House debates
Monday, 21 November 2016
Questions without Notice
Asylum Seekers
2:59 pm
Jason Wood (La Trobe, Liberal Party) Share this | Link to this | Hansard source
My question is to the Minister for Immigration and Border Protection. Will the minister update the House on further steps the government has taken to facilitate third-country resettlement of refugees on Nauru and Manus Island? How does this demonstrate this government's commitment to protecting Australia's borders?
Peter Dutton (Dickson, Liberal Party, Minister for Immigration and Border Protection) Share this | Link to this | Hansard source
I thank the honourable member for his question. I commend him on the work that he is doing at the moment in Victoria staring down the Apex gangs and the threat that those people are opposing to people in Victoria—a job that Daniel Andrews is not doing. It is actually quite shameful, but it is reflective of the weakness of the modern-day Labor leadership that they cannot stand up to unlawful elements in our society.
The reality is that we were charged at the last election with cleaning up one of the significant public policy failings since Federation—
Graham Perrett (Moreton, Australian Labor Party) Share this | Link to this | Hansard source
You had been in office for three years.
Peter Dutton (Dickson, Liberal Party, Minister for Immigration and Border Protection) Share this | Link to this | Hansard source
that is, the 50,000 people that arrived on 800 boats and the 1,200 people that drowned at sea. We were charged with cleaning that mess up. We said to the Australian people that we would resolve this issue of Labor's making. We said that we would get children out of detention and we have. We said that we would close detention centres; we have closed 17 detention centres that Labor opened. We said that we would get people off Manus and Nauru; we are in the process of doing that, and that is why we announced, only in the last week or so, the arrangement with the United States.
But what is very important is that people smugglers in Indonesia, Sri Lanka, Vietnam and elsewhere at the moment hear a very strong and consistent message from not only the Prime Minister but the alternative Prime Minister of this country. Australians are watching now and looking at this government cleaning up a mess of Labor's making. Labor put those people onto Manus and Nauru, Labor put those kids into detention and Labor created a policy which saw those people drown at sea. We have cleaned Labor's mess up. But, in trying to get people off Manus and Nauru, we are concerned—and I have been very open about this—about people-smuggling syndicates putting together propaganda and messages to try and get people onto boats.
The Australian people are watching in bewilderment at the Leader of the Opposition's actions right now. He is weak and incapable of showing leadership. The legislation we have passed before this House and which is now in the Senate faces defeat because the Labor Party cannot deal with the Left of their own party. This weak Leader of the Opposition will stand up at the next election and somehow try and convince Australians that he has the same resolve as this Prime Minister and this government to stare down the continuing threat from people smugglers. All I say to the Australian people is: do not look at what this Leader of the Opposition says but look at what he does. He says he is on a unity ticket with us when it comes to stopping boats and he does the complete opposite, and he fails every test. He is the great chameleon of Australian politics. He shows, yet again, that he is unfit to be Prime Minister of this country.