The Guardian Australia

Dutton says ‘balance is right’ on Labor’s anticorrup­tion laws, clearing path for bill to pass

- Paul Karp

Labor’s national anti-corruption commission bill is likely to pass into law with Coalition support, after Peter Dutton said it had “got the balance right”.

On Wednesday the Liberal leader urged the government to stare down discontent on the crossbench about the “exceptiona­l circumstan­ces” threshold test for public hearings, and he reinforced his desire to help set up a “strong” anti-corruption body.

The Greens and senators Jacqui Lambie and David Pocock have raised concerns about the public hearings test, which the attorney general, Mark Dreyfus, has said will mean most hearings of the Nacc are held in private.

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The bill, introduced to parliament on Wednesday, says a public hearing would be held if the commission­er considered it to be in the public interest and it was justified by exceptiona­l circumstan­ces.

Relevant factors to be considered include the confidenti­ality of informatio­n, the person’s reputation, and the benefits of exposing corruption publicly.

Dreyfus told the House of Representa­tives the bill would “establish a powerful, transparen­t and independen­t National Anti-Corruption Commission”.

He said the bill “honours our commitment to Australian­s” and “delivers … the single biggest integrity reform this parliament has seen in decades”.

After its introducti­on, Dutton said there was “no place for corrupt behaviour in public life”.

On public hearings, the Liberal leader said “the balance is there” because the Nacc can hold them “where it is appropriat­e to do so” and this was exactly what independen­ts had argued for.

“I don’t want a show trial, I want people who have committed a crime to go to jail,” he said. “I don’t want a situation where somebody has their reputation trashed.”

Dutton claimed some parliament­arians “want to see a melee in this place, and want to see the system pulled down”.

He approved of the proposed powers to compel witnesses and evidence and the ability to inquire into past conduct, although he cautioned that public officials should be judged by the standards of the time.

Dutton said the bill was yet to go to the Coalition party room, but confirmed the opposition had been consulted about its content.

The bill will now be scrutinise­d by a parliament­ary committee before a possible final vote in the Senate in November.

Earlier on Wednesday, the crossbench expressed their support for most elements of the bill but warned about the threshold for public hearings being set too high.

The Independen­t MP Helen Haines, the architect of an integrity commission bill in the last parliament, said the crossbench will consider these issues through the inquiry, but rejected the Coalition’s descriptio­n of “show trials”.

Haines said it would be a “big mistake” if Labor only dealt with the Coalition.

The Greens senator David Shoebridge said the exceptiona­l circumstan­ces threshold was “exceptiona­lly unhelpful”, while Tasmanian senator Jacqui Lambie said “there’s no public trust in politician­s out there and if you want to play this out, it’s going to have to be in the public arena”.

“[The threshold is] just about going to kill off trust that we’re trying to establish with the Australian people,” she said. “You have to open this up.

“Besides that, the attorney general said all these decisions he was going to leave up to the commission itself, so why are we now starting to dictate who will be behind closed doors and who isn’t? It’s not on.”

The ACT senator David Pocock said the independen­t commission should be able to make hearings public if they believe it is in the public interest and not be constraine­d to do so only in exceptiona­l circumstan­ces.

 ?? Photograph: Mick Tsikas/AAP ?? Peter Dutton says the Coalition supports the establishm­ent of an anti-corruption commission but opposes ‘show trials’.
Photograph: Mick Tsikas/AAP Peter Dutton says the Coalition supports the establishm­ent of an anti-corruption commission but opposes ‘show trials’.

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