The most recent example of an MP being suspended was when former upper house leader and influential confidante to the Premier,Gavin Jennings,was suspended for months.
Shadow emergency services minister Tim Smith said acting Premier James Merlino had been briefed on the report when he was emergency services minister.
Shadow emergency services minister Tim Smith.Credit:Paul Jeffers
“The report was funded by taxpayers,and as taxpayers we have every right to read its recommendations to improve behaviour in our fire services,” Mr Smith said.
“If this Labor government has nothing to fear,then there is nothing to hide.
“Victorians deserve an open and transparent government – one that values accountability over cover-ups.”
University of Adelaide professor Greg Taylor,who has written a book on the Victorian constitution,said the powers of Parliament were entirely separate from the powers of the judiciary. Mr Taylor said it therefore did not matter that the document was suppressed by a court.
“If there’s a document within Victoria then the Victorian Parliament can demand its production and the government can table it,” he said.
“Parliamentary privilege covers anything that’s tabled.”
Mr Taylor said a government could argue that a document should not be tabled if it was cabinet-in-confidence or if it breached a person’s privacy – neither of which applies to the commission’s report.
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In March,The Age reported thata CFA employee was the victim of serious sexual assaults twice between 2003 and 2013 but received little support from the organisation.
Ms Garrett,who quit the cabinet as a result of the CFA episode,said on Wednesday that it was in the public interest for the report to see the light of day.
“I’d just like to make sure that women feel protected in the workplace so this is all part of that,” she told ABC Radio.
“Lots of workplaces have gone through this ... We’ve seen it in police,in[the ambulance service],in the military. This is a very well-worn path.”
The Victorian government this week defied a parliamentary request to release all the documents and health advice it relied on to impose a curfew during the second wave of the coronavirus pandemic.
Premier Daniel Andrews banned Melburnians from leaving their homes between 9pm and 5am in August as the state desperately tried to bring the outbreaks under control.
The Coalition’s leader in the upper house,David Davis,in September moved a motion in Parliament requiring the government to release the advice behind the decision to impose the curfew.
Ms Symes tabled five documents,but none revealed why the curfew – which was lifted in late September – had been necessary.
“The government has conducted a thorough and diligent search to identify the documents that may be relevant to the[Legislative] Council’s resolution,” Ms Symes wrote in her attached letter.
“It identified 11 documents that fall within the scope of the Council’s order. The government,on behalf of the Crown,makes a claim of executive privilege in relation to six of the documents in full,on the basis that their disclosure would be contrary to the public interest.”
Under parliamentary rules,the government is required to provide a copy of the documents,which it claims are covered by executive privilege,to the MP who moved the motion.