House debates

Thursday, 13 February 2014

Business

Days and Hours of Meeting

9:01 am

Photo of Christopher PyneChristopher Pyne (Sturt, Liberal Party, Minister for Education) Share this | Hansard source

I move:

That standing orders 1, 34 (figure 2), 43, and 192 (figure 4) be amended to read as follows:

1 Maximum speaking times (amendments to existing subject, as follows)

Figure 2. House order of business

43 Members ' statements

(a) In the House at 1.30 pm on Mondays, Tuesdays, Wednesdays and Thursdays, the Speaker shall interrupt business and call on statements by Members. The period allowed for these statements may extend until 2 pm.

(b) In the Federation Chamber at 4 pm on Mondays, the Deputy Speaker shall interrupt business and call on statements by Members. The period allowed for these statements may extend until 4.45 pm.

(c) During these periods, when called on by the Chair, a Member, but not a Minister (or Parliamentary Secretary*), may make a statement for no longer than 90 seconds.

*Including Assistant Ministers who are Parliamentary Secretaries

Figure 4. Federation Chamber order of business

The meeting times of the Federation Chamber are fixed by the Deputy Speaker and are subject to change. Times shown for the start and finish of items of business are approximate.

Adjournment debates can occur on days other than Thursdays by agreement between the Whips.

Members will, I think, be very pleased with this change to the standing orders. They would be very familiar with the fact that the provision for 90-second statements has been limited to a quarter of an hour on Mondays, Wednesdays and Thursdays at 1.45 pm to 2 pm. It is part of the day's proceedings which is very popular with backbenchers, particularly, to raise local constituency issues and matters that would not otherwise fit into the ordinary debate on legislation and so on. So the government has determined, and has negotiated with the opposition in good faith, that we will extend that debate to Tuesdays, and on all four days of sittings it will be 30 minutes, from 1.30 pm to 2 pm each day.

I would like to particularly note that the Tasmanian Liberal members, the members for Braddon, Lyons and Bass, and the member for Hughes and even the member for Maranoa—who is still, after 20-something years here, coming up with new and innovative ideas, which is a good thing—have all been lobbying me over the last few months about extending the 90-second debate. The government is moving to do that. That will begin today. We are also extending it into the Federation Chamber—a whole 45 minutes on Mondays in the Federation Chamber. This will allow 80 statements a week to be made by members in the House and 30 in the Federation Chamber. I think it will be very popular, and I look forward to the contributions of my colleagues over the coming months.

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