Title: Commonwealth Constitution
1Commonwealth Constitution
Commonwealth Constitution
Parliament has Legislative power
Cabinet has Executive power
The Courts have Judicial power
The Ministry
High Court
Other federal courts
House of Representatives
Senate
Doctrine of separation of powers
2An outline ofthe Australian Constitution
- Chapters
- The Parliament
- The Executive Government
- The Judicature
- Finance and Trade
- The States
- New States
- Miscellaneous
- Alteration of the Constitution
3I. Parliament
- Chapter I vests the legislative power of the
Commonwealth in a Federal Parliament consisting
of the Queen, a Senate and a House of
Representatives, and provides for the
establishment of the Houses, the significant
procedures and the powers of the Parliament.
4The concurrent powers
Section 51 The Parliament shall, subject to this
constitution, have power to make laws for the
peace, order and good governance of the
Commonwealth with respect to 39 specific heads
of power.
5The concurrent powers
- If the subject matter of Commonwealth legislation
is not included within the 39 heads, then the
Federal Government has no legislative authority
to deal with it. - Case New South Wales v The Commonwealth (1990)
- Case Australian Communist Party v Commonwealth
(1951)
6V. The States
- Chapter V preserves State constitutions, State
laws and powers of State parliaments. - Racial Discrimination Act 1975 (Cth)
- Commonwealth v Tasmania (1983) 158 CLR 1
7Inconsistency
- Section 109 deals with conflicts between
Commonwealth and State laws. - Section 109
- When a law of a State is inconsistent with a law
of the Commonwealth, the latter shall prevail,
and the former shall, to the extent of the
inconsistency, be invalid.
8Inconsistency
- The test applied by the courts is to determine
whether or not the Federal Parliament expressly
or impliedly intended to cover the whole field,
and if so any State law entering upon that field
is invalid.
9II. The Executive Government
- Chapter II vests the executive power of the
Commonwealth in the Queen, and provides for it to
be exercisable by the Governor-General as the
Queens representative with the advice of the
Federal Executive Council.
10Legislative and executive powers
Section 62 There shall be a Federal Executive
Council to advise the Governor-General in the
Government of the Commonwealth, and the members
of the Council shall be chosen and summoned by
the Governor-General and sworn as Executive
Councillors, and shall hold office during his
pleasure.
11III. The Judicature
- Chapter III vests the judicial power of the
Commonwealth in the High Court of Australia and
any other Federal courts created by the
Parliament.
12Judicial power
- The separateness of judicial power has been
preserved under the Australian Constitution. - Case R v Kirby Ex parte the Boilermakers
Society of Australia (1956) - Case Brandy v Human Rights and Equal
Opportunity Commission (1995)
13IV. Finance and Trade
- Section 90 grants exclusive power to the Federal
Parliament over customs and excise duties. - Section 92 provides that trade commerce and
intercourse among the States shall be
absolutely free.
14VIII. Alteration of the Constitution
- Section 128 provides the procedure by which the
constitution may be amended. - The amendment must be passed
- by both Houses of Parliament
- by a majority of voters
- by a majority of States.