Indigenous consultation in court helps ‘overturn’ sea project
Former deputy prime minister Barnaby Joyce says Indigenous consultation in courts can have “massive effects” on the Australian economy.
Mr Joyce discussed Indigenous consultation with Sky News host Andrew Bolt and how it has massive effects on the Australian economy.
“Isn’t the Voice about consultation … if you don’t consult properly then the court can overturn the decision, they might not have vetoed it – they just overturned it, like the decision never was,” he told Mr Bolt.
“I wonder if any of the learned judges want to come out now and say well … it’s completely legit and it’s on the premise of consultation.
“But that’s different consultation.”
Видео Indigenous consultation in court helps ‘overturn’ sea project канала Sky News Australia
Mr Joyce discussed Indigenous consultation with Sky News host Andrew Bolt and how it has massive effects on the Australian economy.
“Isn’t the Voice about consultation … if you don’t consult properly then the court can overturn the decision, they might not have vetoed it – they just overturned it, like the decision never was,” he told Mr Bolt.
“I wonder if any of the learned judges want to come out now and say well … it’s completely legit and it’s on the premise of consultation.
“But that’s different consultation.”
Видео Indigenous consultation in court helps ‘overturn’ sea project канала Sky News Australia
Показать
Комментарии отсутствуют
Информация о видео
Другие видео канала
Elon Musk ‘doing more than Democrats’ on US border crisisPolitics will be 'trickier' if Australians vote 'No': Nicholas ReeceNSW bowlos being ‘slugged’ by astronomical rate hikesBig win for chickens as demand for backyard hens skyrockets‘Shameful’: Elon Musk slams Justin Trudeau over new podcast rulesSenate Inquiry into Qantas 'a bit like Q&A but just Q with no A': Joe HildebrandABC's 'joke of a report' about grand finals weekend called out‘Obnoxious and bizarre’: Former Labor MP slams the Voice as ‘racial discrimination'Liberal Party moving away from polling firm Crosby Textor'Terrific stuff' to see no booing across AFL and NRL Welcomes to CountryAustralians have ‘no choice’ but to get in credit card debt'Wouldn't want to be hanging at home': Chris Kenny forecasts corporate cutsMeghan Markle was almost chosen to be a California senatorAlbanese ‘giving the left a bone’ by observing at nuclear prohibition conference'Civil unrest' at EV charging points as drivers fight due to long wait timesAlbanese not 'taking any responsibility' for collapse in support for VoicePM’s Voice obsession is politically ‘dangerous’ for himPlibersek called out on ‘hypocrisy’ threatening koalas with wind projectsRishi Sunak realises 'elites got out of touch' after 'extraordinary' green U-turnThe politicisation of the RBA could be a ‘danger’Energy investment a risk at sovereign level as regulatory bodies become 'gun-shy'