involved: Senator Jocelyn
Newman; Department of Defence; Australian Defence Force; Estimates Committee B.
Resum: In answer to a question on notice relating
to the use of asbestos in the Defence Force, the Navy response indicated that
preventative measures had been adopted in 1966, creating the impression that
the matter had come to the attention of the Navy only at that time. Yet
documentation made available to Senator Newman showed that the dangers of
asbestos were drawn to the attention of the Navy in 1943. The committee
concluded that the reply drafted by the officer was accurate to the best of his
knowledge and belief at the time and that he could not have known, or been
expected to know, of the existence of the material subsequently provided to
Senator Newman.
Finding: No contempt was committed in regard to
evidence given to Estimates Committee B in May 1990 concerning asbestos in
Royal Australian Navy ships.
27. Person Referred to in the Senate (Sir William
Keys) (PP No. 438/1990)
Reference: Referred by the President 26/11/90.
Action: Report tabled, adopted, motion to take note
29/11/90 (J.493); report noted 5/12/90 (J.510).
Persons/organisations
involved: Sir William Keys;
Senator Jocelyn Newman; Senator John Herron.
Resum: During a discussion of matters of public
importance on 15 November 1990, Senator Newman referred to Sir William as a
government ‘stooge’ for his support of repatriation hospital integration. Sir
William responded that the views he expressed were his own. In the same debate,
Senator Herron referred to Sir William’s input on the subject of recognition of
overseas-trained doctors to an Australian Medical Association national
conference. Sir William’s response
claimed that the Senator was incorrect in his statements.
Recommendation: That the response be incorporated in Hansard.
28. Person Referred to in the Senate (Mr C.H.
Cannon) (PP No. 438/1990)
Reference: Referred by the President 11/12/90.
Action: Report tabled and adopted 19/12/90 (J.644).
Persons/organisations
involved: Mr C.H. Cannon;
Senator Paul McLean.
Resum: During the adjournment debate on 12
November 1990, Senator McLean alleged that Mr Cannon, when manager of the
National Australia Bank in Toowoomba, had been guilty of fraud and deceptive
conduct. The senator’s comments were published by Darling Downs media. Mr
Cannon responded that the senator’s remarks were without substance and had
damaged his reputation.
Recommendation: That the response be incorporated in Hansard.
29. Person Referred to in the Senate (the
Honourable Tom Uren) (PP No.438/1990)
Reference: Referred by the President 17/12/90.
Action: Report tabled and adopted 19/12/90 (J.644).
Persons/organisations
involved: The Hon. Tom Uren;
Senator the Hon. Robert Ray.
Resum: In question time on 12 December 1990, the
Minister for Defence, Senator Robert Ray, criticised Mr Uren for comments made
by the latter during a trip to Iraq to seek the release of Australian hostages.
He also alleged that Mr Uren briefed former Prime Minister Fraser on Labor
Party matters. In his response, Mr Uren clarified his position on both matters.
Recommendation: That the response be incorporated in Hansard.
30. Possible Improper Influence or
Penalty on a Witness in respect of Evidence before a Senate Committee (PP No. 258/1991)
Reference: President gave precedence to notice of
motion 17/10/90; motion moved by Chairman of Environment, Recreation and the
Arts Committee, Senator Crowley, and agreed to 18/10/90 (J.359).
Action: Report tabled 6/3/91 (J.812); finding
endorsed 7/3/91 (J.831).
Persons/organisations
involved: Mr Glen Jones; Mr
Chris Turner; Australian Drug Free Powerlifting Federation; Standing Committee
on Environment, Recreation and the Arts.
Resum: Mr Glen Jones, National Drug Testing
Officer of the Australian Drug Free Powerlifting Federation, alleged that
another member of the Federation, Mr Turner, threatened to publish to other
members allegations against Mr Jones, including that he had given false
evidence to the standing committee during its drugs in sport inquiry, if he did
not withdraw from a contest for an office within the Federation. Mr Turner
submitted that he had not intended to interfere with Mr Jones on account of his
having given evidence to a Senate committee. The Committee of Privileges
concluded that the proposal to publish a document claiming that false evidence
had been given to a Senate committee was insufficient evidence of intention to
interfere with a witness.
Finding: That no contempt of the Senate was
committed.
31. Person Referred to in the Senate (Sir William
Keys) (PP No. 258/1991)
Reference: Referred by the President 11/12/90.
Action: Report tabled and adopted 11/3/91 (J.842).
Persons/organisations
involved: Sir William Keys;
Senator Jocelyn Newman.
Resum: On 5 December 1990, during a debate on the
committee’s 27th Report, Senator Newman again discussed matters relating to Sir
William Keys. Sir William’s response explained the context of his visit with
the then Minister for Defence to defence facilities in north Queensland, the
rationale for his media comments and his representation of the verterans’
community.
Recommendation: That the response be incorporated in Hansard.
32. Person Referred to in the Senate (Ms Patsy
Harmsen) (PP No. 258/1991)
Reference: Referred by the President 19/6/91.
Action: Report tabled and adopted 21/6/91 (J.1280).
Persons/organisations
involved: Ms Patsy Harmsen;
Senator Paul Calvert.
Resum: During the adjournment debate in the Senate
on 5 June 1991, Senator Calvert raised the matter of the impending closure of
the Electrona silicon smelter. Ms Harmsen believed that her campaign
against the smelter had been misrepresented, and that Senator Calvert’s remarks
had harmed her reputation as a community representative and political candidate
and had caused her to be harassed.
Recommendation: That the response be incorporated in Hansard.
33. Person Referred to in the Senate (Dr Alex
Proudfoot, FRACP) (PP No. 470/1991)
Reference: Referred by President 21/8/91.
Action: Report tabled and adopted 3/9/91 (J.1452).
Persons/organisations
involved: Dr Alex Proudfoot;
Senator Margaret Reynolds.
Resum: Dr Proudfoot took exception to remarks made
in the Senate by Senator Reynolds on 30 May 1991 and to a response to a
question on notice from her which was published in Hansard on 14 August 1991. In Dr Proudfoot’s view, the response
readily identified him and could have led to a belief that he was biased
against women and that his court action against the Human Rights and Equal
Opportunity Commission was frivolous or vexatious.
Recommendation: That the response be incorporated in Hansard.
34. Person Referred to in the Senate (Ms Jeannie
Cameron) (PP No. 470/1991)
Reference: Referred by President 13/11/91.
Action: Report tabled and adopted 14/11/91
(J.1726).
Persons/organisations
involved: Ms Jeannie
Cameron; Senator Graham Richardson.
Resum: During the committee of the whole stage of
the Appropriation Bills in the Senate on 17 October 1991, Senator Richardson
made comments about a staff member of Senator Jocelyn Newman. Ms Cameron
asserted that the person referred to was readily identifiable as herself and
that the comments were unfair, untrue, and had adversely affected her
reputation.
Recommendation: That the response be incorporated in Hansard.
35. Report on Committee’s Work
since Passage of Privilege Resolutions of 25 February 1988 (PP No.
467/1991)
Action: Report tabled 2/12/91 (J. 1811); noted
26/3/92 (J.2133).
36. Possible Improper Interference
with a Witness and Possible Misleading Evidence before the National Crime
Authority Committee (PP No. 194/1992)
Reference: President determined precedence to notice
of motion 8/11/90; motion moved by Leader of the Opposition in the Senate
(Senator Hill) and agreed to 12/11/90 (J.410).
Action: Public hearings 9/12/91, 27/4/92; report
tabled 25/6/92 (J.2623); finding endorsed and recommendations adopted 17/12/92
(J.3427).
Persons/organisations
involved: Mr Mark Le Grand;
Mr Peter Faris, QC; Mr Gregory Cusack, QC; Mr Julian Leckie; National
Crime Authority; Parliamentary Joint Committee on the National Crime Authority.
