By Michelle Grattan, University of Canberra
After a day-long government assault on Human Rights Commission president Gillian Triggs, she’s still in place and Labor has asked the police to investigate the conduct of Attorney-General George Brandis.
It’s not exactly been a political triumph.
An embattled government has embarked on an unnecessary fight, all because it is furious about the commission’s “forgotten children” report.
Its main beef is that the inquiry was started after the Coalition – which has released a large number of children – came to power, rather than under Labor, when the numbers were at a peak.
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The government may indeed have a reasonable argument on timing. But the political cost of its vendetta, the full details of which emerged at a Senate estimates hearing on Tuesday, is mainly to itself.
It looks to be persecuting the woman who’s stood up for the children.
It flaunts its prejudice. Liberal senator Ian Macdonald, chair of the estimates committee, said he hadn’t even read the report. “I don’t waste my time reading documents I am going to take no notice of,” he told Sky.
And, unless Triggs suddenly crumples, the government can’t win. Brandis made it clear there was no allegation of misconduct against her. Her statutory five year term runs to mid-2017.
It took backbencher Craig Laundy, speaking in the Liberal party room, to point to a better tactic. Laundy told his colleagues he’d just spent a week in his Sydney electorate of Reid, a “compassionate place”, and he was getting push back. The government should be focusing on the children, not shooting the messenger, he said.