Nick Xenophon has recommitted to voting down the Turnbull government’s overhaul of Australian citizenship laws, unless fundamental aspects of the bill are changed.
Senator Xenophon on Tuesday confirmed his bloc of three senators would vote against the changes, joining Labor and the Greens to effectively kill off the bill.
In response, Immigration minister Peter Dutton’s office released a statement saying the government was still “discussing the bill with the crossbenchers”.
But Senator Xenophon has all but ruled a change in position, despite meeting with Mr Dutton on Tuesday night.
“There needs to be a substantial rewriting of it,” Senator Xenophon told reporters on Wednesday.
“We’ll continue to talk to the government.”
The Xenophon team’s opposition centres on the proposal for a tough new English language test that would require migrants to reach a 'Band 6' under international testing standards.
The plan was met with strong opposition from ethnic groups, who said it would disadvantage less-educated migrants, including refugees.
The plan was met with strong opposition from ethnic groups, who said it would disadvantage less-educated migrants, including refugees.
Burke takes issue with Herodotus
Labor frontbencher Tony Burke, in a discussion around the bill on Wednesday, ridiculed the high level of English required to pass the test.
In parliament he read out a complicated passage from an English comprehension test part of the IELTS test migrants have to pass, about Herodotus’ account of the battle of Thermopolis.
“That’s not the academic test, that’s the easier one,” he said.
“What on earth does that have to do with being a good Australian? What on earth does that have to do with being a decent Australian citizen?”
Mr Burke said Labor agreed that migrants must have what’s generally regarded as competent English.
“Guess what, if the test is in English I reckon it’s pretty hard to pass if you have no English.”
“University level English as a demand, one is ridiculous, two is an act of extraordinary snobbery.”
He said the changes did not come from a recommendation from security agencies but a report from two Liberals, and warned it would create a permanent underclass of non-citizens.
“Australia has not been that sort of country ever since we got rid of the White Australia policy.”