Resum: In late 1989, the Parliamentary Joint
Committee on the National Crime Authority commenced an inquiry into the NCA’s
‘Operation Ark’, an investigation into possible police corruption in South
Australia. Mr Mark Le Grand, an additional member of the NCA for South
Australia in 1989, was directed by the new NCA Chairman, Mr Peter Faris, not to
make any documents available or have any discussions with any committee or
person outside the Authority without first consulting the Authority; he
reminded him of the secrecy provisions of the NCA Act. Whether intended or not,
this had the effect of restricting Mr Le Grand in the giving of evidence to the
joint committee. The committee concluded that this and subsequent directions
could have had the effect of restricting Mr Le Grand in his dealings with the
joint committee; that answers about the restrictions by NCA members had the
effect of misleading the joint committee; that the restrictive actions of the
members of the NCA in late 1989 were undertaken in the belief that they were in
accordance with the NCA Act; and that the joint committee was not ultimately
prevented from acquiring the information it needed to perform its functions.
Finding: The Committee determined that it should not
find that a contempt had been committed.
Recommendations: That sections 51 and 55 of the NCA Act be
clarified; that any conflict between accountability of statutory bodies to
Parliament and secrecy requirements be resolved during passage of legislation
through Parliament; that the Scrutiny of Bills Committee draw such provisions
to the attention of Parliament; that urgent consideration be given to
legislation clarifying the position of parliamentary privilege vis-a-vis
secrecy provisions of other legislation; that the Senate warn persons dealing
with a House of Parliament or its committees to answer questions fully and
frankly.
- Possible Improper Interference with
Witnesses before the Community Affairs Committee (PP No. 235/1992)
Reference: President determined precedence 2/4/92;
motion moved by Chair of Community Affairs Committee (Senator Zakharov) and
agreed to 2/4/92 (J.2178).
Action: Report tabled 9/9/92 (J.2731); finding
endorsed 17/12/92 (J.3427).
Persons/organisations
involved: Messrs John
Murphy, Kevin Baker, Andrew Walmsley and Mark Plunkett; Standing Committee on
Community Affairs.
Resum: Complaints were made to the Standing
Committee on Community Affairs about a solicitor who had allegedly intimidated
a person or persons because of evidence they gave to the committee on 6
September 1991 in respect of its inquiry into the implementation of pharmaceutical
restructuring measures. However, the witnesses making the assertions refused
the Committee of Privileges’ invitation to substantiate their claims. The
committee reported its disquiet about a possible abuse of process.
Finding: No findings of contempt could or should be
made.
38. Person Referred to in the Senate (the
Honourable Paul B. Toose) (PP. No. 540/1992)
Reference: Referred by the Deputy President 13/10/92.
Action: Report tabled and adopted 13/10/92
(J.2891).
Persons/organisations
involved: The Hon. Paul
Toose; Advertising Standards Council; Senator the Hon. Michael Tate; The Australian.
Resum: In the Senate on 2 December 1991, Senator
Jones asked Senator Tate a question about an article in The Australian in which
the Hon. Paul Toose, as chairman of the Advertising Standards Council (ASC),
was quoted as being hostile to certain lobby groups. Mr Toose regarded the
comments as misleading, and an assault on the status of the ASC and on the
integrity of its chairman.
Recommendation: That the response be incorporated in Hansard.
39. Person Referred to in the Senate (Mr Dale E.
Hennessy) (PP No. 540/1992)
Reference: Referred by the President 24/11/92.
Action: Report tabled, adopted 30/11/92 (J.3158).
Persons/organisations
involved: Mr Dale Hennessy;
Senator John Watson, Select Committee on Superannuation.
Resum: In the adjournment debate on 3 November
1992, Senator Watson referred to the evidence of Mr Hennessy, Director of the
Queensland Government Superannuation Office, and suggested that the Select
Committee on Superannuation might have been misled by Mr Hennessy with
regard to the level of funding of State superannuation schemes.
Mr Hennessy denied Senator Watson’s allegations.
Recommendation: That the response be incorporated in Hansard.
40. Persons Referred to in the
Senate (Ms Margaret Piper, Ms Eve Lester and Mr Seth Richardson) (PP No.
540/1992)
Reference: Referred by the President on 14/12/92.
Action: Report tabled, adopted and noted 17/12/92
(J.3426).
Persons/organisations
involved: Ms Margaret Piper;
Ms Eve Lester; Mr Seth Richardson; Senator Jim McKiernan; Refugee Council of
Australia (RCOA).
Resum: On 7 December 1992, Senator McKiernan
commented in the Senate on the quality of the evidence provided by RCOA
witnesses to the Joint Standing Committee on Migration Regulations. Ms Piper,
on behalf of the other witnesses, objected that many of his remarks were
inaccurate.
Recommendation: That the response be incorporated in Hansard.
41. Person Referred to in the Senate (Mr R.S.Lippiatt)
(PP No.92/1993)
Reference: Referred by President after consultation
with Committee of Privileges, 26/8/92.
Action: Report tabled and adopted 12/5/93 (J.126).
Persons/organisations
involved: Mr Richard
Lippiatt; Senator Robert Bell.
Resum: In the adjournment debate on 3 June and 13
October 1992, Senator Bell referred to Mr Lippiatt’s administration of the Commonwealth Employees’ Rehabilitation and
Compensation Act 1988 on behalf of Australia Post, particularly as it
affected a former Australia Post employee ‘Y’. For privacy reasons, the
Committee discouraged Mr Lippiatt from placing specific facts relating to the
case on the public record but he was able to indicate that he believed Senator
Bell’s information was unsubstantiated.
Recommendation: That the response be incorporated in Hansard.
42. Possible Adverse Treatment of a
Witness before the Corporations and Securities Committee (PP No. 85/1993)
Reference: Deputy President determined precedence
8/10/92; motion moved by Senator Bell at request of Senator Spindler and agreed
to 2/10/92 (J.2879).
Action: Public hearings 15/12/92, 11/2/93; report
tabled and noted 27/5/93 (J.310); findings and recommendations debated 30/9/93
(J.557); amendment moved by Senator Cooney (negatived), findings endorsed and
recommendations adopted 21/10/93 (J.684); President’s response 16/3/94
(J.1413); Government response 22/8/95 (J.3650).
Persons/organisations
involved: Mr James Gaffey;
Australian Securities Commission; Joint Committee on Corporations and
Securities.
Resum: Mr Gaffey, then a legal officer with the
Australian Securities Commission, gave evidence on 11 October 1991 to the Joint
Committee on Corporations and Securities as a representative of the Young
Lawyers Section of the Law Institute of Victoria. The Young Lawyers’ attitude
was contrary to the attitude taken before the committee by the ASC. On
18 May 1992, six charges under the Public Service Act were laid against Mr
Gaffey: five were intra-office matters; the sixth, that ‘he engaged in improper
conduct as an officer’ by making a submission to the joint committee at
variance with the ASC position, thus compromising the latter. Although the
last-named charge was withdrawn, and the operations of the joint committee were
not affected, the Privileges
Committee
concluded that the laying of the charge could deter other witnesses from
appearing before other committees and therefore constituted a contempt.
Findings: That the ASC and two of its officers took
action which constituted a contempt, with intent, against Mr Gaffey for having
given evidence in a private capacity before the Corporations and Securities
Committee. No contempt was involved in the other charges.
Recommendations: That
the Senate endorse the findings; that no penalty be imposed in respect of the identified
contempts, in light of the apologies offered; that heads of departments,
statutory office holders and SES officers be required to undertake study of the
principles governing the operations of Parliament and of the accountability of
departments, agencies and statutory authorities to Parliament.
43. Possible Threat to Senate Select Committee or
Senators (PP No. 389/1993)
Reference: President determined precedence 4/5/93;
motions moved by Senators Reynolds and Walters and agreed to 5/5/93 (J.67).
Action: Report tabled 15/12/93 (J.1028); findings
endorsed 3/2/94 (J.1198).
Persons/organisations
involved: Ms Fiona Patten;
Mr Robert Swan; Eros Foundation; Senate Select Committee on Community Standards
Relevant to the Supply of Services Utilising Telecommunications Technologies.
