If, like most Australians, you’ve never read the Australian Human Rights Commission Act 1986, you may be surprised by how wide it is. The act establishes 15 separate functions and roles for the commission to carry out (plus a 16th “anything incidental” function), ranging from handling discrimination complaints, to conducting inquiries into human rights breaches, to vetting legislation, as well as an advocacy role.
The Australian Human Rights Commission has a function to “promote an understanding and acceptance, and the public discussion, of human rights in Australia”, “undertake research and educational programs”, and “on its own initiative or when requested by the Minister, to report to the Minister as to the laws that should be made by the Parliament, or action that should be taken by the Commonwealth, on matters relating to human rights” — including in relation to Australia’s adherence to international agreements on human rights.
As Crikey argued in 2013, the AHRC’s advocacy role is the one that is most problematic, nebulous and unrestricted. It requires the commission to be selective about what it advocates for, because it can’t effectively advocate for everything in the broad remit of human rights at the same time. But neither the Coalition nor Labor has proposed to amend the AHRC’s functions. So, in the absence of other evidence, notionally the two major parties support this wide-ranging advocacy role — including the role of reporting on what actions the Commonwealth should be taking in relation to human rights.
And it’s the legislated duty of the commission to ensure that those functions are performed “(a) with regard for (i) the indivisibility and universality of human rights; and (ii) the principle that every person is free and equal in dignity and rights; and (b) efficiently and with the greatest possible benefit to the people of Australia.” As the senior member of the commission and the accountable authority of the commission, AHRC president Gillian Triggs has a statutory responsibility to carry out that duty.
The government’s ceaseless attacks on Triggs are, therefore, literally for doing her job, a job that she is required by law to do, a job that the government has elected to leave defined in its current, very broad form.
As several commentators have noted, the government’s latest attack on Triggs is factually wrong. Attorney-General George Brandis and Immigration Minister Peter Dutton tripped up last week in accusing Triggs of using a speech to link the government’s efforts to turn back asylum seeker boats with Indonesia’s decision to execute Andrew Chan and Myuran Sukumaran. Triggs had done no such thing. Instead, she had linked the government’s campaign to turn back boats — which led to repeated infringements of Indonesian sovereignty — with Indonesia’s refusal to engage with Australia on efforts to abolish the death penalty. Even a quick Google of Triggs’ advocacy in relation to the death penalty would show she has been calling for a regional moratorium on capital punishment and even suggested linking aid to the moratorium.
Brandis and Dutton are two of the most incompetent ministers in a dreadful government. Brandis had previously used his department head Chris Moraitis to approach Triggs with a job offer to convince her to resign. Brandis’ most recent debacle was to accuse Labor of inappropriately questioning his handling of a letter from Man Haron Monis — just weeks before the Lindt Cafe Sydney siege — before having to admit he had falsely claimed to have passed the letter to the government’s inquiry into the siege. Dutton was dumped from the Health portfolio for (to use the words of Tony Abbott himself) “mishandling” the GP co-payment. On the weekend, Dutton pretended high dudgeon over Triggs’ remarks and used a grovelling interview with far-right media personality Andrew Bolt to suggest she resign.
However, last week, Triggs did take up an issue that places her in direct opposition to not merely the Coalition and Labor, using another speech to criticise the growth in executive power at the expense of parliamentary and judicial oversight.
Since the Keating years, there has been a steady expansion of executive power in the Immigration portfolio and a reduction in opportunities for judicial oversight. Much of that shift was appropriate: the refugee application system was ruthlessly gamed by illegal immigrants in the early 1990s, with hundreds of appeals clogging up the Federal Court. In response, successive governments have significantly curbed the capacity of courts to exercise any power by way of a merits review over decisions by the Immigration minister. This government has gone further and curbed parliamentary oversight of Immigration matters, pretending that asylum seeker boats were a military threat and declaring anything relating to efforts to turn them back must be kept secret even from traditional forums for bureaucratic accountability, like estimates committees.
Now the Immigration department is at the centre of another effort to dramatically expand the powers of the executive, with the government’s proposal to strip the citizenship of both dual nationals and anyone who could potentially claim dual citizenship purely on the Minister for Immigration’s say-so, without any merits review by a court. As the reaction of former immigration minister Amanda Vanstone suggests, such unchecked executive power is a direct affront to traditional liberalism.
Under the proposal, Dutton would be given the power to declare that Triggs, who was born in the UK, was negligently aiding terrorism through her advocacy of human rights (or perhaps he might read a misrepresentative article about her statements in The Australian and decide she was actively supporting terrorism) and strip her of her citizenship. There’d be no judicial review of such a decision, however ill-judged.
