Anna Chang
So a follow up to last week’s sitting when the Coalition, the Greens and most of the crossbench (from David Pocock to Babet) banded together to agree to Senator Bragg’s motion for a ministerial explanation on the first home buyers scheme, for failure to comply with orders for the production of documents and gave the Minister a slap on the wrist, which culminated in this:
“until the Senate resolves that orders for the production of documents nos 27 and 119 have been satisfactorily complied with, the Minister representing the Minister for Housing be required to attend the Senate at the start of proceedings on the first day of each sitting week to provide an explanation, of no more than 5 minutes, of the failure to fully comply with the orders.”
So here we are: Senator Tim Ayres, explaining:
“Thank you, Acting Deputy President. This motion concerns two separate and distinct orders for production of documents.
“The first, OPD 27 sought advice relating to the 5% deposit scheme, as Minister O’Neill made clear at the time of response in November 2025 the Government made public interest immunity claims only over documents which would reveal cabinet deliberations or otherwise prejudice relations between the Commonwealth and the States. These are well-established and not novel grounds.
“Governments, you know, not just recently, but since the advent of Westminster governments with cabinet processes have made it clear that production of these kinds of documents would impinge upon the freedom of deliberation of the cabinet and would not be in the public interest.
“The second OPD 119 was responded to similarly, in 2025 all documents in the scope of the order were produced laying out in black and white precisely what the order sought.
“It is completely disingenuous and an abuse of one of the Senate’s most serious powers, just like the performance that we observed a few minutes ago to continue to seek compliance on the production of documents in relation to orders which have already been provided, particularly by grouping together two unrelated orders, and what that demonstrates is a couple of things from this Opposition…“
TL;DR, Senator Ayres says they did produce the documents.
Senator Andrew Bragg’s main reply is a bit of an Opposition Talking Point sandwich, but the crux of it is that the documents were heavily redacted, it doesn’t count.:
“I take note of the Minister’s explanation, if you could call that, and I make the point that six times the Senate has sought the production of these documents, and sure, I mean, I can make an argument that a document has been provided, but if it’s redacted in the main, as these documents have been, where almost everything on the sheet of paper is covered up, then it’s hardly complying with the order…
“…It is not a credible response to say to this Parliament, ‘we have provided to you a document which is completely redacted and is not readable.’ Documents that have been provided in relation to the 5% deposits are unreadable. They are unreadable, and that is why for six occasions we have asked for these documents to be provided, and that is why the Senate has compelled this Minister to provide the answer, and we will not stop until those pieces of information are provided, because that is our job.”
Senator Barbara Pocock for the Greens backs in Bragg and the Coalition on this one:
“Well, until the Senate agrees that OPDs 27 and 119 have been complied with, Minister Ayres is going to have to keep showing up at start of every sitting week and attempt to explain why.
“The Minister says we are confused, we are not confused. You have not complied, Minister, with what was sought and we are clear-eyed in a housing crisis the Senate deserves information we’ve been here many times before asking for this information we still don’t have it.
“Senator Bragg‘s OPD no 27 asked for two things: it asks for any advice provided by the Treasury and the Minister for Housing since 1 January 2025 in relation to the HAFF, and to construct 100,000 new homes for first home buyers.
“Second, it asks for any advice provided by the Treasury to the Treasurer and the Minister for Housing since 1 January 2025 in relation to the Government’s plan to enable first home buyers to purchase a home with a 5% deposit.
“This information was first requested in July last year. And what did the Senate receive? Two emails, that’s it. And one of these emails, just a list of options for names for the Government’s commitment to build 100,000 homes. That is not advice.
“The Senate has then further agreed to nine further motions concerning the minister’s failure to comply with the orders, rejecting a public interest immunity claim and requiring the minister to attend the Senate to explain the failure to comply with the order on five separate occasions. This is just not good enough.
“We are in a very serious housing crisis. I am holding hearings around the country with other Senators, looking at the inequity that this housing crisis presents intergenerationally…”
Senator Deb O’Neill then gets up to run more defence for the Government:
“..,every time an unreasonable request for documents is put to the chamber and put to the public servants, that’s time they’re spending getting paperwork together to satisfy some sort of ego maniacal requirement for every single document that’s ever been written.”
