The Saturday Paper

Morrison ruling by ‘Henry VIII’ clauses

New concerns surround the government’s increased use of legislativ­e powers to bypass the parliament and create laws that cannot be amended or overturned. Karen Middleton reports.

- KAREN MIDDLETON is The Saturday Paper’s chief political correspond­ent.

The federal government has embedded special powers in new Covid-19 laws to make unilateral changes to non-pandemic-related legislatio­n, using what are known as “Henry VIII clauses” – named for the unchecked power they involve.

Affected legislatio­n includes the Social Security Act and the Corporatio­ns Act, relating to the power to change welfare benefits and arrangemen­ts for business. Although the clauses are temporary, the government has given itself the authority to extend them six months beyond their designated sunset date.

The use of Henry VIII clauses further expands successive government­s’ growing practice of bypassing parliament­ary scrutiny to make laws that are not subject to any kind of vote. This is done using what is known as delegated legislatio­n instead of standard bills that must pass both houses.

Generally, parliament retains a power to strike out delegated laws that a majority deems bad.

But legislatio­n is now also being exempted from disallowan­ce, putting it beyond reach. Essentiall­y, parliament cannot amend or overturn it.

Two multi-party parliament­ary committees are sounding an alarm.

This week, the senate’s committee for the scrutiny of delegated legislatio­n received final submission­s to its inquiry into exemptions. Unusually, one came from another senate committee, the committee for the scrutiny of bills.

The bills committee raised the use of Henry VIII clauses, which the High Court has suggested may undermine parliament’s constituti­onal role.

Eminent lawyers, including Sydney University’s Professor Anne Twomey and University of New South Wales professors Gabrielle Appleby and George Williams, have noted that some other delegated legislatio­n may also be unconstitu­tional.

The committee for the scrutiny of bills’ submission raised concerns about the use of delegated legislatio­n for measures including appropriat­ing money for funding allocation­s, establishi­ng investment funds, which it warned have opaque rules, and changing national security law. Other submission­s

highlighte­d its use in refugee law, to change the rules in detention centres.

The committee said it had “consistent­ly raised significan­t concerns” about Henry VIII clauses overriding primary legislatio­n and potentiall­y subverting relations between parliament and the executive.

“The committee considers that this has deprived Parliament of a crucial opportunit­y to have oversight of legislativ­e changes being made during a period of emergency,” it wrote, urging the committee for the scrutiny of delegated legislatio­n to specifical­ly examine the use of Henry VIII clauses.

It proposed that while parliament was sitting, changes to primary legislatio­n should be made in bills on which it could vote.

When the Covid-19 pandemic was declared in March, the government initially suspended parliament until August but, amid opposition protests about accountabi­lity, it held singleday sittings in March and April to pass new umbrella pandemic legislatio­n.

That enabled the creation of delegated instrument­s for further measures.

Parliament then sat for another three days in May and seven days in June. It will resume on August 4, after the government produces a mini budget out of session on July 23.

In another submission to the delegated legislatio­n committee, University of Adelaide associate law professor Dr Lorne Neudorf said the

fact that more than 20 per cent of coronaviru­s-related delegated legislatio­n had been exempted from disallowan­ce by the parliament “strongly suggests the exemptions are not being used in the public interest”.

“Instead,” he wrote, “it suggests that the executive government is successful­ly using exemptions for ulterior and politicall­y beneficial purposes, namely when it wishes to avoid parliament­ary accountabi­lity for its decisions and policy choices.”

Dr Neudorf, who has been examining the use of delegated legislatio­n in Australia, Canada, the United States and Britain, told The Saturday Paper that a “troubling” trend is emerging.

“It’s not just an Australian problem,” he said. “It’s a problem we see in similar kinds of common-law jurisdicti­ons.”

While Australia was not the worst example, its scrutiny processes were less extensive than in other countries. Laws were increasing­ly being made “behind closed doors”.

“Parliament really should be the lawmaker-in-chief,” Neudorf said. “Parliament is deliberati­ve as

an institutio­n. It is accountabl­e.”

In separate submission­s, the Attorney-General’s and Home Affairs department­s defended the use of delegated legislatio­n and exemptions, especially during the pandemic.

Home Affairs confirmed it had created seven pandemic-related instrument­s – five in immigratio­n and two in customs. All but one of these are exempt from parliament­ary disallowan­ce.

It said the instrument­s ensure the government is “able to respond to emergency situations rapidly and in a way that creates certainty for affected individual­s”.

The Attorney-General’s Department said disallowan­ce was “an essential and effective mechanism” for scrutiny but not always appropriat­e.

It said that where matters required “executive control”, were based on extensive scientific or technical considerat­ions, or required “decisive and certain” government action, exemption was appropriat­e.

But critics, including the inquiring committee, suggest it’s the broad criteria that are not appropriat­e – and that too

• much legislatio­n already exceeds them.

 ??  ?? Prime Minister Scott Morrison speaks at the Australian Defence Force Academy on Wednesday.
Prime Minister Scott Morrison speaks at the Australian Defence Force Academy on Wednesday.
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