Australia will now process all asylum seekers onshore, despite both the government and opposition supporting offshore processing for those that come by boat.
It’s an incredible win for those — mainly on the Left — who support onshore processing. Due to the limited room available in detention centres (and budgetary constraints) people arriving by boat would be processed quickly and given bridging visas to live in the community, which allow a small pension and the right to work.
National MP Tony Crook refused to support the government’s bill yesterday which would change the Migration Act to allow offshore processing, after the High Court deemed it unlawful. But even with Crook’s support, it’s unlikely the bill would have passed the Senate where the Greens hold the balance of power.
The opposition refused to support the bill as it would allow the government’s Malaysia Solution policy. Instead it demanded the government only send asylum seekers to countries which are a signee to the United Nations convention on refugees. The Labor caucus voted yesterday to keep the Malaysia Solution as official policy, even though it cannot implement it.
Gillard was quick to put the blame on opposition leader Tony Abbott and warn the public to expect more boats to arrive. “There is only one reason that we are not in the circumstances to have offshore processing and that’s because of Mr Abbott and his determination to trash the national interest,” said Gillard. “Mr Abbott’s conduct leads us to circumstances where we are at real risk of seeing more boats.”
The Sydney Morning Herald‘s Phillip Coorey is dubbing it the “Australia Solution”, noting: “The decision was announced last night after a day of crisis meetings which tested the authority of the Prime Minister, Julia Gillard, strained the backbench and took the shine off the policy victory of the day before when the carbon price legislation passed the lower house.”
Yes, it is confusing how we can have both major parties agree on offshore processing and yet not get support for it. “So many aspects of this sorry story fall into the stupid category, it is worthy of a chapter in a political primer on how not to do things,” declares Dennis Atkins in The Courier-Mail.
This is a great day for people smugglers and both parties are responsible, says Greg Sheridan in The Australian:
“It is a defeat in which the Gillard government and the Abbott opposition share equally.”
Labor has no one to blame for this but themselves, says human rights lecturer Angus Francis in The Age:
“The choice that confronted the Labor Party after the election defeat of 2001 was the same that confronts it now: continue to support offshore processing, as Prime Minister Julia Gillard wants, or begin the slow and painstaking process of rebuilding a principled asylum-seeker policy.”
Peter van Onselen is elated that onshore processing is happening, even if it’s only happened because of Gillard and Abbott’s stubbornness. Problem is, detention centres will quickly fill up and other onshore options should be examined, he writes in The Australian:
“Why not simply speed up the processing for all asylum-seekers? Or start community living for those already in detention? Or make arrangements for more processing centres? Again, stubbornness is getting in the way of workable policy outcomes.”
Susie O’Brien in the Herald Sun also supports this change to onshore processing:
“We can well afford to be generous, and to care for those who seek asylum on our shores. Given that most of them are found to be legitimate refugees, and go on to be well-respected members of our society, let’s give them a go.”

39 thoughts on “Govt flips and supports onshore
processing”
Bazza Smith
October 14, 2011 at 12:29 pm‘The song for the lefties when the next boat crashes/sinks killing hundreds:
www .youtube.com/watch?v=NwrL9MV6jSk’
I’m so happy for you that you’ve already got a song picked out for a sadly inevitable future tragedy*, it shows just what sort of person you are. The gleeful tone of the comment is especially telling I feel.
Just make sure you’ve got some popcorn on hand, have a nice cozy armchair and that you’re watching it on your 50 inch high definition TV when tragedy does strike, wouldn’t want you not to be nice and comfortable watching other human beings suffer.
*Inevitable unless Tony has a hidden policy to stop all wars and natural disasters I mean cause let’s face it even if he does ‘Stop the Boats’ what that actually means is just ‘Stopping the boats coming to Australia’, people will still flee bad situations as they fell necessary and some will sadly die in the process. History shows this.
Ron Paul 2012
October 14, 2011 at 12:45 pmWell despite the “this is abbotts fault crowd” doing there best to proclaim the governments innocence, I now officially hate Federal Labor….
the actions of Federal Labor have resigned the 2012 or 2013 election to a super duper duper stop the boats campaign from both sides.
Federal Labor keep saying they want a better debate from the opposition, then they leave a wide open gap for the Liberal Party to park their stop the boats campaign for the next election…
Hell they can park a jumbo left in that space Labor has created…..
