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Frequently Asked Questions

Note: This page contains links to PDF files for more information see Accessing files.


When is the House sitting?

A schedule of proposed parliamentary sittings is published in advance of the sittings.

The actual sittings of the House of Representatives adhere very closely to the schedule. Occasionally circumstances require some departure from it. Nevertheless, the schedule is a very useful guide to the sittings. It is provided in HTML tabular and text versions.

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What are the sitting times of the House?

The regular sitting times of the House of Representatives are set out in its standing orders. These provide for it to meet at the following times:

Mondays - from 12:30pm to 9:30pm

Tuesdays - from 2pm to 9:30pm

Wednesdays - from 9:00am to 8pm.

Thursdays - from 9:00am to 5pm.

Occasionally circumstances require some change to these times.

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What is the House doing?

The routine of business chart shows the categories of business the House of Representatives and the Main Committee normally deal with on each day of a sitting week.

The Notice Paper is the House's formal agenda and lists in order of priority all of the government business, private Members' business and business before the Main Committee awaiting the House's consideration. The Notice Paper also includes details of the questions lodged by Members for written answers by Ministers and the membership of, and inquiries currently being conducted by, the House of Representatives and joint committees.

The Daily Program (PDF format 14kb) provides in more detail the proposed business of the House of Representatives for a particular sitting.

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What has the House done?

The Votes and Proceedings (available in PDF) is the official record (or minutes) of the proceedings of the House of Representatives. It records in concise form the decisions made by the House, papers presented, legislation presented or considered, motions moved, the attendance of Members and any other business which takes place.

The parliamentary debates, often referred to as Hansard, record what was said in the House. The debates are available in HTML and PDF.

The Work of the Session is a periodic summary of the business completed by the House of Representatives and House and joint committees. It is usually published twice each year. The most recent issue and back issues from 1990 are available in PDF.

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Where can I get a copy of legislation?

The text of most bills before the Parliament are available at Billsnet. Explanatory memoranda and amendments proposed in connection with the bills are also available at this site. Acts of the Commonwealth Parliament (bills after they have been passed by both Houses and become law) can be found at the Attorney-General's ScalePlus page.

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Who is my local Member?

If you know the name of the federal electoral division in which you live, refer to the List of Members by electoral division.

If you do not know the name of the electoral division in which you live the Australian Electoral Commission should be able to help. It is responsible for providing electoral information and can be contacted for information on divisional boundaries. A map of Australian electoral divisions is available online from the AEC site.

Biographical information on each Member is also available on the Members' Home Pages.

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How can I contact my local Member?

The List of Members provides contact details including postal addresses, telephone, facsimile and email (if the Member has a parliamentary email account) information for all Members of the House including Ministers.

You can also email your local Member via a Feedback Form (available for those Members with email accounts) which is located on the Member's Home Pages .

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How do I get my petition before the House and what will happen to it after it is presented?

The House has a number of rules regarding the form and content of petitions. A recommended form of a petition is contained in Infosheet 11.

Only a Member of the House can present a petition to the House. This does not necessarily have to be the petitioner's local Member. Petitions are presented following question time every sitting Monday.

The petition's presentation is noted in the Votes and Proceedings (available in PDF), with the full text printed in Hansard. The Clerk refers every petition to the relevant Minister, who may subsequently lodge a response to the petition for presentation to the House after the presentation of petitions on a sitting Monday. In some cases a Minister may order administrative action to be taken.

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Where can I look at a copy of the Constitution?

The text of the Australian Constitution is available in HTML and Word 6.0 format. A summary of issues covered and other information about the Constitution is available in Infosheet 13.

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Why is the House of Representatives Chamber green?

Green is the colour traditionally used by the British House of Commons, and the Australian House of Representatives followed that tradition when the old Parliament House was being built and furnished in 1926-7. The shades of green selected in the present Chamber represent the grey-green tones of native eucalypts.

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Why is question time so noisy?

Of all the proceedings of the House, the question period is the time when the intensity of partisan politics is most clearly evident. Although the purpose of questions is ostensibly to seek information or press for action, they are, because public attention focuses so heavily on question time, often a vehicle for political opportunism. Opposition Members are tempted in their questioning to stress those matters which will embarrass the Government. On the other hand, government Members are tempted to provide Ministers with an opportunity to present government policies and actions in a favourable light, or to embarrass the Opposition. Questions without notice by their very nature may raise significant difficulties for the Chair. The necessity to make instant decisions on the application of the rules on the form and content of questions is one of the Speaker's most demanding tasks. The noise at question time is not typical of other proceedings, either in the Chamber or at meetings of parliamentary committees.

For more information on question time see Infosheet 1.

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What is a quorum?

A quorum is the minimum number of Members required to be present in the House to constitute a meeting of the House. It is set by law to be one-fifth of the total membership. With 150 Members, this makes a quorum of thirty, including the occupant of the Chair.

The House may, and often does, operate with fewer than 30 Members present. Because of the demands placed on Members it is necessary that they spend a large amount of time on other duties outside the Chamber.

At any time during a sitting any Member may draw the lack of a quorum (the state of the House) to the Chair's attention, and a count must be made. If a quorum is not present, the bells are rung until enough Members are present to form a quorum. If, after 4 minutes, a quorum still isn't present, the Chair may adjourn the House until the next sitting day, or suspend the sitting for a short period, in which case, if there is not a quorum when the Chair resumes, the House is adjourned to another day.

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How is the Ministry selected?

The Ministry is selected from among members of the governing party or parties. In the case of the Liberal-National Party Coalition, the two Party Leaders determine the number of Ministers from each party and which Members and Senators will be appointed from each party. The Prime Minister determines the portfolio responsibilities of each Minister.

The Australian Labor Party, when in government, elects its Ministers by a ballot of all Labor Members and Senators. The Prime Minister, who is also chosen by ballot, then determines the portfolio responsibilities of each of the Ministers.

Ministers are actually appointed by the Governor-General.

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What is the Cabinet?

The Cabinet consists of the Prime Minister and senior Ministers, and decides on all major government policy matters.

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Who is the Clerk and what does he or she do?

The Clerk of the House of Representatives is responsible for advising the Speaker and Members on parliamentary procedure. The Clerk's position in the Chamber is seated at the Table, in front of the Speaker. He or she is assisted in the Chamber by the Deputy Clerk, who sits at the Table to the left of the Clerk.

The Clerk is appointed by the Governor-General, on the recommendation of the Speaker, and serves all Members of the House equally. He or she administers the Department of the House of Representatives, which provides support services to the House, its committees and Members.

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What are the standing and sessional orders?

The standing orders are the continuing rules of procedure adopted by the House; the sessional orders are temporary rules which, in most cases, expire at the end of a session - usually when the House is dissolved for a general election. The current version available:

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Where can I find information about Inter-Parliamentary Relations?

The Parliamentary Relations Office (PRO) provides advice and support relevant to the conduct of the Parliaments international and regional affairs. It also provides general support for inter-parliamentary conferences and incoming and outgoing parliamentary delegations; training support for other parliaments, particularly the smaller parliaments in our region; and advice to the Presiding Officers and members on international parliamentary matters.

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Where can I find more information about the House of Representatives and the Parliament?

You can refer to our list of Infosheets. If you have a general topic in mind, the Index is recommended. The site map for the Parliament site provides a general perspective. The site's search engine may be more useful for locating specific items of information.

The Department of the House of Representatives conducts seminars and workshops on the operations of the House which are open to anyone on payment of a fee.

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