Report commission Following the passage of
same-sex marriage legislation in Australia in 2017, a federal review was commissioned by the
Turnbull government to examine the suitability of current religious freedom protections, specifically within the context of the new
Marriage Amendment (Definition and Religious Freedoms) Act 2017. The Religious Freedom Review was chaired by
Philip Ruddock, the former
Attorney-General for Australia at the time same-sex marriage was
banned by the
Howard government in 2004, and had no associated terms of reference. The review panel was composed of Ruddock alongside
Jesuit priest
Frank Brennan, former judge
Annabelle Bennett, Human Rights Commission president
Ros Croucher and constitutional lawyer Nicholas Aroney. The expert review panel first met on 10 January 2018, and on 18 May the final review was handed to the Turnbull government. The Government has declined to release the review in full pending cabinet discussion on its recommendations. The Ruddock review has been interpreted as a way to allow the speedy passage of Dean Smith's marriage bill and to postpone discussions of religious freedom. Proponents of the Ruddock Review argue it is necessary to ensure that religious freedoms are upheld in the wake of religious objection to same-sex marriage, whilst opponents highlight that further protections for religion are not necessary and will occur at the expense of an individual's right to be free from discrimination (particularly in the case of same-sex marriages). Groups such as the
Victorian Aids Council and Australian Human Rights Commission have argued that a comprehensive Bill of Rights -rather than an exclusive religious freedoms law- should be implemented as this would also give full effect to Australia's obligations and commitments under the
International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights by enshrining all fundamental rights. Following the deposition of Malcolm Turnbull as Prime Minister, his replacement
Scott Morrison indicated his government would not release the report or form a full response to it before the end of 2018. This drew criticism from
Michael Kirby and
Kerryn Phelps given the timing of the
Wentworth by-election, as voters would not have an understanding of any changes to religious law potentially instituted by Australia's first
Pentecostal Prime Minister. Despite a senate motion ordering its release ahead of the by-election, the government refused to comply, claiming that a release would "harm the public interest" and interfere in cabinet consideration. The Prime Minister
Scott Morrison suggested in an
ABC Radio interview that the Ruddock review had recommended that people of different religions have the same protections as other attributes such as gender and race. The Prime Minister initially defended this, but stated that the media coverage of the leaked report was "confused". Religious schools have held the right to discriminate against teachers and students on the basis of their gender or sexual orientation since 2013, however the Ruddock report recommended that schools additionally be required to hold a publicly available policy and put the best interests of the child first. Following further media coverage and public pressure, the Labor opposition announced their support would be lent to the government should it seek to repeal the discrimination law exemptions already in existence which allow religious schools to ban students based on their sexuality. The
Morrison government subsequently agreed to introduce a bill to parliament with that aim. The
Australian Greens and Labor opposition have further committed to revoking discrimination exemptions that also allow discrimination against teachers based on their sexual orientation, however the government has so far not indicated its position. The full recommendations of the review were subsequently leaked to Fairfax and reported on 12 October 2018.
Attempts to legislate The
Morrison government ultimately drafted the Religious Discrimination Bill in response to the Ruddock Review. The bill was introduced to the
lower house, where amendments to protect transgender students were passed when government back-benchers
crossed the floor to vote with the opposition. The
Morrison government ultimately shelved the bill in the final session of parliament, instead making it a
2022 Australian federal election promise to pass it. Following an election loss for Morrison, the bill's future is uncertain under the new
Labor Albanese government. Albanese made news for mentioning the religious discrimination bill again in March 2024 saying that there must be bipartisanship and that "now is not the time to have a divisive debate". == See also ==