And is forced to withdraw ‘ego maniacal’.
Comments (11)
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shoe
Mon, 29.06.26
16.45 AEST
Dean Smith is right, it’s a problem that parties without a majority of the vote can get all the power Skye Predavec You'd be forgiven for tuning out of Parliament after Question Time finished last Thursday, but Liberal Senator Dean Smith raised a great point... The Point Live
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Gregory Shearman
Mon, 29.06.26
16.01 AEST
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Chris G
Mon, 29.06.26
15.03 AEST
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Richard
Mon, 29.06.26
16.14 AEST
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Sam
Mon, 29.06.26
15.00 AEST
And again Here we go again: Does the minister know how many first home buyers now owe more money than their home is worth? Clare O'Neil is annoyed: Speaker,... The Point Live
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Michael Cowan
Mon, 29.06.26
14.52 AEST
Coalition now pretending first homes are a short term purchase. Or something. Because my god. This is what their tactics team have come up with: My question is to the Minister for Housing: Last week the minister... The Point Live
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Sam
Mon, 29.06.26
14.17 AEST
Question time begins First there are welcomes to the prime minister of Vanuatu PM Jotham Napat and his delegation on the floor of parliament. Angus Taylor is endorsing... The Point Live
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Richard
Mon, 29.06.26
10.17 AEST
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Sam
Mon, 29.06.26
09.16 AEST
Australia refusing to commit to incarcerated children reforms Human Rights Watch says the Albanese government has only accepted 128 of the 332 recommendations it received from the UN Human Rights Council in response... The Point Live
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Gregory Shearman
Mon, 29.06.26
10.46 AEST
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Sam
Mon, 29.06.26
12.29 AEST
Join the conversation
this is such bad faith, we are in preferential system, so a winning candidate has to be preferred by a majority of the electorate, if you were reading this you'd think we were in FPTP hell. not to mention we already have a proportional parliament that allows minor parties to hold the rest of the country hostage - its called the senate
I suspected something from the supine government on the PBS after reading about Trump complaining that people in other countries aren't paying enough for their medicine. What an effing nerve! I suspect a vapid origami fold by the government, acceding to anything Trump wants, in order to bolster AUKUS.
It is worrying for me that a medication that I need to take for the rest of my life in order to avoid epileptic seizures could end up setting me back hundreds a month.
Sadly, I've not much faith in this government and even less faith in any other government to the right of Labor.
You have to wonder about some of these same questions the Opposition is asking.Are they just asking for the sake of something to ask because the Tax Payers aren’t getting value for money from the wages they are paying these politicians.
The Opposition has some sort of 'tactics team' thing, where at the start of every week a few (very few..) buzzwords are generated for the MP's to harp on like some sort of monotone drill rap assault.
Very few buzzwords - the party tacticians have to work with an assembly that has the memory of a goldfish -though not the charms or smarts. A palette of more than about three keywords would throw the Members into a cathartic meltdown
So the Coalition admits they wanted to keep house prices inflated?
Describing it as a "tactics team" is being generous; more aptly a "distracting team".
This tactic is a rerun of the $275 power price reduction question.
Lol, Coalition courting PHON and have the audacity to talk about women's rights
Pelicans are great creatures and probably will, in time, forgive Paul Hogan for comparing them to Pauline Hanson. But hey, a shout out to Paul Hogan for overcoming his same initials and calling Hanson out for what she is.
Very disappointing. People seem to think no criminal responsibility=no intervention . Juvenile Justice costs a fortune and doesn't deliver very good results. It might make some politicians feel strong but punching down on Australia's disadvantaged kids isn't something anyone should be proud of.
The people calling for "tougher" police and judicial solutions to juvenile crime don't even think that any kids that go into prison will be released eventually. If they're neglected, beaten, raped or subjected to isolation or drugs then when they're released, they will be more likely to commit further crimes.
Treat 'em nice. A fair few of them will respond well and will be saved.. a win for all of us.
Unfortunately, statistically speaking, many juvenile offenders already experience some or all of those things prior to being incarcerated.
Of course they don't respect the law - their going to jail for often disruptive but many repeat minor offences whilst their abusers suffer no consequences.