Rebels with a cause

Independent MP Rob Oakeshott

27 August 2010In Inside Story, Brian Costar and Jennifer Curtin look at the motivations, role and significance of Australian independent MPs

“TO IMAGINE politics without parties is like trying to imagine Australian football without teams,” wrote the political scientist Geoffrey Brennan in 1996. “Politics just is the game played out by rival parties, and anyone who tries to play politics in some way entirely independent of parties consigns herself to irrelevance.” A decade and a half later, those words describe a political world that might never return.

But the political game that Brennan described had already changed by the time of the 2001 federal election, which was contested by no fewer than 29 registered political parties – only three of whom secured representation in the House of Representatives – but which saw three independents elected, the largest number to succeed at a single federal poll for decades. Of the three, Peter Andren remained the member for Calare until his death in 2007 and Tony Windsor and Bob Katter are still MPs – both with a dramatically increased national profile following this weekend’s election. The three were joined in 2008 by Rob Oakeshott, a former state member who had left the National Party in 2002…

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Photo: Independent MP Rob Oakeshott

Noticeboard

07 March 2012

In May 2011 the Federal Government announced that the Australian Charities and Not-for-profits Commission (ACNC) would commence operations from 1 July 2012 and that it would initially be responsible for determining the legal status of groups seeking charitable, public benevolent institution, and other not-for-profit (NFP) benefits on behalf of all Commonwealth agencies. 

01 March 2012


The Productivity Commission has been asked to report within 9 months on Regulatory Impact Analysis: Benchmarking. The study requires a benchmarking of the efficiency and quality of regulatory impact analysis processes used by the Commonwealth and state and territory governments, as well as those of the Council of Australian Governments.
20 December 2011

On 18 November 2011, Parliamentary Secretary for Immigration and Multicultural Affairs, Senator the Hon Kate Lundy, announced the establishment of an independent panel of eminent community leaders to conduct an inquiry into Australian Government services to ensure they are responsive to the needs of Australians from culturally and linguistically diverse backgrounds.