Resum: The Eros Foundation is a lobby group for
legalised adult goods and services in Australia. Ms Patten, a public relations
consultant of the Foundation, indicated in a covering letter to the select
committee that traders disadvantaged by the committee’s proposed limits on 0055
telephone services would contemplate damages action. Mr Swan was reported
in The Australian of 23 January 1993 as indicating that the
Foundation would ‘out’ Liberal Party figures if the party adopted a policy of
cracking down on the sex industry; similar comments were also allegedly made by
Ms Patten. The Committee of Privileges concluded that the intention of the
Foundation’s representatives was not to threaten the select committee members;
and that the ‘outing’ proposal, while offensive, could not be regarded as
having the effect or tendency of substantially obstructing senators in the
performance of their functions.
Finding: The Committee did not find that a contempt
of the Senate had been committed by representatives of the Eros Foundation, in
that they did not intend to utter a threat to the select committee and their
actions did not have the effect or tendency of substantially obstructing
senators in the performance of their functions.
44. Possible Improper Interference
with or Misleading Reports of Proceedings of Senate Legal and Constitutional
Affairs Committee (PP No. 390/1993)
Reference: President determined precedence 8/8/93;
motion moved by Chair of Legal and Constitutional Affairs Committee (Senator
Cooney) and agreed to 30/8/93 (J.405).
Action: Report tabled 15/12/93 (J.1028); finding
endorsed and recommendation adopted 3/2/94 (J.1198); Watchdog Association
complied with Senate order 15/3/94 (J.1394).
Persons/organisations
involved: Mr Andrew Wade;
Watchdog Association Inc; Australian Securities Commission; Senate Standing
Committee on Legal and Consitutional Affairs.
Resum: In July 1993, the Watchdog Association
placed an advertisement in several newspapers, encouraging submissions to the
Senate Standing Committee on Legal and Constitutional Affairs inquiry into the
Australian Securities Commission. The advertisement was so worded that it could
have created the impression that the Senate committee was interested only in
submissions from persons whose rights had been ‘trampled on’ by the ASC or that
the inquiry was hostile to the ASC. The Committee of Privileges concluded that
the advertisement was potentially misleading, but that this was not the
intention of the Association. The Committee reported that Mr Wade, for the
Association, agreed to take action to remedy the situation.
Finding: The Committee did not find that a contempt
had been committed.
Recommendations: That the Senate endorse the finding; and
that the Watchdog Association place a notification of the report and the
committee’s conclusions in the Watchdog
Reporter as soon as possible.
45. Person referred to in the Senate (Mr T.T.
Vajda) (PP No. 4/1994)
Reference: Referred by President 28/1/94.
Action: Report tabled 7/2/94 (J.1208); adopted
7/2/94 (J.1209).
Persons/organisations
involved: Mr T.T. Vajda;
Senator Jim Short.
Resum: On 20 May 1993 in the Senate, Senator Short
repeated allegations which had been published in the Sydney Morning Herald that Mr Vajda had been involved in the arrest
or interrogation of Mr and Mrs Bardy in Hungary in 1951. In his response,
Mr Vajda denied the allegations.
Recommendation: That the response be incorporated in Hansard.
46. Possibly False or Misleading
Information given to Estimates Committee E or the Senate (PP No. 43/1994)
Reference: President determined precedence 27/9/93;
motion moved by Senator Ferguson and agreed to 29/9/93 (J. 528).
Action: Report tabled 2/3/94 (J.1342); finding
endorsed 24/3/94 (J.1524).
Persons/organisations
involved: Senator the Hon.
Chris Schacht; Australian Customs Service; Estimates Committee E.
Resum: During the hearings of Estimates Committee
E on 26 August 1993, the minister responsible for Customs, Senator Schacht,
twice indicated that he did not think legislation was necessary to introduce a
fee or tax in relation to the diesel fuel rebate scheme. In fact, legislation
was being drafted at the time. The Committee of Privileges concluded that the
minister gave false information to Estimates Committee E, but that he did so
inadvertently; and that the officers advising him were unsure whether false
information was being given. The committee also concluded that, although the
matter was clarified in the Senate on 31 August, it would have been
preferable had it been clarified at the first possible opportunity, and
criticised the public servants involved in briefing the minister. The committee
also observed that public servants are required to answer fully and honestly
all questions which are asked directly of them and, in the event that their
minister provides wrong, inaccurate or incomplete information, to make the fact
known to the minister as soon as practicable so that any errors or omissions
may be rectified, preferably during the hearing in question.
Finding: The committee determined that it should not
find that a contempt had been committed.
47. Person referred to in the Senate (Councillor
Michael Samaras) (PP No. 112/1994)
Reference: Referred by President, 11/5/94.
Action: Report tabled 31/5/94 (J.1713); report
adopted 2/6/94 (J.1746).
Persons/organisations
involved: Councillor Michael
Samaras; Senator Michael Baume.
Resum: On 3 May 1994, Senator Michael Baume
alleged, in a notice of motion, that Councillor Samaras of Wollongong City
Council had been involved in electoral fraud. Councillor Samaras wrote to the
President of the Senate on 7 May 1994, denying the allegation and seeking
redress.
Recommendation: That the response by Councillor Samaras be
incorporated in Hansard.
48. Possible Improper Disclosure of Document or
Proceedings of Migration Committee
(PP
No. 113/1994)
Reference: President determined precedence 25/11/93;
motion moved by Chair of Migration Committee (Senator McKiernan) and agreed to
25/11/93 (J.901).
Action: Report tabled 8/6/94 (J.1778); finding
endorsed and recommendation adopted 30/6/94 (J.1999).
Persons/organisations
involved: Joint Standing
Committee on Migration; Ms Margo Kingston; the Canberra Times.
Resum: On 25 November 1993, an article in the Canberra Times purported to reveal the
draft recommendations of the Migration Committee’s report into detention
practices. All committee members, their staff and staff of the secretariat
denied any knowledge of the source of the disclosure, while Ms Kingston, the
journalist concerned, refused to assist the Privileges Committee for ethical reasons.
Findings: The committee was unable to make a finding
that there was an improper disclosure of a document before, or proceedings of,
the Joint Committee on Migration; it therefore did not find that a contempt had
been committed.
Recommendation: The committee recommended that the issue of
journalistic ethics be referred to the Senate Standing Committee on Legal and
Constitutional Affairs.
49. Parliamentary Privileges
Amendment (Enforcement of Lawful Orders) Bill 1994 (PP No.171/1994)
Reference: Motion moved by the Leader of the
Australian Democrats, Senator Kernot, and agreed to, 12/5/94 (J.1683).
Action: Public hearing 18/8/94; report tabled
19/9/94 and noted by the Senate (J.2160).
Persons/organisations
involved: the Senate.
Resum: On 23 March 1994, Senator Kernot introduced
the Parliamentary Privileges Amendment (Enforcement of Lawful Orders) Bill
1994, designed to provide for the Federal Court to enforce lawful orders made
by the Parliament and to allow the court to determine claims of executive
privilege. Options for determining claims of public interest immunity were
canvassed before the committee, as were sanctions for the enforcement of
orders. The committee concluded that such matters should not be determined by
courts.
Recommendation: That the Bill not be proceeded with.
50. Possible Improper Interference
with a Witness and Possible False or Misleading Answers given to the Senate or
a Senate Committee (PP No. 322/1994)
Reference: President gave precedence 19/5/93; motion
moved by Senator Watson and agreed to 20/5/93 (J.214).
Action: Report tabled 8/12/94 (J.2766); findings
endorsed and recommendations adopted 2/2/95 (J.2863).
Persons/organisations
involved: Mr John
Richardson; Mr Frank Kelly; Australian Customs Service (ACS); Joint Committee
of Public Accounts; Estimates Committee A.
