A bill is a proposal for a law or a change to an existing law. A bill becomes law (an Act) when agreed to in identical form by both houses of Parliament and assented to by the Governor-General.
Bills introduced to Parliament are scrutinised to make sure they meet certain standards and to consider whether they should be referred to a committee for further investigation. This can include feedback from stakeholders and the general public, and a report recommending potential improvements to the bill.
TOTAL RESULTS: 340
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- Date
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26 Mar 2024
- Chamber
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House of Representatives
- Status
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Act
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Portfolio
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Home Affairs
- Summary
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Amends the
Migration Act 1958
to: require non-citizens who are on a removal pathway and have exhausted all avenues to remain in Australia to cooperate with steps taken for the purpose of arranging their lawful removal from Australia; and make minor and technical amendments.
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- Date
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30 Nov 2023
- Chamber
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House of Representatives
- Status
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Act
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Portfolio
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Attorney-General
- Summary
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Amends the
Modern Slavery Act 2018
to establish the Australian Anti-Slavery Commissioner as an independent statutory office holder within the Attorney-General’s portfolio to provide an independent mechanism for victims and survivors, business and civil society to engage on issues and strategies to address modern slavery.
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- Date
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27 Nov 2023
- Chamber
-
House of Representatives
- Status
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Not Proceeding
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Sponsor
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TINK, Kylea, MP
- Summary
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Amends the
Migration Act 1958
to: prohibit the detention of minors; and introduce a 90-day limit on immigration detention which can only be extended in certain circumstances.
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- Date
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27 Nov 2023
- Chamber
-
House of Representatives
- Status
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Act
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Portfolio
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Home Affairs
- Summary
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Further to the
Migration Amendment (Bridging Visa Conditions) Act 2023
, which responded to the High Court’s judgement in NZYQ v Minister for Immigration, Citizenship and Multicultural Affairs & Anor
(S28/2023), the bill amends the Migration Act 1958
to: provide for additional conditions to be placed on bridging visas granted to non-citizens released from immigration detention; and clarify the authority for the collection and use of information gathered by an electronic monitoring device.
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- Date
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16 Nov 2023
- Chamber
-
House of Representatives
- Status
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Act
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Portfolio
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Home Affairs
- Summary
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Amends the
Migration Act 1958
and Migration Regulations 1994
in response to the High Court’s judgement in NZYQ v Minister for Immigration, Citizenship and Multicultural Affairs & Anor
(S28/2023) to provide for certain conditions to be placed on bridging visas granted to non-citizens released from immigration detention.
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- Date
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10 Aug 2023
- Chamber
-
House of Representatives
- Status
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Act
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Portfolio
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Special Minister of State
- Summary
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Amends the
Members of Parliament (Staff) Act 1984
to: implement certain recommendations of the review by the Department of Prime Minister and Cabinet in relation to the Act’s employment framework; and make amendments consequential on the establishment of the Parliamentary Workplace Support Service. Also makes consequential amendments to 18 Acts.
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- Date
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22 Jun 2023
- Chamber
-
Senate
- Status
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Not Proceeding
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Sponsor
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SMITH, Sen Dean
- Summary
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Amends the
Migration Act 1958
to: require persons entering Australia to respond to specified questions in relation to organ transplants outside Australia; provide for annual reporting requirements in relation to this information; and enable the minister to refuse to grant, or to cancel, a person’s visa if the minister reasonably suspects the person has been involved in conduct constituting an offence involving trafficking in human organs.
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- Date
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22 Jun 2023
- Chamber
-
House of Representatives
- Status
-
Act
-
Portfolio
-
Home Affairs
- Summary
-
Amends the:
Migration Act 1958
to: establish criminal offences and associated civil penalty provisions for a person who unduly influences, pressures or coerces a non-citizen to breach a work-related condition of their visa or accept an exploitative work arrangement to meet a work-related condition of their visa; enable the minister to prohibit certain employers from employing any additional non-citizens and introduce associated offence and civil penalty provisions; require the minister to publish certain information about a prohibited employer; increase and align the maximum criminal and civil penalties for current and proposed work-related and employer-sponsored related breaches; trigger the enforceable undertaking provisions in the Regulatory Powers (Standard Provisions) Act 2014
; provide for enforceable compliance notices where an officer suspects a contravention of a work or sponsorship-related offence or related provision; remove the criminal offence of breaching a work-related visa condition and insert an avoidance of doubt clause for remaining work-related offence provisions; and enable the Migration Regulations 1994
to prescribe matters the minister may, must or must not take into account when considering the exercise of the power to cancel visas on certain grounds.
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- Date
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13 Jun 2023
- Chamber
-
Senate
- Status
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Not Proceeding
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Sponsor
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HANSON-YOUNG, Sen Sarah
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- Date
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24 May 2023
- Chamber
-
House of Representatives
- Status
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Act
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Portfolio
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Home Affairs
- Summary
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Amends the
Migration Act 1958
to: require all cancellation-related documents to be given in writing and enable the regulations to prescribe methods for giving such documents; ensure that where the minister gives a document to a person and makes an error in doing so, the giving of the document is valid where the person actually receives the document and the document is taken to have complied with the content-related requirements where the minister has substantially complied with those content requirements and the error does not cause substantial prejudice to the person’s rights; and remove the prohibition on non-citizens who are nationals of two or more countries and certain other cohorts from making a valid application for a protection visa.
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Bills lists
All bills before Parliament for the current calendar year and details of their progress.

Parliamentary Library analysis of bills, including the purpose, background and key issues.

Parliament delegates the power to legislate so details of law can be changed quickly by others. These delegated laws are referred to as legislative instruments and can be overruled – disallowed – by Parliament.

Legislative instruments subject to a notice of motion to disallow. The progress and eventual outcome of any such notice is also recorded.

The introduction of a tariff proposal is the formal procedure for initiating the collection of customs and excise duties.

Bills referred to committees
To inquire and report views on the bill from organisations and individuals.
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