The Liberal Party’s cadaver in waiting, Phillip Ruddock, described last week’s High Court decision on the rights of asylum seekers as “diabolical.” The misuse of the word was so grotesque as to suggest that the former immigration minister and attorney-general’s use of it might have itself been satanic inspiration.
The court’s unanimity, a rare enough event in itself, bringing together conservatives and liberals, Coalition and Labor appointees, was an endorsement of the law of the land — but in a sense it went further than that. By finding that the treatment of certain boat people had lacked “procedural fairness,” the court was also making a statement about justice, ethics and human decency.
In the most basic Australian terms, the judges found that at least two Sir Lankans had been denied a fair suck of the sauce bottle. And the reason was, quite simply, that the law propounded by Ruddock for John Howard and adopted by Kevin Rudd and Julia Gillard had not been properly applied.
When dealing with those confined on Christmas Island, the government had tried to have a bob each way — successive ministers had applied the Migration Act to knock back their applications for visas but had refused them the opportunity for appeal that the Act gave to those on the mainland. And the whole scam had its genesis in the legal fiction concocted by Ruddock and his fellow conspirators when they declared that Christmas Island could be excised from Australia’s migration zone, while remaining subject to the rest of Australian law.
The trick was, as my mother might have said, too clever by half. And now, finally, the whirligig of time, in the garb of our nation’s final arbiters, has brought in its revenges and established that the idea was, in the dictionary sense, indeed diabolical — fiendish, outrageously wicked; (colloquial) difficult, unpleasant, very bad.
Where we go from here is unclear; in spite of what the optimists have been saying, the decision does not constitute a new Magna Carta or bill of rights, an irreversible blow for human freedom. The government could try and legislate its way out of the impasse, and would presumably have the support of the opposition, whose leader, Tony Abbott, has declared that judges are out of touch with public opinion and that unless they start listening more closely to the shock jocks should perhaps be elected rather than appointed, thus shredding the concept of the separation of powers which is the very basis of our system of government.
And there is no need for such drastic measures. The government’s actions were found not to be unconstitutional, but unconscionable; it broke its own rules. The foundations of our democracy remain firm. But Julia Gillard and her advisers will now have to rethink their whole approach to asylum seekers, and this can only be a good thing. At the very least the decision might act as a circuit breaker to the hysterical paranoia over the issue.
These people are our fellow human beings, and as such must be given fair dealing under the law. Successive governments have tried to deny them this; how would we feel if the politicians decided to treat us with the same cynical disregard for our rights? We would consider it truly diabolical and, unlike Ruddock, we would be entirely correct.
For a self-confessed amateur in the field of foreign policy Julia Gillard is proving a commendably adept student. Her performances at the G20 and APEC may have lacked the panache of those of her predecessor, but they were competent and gaffe-free, and did nothing to diminish Australia’s won-back reputation as good global citizen.
The best thing about them was that our Prime Minister was able to separate the long term national interest from her current political travails. It cannot have been easy for her and Treasurer Wayne Swan to argue for special treatment of the local banks at a time when they are at their arrogant, self-serving worst on the domestic scene, but they held their noses, gritted their teeth and did just that. They now have all the more reason to give the ungrateful bastards a good kicking once they return home.
Equally commendable was Gillard’s vigorous and unequivocal commitment to the free trade agenda, which would not have pleased some of her key supporters in caucus and beyond. At a time when many of the countries which have emerged from the GFC in tighter economic straits than Australia are slipping back into protectionism, it was a bold and forthright stance — even one of leadership.
Kevin Rudd must have approved. His own leading role in the expansion and enhancement of the G20 as a pre-eminent intergovernmental body is perhaps his most important and lasting legacy from his brief period as prime minister. He would have looked on in envy as Gillard reaped the benefits of his work. But at least he would be pleased that she shows every sign of following it through, rather than ditching it as she has done with most of his domestic policies.
The Greens are understandably disappointed at the announcement that the Liberals will preference Labor ahead of them in Victoria, but they shouldn’t be — the Libs are, after all, a party of the right and these days Labor is far more inclined in that direction than are the Greens. For the Greens to expect Liberal preferences is as absurd as imagining that Labor would preference a party of the far right, like One Nation.
If the decision had gone the other way the Liberals would have justifiably been accused of blatant political opportunism, a cynical abandonment of principle, and that couldn’t be the case, could it? Well, okay, it was a couple of months ago, but that was Tony Abbott. It would never do for a Baillieu.
Actually a denial of legal rights is a breach of the constitution, that was the point. It is didn’t breach the constitution Chapter 111 the case would not have won unanimously Mungo.
This hysterical bullshit we get in this nation over a few thousand who arrive by sea on some occassions drives me crazy. 800,000 other people arrive by sea and we don’t even notice them.
Article 16(1) of the refugee convention is not negotiable, cannot ever be altered and cannot be ignored – it guarantees that every refugee in our territory has access to the courts. Full stop.
Article 9 of the declaration of human rights article 9 states that no-one shall be arbitrarily locked up and articles 9 (1 and 4) of the covenant of civil and political rights guaranteeing against arbitrary detention has been broken by Australia more times than any other western nation.
All to maintain the lie that people are not allowed to come to an island by sea.
We are celebrating the release of Ms Suu Kyi from arbitrary detention but we have 72 Burmese refugees in Darwin concentration camp where they have been for over a year under the illegal regime used by the ALP to try and get around the law.
The idiotic knee jerk reaction that people might spend longer in jail because we broke the frigging law shows what hysterical nitwits they are.
We will probably start getting a lot of this sort of thing from when the Howard government pushed through many bills etc in the name of “The war on terror” and “Homeland security”. Well I hope we do, we need to run over that period and what was condoned by parliament during the fear mongering times.
Poor Mungo – could somebody please tell him that the ALP has won the last TWO elections? He still seems to be fighting old battles against the ghost of John Howard.
Time to move on, Mungo. Time to move on.
As for dear Marilyn, a prize goes to anybody who can translate the following into English:
[It is didn’t breach the constitution Chapter 111 the case would not have won unanimously Mungo.]
To use a wonderful turn-about word from George Brandis… you’d think the penny would have dropped on this proleptical legislative provision ages ago…
Basically, the legislation said that people in Christmas Island as refugees were covered by the legislation but not by the law, because Australian law didn’t apply in Christmas Island which wasn’t part of Australia for the purposes of the legislation except where it was part of Australia to the extent to which Australian law applied by not applying.
About on a par with Senator B’s startling revelation that a Speaker who agrees with someone else that neither of them will vote is in breach of the constitutional provision that the Speaker can’t vote because otherwise he might had voted if he hadn’t agreed not to vote and doesn’t.
George said it applied proleptically, but the rest of us could probably think of other adverbs.
Some of these guys must have been with me in Roddy Meagher’s Roman Law lectures…. but at least you could tell when he was talking Latin, when he was talking English, and when he was just channeling Pitt the Younger.
The ghost is proving difficult to exorcise, Peter