The
Climate Change Act 2022 passed the parliament on 8 September 2022, having been approved by the House by 86 votes to 50 and the Senate by 37 votes to 30. The legislation codifies a 43 per cent
emissions reduction target by 2030 (on 2005 levels), requires the
Climate Change Authority to provide advice on Australia's progress against those targets, mandates that the
Minister for Climate Change reports annually to Parliament on Australia's progress, and forces federal government agencies to adhere to the legislative requirements of the Act.[4][5][6]
The
Social Security Amendment Act 2022 passed the parliament on 28 September 2022, having passed the House by 86 votes to 56 and the Senate by 33 votes to 26.[7][8] The legislation repealed the mandatory
Cashless Welfare Card, originally introduced as a trial in 2016 for 12,500 people across four trial sites, which quarantined around 80% of a person's income so it could not be spent on alcohol or gambling or withdrawn in cash. As a result of the legislative change, participants could opt out of the scheme, though around 4,300 people in the
Northern Territory and
Cape York remained on the card prior to the introduction of a compulsory income-management scheme in 2023.[9]
The
Anti-Discrimination and Human Rights Legislation Amendment (Respect at Work) Act 2022 passed the parliament on 28 November 2022. The legislation implemented seven of the recommendations of the
Kate Jenkins-authored Respect@Work report into
sexual harassment. Among other reforms, the laws impose a positive onus on employers to take steps to demonstrate that they're proactively attempting to eliminate sex discrimination "as far as possible". In addition, victimising conduct can be the basis of a civil, not just criminal, complaint, and public sector agencies are newly required to report to the Workplace Gender Equality Agency as occurs with private sector agencies.[10]
The
National Anti-Corruption Commission Act 2022 passed the parliament on 30 November 2022. The legislation established the
National Anti-Corruption Commission, an independent federal agency equipped with the power to investigate Commonwealth ministers, public servants, statutory office holders, government agencies, parliamentarians and parliamentary staff for corrupt or improper behaviour.[11][12]
The
Fair Work Legislation Amendment Act 2022 passed the parliament on 2 December 2022.[13] The legislation passed the House of Representatives by 80 votes to 56[14] and passed the Senate by 35 votes to 31.[15] The
workplace relations reforms introduce
multi-employer bargaining, allow the
Fair Work Commission to authorise workers with sufficient common interests to bargain together and abolish the
Australian Building and Construction Commission and
Registered Organisations Commission.[16][17] The legislation passed with the support of the Greens and Senator David Pocock, who each won government support for an enforceable right to request unpaid parental leave and measures to prevent a loophole in the better-off-overall test in the legislation, as well as the creation of a statutory advisory committee of experts to provide independent advice concerning "economic inclusion" of lower-income people, welfare recipients and cost-of-living relief.[18]
The
Safeguard Mechanism (Crediting) Amendment Act 2023 passed the parliament on 30 March 2023. The legislation passed with the support of the Labor government, the
Greens,
Jacqui Lambie Network and
independent crossbenchers in both chambers, following intense negotiations between the parties. In effect, 215 of the country's major polluting facilities are required to cut emissions intensity by 5% a year, through absolute cuts or by buying
carbon offsets. While individual companies can buy an unlimited number of offsets, total absolute emissions under the scheme cannot increase and are required to come down over time.[22] The legislation passed the Senate by 32 votes to 26 and the House by 89 votes to 50, with the Liberal/National Coalition, One Nation and United Australia parties opposed to the reforms.[23][24]
The
Housing Australia Future Fund Bill 2023 passed the parliament on 14 September 2023. The legislation established the
Housing Australia Future Fund, a $10 billion
sovereign wealth fund-type scheme to enable the construction of 30,000 social and affordable homes over five years. A guaranteed $500 million is to be spent per year from the fund, while a minimum of 1,200 homes are to be built in each state and territory across the period.[27] The legislation's passage was achieved after the government won the support of the Greens, who negotiated an extra $1 billion for public and community housing from the government, though failed to win support for a national
freeze or caps on rents.[28] Several months prior to the legislation's passage, the government made a $2 billion separate one-off announcement for social housing through a "social housing accelerator" scheme.[29]
In January 2024, Prime Minister Anthony Albanese announced the government had approved changes to the
Stage 3 income tax cuts, originally passed by the
Morrison government during the
46th Parliament and set to come into effect on 1 July 2024. Under the new scheme, the flattening of the tax rate for all income between $45,000 and $200,000 to 30% will be overturned through the restoration of the 37% tax rate, income earners above $150,000 will have their tax cuts progressively reduced to as much as half of the original cut, whilst earners up to $150,000 will have a larger cut than proposed under the previous government.[30][31] To this effect, the
Treasury Laws Amendment (Cost of Living Tax Cuts) Bill 2024 was approved by the parliament on 27 February 2024.[32]
The 47th Parliament of Australia has a historically high representation of women; women make up 38% of the House of Representatives and 57% of the Senate, the highest on record for both chambers.[35] In terms of representation, Indigenous members will account for 9.6 per cent of the 76 Senate seats, and 1.9 per cent of 151 House of Representatives seats.[36]
Senate
The Senate included 32 men and 44 women, the most women to date.
40 of the 76 seats in the upper house were contested in the
election in May 2022. The class of senators elected in 2022 are denoted with an asterisk (*).
This table lists members of the House who have resigned, died, been elected or appointed, or otherwise changed their party affiliation during the 47th Parliament.
^
abJim Molan, Liberal senator for Victoria, died in office on 16 January 2023. His successor,
Maria Kovacic, was appointed as his replacement on 31 May 2023.
^Lidia Thorpe, senator for Victoria, resigned from the Greens on 6 February 2023 to sit as an independent.
^David Van, senator for Victoria, resigned from the Liberal Party on 17 June 2023 to sit as an independent.
^
abMarise Payne, Liberal senator for New South Wales, resigned on 30 September 2023. Her successor,
Dave Sharma, was appointed as her replacement on 30 November 2023.
^
abPat Dodson, Labor senator for Western Australia, resigned on 26 January 2024. His successor,
Varun Ghosh, was appointed as his replacement on 1 February 2024.
^Linda White, Labor senator for Victoria, died in office on 29 February 2024. Her successor will be appointed as her replacement at a later date.
^Tammy Tyrrell, senator for Tasmania, resigned from the Jacqui Lambie Network on 28 March 2024 to sit as an independent.
^
abJanet Rice, Greens senator for Victoria, resigned on 19 April 2024. Her successor,
Steph Hodgins-May, was appointed as her replacement on 1 May 2024.