Does Australia Need a Bill of Rights?
| Author: | The Hon Mr Justice David Malcolm AC Chief Justice of Western Australia |
| Subjects: | Australia Constitution (Other articles) Human rights (Other articles) Human rights law and legislation (Other articles) |
| Issue: | Volume 5, Number 3 (September 1998) |
| Category: | Comment |
The Hon Phillip Pendal MLC;
Ladies and Gentlemen
This was a significant part of the rationale for abandoning the
fiction of terra nullius which was the basis for the "discriminatory rule"
of the common law departed from in Mabo.
This view is echoed by Hilary Charlesworth who considers that:
As Millhouse J said in Grace Bible Church v Reedman[36]:
". . . in the absence of a Bill of Rights . . . the citizens of this State do not have rights which may not be overridden by Act of the South Australian Parliament."
It is sometimes said that Parliament is the great bastion of our liberties. However, a government wishing to be seen as doing something decisive when confronted with a problem that is inconveniencing many people or causing public pressure for a response can and will infringe fundamental rights and freedoms of all. It is argued that the approach of the Parliamentary process to human rights is illustrated by the relative absence of any safeguards in the law-making system itself as against infringements of these rights. Much legislation passes through Parliament at considerable speed, most of it has not been looked at in any great depth, except by a small number of public servants and possibly the opposition spokesperson's relevant Minister. The amount of legislation enacted by Parliaments has increased greatly, and that increase is exceeded only by the amount of delegated legislation that is produced.
Legislation is supposed to be scrutinised by the Parliament, but the strong party discipline and the entrenched power of the executive have diminished the safeguard significantly. In most of our legislatures there is little or no evidence of effective safeguards in respect of delegated legislation. In recent times, however, lack of control by the party in Government in the Senate has seen much closer scrutiny of Commonwealth legislation.
When in Government, both major political parties have undertaken obligations on behalf of Australia in international law by ratifying treaties such as the International Covenant of Civil and Political Rights, the International Covenant on Economic Social and Cultural Rights, the International Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination Against Women, the International Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Racial Discrimination and the International Convention on the Rights of the Child. Australia has also signed numerous International Labour Organisation Conventions. To date Australia has met its international obligations to varying degrees. In some cases it was suggested to the Committee that Australia had failed to fulfil its obligations to protect relevant human rights, and constitutional entrenchment of a Bill of Rights would ensure that these obligations are fulfilled. The entry into international treaties has no direct impact on Australian domestic law in the absence of legislation to implement the treaty, particularly when the international obligation undertaken by the Commonwealth can only be implemented by a State. The significance of an international treaty to which Australia is a party was discussed by Mason CJ and Deane J in Minister for Immigration v Teoh.[37]