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Australia politics live: Nationals cross floor to back Pauline Hanson motion on immigration; Bob Carr defends China visit | Australia news

Two Nationals and a Liberal cross floor to support immigration inquiry proposal

Tom McIlroy

The Nationals shadow ministers Bridget McKenzie and Ross Cadell and the Liberal backbencher Sarah Henderson crossed the floor on a Senate vote about immigration levels last night.

Pauline Hanson’s One Nation party attempted to establish a parliamentary inquiry into “the impact of high immigration on the Australian economy”.

The Coalition opposed the motion but McKenzie and Cadell, both members of the opposition frontbench, and Henderson, voted with conservative Coalition senators Alex Antic and Matt Canavan in favour of the inquiry.

Liberal frontbencher, Anne Ruston, was heard appealing across the chamber to McKenzie to vote with the rest of the Coalition against the motion.

The motion was ultimately defeated 37 votes to 9.

The vote came in a week when large public rallies about immigration featured speeches by right-wing activists and neo-Nazis.

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Key events

After passing the Senate yesterday – with a deal struck between the government and Coalition to immediately release 20,000 home care packages – the aged care legislation will go back to the House of Representatives for a final vote today.

The government set to lose a vote in the Senate, with the Coalition, Greens and crossbench teaming up to force Labor’s hand to release more packages

Aged care minister Sam Rae is on RN Breakfast this morning, and is being asked why it took Labor’s hand being forced to release these packages – why didn’t they just agree to release the packages sooner?

Rae won’t interact with the question (and Sally Sara asks it several times), but Rae won’t say why it took the government so long to move.

Rae concedes the government didn’t need parliamentary approval to roll out extra packages, but says Labor has been trying to achieve the reforms with bipartisanship.

We needed to reach a bipartisan agreement about how this was going to be done. That was a key principle that we have pursued all the way through. As of yesterday, we have reached a bipartisan agreement about how that rollout occurs. The other part is that we’ve had evolving advice from the sector about their ability to actually respond to these increased packages that we’re going to put into the system.

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