Don’t think it will happen? Probably not to a high-profile figure. But Immigration is the portfolio that sent Vivian Solon to the Philippines and locked up Cornelia Rau without any legal right, and which presided over the sexual abuse of children on Nauru but insisted it knew nothing about it until late last year. A negligent department led by an incompetent minister demands judicial and parliamentary checks. That the Liberal Party needs reminding of this fact demonstrates just how illiberal it has now become.


62 thoughts on “Gillian Triggs is obeying the law while Dutton seeks ways to thwart it”
James O'Neill
June 9, 2015 at 2:31 pm“such unchecked executive power is a direct affront to traditional liberalism.” It is more than that. It is a full front assault on some of the most basic tenets of the rule of law. It is not confined to issues of immigration or refugees. Starting in 2001 the Howard government passed a raft of laws that steadily diminished civil liberties in this country. In that they were enthusiastically aided and abetted by the Labor Party, first in opposition, then in government, and again now in opposition.
It is a pattern observed in a number of so-called western democracies. At least in all of them, but not Australia, there is a Bill of Rights or equivalent to provide a measure of restraint through the courts on the unfettered use/abuse of executive power.
Dutton is only a symptom of a much deeper malaise. If we truly value our diminishing democracy then we need to do something about it, and fast.
poppy41
June 9, 2015 at 2:34 pmWhats the old adage, ‘the best form of defence is attack’
This government has sooo much bad decision making to it’s credit, it has to attack, attack, attack,so that people will hopefully believe them, and once again succumb to the same recipe of attack dog principles that were used against the previous government.
I find it very interesting that a few past ministers of the LNP feel angry enough with this governments performance that they feel impelled to publicly discuss this present governments decision making and agenda which appears to be the destruction of this country’s reputation and rules of law that have been slowly built up over the last centuries to whom we are today as a nation.
They are a disgrace, and an embarrasment!
MJM
June 9, 2015 at 2:41 pm“Brandis and Dutton are two of the most incompetent ministers in a dreadful government.”
Great statement – made my day.
Migraine
June 9, 2015 at 3:15 pmEven if the government can’t force Trigg to resign – even if they can’t squeeze through legislation or some other instrument that would let them sack her – they have acheieved their real goal. They have sent the strongest possible signal to future candidates for this and other roles to either shut up, or be really damn sure you’re prepared for a government-sanctioned shitstorm if you get on the wrong side of a thin-skinned Minister. Not everyone has Trigg’s backbone. Not everyone will be willing to expose themselves and their families to this kind of abuse. In future, we’ll see far less capable and far less courageous people in these important advocacy roles. And not just those roles in the direct gift of the government: by reducing funding for all sorts of community and advocacy groups and imposing more and more conditions on the use of the funding they do allow, the government is carefully and deliberately strangling all sources of opposition and all manner of avenues for criticism.
drsmithy
June 9, 2015 at 3:26 pm“Adults in charge.”
Never gets old.
drsmithy
June 9, 2015 at 3:30 pmDutton and Brandis’ attack on Triggs’ is not factually wrong. It can only be factually wrong if you know what she meant when she said those inflammatory words.
When Triggs said, “The boats have got to stop. But have we thought about what the consequences are of pushing people back to our neighbour Indonesia? Is it any wonder that Indonesia will not engage with us on other issues that we care about, like the death penalty?” We all know what she meant.
Even for you, David, that’s an 11/10 for irony.
David Hand
June 9, 2015 at 3:33 pmHey Migraine,
How can you possibly advocate a view about the Coalition government “carefully and deliberately strangling all sources of opposition and all manner of avenues for criticism” when every single day, they get rivers of opposition and criticism from the ABC, Fairfax, Crikey, Triggs, Unions, churches, charities, the Greens and the ALP?
David Hand
June 9, 2015 at 3:57 pmGive it a rest doctor.
Maybe I could have used different words to avoid confusing you.
I’ll try once more just for you. Facts need verification and Keane does not know the facts that he accuses Dutton and Brandis of being wrong about. He just has an opinion that I and many others don’t share.
My comment that “we all know what she meant” was an opinion as well.
zut alors
June 9, 2015 at 3:58 pmTo be frank, Abbott & Co are pulling their punches by merely criticising Gillian Triggs.
It’s patently obvious they’d prefer to completely abolish the role of Human Rights Commissioner. Those pesky Commissioners…
Venise Alstergren
June 9, 2015 at 4:29 pmTHE PAV: Very well said. It never fails to amaze me how a collection of deadbeats-most of whom pride themselves as being better humans than the rest of us because THEY are Christians-have, within a short span of time, delivered a whole nation into disrepute. But Tony Abbott and his extraordinarily obtuse gang have done just that. And the fact that I predicted this outcome does nothing to ameliorate my bitterness.