I blame Federal labor, they know the Liberal Party is going to run their lines, they know it works…and now they have given Carte Blanche permission for Abbott to take his stop the boats stop the smokes campaign to a new level…
although that clip played by insiders did make me lol.
Don’t cry for me Argentina, don’t cry for me the left of Australia, Abbott Bathes in the tears of his enemies and you will be crying all the way to his victory in 12/13.
Filth Dimension
October 14, 2011 at 1:15 pmahahhahaaha! truthie! an ‘armada’. you crack me up.
Observation
October 14, 2011 at 1:18 pmRon Paul – But just imagine for a minute, if during the next two or so years of onshore processing the number of boats stayed the same or even reduced!
With all the different variables that dictate the number of boats coming it could go either way.
Filth Dimension
October 14, 2011 at 1:20 pmfirst world problems.
shepherdmarilyn
October 14, 2011 at 2:39 pmWhich part of it’s not legal didn’t the morons in the media hear? And Greg Sheridan is ridiculous in the extremes of extremists these days.
Tony Crook said something interesting yesterday that our lazy frigging press gallery entirely missed.
I’ts humananitarian.
We fancy that.
There is not now and nor has there ever been anything thing as offshore “processing” for asylum seekers, if they tried to apply offshore this is what would happen to them.
http://www.austlii.edu.au/au/cases/cth/RRTA/2011/792.html
RELEVANT LAW
4. Under s.65(1) a visa may be granted only if the decision maker is satisfied that the prescribed criteria for the visa have been satisfied.
5. So far as is relevant to this matter, s.36(2) of the Act provides that a criterion for a Protection (Class XA) visa is that the applicant for the visa is a non-citizen in Australia This means that a Protection (Class XA) visa may only be granted if the applicant is in Australia.”
So will all you lazy, ignorant people get it through your thick skulls that when we are told over and over again that it is illegal it is because it really is illegal.
Imagine if every country pushed away refugees to some other place?
Verio Browning
October 14, 2011 at 2:47 pmOn this issue Julia has won hands down. Consider this:
She was originally from the left wing of the ALP which has campaigned long and hard for on shore processing, bridging visas and the right to work for the claimants while being processed. This is now happening.
This could not be implemented due to the fear and loathing originally manufactured by Howard but supinely adhered to by the ALP from Beasley to Rudd. The remnants of the White Australia policy are still strong within our community, so much so that it couldn’t be tackled head on but had to be dealt with far more subtly. How better to do that than by giving an option to the racist remnants that pride would not let them allow, thus giving her the policy that she probably wanted in her heart of hearts while now allowing her to slam Dr NO for every boat that now appears on the horizon? If I were her I would also be reminding the electorate at every opportunity the many Australians killed over the last decades by the policies of Dr NO and his colleagues and tying that to their attitude about refugees as well.
Now that both the global warming and refugee issues have been through Parliament I expect that there will not be too many other ‘big issue’ items coming up for the next two years but instead constant reminders from the ALP (and Greens too, I hope) of the success of their policies in the face of mindless and socially damaging Death Eater obstructionism. When the country realises that:
a) the so called tax on carbon doesn’t hurt them
b) refugees aren’t taking over the country and
c) the clubs are still in existence even with mandatory limits place on their greed,
then Julia and the team will have huge bragging rights at the next election which just may see them through.
All in all it’s rather Zen how it’s been done.
GocomSys
October 14, 2011 at 3:08 pmRecommendations to the government:
Honour the Malaysia deal (4000 UNHCR vetted asylum seekers to be settled in Australia).
Continue the successful process of regional solutions development.
No more “concentration camps” on Nauru, Manus Island or anywhere else for that matter.
Establishing dedicated Processing Centres onshore and supporting Regional Processing Centres offshore. Fast integration process to be implemented.
Note: Do not engage with politically self serving extremists or be deterred by their actions.
GocomSys
October 14, 2011 at 3:15 pmGovernment “flips”, “common” expression usually found in tabloids. Unnecessary.
GocomSys
October 14, 2011 at 3:18 pm“I really don’t give a toss what some of the usual obnoxious simple minded posters have to say”.
RON PAUL 2012 posted Friday, 14 October 2011 at 12:45 pm
Yes, you are one of them. Join the others.