Geoff Shaw, the Independent MP who holds the balance-of-power in Victoria, could be expelled from Parliament today for misusing his parliamentary car and fuel card. A member has not been expelled from the Victorian Parliament since 1901.
Premier Denis Napthine said he was waiting for legal advice, and would not be dealing with the issue until the budget was passed.
If you’re struggling to get your head around what’s happening in Victoria and what expelling an MP means, this cheatsheet might help.
By John Waugh, University of Melbourne
Independent MP Geoff Shaw should be grateful the opposition is only proposing to expel him from Victorian state parliament. It could be worse. Victoria’s Legislative Assembly still has the power to lock up its own members for contempt. And if it treads carefully, it can prevent the courts reviewing what it does.
Although Shaw doesn’t need to pack his toothbrush just yet, the debate about his expulsion raises serious questions about the scope of the Legislative Assembly’s powers and the way they are exercised.
Unlike federal parliament, which reformed its contempt powers in 1987, each house of the Victorian parliament still has the power to expel its own members as punishment for contempt. Like the power to imprison, this power was inherited from the British House of Commons under Victoria’s first Constitution Act of 1855.