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As it happened: Scott Morrison’s ally launches broadside ahead of parliamentary rebuke; Nationals to oppose Indigenous Voice to parliament

Broede Carmody, Angus Thompson and Michaela Whitbourn
Updated ,first published

The day in review

By Michaela Whitbourn

Good evening and thank you for reading our live coverage of the day’s events. If you’re just joining us now, here’s a wrap of the major headlines today.

Bridget Archer and Scott Morrison in May this year.James Brickwood
  • Morrison was appointed to five additional ministries between March 2020 and May 2021: Health; Finance; Industry, Science, Energy and Resources; Treasury; and Home Affairs. There was no announcement to parliament or the public. Former High Court justice Virginia Bell said in a report last week that “the secrecy with which the appointments had been surrounded was corrosive of trust ... in government”.
  • Opposition leader Peter Dutton has described the censure motion as an “opportunistic swipe”.
Alex Hawke and Scott Morrison on Monday.Rhett Wyman

‘We want freedom’: How China’s protesters navigate censorship

By Eryk Bagshaw

China’s sophisticated state security apparatus uses cameras, artificial intelligence and blockades to stop most dissent from ever germinating.

But its protesters have taken lessons from Hong Kong’s pro-democracy movement on how to navigate the government’s labyrinth of censorship. Now, they are demanding an end to its COVID-zero policy and condemning its crackdown on freedom of speech.

A protester holds up a sign in Beijing on Sunday.AP

“We don’t want lockdowns, we want freedom,” protesters sang in Shanghai on Sunday, repeating the slogans of “Bridge Man”, the lone dissident who unfurled a banner from Beijing’s Sitong Bridge in October.

“We don’t want to be slaves, we want to be citizens.”

Liberal MP surprised by Nationals’ opposition to Indigenous Voice

By Angus Thompson

Federal Liberal backbencher Bridget Archer also said she was surprised the Nationals had announced their opposition to the Indigenous Voice to parliament.

“Certainly the Liberal party room has not made a decision yet and is looking to take more of a wait-and-see approach,” Archer told ABC television.

“Also for me personally, I am very open-hearted and open-minded about the discussion and, indeed, I am part of a group for the Uluru Statement.

“I was surprised that they have come out so soon, and with a ‘no’ position, and obviously it has caused some consternation amongst their own ranks as well.”

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Liberal backbencher confirms support for Morrison censure

By Angus Thompson

Federal Liberal backbencher Bridget Archer has confirmed she will support the censure motion against former prime minister Scott Morrison over his secret ministries, saying it would be an “act of hypocrisy” to do anything else.

Archer confirmed her stance on ABC television this afternoon, adding she would also like to speak to it if given the opportunity.

Bridget Archer, left, and Member for Wentworth Allegra Spender in parliament earlier this month.Alex Ellinghausen

As reported earlier today, the Albanese government will move tomorrow to censure Morrison over his multiple secret ministries.

Morrison was appointed to five additional ministries between March 2020 and May 2021: Health; Finance; Industry, Science, Energy and Resources; Treasury; and Home Affairs.

Voice plan would divide the country: Nationals senator

By Michaela Whitbourn, Lisa Visentin and Angus Thompson

Nationals senator Bridget McKenzie has issued a defence of her party’s refusal to back the Indigenous Voice to parliament, claiming it is “scantily detailed by the Labor Party” and will divide the country.

Nationals senator Bridget McKenzie.James Brickwood

Speaking on ABC Melbourne radio today, McKenzie said she was listening to “Indigenous Australians on the conservative side of politics” and to “local MPs who are talking to their communities”.

I find it, you know, passing strange ... that rather than take the lived experience of [Country Liberal Party senator] Jacinta Nampijinpa Price, who is a conservative Indigenous senator and actually appreciate her voice and her experience, what we’re actually talking about here is quite tabloid issues rather than going to the heart of this conversation, which is about a voice to Parliament that lacks detail.

We don’t want to see our country divided by race and we don’t think this particular issue will shift the dial when it comes to changing the experience of particularly rural and regional and remote Aboriginal Australians.

A constitutionally enshrined advisory body to Parliament based solely on a person’s race is the antithesis of the values the National Party articulate.