Resum: Mr John Richardson was a customs agent with
a firm which represented Midford Paramount, a shirtmaking firm charged with
misuse of export quotas and threatened with other charges. The charges failed,
but the company was forced to close because of the activities of the ACS. These
matters were investigated by the Joint Committee of Public Accounts. Mr
Richardson gave evidence to the joint committee on 29 August 1991, in which he
was highly critical of the ACS. During his evidence, he reported that an
unknown caller had threatened to put him out of business if he criticised
Customs to the inquiry. He subsequently provided documentation to the Senate on
the question of a penalties scheme administered by the ACS, alleging that
Customs officers had misled Estimates Committee A in their responses to
questions concerning the scheme.
Findings: A threatening call was made to Mr
Richardson, and this constituted a serious contempt (the committee was unable
to discover the source of the call); the witness suffered penalty or injury but
the committee could not establish whether this was as a result of his giving
evidence to a committee; ACS answers and evidence to the Senate and an
estimates committee did not constitute a contempt.
Recommendations: That the Senate request the
Comptroller-General of Customs to circulate copies of the committee’s report to
all senior officers in the ACS; that the Senate refer the matter of the
implementation of the recommendations of a report on customs operations (the
Conroy report) to the relevant committee.
- Possible Penalty or Injury to a Witness
before the Employment, Education and Training Committee (PP No. 4/1995)
Reference: President gave precedence 30/5/94; motion
moved by Senator Crane and agreed to 31/5/94 (J. 711).
Action: Report tabled 7/2/95 (J.2899); finding
endorsed 2/3/95 (J.3008).
Persons/organisations
involved: Mr Roger Boland;
Mr Bert Evans; the Hon. Laurie Brereton; the Metal Trades Industry Association
(MTIA); the Australian Industrial Relations Commission.
Resum: On 11 November 1993 Mr Roger Boland,
director of industrial relations for the MTIA, gave evidence critical of
government policies to the Senate Standing Committee on Employment, Education
and Training in relation to the Industrial Relations Reform Bill 1993. An
article in the Australian Financial
Review of 29 March 1994 alleged that the Minister for Industrial
Relations, the Hon. Laurie Brereton, had overturned a proposal to appoint Mr
Boland to the Australian Industrial Relations Commission. Discussion in both
Houses linked Mr Boland’s non-appointment to the views he expressed before the
Senate committee. Mr Brereton and Mr Bert Evans of the MTIA denied that Mr
Boland had been deprived of the appointment. Mr Boland stated he did not regard
himself as having been prejudiced in any way because of his giving evidence.
Finding: The committee did not find that a contempt
had been committed.
52. Parliamentary Privileges
Amendment (Enforcement of Lawful Orders) Bill 1994 —Casselden Place reference
(PP No. 21/1995)
Reference: Motion moved by Senator Spindler and agreed
to 22/6/94 (J.830-1).
Action: Report tabled 1/3/95 (J.2984); report noted
2/3/95 (J.3008).
Persons/organisations
involved: the Senate, the
Department of Administrative Services, the Auditor-General.
Resum: The committee considered a particular
instance of refusal by a minister to produce documents in response to an order
of the Senate. The documents related to Commonwealth leaseholding arrangements
in Casselden Place, Melbourne, and were denied on commercial-in-confidence
grounds. The impasse was broken by the Senate’s asking the Auditor-General to
investigate and report on the matter. The committee concluded that claims of
executive privilege are for a House of Parliament to determine and that, in the
event of conflict, an independent arbiter be called upon to evaluate material
to assist the relevant House to determine the matter. The committee noted the
success of the process in respect of the matter it considered.
53. Possible Threat to a Senator (PP No. 44/1995)
Reference: President gave precedence 19/10/94; motion
moved by Senator Parer and agreed to 20/10/94 (J.2342).
Action: Report tabled 22/3/95 (J.3107); finding
endorsed 23/3/95 (J.3136).
Persons/organisations
involved: Senator Woodley,
Mr Keith Williams.
Resum: In the Senate on 21 September 1994, Senator
Woodley alleged that, when he raised concerns about the Port Hinchinbrook
development, he had been threatened by Mr Keith Williams, the principal of
the development. The committee concluded that Mr Williams had prosecuted
his campaigns vigorously but in doing so did not obstruct Senator Woodley in
the performance of his duties.
Finding: The committee did not find that a contempt
had been committed.
54. Possible Unauthorised
Disclosure of a Submission to the Joint Committee on the National Crime
Authority (PP No. 133/1995)
Reference: President gave precedence 2/3/94; motion
moved by Deputy Chair of Joint Committee on National Crime Authority (Senator
Vanstone) and agreed to 3/3/94 (J.1359).
Action: Report tabled 30/6/95 (J.3602); findings
endorsed and recommendation adopted 24/08/95 (J.3694).
Persons/organisations
involved: Mr Les Ayton, the
Hon. KT Griffin, the Hon. Stephen Baker, the Hon. Dean Brown, Mr Chris
Nicholls, Joint Committee on the National Crime Authority.
Resum: The Joint Committee on the National Crime
Authority received as in camera evidence a confidential submission dated 29 May
1991 relating to its inquiry into casinos from then Superintendent Les Ayton of
the Western Australia Police. On 4 March 1993, Messrs Griffin and Brown
quoted from the submission in the South Australian Parliament and the document
was tabled. An anonymous telephone call to the joint committee secretariat
implicated journalist Chris Nicholls as the source of the improper disclosure
of the submission.
Findings: The Committee found that the Ayton
submission, received in camera by the Joint Committee on the National Crime
Authority, was improperly disclosed and that such disclosure constituted a
serious contempt; it was unable to establish the source of the improper
disclosure, owing substantially to the constraints on its capacity to examine
the members of the South Australian legislature responsible for publishing and
referring to the submission under privilege.
Recommendation: If the source of the improper disclosure is
subsequently revealed, that the matter again be referred to the committee, with
a view to a possible prosecution for an offence under section 13 of the Parliamentary Privileges Act 1987.
- Possible Penalty or Injury to a Witness
before the Standing Committee on Industry, Science, Technology, Transport,
Communications and Infrastructure (PP No. 134/1995)
Reference: President gave precedence 27/10/93; motion
moved by Chair of the Industry, Science, Technology, Transport, Communications
and Infrastructure Committee (Senator Childs) and agreed to 18/11/93 (J.812).
Action: Public hearings 18/8/94, 27 and 28/10/94;
report tabled 30/6/95 (J.3602); finding endorsed 19/10/95 (J.3984).
Persons/organisations
involved: Dr Philip
Nitschke, Royal Darwin Hospital, the Hon. Mike Reed, Standing Committee on
Industry, Science, Technology, Transport, Communications and Infrastructure.
Resum: Dr Nitschke, then a Resident Medical
Officer at Royal Darwin Hospital, gave evidence to the standing committee’s
inquiry into disaster management as a representative of the Medical Association
for the Prevention of War. The evidence was critical of the Hospital’s
preparedness for a nuclear accident. The responsible minister, the Hon. Mike
Reed, issued a press release on the same day, suggesting that the Hospital
could ‘scrape by’ without Dr Nitschke; he was interviewed the following day for
a contract for the following year and was not, initially, successful, despite
the fact that contract renewal was virtually automatic at the hospital.
Findings: The Committee found that the Minister’s
press release could be regarded as constituting a threat to Dr Nitschke; that
he was penalised by the hospital by his initial rejection for a 1994 contract;
that the threat was not made and penalties were not imposed in consequence of
his appearance before the Standing Committee; therefore, no contempt was
committed.
56. Person Referred to in the Senate (Ms Yolanda
Brooks) (PP No. 135/1995)
Reference: 20/6/95, by the President.
Action: Report tabled 30/6/95 (J.3602); report
adopted 24/08/95 (J.3694).
Persons/organisations
involved: Ms Yolanda Brooks,
Senator Ian Macdonald.
Resum: On 18 November 1993 during discusssion of
matters of public importance and on 28 June 1994 during the adjournment
debate, Senator Ian Macdonald revealed the content of affidavits filed in the
Queensland Supreme Court relating to the dismissal of Ms Brooks from her
position of Shire Clerk of the Whitsunday Shire Council. Ms Brooks stated that
the allegations against her had no basis in fact; the publication of them was
both professionally and personally damaging; and that Senator Macdonald had no
direct knowledge of the matter.
