Federal Executive Council (Australia)

The Federal Executive Council is a body established by the Constitution of Australia to advise the Governor-General.[1] The Governor-General is bound by convention to follow the advice of the Executive Council on almost all occasions, giving it de facto executive power.[2] This power is used to legally enact the decisions of the Cabinet, which has no de jure authority.[2][3]

The Federal Executive Council is the Australian equivalent of Executive Councils in other Commonwealth realms, and is similar to the privy councils of Canada and the United Kingdom (although unlike these privy councils, the Leader of the Opposition is not typically a member).[3]

Composition

The Federal Executive Council consists of all current and former Commonwealth ministers and assistant ministers (previously called parliamentary secretaries).[1] Membership is governed by Section 64 of the Constitution, which stipulates that once appointed to a ministerial role, a person shall also be a member of the Executive Council.[1][4] Membership is usually for life, however only those serving in the current ministry are actually involved in Council activities.[1] Members of the Executive Council are entitled to the style 'The Honourable'.[1] The Governor-General presides over meetings of the Executive Council, but is not a member.[1]

The position of Vice-President of the Executive Council is usually given to a Member of the Cabinet, and no additional salary or allowance is paid. The appointment of Sir James Killen to this post in 1982 was controversial because the office was seen as a sinecure given that he held no Ministerial portfolio. He was nevertheless considered a member of the Ministry by virtue of this office, and he even administered a small, short-lived department (the Department of the Vice-President of the Executive Council; such a department also existed for two months in 1971 under Sir Alan Hulme, who was simultaneously Postmaster-General).

The Governor-General has the power to dismiss any member of the Executive Council, but that power is rarely exercised in practice. It might be exercised if, hypothetically, a minister or former minister were convicted of a serious criminal offence. One notable case was that of the Queensland Senator Glen Sheil. Malcolm Fraser's government was re-elected at the 1977 election on 10 December, and on 19 December he publicly announced the ministry he would be recommending to the Governor-General, which included Senator Sheil as the new Minister for Veterans' Affairs. Sheil was sworn in as an Executive Councillor but, prior to the scheduled swearing-in of the Ministry, he made public statements about apartheid that were at odds with the government's attitude to the issue. Fraser then advised Governor-General Sir Zelman Cowen not to include Sheil in the ministry—advice that Cowen was required by convention to follow. Sheil's appointment as an Executive Councillor without portfolio was terminated on 22 December.[5]

Meetings

Meetings do not require the Governor-General's attendance, but the Governor-General must be notified of the meeting in order for it to be valid. A quorum for meetings is the Governor-General and two serving ministers or assistant ministers (previously called parliamentary secretaries). If the Governor-General is not in attendance, quorum is the Vice-President and two serving ministers or assistant ministers. In the absence of the Vice-President, quorum is three ministers, one of whom, a senior minister, will preside. In practice, meetings will only be attended by a small number of Councillors rather than the full Cabinet.[1]

Most of the powers vested in the Governor-General, such as appointments and the authorisation of budgets, are exercisable only by "the Governor-General in Council" – that is, under advice from the Federal Executive Council. The Council acts as a formal ratification body for decisions of the Cabinet. In a parallel manner to the Royal Assent given to legislative Acts by the Governor-General after they have passed both Houses of Parliament, proposed executive actions will receive the approval of the Governor-General in Council after they have been agreed to by the Prime Minister and Cabinet.[1]

See also

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 "Federal Executive Council Handbook". Department of the Prime Minister and Cabinet. Retrieved 7 January 2015.
  2. 1 2 "Democracy in Australia – Australia's political system" (PDF). Australian Collaboration. Retrieved 25 January 2014.
  3. 1 2 Hamer, David. "The executive government". Department of the Senate (Australia). Retrieved 25 January 2014.
  4. "Chapter II – The Executive Government". Constitution of Australia. Office of Parliamentary Counsel (Australia). Retrieved 25 January 2014.
  5. Gavin Souter, Acts of Parliament, p. 624


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