Chapter 2

Trick or Treaty? Commonwealth Power to Make and Implement Treaties

Chapter 2

Background

The main issues

2.1 From the submissions and evidence before the Committee there would appear to be a number of central issues which arise for consideration by the Committee. These issues include concerns about:

2.2 The terms of reference are broad and relate to the following key issues:

The number of treaties to which Australia is a party

2.3 Various figures have been given for the number of treaties to which Australia is a party. Sometimes the number given is 2223.[2] This number represents the number of international instruments listed in the Australian Treaties List. This number does not truly represent the number of treaties to which Australia is a party because many of the international instruments that are included in the treaties list merely amend existing treaties or are subsidiary to them. The list also includes treaties which have been terminated or replaced with other treaties.[3]

2.4 According to the Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade, the number of treaties to which Australia is currently a party is 'approximately 920'.[4] This number better represents the number of treaties to which Australia is a party because it only includes current multilateral and bilateral treaties rather than treaties that have become obsolete and treaties that merely amend principal treaties.

2.5 Criticism was expressed by some witnesses before the Committee that the exact number of treaties is not known.[5] Mr Lamb, from the Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade, explained that there were two reasons why the Government could not be sure of the exact number of treaties to which Australia is a party. The first reason is that several of the treaties on the Treaty List were entered into by the United Kingdom, before Australia started to exercise the power to enter into treaties, and it is unclear whether other countries would still regard Australia as being a party to those treaties. The second reason is that a number of the treaties were made with countries which have now split into several separate countries (such as the former Soviet Union, the former Yugoslavia and the former Czechoslovakia), and it is not yet clear whether the new countries consider themselves bound by these treaties.[6]

2.6 Out of the approximately 920 treaties to which Australia is a party, the majority (over 500), are bilateral. The number of treaties has steadily increased, with more than 300 treaties concluded in the last decade. The growth has principally occurred in bilateral treaties (particularly in areas such as investment, extradition, mutual assistance in criminal matters and taxation), although there has also been an increase in the number of multilateral treaties to which Australia has become a party.

2.7 The Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade submitted to the Committee that the number of multilateral United Nations treaties to which Australia is a party is 'about average for an OECD country'.[7]

Previous proposals for reform

2.8 There have been a number of reviews of some of the key issues raised by this reference. The most detailed of these reviews have been undertaken by the Australian Constitutional Convention and its External Affairs sub-committee and the Constitutional Commission and its advisory committees.

Australian Constitutional Convention

2.9 The External Affairs SubCommittee of the Australian Constitutional Convention in 1984 completed a substantive analysis of the external affairs power. This report came in the wake of the Tasmanian Dams case in 1983. Since this case there have been significant developments in the interpretation of the external affairs power. The Final Report of the Constitution Commission, in 1988, provides a convenient summary of the results of that earlier Convention:

  1. There should be full and effective involvement of State Officers in consultation with Commonwealth Officers prior to the preparation of the brief for the Australian delegation to any negotiating session.
  2. The existing Treaties Schedule should be upgraded, where possible, to include adequate information concerning any potential treaties, international agreements or arrangements.
  3. The practice of State Officers attending negotiating sessions as part of the Australian delegation should be encouraged. Where State Officers do attend, they should attend as Full Members of the delegation being bound by the terms of the brief for the Australian delegation and responsible to the leader of the delegation. This right as a full delegate should include access to appropriate cables and communication facilities.
  4. The Federal structure of Australia should be effectively explained to the international community. In this regard, several members of the SubCommittee believed that an appropriate Federal clause should be sought in appropriate treaties.

Other recommendations were:

  1. The Australian Treaties Council would be established by the Premiers' Conference, report annually to it and be ultimately responsible to it. No legislation, at least initially, would be required in order to provide maximum flexibility in its operations.
  2. Membership of the Australian Treaties Council would be as determined by the Premiers' Conference with an emphasis on expertise in international law and Inter-Governmental relations being considered desirable.
  3. The Australian Treaties Council would function as a body through which the interests of the States could be identified and views expressed and coordinated, if possible, in relation to the negotiation of Treaties bearing upon State interests. It could assist in conveying these State views to the Commonwealth Government.
  4. The Australian Treaties Council would provide advice and reports on its own initiative on the effect of proposed Treaties, both to the Commonwealth and the States, and make recommendations on the manner whereby particular, Treaties could be ratified and implemented within Australia, including the recommendation of model legislation. No Government would be bound by such recommendations.
  5. The Australian Treaties Council would not replace existing mechanisms for Inter-Governmental consideration of particular Treaties but would provide advice to those bodies in appropriate cases or wherever specifically requested to do so.
  6. The Australian Treaties Council would report regularly to State Parliaments on its deliberations; the handling of such reports to be for each Parliament to determine.
  7. All Governments, both Commonwealth and State, would have the right to refer particular Treaties to the Australian Treaties Council, save that the rights of the Commonwealth in relation to Treaties concerning defence and national security would be recognised.[8]

2.10 No recommendation was made regarding the scope of the legislative power because of wide differences of opinion.

Constitutional Commission and Advisory Committees

2.11 The Constitutional Commission was established in 1985 to carry out a fundamental review of the Australian Constitution. The members of the Commission were Sir Maurice Byers QC, (Chair), Professor Enid Campbell, Hon Sir Rupert Hamer, Hon Mr Justice Toohey, Hon Gough Whitlam, and Professor Leslie Zines.

2.12 The Commission was advised by an Advisory Committee on the Distribution of Powers, which reported on the external affairs power, among other things, on 6 June 1987. The Committee recommended that there be no amendment to the external affairs power. It considered whether there should be greater parliamentary participation in treaty making, and concluded that there should be a statutory requirement that treaties be tabled in both Houses of the Commonwealth Parliament. A majority of the Advisory Committee did not recommend that treaties should be approved by Parliament before ratification.[9] However, Mr Geoff Lindell, who was a member of the Advisory Committee, dissented on this point, and outlined proposals for parliamentary approval of treaties in Appendix J to the Advisory Committee's report.[10]

2.13 The Commission, itself, reported on 30 June 1988. Two of the issues examined by the Commission included:

2.14 The Commission recommended that:

2.15 The Commission considered the case for parliamentary approval of treaties before their ratification. A majority concluded that it is unnecessary to increase the role of Parliament in treaty making, in this manner.[12] Professor Zines dissented, however, agreeing with Mr Lindell that there should be a statutory requirement that the ratification of treaties by Australia be conditional on either the approval of both Houses of Parliament or the non-disallowance by either House within a specified period.[13] Sir Rupert Hamer also agreed with Professor Zines on this point.[14]

Endnotes:

  1. Joint statement by the Minister for Foreign Affairs and Trade and the Attorney-General, dated 21 October 1994.
  2. See Senate Legal and Constitutional References Committee, Treaties and the External Affairs Power - Discussion Paper, March 1995, Appendix B.
  3. Mr C.R. Jones, Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade, Submission No. 93, Vol 6, p 1147.
  4. Hansard, Senate Legal and Constitutional References Committee (SLCRC), 1 May 1995, p 10.
  5. See, for example, Mr G. Barnett, Hansard, SLCRC, 22 May 1995, p 479.
  6. Hansard, SLCRC, 1 May 1995, p 10, per Mr C. Lamb.
  7. Mr C.R. Jones, Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade, Submission No. 93, Vol 6, p 1147.
  8. Constitutional Commission, Final Report of the Constitutional Commission, Vols 1 and 2, AGPS, Canberra, 1988, pp 735-6.
  9. Constitutional Commission, Advisory Committee on the Distribution of Powers Report, Canberra Publishing and Printing Co, Canberra, 1987: p 88.
  10. Constitutional Commission, Advisory Committee on the Distribution of Powers Report, Canberra Publishing and Printing Co, Canberra, 1987, p 233.
  11. Constitutional Commission, Final Report of the Constitutional Commission, Vol 2, AGPS, Canberra, 1988, p 731.
  12. Constitutional Commission, Final Report of the Constitutional Commission, Vol 2, AGPS, Canberra, 1988, p 745.
  13. Constitutional Commission, Final Report of the Constitutional Commission, Vol 2, AGPS, Canberra, 1988, pp 745-46.
  14. Constitutional Commission, Final Report of the Constitutional Commission, Vol 2, AGPS, Canberra, 1988, p 749.