Recommendation: That the response be incorporated in Hansard.
57. Possible Penalty or Injury
Imposed on Witnesses before the Senate Select Committee on Superannuation (PP
No. 183/1995)
Reference: President gave precedence 16/12/93; motion
moved by Senator West on behalf of Superannuation Committee and agreed to
(J.1073).
Action: Report tabled 17/10/95 (J.3937); finding
endorsed 19/10/95 (J.3984).
Persons/organisations
involved: Mr
Kevin Lindeberg, Mr Des O’Neill, Mr Cecil Lee, Mr Gordon Rutherford,
Queensland Professional Credit Union, Select Committee on Superannuation.
Resum: Mr Kevin Lindeberg alleged that he and his
wife had their membership of the Queensland Professional Credit Union
terminated, and Mr Des O’Neill had his application for membership rejected, as
a result of their giving evidence to the Select Committee on Superannuation in
Brisbane on 29 April 1993. Messrs Lindeberg and O’Neill had raised before that
committee, and attempted to raise before the 1993 Credit Union AGM, the matter
of extraordinary withdrawals from the superannuation fund in 1987, and related
matters.
Finding: The committee noted that the question of
possible contempt was intertwined with wider disputes between persons within an
organisation. It was unable to establish that the penalty and injury caused to
Messrs Lindeberg and O’Neill were on account of their giving evidence to the
Senate Superannuation Committee and accordingly determined not to make a finding
that a contempt of the Senate had occurred.
58. Possible Improper Interference
with a Witness before Select Committee on Unresolved Whistleblower Cases (PP
No. 476/1995)
Reference: President gave precedence; motion moved by
Senator Foreman on behalf of Chair of Select Committee on Unresolved
Whistleblower Cases (Senator Murphy) and agreed to 30/6/95 (J.3600).
Action: Report tabled 26/10/95 (J.4069); finding
endorsed 9/5/96 (J.146).
Persons/organisations
involved: Mr Peter Jesser,
Professor Craig Littler, University of Southern Queensland, Select Committee on
Unresolved Whistleblower Cases
Resum: Mr Jesser, a senior lecturer in the Faculty
of Business at the University of Southern Queensland, alleged that Professor
Craig Littler questioned his [Jesser’s] right to make a submission about
departmental matters to an outside body and that intimidation and reprisal
followed his giving evidence to the Select Committee on Unresolved
Whistleblower Cases.
Finding: The Privileges Committee concluded that, whether or not intimidation
or reprisal had occurred, it was not because of Mr Jesser’s giving evidence to
the Senate committee. Therefore no contempt
of the Senate was committed.
59. Person Referred to in the Senate (Mrs Esther
Crichton-Browne) (PP No. 475/1995)
Reference: 22 November 1995, by the President.
Action: Report tabled 1/12/95 (J.4344); report adopted 9/5/96 (J.146).
Persons/organisations
involved: Mrs Esther
Crichton-Browne, Senator Sue Knowles.
Resum: During the adjournment debate on 15 November
1995, Senator Knowles commented on aspects of a matter relating to a
restraining order against Senator Crichton-Browne. Mrs Crichton-Browne
responded that Senator Knowles’ version of events was inaccurate.
Recommendation: That the response be incorporated in Hansard.
60. Possible Unauthorised
Disclosure of Documents or Deliberations of Senate Select Committee on the
Dangers of Radioactive Waste (PP No. 9/1996)
Reference: Deputy President gave precedence to notice
of motion 29/6/95; motion moved by Senator Chapman and agreed to, 30/6/95
(J.3600).
Action: Report presented to the President, 29/4/96;
tabled 30/4/96 (J.30); finding endorsed 20/6/96 (J.361).
Persons/organisations
involved: Senator Grant
Chapman; the Hon. Duncan Kerr, Minister for Justice; Select Committee on the
Dangers of Radioactive Waste.
Resum: At a meeting held on 27 June 1995, the
Radioactive Waste Committee agreed to order the production of certain documents
by the Australian Federal Police and other bodies. On the following day the
Minister for Justice issued a press release commenting on this demand, before
it was more widely known. The Radioactive Waste Committee considered the
unauthorised disclosure, although it did so after the matter had been referred
to the Committee of Privileges. Its conclusion was that, although the source of
the leak could not be determined, the unauthorised disclosure had not impeded
the work of the committee.
Finding:
No question of contempt
involved.
Recommendation:
That the Senate endorse
procedures first outlined in the committee’s 20th report, in the form of a
resolution, that a committee affected by an unauthorised disclosure should seek
to discover the source of the disclosure. It should then conclude whether the
disclosure potentially or substantially interfered with the work of the
committee; if so, it should report to the Senate and the matter may be raised
in accordance with Standing Order 81.
61. Possible False or Misleading
Statements to Senate Select Committee on Public Interest Whistleblowing (PP No.
10/1996)
Reference: President determined precedence 9/3/95;
motion moved by Senator Murphy and agreed to, 21/3/95 (J.3084).
Action: Report presented to the President 29/4/96;
tabled 30/4/96 (J.31); finding endorsed 20/6/96 (J.361).
Persons/organisations
involved: Mr Alwyn Johnson;
Mr John Harris; Trust Bank; Select Committee on Public Interest Whistleblowing.
Resum: On 27 February 1995, Mr Johnson drew to the
attention of a select committee secretary statements pertaining to the
termination of his employment by the Trust Bank, made by the bank’s chairman Mr
John Harris in response to an invitation by the Select Committee on Public
Interest Whistleblowing. Mr Johnson had alleged to that committee that he had
been dismissed by the bank for his role in disclosing problem loans. Through
its solicitors, the bank asserted that Mr Johnson’s position had been made
redundant as a result of the amalgamation of two banks, that he was
independently assessed as being unsuitable for redeployment at a lower level,
and that his contribution to the disclosure of the problem loans was not a
factor in the decision to terminate his employment. The committee concluded
that, although Mr Harris’ statements were not as precise as they might have
been, they did not constitute false or misleading evidence before a committee.
Finding: No finding of contempt should be made.
62. Committee of Privileges 1996-1996:
History, Practice and Procedure (PP No. 108/1996)
Action: Report
presented to the President of the Senate 28/6/96, tabled 21/8/96 (J.481); noted
25/9/97 (J.2527).
63. Possible false or misleading
evidence before Select Committee on Unresolved Whistleblower Cases (PP No.
360/1996)
Reference: President gave precedence 24/6/96; motion
moved by Senator Shayne Murphy and agreed to 25/6/96 (J.385).
Action:
Report tabled 5/12/96 (J.1212); finding endorsed 29/5/97 (J.2041).
Persons/organisations involved: Mr Kevin Lindeberg;
Mr Peter Coyne; Senator Shayne Murphy; Queensland Criminal Justice
Commission; Select Committee on Unresolved Whistleblower Cases.
Resum: Senator Murphy, as former chair of the
Select Committee on Unresolved Whistleblower Cases, received submissions from
Mr Lindeberg and Mr Coyne which alleged that deliberately misleading
evidence had been given to that committee by the Criminal Justice Commission
about the number and availability of advices given by the Queensland Crown
Solicitor, and awareness of documents held by the Queensland Department of
Family Services and Aboriginal Islander Affairs, in relation to what came to be
known as the Heiner documents case. The Committee concluded that the CJC was
unaware of the documents. It also made the point that state bodies were the
most appropriate avenues for examinations of this kind.
Finding: That no contempt had been committed by the
Criminal Justice Commission in respect of the matter.
64. Possible false or misleading
evidence before the Environment, Recreation, Communications and the Arts
Legislation Committee (PP No. 40/1997).
Reference: President gave precedence 22/8/96, motion
moved by Senator Patterson and agreed to 9/9/96 (J.532).
