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NZCPR
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Steve
Fielding
13
September 2009
Who
holds the New Zealand Government to account?
Who
holds the New Zealand Government to account? The voters? The
press? Both might be formidable forces during an election but
sadly they seem to lose influence over politicians once they
are appointed.
Permanent
accountability can exist when an upper house of parliament is
established. Australia’s Parliament is based on a two-house
system. The House of Representatives is controlled by the
government. This is where legislation is first introduced and
is passed because of the government majority. But in order for
the legislation to become law in Australia it needs to pass
another test – that of the Senate.
Democratically
elected and with full legislative power, the Australian Senate
is generally considered to be the most powerful legislative
upper chamber in the world after the United States Senate. The
Senate mix is different after every election, but more often
than not the government of the day does not hold the majority
in this house. It therefore relies on the support of minor
parties and independents to pass its legislation. This creates
an environment where the government is accountable for every
policy and piece of legislation it introduces to the
Parliament, protecting the interests of true democracy.
When
Australia’s Senate is working effectively it functions as a
house of review. The Senate scrutinises and refines
legislation and policies the government puts forward. Because
legislation doesn’t always have easy passage in the Senate,
the government often negotiates and consults with minor
parties in an effort to win their vote. This renders an
incredible amount of influence to minor parties and
independent Senators in Australian politics. The Senate system
gives smaller players in the political system a bigger voice
so power doesn’t rest with the big parties alone. They have
the power to uphold or overturn legislation, making their vote
crucial.
I
have been a Senator for four years and I am a true believer in
the Senate system. I consider governments with too much power
and too little accountability risky. During my time in the
Senate I have used my vote to overturn what I believed to be
poor policy from the government. In 2006 my vote defeated the
previous government’s proposed harsher asylum seeker laws,
which included booting families seeking refugee status
offshore for indefinite periods of time. On another big issue,
my vote in support of the Howard Government that same year
ensured abolishing compulsory student unionism at universities
because I believe expensive fees for university extras such as
crèche and sporting events should not be forced on every
student if they don’t use them.
More
recently my vote was used to block a budget legislation to
increase luxury car tax because it meant farmers and tourism
operators would be slugged for purchasing vehicles they need
not for luxury, but to earn a living. The law was eventually
passed after I negotiated with the government for an exemption
for farmers and tourism operators.
One
of the most significant pieces of legislation I have voted on
to date is the government’s emissions trading scheme (ETS),
introduced last month to reduce Australia’s carbon dioxide
emissions. What the ETS really is, is a multi-billion dollar
tax on businesses and on Australian working families. This tax
will need to be paid by someone and it will be millions of
ordinary Australians who will end up footing the bill. It will
hurt industries across the entire economy and lead to
thousands of hard-working Australians losing their jobs in the
middle of a global recession. And all of this could occur
because of policy being rushed through parliament before we
know what the rest of the world is doing at Copenhagen later
this year. I also have concerns about what is actually driving
climate change.
You
see, until recently I like most people simply accepted without
question the notion that climate change was a result of
increased carbon dioxide emissions. That was until somebody
asked me a question I could not answer. W
hen I was told that
carbon dioxide emissions have gone up rapidly since 1995 but
global temperatures have not increased as predicted, I was
left dumbfounded. How could I, as a Federal Senator, vote for
legislation that will carry with it such a high price yet not
answer such a simple question?
To
hear the other side of the argument I spoke to a cross-section
of scientists in Australia and even went on a self-funded trip
to Washington to investigate further the science and facts
behind climate change. I quickly began to understand that the
science on this issue was by no means conclusive. I heard
views which challenged the Rudd Government’s set of
‘facts’. Views which could not be dismissed as mere
conspiracy theories, but which were derived using proper
scientific analysis.
I
met with the government and asked them three simple questions
that I believe went to the heart of the climate change debate.
Three questions which I believed needed to be answered if they
expected me to vote in support of their legislation. Three
questions which remain unanswered to a satisfactory level.
Then
Al Gore visited Australia. So, I thought to myself if I
couldn’t get answers from the government, surely I could get
them from the climate change preacher. Despite a series of
phone calls and a lot of coverage in the press, Mr Gore would
not meet with me. Here was the great climate change crusader
running away over a few simple questions.
I
have written to every Senator urging them to look at the
material I have sourced from reputable scientists and ask them
the key question – what is driving climate change? If they
can’t answer that simple question they shouldn’t be voting
for an ETS. This is the biggest economic decision in this
country’s history, one which is too important to vote along
party lines.
The
Rudd Government’s climate change bill was defeated by the
Senate earlier this month but is expected to be re-introduced
later this year. I am happy to fight the lone battle in the
Senate until those Senators who are honest with themselves
break party lines. And I am grateful that Australia has a
Senate which gives me the freedom to do so.
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