Shortly after the vote,Ms Archer was called into a meeting with the Prime Minister,Treasurer Josh Frydenberg and Foreign Minister Marise Payne.
When asked about the meeting,Mr Morrison said it was “very positive and very encouraging”.
“Bridget and I are close colleagues and we have a very good friendship. I was pleased to be there with Senator Payne and Josh Frydenberg and to be there to support Bridget,” he told reporters.
But he rejected a question that suggested they had a “frank exchange” about Ms Archer’s views.
“That is not how I would describe it at all. It was a very warm and friendly and supportive meeting. Bridget is a close friend and colleague. And I wanted to ensure that she was being supported,” he said.
Ms Archer said the meeting was not a dressing down but nor was it entirely pastoral care. The discussion was frank and wide-ranging,not limited to the integrity commission issue.
She holds the most marginal Liberal seat in the country,and last Decembershe spoke out against any plans to send the cashless welfare card trials to Tasmania. She also was the first Liberal MP to announceshe would attend the Women’s March in Canberra,after former ministerial staffer Brittany Higgins went public with rape allegations.
Ms Archertweeted a clarification after a photo of her and Mr Frydenberg in Parliament went viral on Twitter,with users accusing the Treasurer of intimidating her after the vote.
“Thank you to my very good friend Josh Frydenburg (sic) who was checking on my welfare here. Reports that he was lecturing me are in no way true. He is a good person and was being very kind to me,” she tweeted.
The vote was won 66-63 the first time it was put,and 66-64 the second time,but was not carried due to a technicality in parliamentary laws that required an absolute majority of 76 votes to continue.
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Five Coalition senators also crossed the floor to support a One Nation bill to oppose vaccine mandates earlier in the week. Mr Morrison says he is pleased his team members speak their minds and stand up for what they believe in.
“I don’t lead a team of drones and warm bodies that I just move around in the Parliament,” he told reporters in Adelaide on Friday.
“I want people in my team to speak their mind. I am not afraid of that. I’m not afraid of members raising issues with me and being strong advocates on behalf of their community,I think that makes our government stronger.
“I am big enough to deal with that. My party is big enough to deal with that. Australia’s big enough to deal with that.”
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The Joint Committee on Human Rights,which is chaired by Victorian Nationals MP Anne Webster,considered a dispute over freedom of speech and Section 18C of the Racial Discrimination Act in a similar move over summer at the end of 2016 when Parliament could not agree on proposed changes.
The timing of the new referral suggests Parliament will resume on February 8 and could consider the report on the Religious Discrimination Bill delivered the Friday before that sitting.