Treasury Laws Amendment (Fairer for Families and Farmers and Other Measures) Bill 2024 - Second Reading - Put the question
Passed by a small majority
No rebellions 85% attendance
Division last edited 29 days ago by mackay staff
The majority voted in favour of a motion to read the bill for a second time in the House of Representatives. In other words, they voted to agree with the main idea of the bill. This means they can now discuss it in more detail.
In his second reading speech, Fenner MP Andrew Leigh (Labor) explained that:
When Labor came to office, we asked former competition minister Dr Craig Emerson, one of Australia's best policy brains, to review the Food and Grocery Code of Conduct. Dr Emerson consulted broadly, and concluded that the code was not doing its job. As he noted, there were no penalties, and no formal complaints had been raised after the 2021-22 financial year. His report made 11 recommendations, and the government accepted all of them. The most important recommendation was that the Food and Grocery Code be made mandatory, with substantial penalties for more harmful breaches.
As Dr Emerson noted, what it really means is that the supermarkets will need to treat their suppliers in good faith. They must not abuse their superior bargaining power, the muscle that they have over smaller suppliers.
The government's intention is that penalties will apply principally to corporations—that is, to supermarkets themselves. Consistent with other industry codes, the bill provides for non-body corporate penalties. Breaches by non-bodies corporate are lower to provide a proportionate approach.
The bill will ensure penalties for treating suppliers poorly in breach of the code are not merely a cost of doing business. These are serious penalties. They are the highest corporate penalties under any industry code.
The bill provides that the maximum penalty that can be prescribed in the code will be the greater of $10 million, three times the value of the benefit gained from the contravening conduct, or 10 per cent turnover in the preceding 12 months.
Nobody rebelled against their party.
Party | Votes | |
---|---|---|
Australian Greens (100% turnout) | 4 Yes – 0 No | |
Adam Bandt Melbourne | Yes | |
Stephen Bates Brisbane | Yes | |
Max Chandler-Mather Griffith | Yes | |
Elizabeth Watson-Brown Ryan | Yes | |
Australian Labor Party (94% turnout) | 72 Yes – 0 No | |
Anne Aly Cowan | Yes | |
Michelle Ananda-Rajah Higgins | Yes | |
Jodie Belyea Dunkley | Yes | |
Chris Bowen McMahon | Yes | |
Tony Burke Watson | Yes | |
Matt Burnell Spence | Yes | |
Linda Burney Barton | Yes | |
Josh Burns Macnamara | Yes | |
Mark Butler Hindmarsh | Yes | |
Alison Byrnes Cunningham | Yes | |
Andrew Charlton Parramatta | Yes | |
Lisa Chesters Bendigo | Yes | |
Jason Clare Blaxland | Yes | |
Sharon Claydon Newcastle | Yes | |
Libby Coker Corangamite | Yes | |
Julie Collins Franklin | Yes | |
Pat Conroy Shortland | Yes | |
Mary Doyle Aston | Yes | |
Mark Dreyfus Isaacs | Yes | |
Justine Elliot Richmond | Yes | |
Mike Freelander Macarthur | Yes | |
Carina Garland Chisholm | Yes | |
Steve Georganas Adelaide | Yes | |
Andrew Giles Scullin | Yes | |
Patrick Gorman Perth | Yes | |
Luke Gosling Solomon | Yes | |
Julian Hill Bruce | Yes | |
Ed Husic Chifley | Yes | |
Stephen Jones Whitlam | Yes | |
Ged Kearney Cooper | Yes | |
Matt Keogh Burt | Yes | |
Peter Khalil Wills | Yes | |
Catherine King Ballarat | Yes | |
Madeleine King Brand | Yes | |
Tania Lawrence Hasluck | Yes | |
Jerome Laxale Bennelong | Yes | |
Andrew Leigh Fenner | Yes | |
Sam Lim Tangney | Yes | |
Zaneta Mascarenhas Swan | Yes | |
Kristy McBain Eden-Monaro | Yes | |
Emma McBride Dobell | Yes | |
Louise Miller-Frost Boothby | Yes | |
Brian Mitchell Lyons | Yes | |