Indigenous leader and lawyer Noel Pearson was highly critical of Price’s influence in the Nationals party room on ABC radio earlier today, saying she had been caught up in a “tragic redneck celebrity vortex” fuelled by right-wing think tanks who were using her as a “blackfella to punch down on other blackfellas”. The Nationals Party announced today that it would not support the government’s Voice proposal.

Chevron Australia reveals widespread workplace bullying and harassment

By Peter Milne

Chevron Australia has said it is determined to take meaningful action after a report found many workers in the US multinational’s West Australian gas business had experienced harassment, bullying or discrimination.

Almost half of the workers surveyed by consultancy Intersection had been bullied at work in the past five years, nearly a third experienced sexual harassment and almost as many had been harassed in other ways, according to an independent report released today.

The report found workers were loath to report incidents after successive waves of job cuts have left them fearful of speaking up.

Chevron Australia managing director Mark Hatfield issued an apology today.Trevor Collens

Bullies most commonly humiliated their coworkers, undermined their work and continually and unjustly criticised their work.

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Coalition senator condemns ‘ugly’ attacks after Voice opposition

By Lisa Visentin

Country Liberal Party Senator Jacinta Nampijinpa Price has issued a lengthy statement in response to Noel Pearson’s interview on ABC Radio National this morning, in which the Indigenous leader condemned her opposition to the Indigenous Voice to parliament.

“It doesn’t take long for nasty to rear its ugly head,” Price said in the statement. “I am no stranger to attacks from angry men who claim to speak on behalf of Aboriginal Australia.

Country Liberals Senator Jacinta Nampijinpa Price.Alex Ellinghausen

“It’s not hard to see why as an Aboriginal woman I have reservations about enshrining an idea that lacks detail into our parliament that has the potential to empower bullies like those I have encountered over the years.”

Nationals leader David Littleproud announced on Monday the party would formally oppose the Voice, saying it wanted to empower Aboriginal people at a local level, “not create another layer of bureaucracy here in Canberra”.

WA responds to report on sexual harassment in mining industry

By Hamish Hastie

The West Australian government has announced its response to the Enough is Enough report into sexual harassment into the mining industry, which was released in September.

The report was triggered after a spate of sexual assaults on WA mine sites and made shocking findings into failures from companies and the regulator to address the issue.

Women’s Interests Minister Simone McGurk.Cameron Myles

The McGowan government will spend $1.2 million to address sexual harassment and assaults in the resources sector including an $80,000 grant to the Sexual Assault Resource Centre for an online training package to teach mine site first responders how to use the centre’s site early evidence kits, known as SEEKs.

On Tuesday the government also announced it would inject $335,000 into community legal centre Circle Green Community Legal to run a triage service for people who had experienced sexual harassments in the mining sector.

NSW’s last ‘Rat of Tobruk’ honoured in parliament

By Michaela Whitbourn

World War II veteran Ernie Walker, one of the famous “Rats of Tobruk”, has been honoured in parliament after he died aged 106.

“The last of NSW’s Rats of Tobruk has marched into history,” Albanese said, adding that Walker was also a veteran of Kokoda.

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Albanese said the Rats of Tobruk name was conceived by propagandist Lord Haw Haw “as an insult because the soldiers under siege in that crucial Libyan port were trapped like rats living in holes”.

“But the Australian forces took up the name with defiance and pride,” he said. “They wore it as a badge of honour, and in some of the darkest days of the war their remarkable act of defiance lifted the spirits of allied forces everywhere.

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Queensland premier picks fight with federal Labor on power bills

By Sean Parnell

Queensland Labor Premier Annastacia Palaszczuk has warned the Albanese government to take its “hands off our generators” and ensure national energy policies don’t leave the state worse off.

Responding to claims Queensland would support a potential cap on domestic coal prices in a bid to reduce power bills, Palaszczuk said state-owned electricity generators had served the network well and delivered benefits to consumers.

Queensland Premier Annastacia Palaszczuk.Matt Dennien

“I say very clearly to the federal government: hands off our generators,” she told state parliament on Tuesday.

“There is no way that Queensland is going to sacrifice the returns that we are able to provide back to Queenslanders.”

Palaszczuk challenged NSW and Victoria to “open up some of their gas fields” to boost supply.

“Queensland is always doing the heavy lifting and we need to make sure that, if there are any steps by the Commonwealth in this direction, Queenslanders are fully compensated,” she said.

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