Customs Amendment (Comprehensive and Progressive Agreement for Trans-Pacific Partnership Implementation) Bill 2018 and another - Second Reading - Change approach to trade agreem...
Not passed by a small majority
No rebellions 96% attendance
Division last edited 1st Feb 2019 by mackay staff
The majority voted against an amendment introduced by Senator Sarah Hanson-Young, which means it failed.
Senator Hanson-Young explained her amendment:
this amendment ensures that any need for funds to fight an ISDS clause would have to come before the parliament. It also ensures that there is proper transparency around how taxpayer funds are being spent in defending our sovereignty and our laws and regulations against multinationals. Given we now have a TPP agreement with locked-in ISDS provisions, it is absolutely essential that the Australian people know what this is costing us and what the impact is, and that transparency prevails. This is about ensuring that the government can't paper over what they've just agreed to; that the Labor Party, either in opposition or in government, can't pretend that this isn't having a chilling effect; and that taxpayer money being spent on it is accounted for, and sunlight is shone in places where, we know, both sides of this place would prefer it not to be.
The bill was introduced along with another to implement the Comprehensive and Progressive Agreement for Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP-11). Their basic purpose is to implement the customs dimensions of the TPP-11 Agreement by making relevant amendments to the Customs Act 1901 and the Customs Tariff Act 1995. Read more in the bills digest.
(1) Clause 2, page 2 (cell at table item 2, column 2), omit the cell, substitute:
If the Comprehensive and Progressive Agreement for Trans-Pacific Partnership, done at Santiago, Chile on 8 March 2018, enters into force for Australia —the first day that another Act is in force that includes provisions with the effect that Australia must not defend an action brought against Australia under an investor-state dispute settlement provision of any treaty unless the Parliament has agreed to the defence.
However, the provisions do not commence at all unless all of the events mentioned in this item occur.
Nobody rebelled against their party.
Party | Votes | |
---|---|---|
Cory Bernardi SA Australian Conservatives | Absent | |
Australian Greens (89% turnout) | 8 Yes – 0 No | |
Richard Di Natale Victoria | Yes | |
Mehreen Faruqi NSW | Yes | |
Sarah Hanson-Young SA | Yes | |
Nick McKim Tasmania | Yes | |
Janet Rice Victoria | Yes | |
Rachel Siewert WA | Yes | |
Larissa Waters Queensland | Yes | |
Peter Whish-Wilson Tasmania | Yes | |
Jordon Steele-John WA | Absent | |
Australian Labor Party (40% turnout) | 0 Yes – 10 No | |
Kim Carr Victoria | No | |
Alex Gallacher SA | No | |
Kristina Keneally NSW | No | |
Chris Ketter Queensland | No | |
Kimberley Kitching Victoria | No | |
Malarndirri McCarthy NT | No | |
Claire Moore Queensland | No | |
Louise Pratt WA | No | |
David Smith ACT | No | |
Glenn Sterle WA | No | |
Catryna Bilyk Tasmania | Absent | |
Carol Brown Tasmania | Absent | |
Doug Cameron NSW | Absent | |
Anthony Chisholm Queensland | Absent | |
Jacinta Collins Victoria | Absent | |
Patrick Dodson WA | Absent | |
Don Farrell SA | Absent | |
Gavin Marshall Victoria | Absent | |
Jenny McAllister NSW | Absent | |
Deborah O'Neill NSW | Absent | |
Helen Polley Tasmania | Absent | |
Lisa Singh Tasmania | Absent | |
Anne Urquhart Tasmania | Absent | |
Murray Watt Queensland | Absent | |
Penny Wong SA | Absent | |
Centre Alliance (100% turnout) | 2 Yes – 0 No | |
Stirling Griff SA | Yes | |
Rex Patrick SA | Yes | |
Nigel Scullion NT Country Liberal Party | Absent | |
Derryn Hinch Victoria Derryn Hinch's Justice Party | No | |
Sue Lines WA Deputy President | No | |
Steve Martin Tasmania Independent | Absent | |
Tim Storer SA Independent | Absent | |
Fraser Anning Queensland Katter's Australian Party | Yes | |
David Leyonhjelm NSW Liberal Democratic Party | No | |
Liberal National Party (50% turnout) | 0 Yes – 1 No | |
James McGrath Queensland | No | |
Matthew Canavan Queensland | Absent | |
Liberal Party (48% turnout) | 0 Yes – 11 No | |
Eric Abetz Tasmania | No | |
David Bushby Tasmania | No | |
Richard Colbeck Tasmania | No | |
Jonathon Duniam Tasmania | No | |
David Fawcett SA | No | |
Concetta Fierravanti-Wells NSW | No | |
Jane Hume Victoria | No | |
Jim Molan NSW | No | |
Linda Reynolds WA | No | |
Dean Smith WA | No | |
Amanda Stoker Queensland | No | |
Simon Birmingham SA | Absent | |
Slade Brockman WA | Absent | |
Michaelia Cash WA | Absent | |
Mathias Cormann WA | Absent | |
Mitch Fifield Victoria | Absent | |
Lucy Gichuhi SA | Absent | |
Ian Macdonald Queensland | Absent | |
James Paterson Victoria | Absent | |
Marise Payne NSW | Absent | |
Anne Ruston SA | Absent | |
Zed Seselja ACT | Absent | |
Arthur Sinodinos NSW | Absent | |
National Party (33% turnout) | 0 Yes – 1 No | |
Bridget McKenzie Victoria | No | |
Barry O'Sullivan Queensland | Absent | |
John Williams NSW | Absent | |
Pauline Hanson's One Nation Party (100% turnout) | 2 Yes – 0 No | |
Peter Georgiou WA | Yes | |
Pauline Hanson Queensland | Yes | |
Scott Ryan Victoria President | Absent | |
Brian Burston NSW United Australia Party | Absent | |
Totals (51% turnout) | 13 Yes – 26 No |
Turnout is the percentage of members eligible to vote that did vote.