Action: Report
tabled 19/3/97 (J.1635); finding endorsed and recommendation adopted 29/5/97
(J.2042).
Persons/organisations involved: Mr Geoffrey Marr; Mr Paul Miles;
Mr David Krasnostein; Senate Environment, Recreation, Communications and the
Arts Legislation Committee.
Resum: Mr Marr, an administrative officer with
Telstra, and Mr Miles, a private investigator and friend of Mr Marr, wrote to
the President of the Senate in November 1995 and January 1996 claiming that,
during evidence given by Mr Krasnostein, Telstra General Counsel, to the Senate
Environment, Recreation, Communications and the Arts Legislation Committee
estimates hearing on 27 June 1995, Mr Krasnostein falsely alleged that Mr Marr
had threatened violence against Telstra employees and their families; and that
Mr Marr and Mr Miles had unlawfully obtained an internal Telstra e-mail
message. The Committee concluded that Mr Krasnostein did not make the allegation
that Mr Marr had threatened Telstra employees. However, Mr Krasnostein’s
evidence left the ERCA Committee with the clear impression that there were
grounds for suspicion that Mr Miles and Mr Marr had illegally acquired a
Telstra internal e-mail, thus misleading that committee. The Privileges Committee concluded that misleading evidence was not
intentionally given.
Finding: The Committee found that no contempt of the Senate had
been committed.
Recommendation: That a statement of principle relating to
the accountability of statutory authorities to Parliament be reasserted.
65. Person referred to in the Senate (Dr Neil
Cherry) (PP No. 48/1997)
Reference: Referred by the President 5/3/97.
Action: Report tabled 25/3/97 (J.1759); report adopted 25/3/97
(J.1759)
Persons/organisations involved: Dr Neil Cherry; Senator the Hon.
Richard Alston.
Resum: During question time on 5 March 1997,
Senator Alston alleged that Dr Neil Cherry was a ‘shameless charlatan’ and
‘snake oil merchant’ in relation to the emerging research on electro-magnetic
radiation. Dr Cherry wrote to the President of the Senate on 5 March 1997,
denying the allegations and seeking redress.
Recommendation: That the response by Dr Neil Cherry be incorporated in Hansard.
66. Person Referred to in the Senate (Ms Deborah
Keeley) (PP No. 89/1997)
Reference: Referred by the President 22/4/97.
Action: Report tabled 29/5/97 (J.2038); report adopted 29/5/97
(J.2038)
Persons/organisations involved: Ms Deborah Keeley; Senator Bill
O’Chee.
Resum: On 25 February 1997 during debate in the
Senate, Senator O’Chee alleged that the principal author of a report prepared
by the Office of Government Information and Advertising, relating to tenders
for a creative advertising and media strategy to explain, promote and encourage
voluntary compliance for the Australia-wide gun amnesty, had been offered a
lucrative position with an advertising agency which was one of the final
tenderers for the contract. Ms Keeley wrote to the President of the Senate on 21
April 1997, denying the allegation and seeking redress.
Recommendation: That the response by Ms Keeley be incorporated in Hansard.
67. Possible threats of legal
proceedings made against a senator and other persons
(PP No. 141/1997)
Reference: 23/8/95. President gave precedence 22/8/95.
Motion moved by Senator Boswell and agreed to 23/8/95 (J.3665).
Action: Public hearings 31/1/97,
16/4/97; Report tabled 3/9/97 (J.2412); findings endorsed 22/9/97 (J.2456)
Persons/organisations
involved: Senator Bill O’Chee;
Mr David Armstrong; Mr Michael Rowley; Mr Ron Crew; Cairns
Professional Game Fishing Association.
Resum: During question time on 8 June 1995,
Senator O’Chee asked a question about a possible conflict of interest by one of
the board members of the East Coast Tuna Management Advisory Committee, Mr
Michael Rowley, who undertakes tuna fishing in North Queensland. Senator O’Chee
claimed that a proposal to allow longline fishing, previously forbidden in a
specified area in order to prevent the depletion of marlin and other bill fish,
had been put before the Committee, and tabled certain photographs that
purported to show Mr Rowley’s boats landing prohibited fish. In an adjournment
speech on 22 June 1995, Senator O’Chee referred to certain information
provided to him by Mr David Armstrong, a former manager of a tuna
company of which Mr Rowley was a shareholder and director. Mr Rowley
subsequently instructed the firm of Bottoms English to initiate defamation
proceedings against certain persons, including Mr David Armstrong, with the
letter of demand in respect of Mr Armstrong citing only the material contained
in Senator O’Chee’s speech as evidence of the alleged defamation.
Findings: A contempt of the Senate was committed by
Mr Rowley, acting on legal advice, in taking legal action against Mr Armstrong.
No contempt of the Senate was involved in the taking of other legal actions.
Penalty: No penalty was recommended, the Committee
deeming it inappropriate to recommend a penalty against a person who, after
receiving legal advice, regarded himself as exercising his legal rights.
68. Persons referred to in the
Senate (Mr Ray Platt, Mr Peter Mulheron) (PP No. 158/1997)
Reference:
Referred by the President
21/7/97 and 7/8/97.
Action: Report tabled 23/9/97 (J.2478); report adopted 23/9/97
(J.2478).
Persons/organisations involved: Mr Ray Platt; Mr Peter Mulheron;
Senator Boswell.
Resum: On 18 June 1997, during discussion on
matters of public interest, Senator Boswell made a speech criticising of The Strategy newspaper and its editor,
Mr Platt. Mr Mulheron subsequently identified himself as a staff member of
The Strategy. Both Mr Platt and
Mr Mulheron wrote to the President on 21 July and 7 August 1997
respectively, claiming that Senator Boswell’s statements were incorrect.
Recommendation: That the responses be incorporated in Hansard.
69. Person referred to in the Senate (Dr Clive
Hamilton) (PP No. 183/97)
Reference: Referred by the President 29/9/97.
Action:
Report tabled 21/10/97 (J.2659); report adopted 21/10/97 (J.2659).
Persons/organisations involved: Dr Clive Hamilton; Senator the Hon. W.
Parer.
Resum: During question time on 25 September 1997,
in response to a question on Dr Clive Hamilton’s criticism of the
government’s position on greenhouse, Senator Parer alleged that Dr Hamilton was
‘anti-Australian’ and read extracts from Dr Hamilton’s interview on an ABC
radio program The Search for Meaning. Dr Hamilton
wrote to the President seeking redress, stating that The Search for Meaning was a long-running program that provided an
opportunity for well-known people to discuss their personal, spiritual and
religious journeys. His revelations on that program were a personal matter and
entirely unrelated to his credentials to discuss climate change policy.
Recommendation: That the response be incorporated in Hansard.
70. Questions arising from
proceedings of the Parliamentary Joint Committee on the National Crime
Authority (PP No. 68/1998)
Reference: Motion moved by Senator Ferris and agreed to 26/6/1997 (J.2257-8).
Action: Report tabled 6/4/98 (J.3623); conclusions
and recommendations noted 28/5/98 (J.3881).
Persons/organisations involved: Mr John Elliott; Senator Stephen Conroy;
Parliamentary Joint Committee on the National Crime Authority.
Resum: In 1997 the Joint Committee on the National
Crime Authority undertook an evaluation of the operations of the National Crime
Authority. At a public hearing of the joint committee, Mr John Elliott gave
evidence concerning the Authority’s investigation of him; at the same hearing
Senator Stephen Conroy was prevented from putting certain questions to Mr
Elliott and certain material was expunged from the Hansard transcript of evidence. The joint committee sought
clarification of certain matters from the Privileges Committee: whether Senator Conroy’s rights to question
a witness were infringed; the limitations on the joint committee of the National Crime Authority Act 1984, sections
51 and 55; and whether certain further material should be expunged from the Hansard record.
Conclusions: The Committee of Privileges concluded that
the entire joint committee hearing was contrary to the statute under which the
joint committee was established, and as a consequence Senator Conroy’s rights
could not have been infringed. It further found that, as the proceedings had
been widely publicised, a belated expungement order would be ineffectual. It
drew attention to the extremely restrictive terms of the relevant provisions of
the NCA Act and suggested that they should be reviewed.
