The Gold Coast Bulletin

‘No evidence’ LGBTQI students being expelled

- CATIE MCLEOD

SCOTT Morrison has claimed there is “no evidence” of gay students being expelled from schools because of their sexuality as he defended his renewed push for religious discrimina­tion reforms.

The Prime Minister has said a re-elected Morrison government would pursue contentiou­s changes to the religious discrimina­tion act (RDA) to enhance religious freedoms without making changes to the sex discrimina­tion act (SDA) to protect gay students at the same time.

Mr Morrison came under fire during a press conference in Melbourne on Sunday as reporters raised concerns that changing the RDA on its own could leave young Australian­s open to harm.

Mr Morrison said there would be a “sequential” change made to the SDA but he refused to put a timeline on when the greater protection­s for gay students would be introduced.

Asked how these students would be protected in the interim, Mr Morrison pushed back against suggestion­s

LGBTQI people experience­d discrimina­tion at religious schools.

“And on education it has been presented, students are being expelled each and every day, apparently, each and every week and each and every year. There is no evidence of that at all,” he said.

“What I’m saying is (it’s) not like they don’t need to be protected. No, what I am saying is there is no evidence because religious schools themselves don’t wish to do that. They don’t wish to do it.”

Mr Morrison said the RDA reforms were about ensuring people of religious faith were not discrimina­ted against, saying they had no current protection­s.

He was asked what guarantee he could give to gay students that he wouldn’t send the proposed changes to a parliament­ary law reform review — which could stall the legislatio­n by up to 12 months.

Mr Morrison responded by saying: “I don’t think you are across the legislatio­n” to which the reporter replied: “I think I am”.

Mr Morrison promised to make the changes to the RDA before the 2019 election, which the Coalition said would better protect faith communitie­s from discrimina­tion.

But earlier this year he failed in his attempt to amend the RDA and the sex discrimina­tion act concurrent­ly in a bid to assuage moderates’ concerns about gay students being expelled on the basis of their sexuality.

The Morrison government shelved the package of laws after five moderate Liberal MPs crossed the floor of parliament and sided with Labor over the proposed RDA amendments.

Paediatric­ian Katie Allen was one of those five MPs who revolted and on Sunday signalled she would do the same again. Dr Allen said her position remained “unchanged”.

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