“Bridget knows exactly what happens when you break ranks,but she fundamentally believes in the whole Menzies dictum of being a member of the Liberal Party,” she said after the votes.
“Many[other backbenchers] talk about working inside the tent,many of them posture around believing in things like an integrity commission. But when push comes to shove,they don’t do what the Liberal Party says it can always do and that’s cross the floor on any vote that they like.”
Ms Archer,who represents the marginal Tasmanian seat of Bass,said politics had got in the way of creating a federal integrity body despite broad agreement across the political spectrum that one was needed.
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“There’s no debate on the fact that we need one … and we shouldn’t be afraid to have the debate on what it looks like,” Ms Archer said.
She said there was a place in Parliament for partisanship and politics,but for “something as important as trust and confidence in elected officials,that’s not it”.
Prime Minister Scott Morrison promised a national integrity commission in 2018,taking it to the last federal election,but Parliament is still waiting for the introduction of legislation from Attorney-General Michaelia Cash. The government published a draft version of its planned laws just over a year ago and has been consulting on it since.