Recommendations: That the NCA Committee seek amendment to
sections 51 and 55 of the National Crime Authority Act or that, as an
alternative to seeking amendment to section 51 of the Act, a declaratory
enactment be made by Parliament to make it explicit that parliamentary
privilege cannot be set aside except by express words in a statute.
71. Further possible false or
misleading evidence before Select Committee on Unresolved Whistleblower Cases
(PP No. 86/1998)
Reference: President determined precedence 4/12/97.
Motion moved by Senator Woodley and agreed to 5/12/97 (J.3206).
Action: Report tabled 26/5/98 (J.3839); finding endorsed 28/5/98
(J.3882).
Persons/organisations involved: Mr Kevin Lindeberg; Senator John Woodley;
Senate Select Committee on Unresolved Whistleblower Cases; Queensland Criminal
Justice Commission; Parliamentary Criminal Justice Committee of the Queensland
Legislative Assembly.
Resum: This inquiry dealt with further allegations
that the Queensland Criminal Justice Commission had presented misleading
evidence to the Senate Select Committee on Unresolved Whistleblower Cases in
relation to the Parliamentary Criminal Justice Committee’s handling of Mr
Lindeberg’s complaint and in relation to its investigation of the shredding of
the Heiner documents. The Privileges Committee dismissed these allegations, and, having again noted that they were
part of a series of disputes in Queensland involving the role of the
Commission, suggested that such disputes should be resolved by state bodies.
Finding: That no contempt of the Senate has been
committed by the Queensland Criminal Justice Commission.
72. Possible improper action against a person
(Dr William De Maria) (PP No. 117/98)
Reference: Documents tabled by the President on
25/8/97; motion moved by Senator Bourne and agreed to 4/9/97 (J.2438).
Action: Report tabled 30/6/98 (J.4110); findings
endorsed and recommendation adopted 1/12/98 (J.225).
Persons/organisations involved: Dr William De Maria; The University of
Queensland; Senator John Woodley.
Resum: On 27 May 1997 Senator John Woodley gave a
speech in the Senate which added to remarks he had made on the previous evening
about whistleblowers. Senator Woodley’s speech mentioned two Senate select
committee reports on whistleblowing, referring specifically to the work of Dr
William De Maria, who had been a witness before the committees. On 29 May 1997
Senator Woodley took the opportunity to table documents which he believed to be
associated with his previous speech but which in fact contained Dr De
Maria’s allegations of misconduct against University of Queensland staff. On
18 June 1997 Senator Woodley apologised to those staff and to the
Senate for his role in tabling the documents. The University subsequently took
disciplinary action against Dr De Maria based on the documents tabled
by Senator Woodley on 29 May.
Findings: The University of Queensland, in taking
action against Dr William De Maria as a direct consequence of his
communication with the Senate through Senator Woodley, committed a contempt.
The Committee of Privileges was unable to conclude that Dr De Maria
should be found in contempt. It observed, however, that all senators have a
duty to check material before tabling.
Recommendation: That
no penalty be imposed.
73. Possible improper interference
with a potential witness before the Parliamentary Joint Committee on Native
Title and the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Land Fund (PP No.
118/98)
Reference: President determined precedence 1/10/97.
Motion moved by Senator Bolkus and agreed to 2/10/97 (J.2611).
Action: Report tabled 30/6/98 (J.4111); finding
endorsed and recommendations adopted 1/12/98 (J.225-6).
Persons/organisations involved: The Hon. Daryl Williams; Mr Alan Rose,
Australian Law Reform Commission; Attorney-General’s Department; Parliamentary
Joint Committee on Native Title and the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander
Land Fund
Resum: After
communications between the Australian Law Reform Commission and the Native
Title Committee secretariat, an invitation was extended to the former to make a
written submission and to give oral evidence to that committee. The
Commission’s President, Mr Alan Rose, accepted the invitation on 19 September
1997 but withdrew following discussions with the Attorney-General’s Department.
On 29 September 1997, an article in the Sydney Morning Herald alleged Mr Rose had been pressured to
withdraw by the Attorney-General.
Finding: The Committee of Privileges found that no
contempt was committed in respect of the matter, as the Attorney-General and
his officers had not sought by improper means to influence the evidence of the
Australian Law Reform Commission, or to cause the Commission to refrain from
giving that evidence. The Committee noted, however, the pResumd failure by all
persons involved to take account of the rights, obligations and protections of
witnesses before parliamentary committees.
Recommendations: That the following matter be referred to
the Legal and Constitutional Legislation Committee for inquiry and report: The
statutory powers and functions of the Australian Law Reform Commission; and
that the Senate resolution of 21 October 1993, relating to senior public
officials’ duty to undertake study of the principles governing the operations
of Parliament, be reaffirmed, with each
department to report in a year’s time on how the terms of the resolution have
been complied with.
74. Possible unauthorised disclosure of
parliamentary committee proceedings (PP No. 180/98) (Note: This report
incorporates six separate references to the Committee)
References:
(1) Possible unauthorised disclosure of
documents of the Parliamentary Joint Committee on Native Title and the
Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Land Fund – President gave precedence;
motion moved by Senator Evans and agreed to 27 October 1997 (J.2717)
(2) Possible premature disclosure of the
report of the Parliamentary Joint Committee on Native Title and the Aboriginal
and Torres Strait Islander Land Fund – President gave precedence; motion moved
by Senator Abetz and agreed to 29 October 1997 (J.2759)
(3) Possible unauthorised disclosure of
advice to the Parliamentary Joint Committee on the National Crime Authority –
President gave precedence; motion moved by Senator McGauran and agreed to 26
November 1997 (J.2991)
(4) Possible unauthorised disclosure of the
report of the Environment, Recreation, Communication and the Arts References
Committee – President gave precedence; motion moved by Senator Evans and agreed
to 26 November 1997 (J.2991)
(5) Possible unauthorised disclosure of a
draft report of the Economics References Committee – President gave precedence;
motion moved by Senator Collins and agreed to 12 March 1998 (J.3379)
(6) Possible unauthorised disclosure of a
draft report of the Parliamentary Joint Committee on the National Crime
Authority – President gave precedence; motion moved by Senator McGauran and
agreed to 2 July 1998 (J.4162)
Action: Report tabled 9/12/98 (J. 360); findings
endorsed and recommendations adopted 15/2/99 (J.428).
Persons/organisations
involved:
- Parliamentary Joint Committee on Native
Title and the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Land Fund; Senator the
Hon. Nick Bolkus; the Hon. Daryl Williams; Mr Warren Entsch; Senator
the Hon. Nick Minchin.
- Parliamentary Joint Committee on Native
Title and the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Land Fund; Senator
Jeannie Ferris; Senator Eric Abetz; Senator the Hon. Nick Bolkus;
Mr D. Melham MP; Ms Margo Kingston; Ms Aban Contractor; Mr Jack
Waterford.
- Parliamentary Joint Committee on the
National Crime Authority; Senator Stephen Conroy; Senator Jeannie Ferris;
Senator Julian McGauran; Professor Jim Davis.
- Environment, Recreation, Communications
and the Arts References Committee; Senator the Hon. Chris Schacht; the
Hon. Michael Baume; Senator the Hon. Richard Alston; Mr Neville Stevens.
- Economics References Committee; Senator
Jacinta Collins; Senator George Campbell; other committee members and
staff.
- Parliamentary Joint Committee on the
National Crime Authority; Senator Jeannie Ferris; Senator Julian McGauran.
Resum: This report covers six separate instances
of unauthorised disclosure of Senate committee reports, proceedings or
documents. Having examined each of the matters referred, the Committee
concluded that it should also examine the underlying principles governing
improper disclosures. The Committee therefore devoted the first chapter to
examining the issues of principle, concluding that the existing prohibitions
should remain, while in the second chapter it discussed and made findings on
the individual matters referred to it.