Rob Mitchell McEwen | Yes | |
Daniel Mulino Fraser | Yes | |
Shayne Neumann Blair | Yes | |
Clare O'Neil Hotham | Yes | |
Alicia Payne Canberra | Yes | |
Graham Perrett Moreton | Yes | |
Fiona Phillips Gilmore | Yes | |
Tanya Plibersek Sydney | Yes | |
Sam Rae Hawke | Yes | |
Gordon Reid Robertson | Yes | |
Dan Repacholi Hunter | Yes | |
Amanda Rishworth Kingston | Yes | |
Tracey Roberts Pearce | Yes | |
Michelle Rowland Greenway | Yes | |
Joanne Ryan Lalor | Yes | |
Marion Scrymgour Lingiari | Yes | |
Bill Shorten Maribyrnong | Yes | |
Sally Sitou Reid | Yes | |
David Smith Bean | Yes | |
Anne Stanley Werriwa | Yes | |
Meryl Swanson Paterson | Yes | |
Susan Templeman Macquarie | Yes | |
Matt Thistlethwaite Kingsford Smith | Yes | |
Kate Thwaites Jagajaga | Yes | |
Maria Vamvakinou Calwell | Yes | |
Tim Watts Gellibrand | Yes | |
Anika Wells Lilley | Yes | |
Josh Wilson Fremantle | Yes | |
Tony Zappia Makin | Yes | |
Anthony Albanese Grayndler | Absent | |
Jim Chalmers Rankin | Absent | |
Cassandra Fernando Holt | Absent | |
Richard Marles Corio | Absent | |
Brendan O'Connor Gorton | Absent | |
Rebekha Sharkie Mayo Centre Alliance | Yes | |
Mark Coulton Parkes Deputy Speaker | No | |
Zali Steggall Warringah Independent | Yes | |
Zoe Daniel Goldstein Independent | No | |
Andrew Gee Calare Independent | No | |
Helen Haines Indi Independent | No | |
Monique Ryan Kooyong Independent | No | |
Allegra Spender Wentworth Independent | No | |
Kylea Tink North Sydney Independent | No | |
Andrew Wilkie Clark Independent | No | |
Russell Broadbent Monash Independent | Absent | |
Kate Chaney Curtin Independent | Absent | |
Dai Le Fowler Independent | Absent | |
Sophie Scamps Mackellar Independent | Absent | |
Bob Katter Kennedy Katter's Australian Party | Absent | |
Liberal National Party (100% turnout) | 0 Yes – 9 No | |
Angie Bell Moncrieff | No | |
Colin Boyce Flynn | No | |
Cameron Caldwell Fadden | No | |
Garth Hamilton Groom | No | |
Henry Pike Bowman | No | |
Phillip Thompson Herbert | No | |
Andrew Wallace Fisher | No | |
Andrew Willcox Dawson | No | |
Terry Young Longman | No | |
Liberal Party (82% turnout) | 0 Yes – 27 No | |
Karen Andrews McPherson | No | |
Bridget Archer Bass | No | |
Scott Buchholz Wright | No | |
David Coleman Banks | No | |
Warren Entsch Leichhardt | No | |
Paul Fletcher Bradfield | No | |
Ian Goodenough Moore | No | |
Andrew Hastie Canning | No | |
Alex Hawke Mitchell | No | |
Luke Howarth Petrie | No | |
Simon Kennedy Cook | No | |
Sussan Ley Farrer | No | |
Nola Marino Forrest | No | |
Melissa McIntosh Lindsay | No | |
Ted O'Brien Fairfax | No | |
Gavin Pearce Braddon | No | |
Melissa Price Durack | No | |
Rowan Ramsey Grey | No | |
James Stevens Sturt | No | |
Michael Sukkar Deakin | No | |
Angus Taylor Hume | No | |
Dan Tehan Wannon | No | |
Bert Van Manen Forde | No | |
Aaron Violi Casey | No | |
Jenny Ware Hughes | No | |
Rick Wilson O'Connor | No | |
Keith Wolahan Menzies | No | |
Peter Dutton Dickson | Absent | |
Julian Leeser Berowra | Absent | |
Zoe McKenzie Flinders | Absent | |
Tony Pasin Barker | Absent | |
Ross Vasta Bonner | Absent | |
Jason Wood La Trobe | Absent | |
National Party (100% turnout) | 0 Yes – 12 No | |
Sam Birrell Nicholls | No | |
Darren Chester Gippsland | No | |
Pat Conaghan Cowper | No | |
David Gillespie Lyne | No | |
Kevin Hogan Page | No | |
Barnaby Joyce New England | No | |
Michelle Landry Capricornia | No | |
David Littleproud Maranoa | No | |
Michael McCormack Riverina | No | |
Llew O'Brien Wide Bay | No | |
Keith Pitt Hinkler | No | |
Anne Webster Mallee | No | |
Milton Dick Oxley Speaker | Absent | |
Totals (89% turnout) | 78 Yes – 56 No |
Turnout is the percentage of members eligible to vote that did vote.