The amendment,confirmed by Mr Morrison on Thursday,represents a significant departure from the government’s public position until now. Originally,the Coalition insisted the best avenue for addressing the potential repeal of the Sex Discrimination Act exemptions was through a 12-month review process by the Australian Law Reform Commission after the passage of the Religious Discrimination Bill.
Instead,moderate Liberal MPs Dave Sharma,Katie Allen,Fiona Martin and Angie Bell are pushing for the provision to be immediately scrapped. Mr Morrison has agreed to amend the law but the details of how that is done are still being worked out.
Mr Morrison revealed the amendment in a radio interview on Thursday,in which he opposed the decision by Brisbane school Citipointe Christian College to issue contracts requiring students to agree to specific gender roles and denounce homosexuality or face expulsion.The school has since withdrawn the contracts.
“My kids go to a Christian school here in Sydney,and I wouldn’t want my school doing that either,” Mr Morrison told Brisbane’s B105.3 radio.
“And the bill that we’re going to be taking through the Parliament,we will have an amendment which will deal with that to ensure that the kids cannot be discriminated against on that basis.”
The flagged amendment comes ahead of the release on Friday of reports by two parliamentary inquiries into the Religious Discrimination Bill. Government sources,speaking on the condition of anonymity,said the amendment related to section 38(3) of the Sex Discrimination Act but could not confirm whether it involved the full repeal of the section. The section gives church schools a legal exemption to discriminate against students on the basis of sexual orientation and gender identity,including by expelling them,if it is done “in good faith in order to avoid injury to the religious susceptibilities of adherents” of the religion.
The move represents an attempt by the Prime Minister to broker a pathway for the Religious Discrimination Bill’s passage in the next sitting fortnight after the moderate grouprenewed a push for the exemption to be scrapped following the actions of Citipointe Christian College. The delicate nature of the balance of power in Federal Parliament means Liberal and National MPs prepared to abstain or cross the floor can significantly influence whether the government brings legislation on for a vote.