Religious discrimination bill overhauled

November 17, 2021 by AAP
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Schools would receive legal protection to hire staff on the basis of faith under a bill expected to go to federal parliament as early as next week.

Moriah College, Sydney

However, the religious discrimination bill would not allow a school to reject a teacher based on their sexuality or other trait.

The draft bill will be presented to a joint coalition party room meeting in Canberra on Tuesday and could be introduced to parliament as early as Wednesday.

It is understood a contentious part of the bill – known as the “Folau clause” – has been scrapped from an earlier version.

The section would have protected organisations from indirect discrimination claims if they acted against employees for misconduct for expressing their religion.

There had been a push from conservative groups for the bill to allow individuals and organisations the freedom to make statements of belief, such as Israel Folau’s controversial social media posts saying homosexuals would go to hell.

Folau, who was sacked by Rugby Australia in 2019 over the posts, later received an apology from the body and a confidential settlement.

Also believed to be axed is a section in the bill allowing healthcare providers to “conscientiously object” to providing a service on religious grounds.

Education Minister Alan Tudge told Sky News on Wednesday the bill would uphold the right of a religious school to employ teachers of their own faith.

“This is a critical principle at stake here … you can’t be a Catholic school if you can’t employ Catholic teachers, you can’t be a Muslim school without employing Muslim teachers.”

Asked if it also meant a Catholic school could reject a gay teacher, Mr Tudge said: “That wouldn’t be lawful under our bill.”

He said while there had not been a significant problem to be resolved by the bill, the laws would enable schools to “provide a good education consistent with the values which they articulate”.

The bill was an election promise by the Liberal-National coalition but has sat in the too-hard basket since then as conservatives and moderates disagree on how far it should go.

Labor is awaiting the detail before determining its position.

From Paul Osborne in Canberra/AAP

Comments

4 Responses to “Religious discrimination bill overhauled”
  1. Rabbi Chaim Ingram OAM says:

    “You can’t be a Catholic school if you can’t employ Catholic teachers, you can’t be a Muslim school without employing Muslim teachers.”
    But not only teachers of one’s own faith, Mr. Tudge. I taught once in a Catholic school. Many Jewish schools employ non-Jewish secular studies teachers. Perfectly fine. But to be told you have to employ teachers even if they boast a lifestyle or ideology at odds with that of the school – that is government control gone mad.

    • mikeybear says:

      Curious to understand how a geography, music, maths or physics teacher would need to uphold a particular religious ideology, or for that matter the cleaner or maintenance person?

    • mikeybear says:

      I’m also curious to understand if these “lifestyles” you refer to so vaguely include being divorced, single (by choice), married and childless (by choice), or remarried?

  2. mikeybear says:

    The ramifications of such a Religious Discrimination Bill are going to impact many vulnerable groups, most notably disabled people. This is going to be far worse for many segments of Australian society than just protecting religions.

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