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Labor is promising a national anti-corruption commission with the power to hold public hearings and the ability to issue findings of fact and findings of corrupt conduct in public reports.
As with the government policy,the Labor model would not allow the new agency to determine criminal liability because this would be a matter to be referred to the Australian Federal Police or the Commonwealth Department of Public Prosecutions.
Senator Cash responded to the Prime Minister’s remarks by saying the government was committed to passing the Commonwealth Integrity Commission bill but Labor had ruled out support.
“Should the Labor Party decide to stop playing politics on this matter and agree to pass our legislation,we would be happy to work with them to ensure quick passage through the Parliament,” a spokesman for Senator Cash said.
Dr Haines introduced her bill to Parliament last year with a plan for a tougher agency that could hold public hearings and issue public findings in the same way as state agencies such as the Independent Commission Against Corruption in NSW and the Independent Broad-based Anti-corruption Commission in Victoria.
Liberal backbencher Bridget Archer crossed the floor last year to support Dr Haines bring on a debate on her bill,raising the prospect of another challenge to the government’s numbers if Dr Haines tried again.
Ms Archer,the member for Bass in northern Tasmania,toldThe Sydney Morning Herald andThe Age she remained determined to get an integrity commission established.
“You don’t stick your neck out that far to suddenly pull it back in,” Ms Archer said. “I want to see something happen.”
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Dr Haines,who represents Indi in northern Victoria,said she would try again to force a debate on the integrity commission after gaining support from Labor,the Greens and other crossbenchers last year.
”There is a majority right now in the House who want to see my bill debated,” she said.
“If the Prime Minister is fair dinkum about a debate on his bill,let him bring it on.”
South Australian independent senator Rex Patrick,who gained a majority in the Senate on the issue last year,challenged the government to add more sitting days to the parliamentary calendar to get the integrity commission established,saying it was more important than the argument over a Religious Discrimination Act.
“It is the government that drafts the sitting calendar and they can amend it to hold extra sitting weeks to deal with a federal ICAC,and I’m up for that,” said Senator Patrick.
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