(1) Two
documents from the Native Title Committee (NTC) secretariat relating to
contacts between the Committee and the Australian Law Reform Commission were
tabled in the House of Representatives on 22 October 1997 by the Attorney-General.
It was claimed that the NTC chair, a member of the House of Representatives,
had transmitted the documents without the authority of the NTC. The Committee
concluded that the second of the two documents had indeed been transmitted
without the authority of the NTC, though its attachments had been authorised
for release. It considered that the release was not particularly serious and,
in any event, the Committee could not make a finding of contempt against a
member of the House of Representatives.
Finding: No contempt of the Senate
committed.
(2) Before
the tabling of a report from the Native Title Committee (NTC) on the Native
Title Amendment Bill 1997, at least two newspapers gave accurate accounts of
its contents, and two members of the NTC, Mr Daryl Melham MP and Senator the
Hon. Nick Bolkus, held a televised press conference based on a minority report.
The Committee was unable to discover the source of the earlier disclosures of
the draft report to various news media, nor was it able to examine the actions
of Mr Melham as a participant in the
press conference.
Finding: Senator the Hon. Nick Bolkus committed a
contempt of the Senate
(3) On
23 October 1997 Senator Conroy responded in the adjournment debate to a matter
raised in the Senate concerning parliamentary privilege and the Joint Committee
on the National Crime Authority, quoting an opinion sought by the NCA Committee
from Professor Jim Davis, an opinion which had not at that time been authorised
for release but which supported the senator’s views on a contentious issue
within that committee. The Privileges Committee considered that Senator Conroy had been unwise to disclose the
document but that there had been no NCA Committee intention to suppress the
document.
Finding: No contempt of the Senate committed.
(4) In
a response dated 8 September 1997 to a question taken on notice in an estimates
hearing, the Department of Communications and the Arts advised that a draft of
the majority report on the Telstra sale bill by the Environment, Recreation,
Communications and the Arts References Committee had been found in the
department. On investigation, it appeared that the committee secretary had been
instructed by a member of the committee to provide successive drafts of the
minority report and the draft majority report to the minister’s office so that
the minister’s staff could assist government senators in the preparation of the
minority report and have access to departmental resources in doing so.
Finding: Unidentified officer, or officers, of the
Department of Communications and the Arts committed contempt of the Senate.
(5) On
7 December 1997 an article in the Weekend
Australian quoted from a draft report of the Economics References Committee
on promoting Australian industry. Committee members and secretariat advised
that they had no knowledge of how the draft report contents were disclosed. One
senator suggested that, as such documents were not always clearly stamped
‘confidential’, they could be inadvertently passed on or left lying in an open
area; he also suggested that briefings
on the handling of committee documents were required for new senators.
Finding: Unidentified person or persons who
disclosed draft report committed contempt of the Senate.
(6) An
article appeared in The Age on 6
April 1998, giving an accurate account of the outcome of the deliberations of
the National Crime Authority (NCA) Committee before its report evaluating the
NCA had been tabled. In this instance, the unauthorised disclosure did not
impede the work of the committee but placed the relationship of trust between
committee members in jeopardy.
Finding: Unidentified person or persons who
disclosed draft report likely to have committed contempt of the Senate.
Recommendations:
That no penalty be imposed in respect of any persons against whom a
contempt finding has been made; and that the question of authority to divulge
private deliberations and documents of committees be referred to the Procedure
Committee.
75. Execution of Search Warrants in
Senators’ Offices (PP No.52/99)
Reference: Deputy President, as Chair of the Senate
Procedure Committee, requested that the Privileges Committee consider the matter (1/12/98).
Action: Report tabled 22/03/99 (J.581);
recommendation adopted 25/03/99 (J.633).
Persons/organisations involved: Presiding Officers, Australian Federal
Police.
Resum: The committee considered the question
whether parliamentary privilege provides an immunity from legal processes for
compulsory production of documents and the significance of search warrants in
the context of this question. It did not reach a firm conclusion on the matter
but considered that general guidelines between the Australian Federal Police
and the Law Council of Australia in respect of legal professional privilege
could form the basis for developing comparable protocols between the Presiding
Officers and law enforcement authorities.
Recommendation: That the general guidelines between the
Australian Federal Police and the Law Council of Australia should form the
basis for discussion between the Presiding Officers and the Attorney-General
regarding the execution of search warrants in the offices of senators and
members.
- Parliamentary Privilege: Precedents,
Procedures and Practice in the Australian Senate 1966-1999 (PP No. 126/1999)
Action: Report
noted 26/8/99 (J.1585).
- Persons Referred to in the Senate
(Certain Faculty Members of Greenwich University)
(PP No.151/1999)
Reference: Referred by the President 27/5/99.
Action: Report tabled and adopted 28/6/99 (J.1350).
Persons/organisations
involved: Senator Kim Carr;
Greenwich University; Dr Claudine Jeanrenaud; Dr Carl E. Lindgren; Dr Lisa
A. Mertz; Dr Daniel W. Miller; Dr Francesco Patricolo; Dr C. Norman Shealy; Dr
Rick Walston and Dr John Walsh.
Resum: During the adjournment debate on 22 March
1999, Senator Kim Carr referred to the establishment of Greenwich University on
Norfolk Island and commented on the nature of the courses offered and the
qualifications of the faculty. In their responses, faculty members asserted that
they themselves, and the courses they offered, were academically sound.
Recommendation: That the response be incorporated in Hansard.
- Possible Improper Use of Proceedings of
Community Affairs References Committee
(PP No. 183/1999)
Reference: President
gave precedence to notice of motion; motion moved by Senator Crowley and agreed
to, 27/5/99 (J.947).
Action: Report tabled 1/9/99 (J.1626); findings
endorsed 23/9/99 (J.1739).
Persons/organisations
involved: Community Affairs
References Committee; Associate Professor Margaret Allars; Dr Frank Peters; Dr
Wes Whitten; Dr David Howes; the Hon. Dr Michael Wooldridge; Department of
Health and Family Services.
Resum: In its report on the Creutzfeldt-Jakob
Disease settlement offer, the Community Affairs References Committee
recommended, inter alia, that a review be undertaken by Professor Allars of
further scientific information, including that provided to the committee by Drs
Peters, Whitten and Howes. The review was undertaken and provided to the
minister, whose department provided copies to the committee, and to many other
interested persons before the committee had authorised publication. Dr Howes
complained to the committee that Professor Allars' review disparaged him and
reflected badly on his reputation. The department asserted that the review had
been undertaken for a Senate committee and
was thus covered by parliamentary privilege.
Findings: The committee did not make a finding with
respect to its first two terms of reference, namely whether committee witnesses
were injured in consequence of the evidence they gave the committee or whether
the proceedings of the committee were misused to harm them. It considered the
matters to be ones for scientific peer review to determine and beyond its
competence. In respect of the questions as to whether the proceedings of the
Community Affairs References Committee were misrepresented by the department
and whether the department published a document prepared for and submitted to a
parliamentary committee, the Privileges Committee found that no contempt was committed as the department was unsure of
the status of the review report and unaware of the need to obtain committee
authorisation to distribute it. The Privileges Committee criticised the department for its inadequate
understanding of parliamentary processes.
- Possibly False or Misleading Statements
Tabled in the Senate - Discontinuation of Inquiry (PP No. 196/1999)
Reference: President
determined precedence 6/5/97; motion moved by the Leader of the Opposition in the
Senate, Senator Faulkner, at the request of Senators Bolkus and Margetts, and
agreed to 7/5/97, though inquiry not to commence until conclusion of Australian
Federal Police investigations and any legal proceedings (J.1855-6).
Action: Report tabled 29/9/99 (J.1792); adopted
30/9/99 (J.1811).
Persons/organisations
involved: Senator Malcolm
Colston; Mrs C. Smith; Attorney-General; Australian Federal Police; Director of
Public Prosecutions.
Resum: Statements were tabled in the Senate on 24
March and 6 May 1997 relating to travel allowance payments to then Senat |