Attendance at committee meetings by visitors
The issue
3.1
In undertaking their work House committees hold both public and private
meetings. Private meetings allow the committee to deliberate in private on
matters such as report consideration, to receive private briefings and to take
evidence from witnesses in private.
3.2
The revised House of Representatives standing orders introduced on 16 November 2004 (amended on 8 February 2005) appear to have inadvertently created
some confusion whether committees can admit visitors to their private
meetings. This issue is examined with a view to eliminating the confusion.
3.3
In revising the standing orders it was not the Procedure Committee’s intention to exclude visitors when a committee is holding all private meetings.
3.4
The principle the Procedure Committee is seeking is for a committee or
subcommittee to have the power to decide who may be present at any of its
meetings with the exception of deliberative meetings or private hearings (formerly
called in camera hearings).
Current practice
3.5
The relevant House standing orders compared with the former standing
orders are shown in Table 3.1 with keywords italicised. The new standing
orders differ from the former standing orders in that they refer to private
meetings.
Table 3.1 Current practice
Current standing order
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Former standing order
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235 Proceedings and sittings of committee
(a) A committee or a subcommittee may conduct
proceedings using any means approved by the House and in the following
manner:
(i) in private meeting;
(ii) by hearing witnesses, either in public or
in private; and
(iii) in the form of any other meeting,
discussion or inspection conducted under the practice of committees of the
House.
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240 Admission of visitors (replaces former
standing order 344)
(a) A committee or a subcommittee may admit
visitors when it is examining a witness or gathering information in other
proceedings.
(b) All visitors must leave if:
(i) the Chair asks them to;
(ii) the committee or subcommittee resolves
that they leave; or
(iii) the committee or subcommittee is
conducting a private meeting.
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Former standing order 344*
When a committee or subcommittee is examining a
witness, or engaged in other proceedings for the purpose of gathering
information, visitors may be admitted. They shall withdraw if requested by
the chair or if the committee or subcommittee resolves for their withdrawal.
All visitors must withdraw when the committee or subcommittee is
deliberating or taking evidence in camera.
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241 Admission of other Members (replaces former
standing order 345)
Other Members, who are not members of the committee,
may be present when a committee or subcommittee is examining a witness, or
gathering information in other proceedings. Other Members must leave when the
committee or subcommittee is conducting a private meeting, or if the
committee or subcommittee resolves that they leave.
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Former standing order 345
Members of the House may be present when a committee
or subcommittee is examining a witness, or engaged in other proceedings for
the purpose of gathering information, but shall withdraw if the committee or
subcommittee so resolves. They shall withdraw when the committee or
subcommittee is deliberating or taking evidence in camera.
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Note: * Standing Order 344 was subject to review by the
Procedure Committee in relation to the power of a member to require that
visitors withdraw. The Procedure Committee recommended that SO 344 be modified
to prevent this. See: House of Representatives Standing Committee on
Procedure. June 2003. Sessional Order 344. Department of the House of
Representatives, Canberra, ix 20p.
Source Clerk of the Department of the House of
Representatives, submission, pp 12-13.
3.6
For comparative purposes the equivalent Senate SO 36 set out below addresses both public and private meetings.
Senate SO 36
Persons other than members
and officers of a committee may attend a public meeting of a committee but
shall not attend a private meeting except by express invitation of the
committee, and shall always be excluded when the committee is deliberating.
Areas of clarification
3.7
The former wording of SO 240 only excluded visitors from private
meetings when the committee or subcommittee was deliberating or taking evidence
in camera. The substitution of the broader term ‘private meeting’ to cover the
narrower terms ‘deliberating or taking evidence in camera’ means that the
option of having visitors at some private meetings has been removed.
3.8
The Clerk’s submission notes that under SO 240 it is not clear how to
handle visitors’ attendance at private briefings (a form of private meeting)
which are used by committees to gather information informally on an inquiry or
to brief the committee on topics which are not associated with a particular
inquiry.[1]
3.9
While SO 240(a) states that ‘A committee or subcommittee may admit
visitors when it is examining a witness or gathering information in other
proceedings.’, SO 240(b) states that ‘All visitors must leave if:…(iii) the
committee or subcommittee is conducting a private meeting.’
3.10
Under SO 241 there is similar ambiguity in relation to the admission of other
Members.
3.11
In addition, under SO 240 the committee or subcommittee ‘admits’
visitors but under SO 241 other Members ‘may be present’. The Clerk’s
submission suggests that the words ‘may be present’ may imply that other
Members may be present on their own initiative without the invitation from the
committee.[2]
3.12
The Clerk’s submission states that:
…It would seem clear that the principle be that the committee
should have the power to decide who may be present at any of its meetings with
the exception of deliberative meetings or private (in camera) hearings. Having
people who are not members or staff of the committee (or witnesses) at either
of these types of meetings increases the risk of a breach of privilege
occurring and has the potential to threaten the integrity and credibility of
the committee system.[3]
Conclusion
3.13
As suggested by the Clerk’s submission[4] the Committee believes that the uncertainty surrounding whether visitors and Members can attend
private meetings of a committee or subcommittee can be removed by:
n omitting the
reference to the general term private meeting from standing orders 240
and 241 and replacing it with deliberating or hearing witnesses in private;
and
n in standing order 241
in the phrase ‘Other Members…may be present’ removing the word ‘present’
and substituting ‘admitted’ so that the initiative is with the committee
to determine whether it will permit the attendance of other Members.
Recommendation
Recommendation 3
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3.14
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The Committee recommends that standing orders 240 and 241 be
amended (as indicated by underlining) as follows:
240 Admission of visitors
(a) A committee or a
subcommittee may admit visitors when it is examining a witness or gathering
information in other proceedings.
(b) All visitors must leave
if:
(i)
the Chair asks them to;
(ii)
the committee or subcommittee resolves that they leave; or
(iii) the
committee or subcommittee is deliberating or hearing witnesses in private.
241 Admission of other Members
Other Members, who are not Members of the committee, may be admitted
when a committee or subcommittee is examining a witness, or gathering
information in other proceedings. Other Members must leave when the
committee or subcommittee is deliberating or hearing witnesses in private,
or if the committee or subcommittee resolves that they leave.
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Margaret May MP
Chair
10 November 2005