Malcolm Turnbull’s ultimatum to the Senate – pass the government’s industrial relations bills or face a double dissolution – is a confrontationist but canny strategy.
After the vibe took hold that Turnbull looked weak, this is being seen as using his authority decisively.
It can correctly be said he is putting a gun to the heads of the crossbench - but it can’t be claimed he is being tricky or devious. He is spelling out very directly what the senators must do to avoid a double dissolution.
If the crossbenchers won’t play ball, the government spills the whole Senate at a July 2 election that, on present polling, it would win. Industrial relations would be at the centre of the campaign, which would be to the disadvantage of Bill Shorten.
That election would get rid of some of the present pesky crossbench. The industrial legislation would pass through a subsequent joint sitting.
On the other hand, if sufficient crossbenchers decide to back the bills, Turnbull obtains the measures, and can claim a significant victory over a previously recalcitrant Senate.
He forgoes the double dissolution. But that would not be a disaster. True, he would be left with most of his difficult current crossbenchers – only John Madigan faces the voters at a normal Senate election - but he’d also dodge a risk.
The new Senate voting system passed last week certainly works against “micro” players, and would take some or most of those there out in a DD. But, given the small quota, the new Senate could still see a difficult crossbench. For example Tasmanian Jacqui Lambie, regarded by the government as particularly trying to deal with, would likely get back.
By having Parliament recalled for three weeks so the Senate can debate the bills to resurrect the Australian Building and Construction Commission and to tighten trade union governance, Turnbull has overcome one of two serious timing problems he had for a double dissolution.
He wants the ABCC legislation as part of any DD trigger, but there was not going be time for it to be properly dealt with. So the argument that it had “failed to pass” and thus was eligible to be a trigger would have been, at the least, questionable.
There can be no disputing the Senate will now have plenty of opportunity to debate it. Even if a final vote was avoided, the government would have a solid failure to pass case.
By bringing the budget forward a week, Turnbull is clearing away another scheduling obstacle. A May 10 budget followed by calling an election on May 11 presented a bad squeeze. It gave hardly any time to get supply – required for the election period - through two houses and no opportunity for Bill Shorten’s budget reply.
Labor would not refuse supply but a Senate filibuster, if the opposition wanted to play hardball, could have been dangerous. Denying Shorten his budget reply would have been indecorous.
Now there will be ample time to get right both the necessities and the niceties if there is to be a DD.
None of this means the coming weeks, especially the parliamentary weeks, won’t be chaotic, full of anger, confected and genuine, from the furious crossbenchers who are now under maximum pressure, and with Labor trying tactical manoeuvres.
Some of the crossbenchers face the choice between survival for four years if they surrender on the legislation or adopting a defiant stand and facing nasty consequences.
For Madigan, whether it is a double dissolution or a half Senate election, the difference is likely to be between leaving the Senate mid this year or mid next year, when his full term runs out. He is not expected to have a chance of re-election.
Independent Nick Xenophon would be advantaged by a DD – he could end up this year with two or three Senate seats and potentially in a very powerful position.
The government needs six out of eight of the non-Green crossbenchers for its bills. They start from different positions on the ABCC legislation – stretching from firmly in favour (Family First’s Bob Day) to firmly against (John Madigan, Glenn Lazarus) with others ranged between. A number of them are talking tough now; time will tell if pragmatism kicks in.
One consideration for some might be the realisation they could kill the bills, kill their own political careers and then see the legislation operating anyway after a joint sitting. Looked at that way, is it really worth their hanging out?
With the political heat now dramatically turned up, the next few weeks will be challenging for Turnbull to manage.
But they will also be difficult for Shorten, as he comes under more pressure to justify why the unions – some of which have emerged very badly from the royal commission - should not be subject to these tougher provisions.
There has been some speculation that the Senate, while having to return because the Governor-General has recalled the whole parliament, once back could decide not to consider the industrial bills.
If it did, that would discredit the Senate further. It would also reinforce the argument that the Senate had “failed to pass” the ABCC legislation.
Excessive union power might be an issue to Turnbull’s advantage but it wouldn’t be the only issue if there is a double dissolution election. Turnbull still has a serious need to forge a credible, affordable, saleable tax package.
According to Monday’s Newspoll the public is willing to cut him some slack on tax, despite the shambles we’ve recently seen from the government. The poll found 45% thought Turnbull the more capable of handling tax reform, compared with 25% who nominated Shorten as the more capable.
Nevertheless an election campaign in which Turnbull could put as much weight as possible on industrial relations would obviously be attractive for him.
Michelle Grattan, Professorial Fellow, University of Canberra
This article was originally published on The Conversation. Read the original article.



UN Clash Erupts as Israel Envoy Confronts UN Officials Over Blacklisting Reports
JD Vance Rebukes Israeli Critics of Iran Deal, Defends Trump’s Middle East Strategy
Trump Inspects Upgraded Qatar-Gifted Boeing 747 as Interim Air Force One Nears Service
Zelenskiy Backs Lula’s Peace Initiative as Ukraine Seeks New Diplomatic Path to End War
Trump Says He Will Visit Turkey and Return to China in 2026
Russia and Ukraine Exchange Strikes After Zelenskiy-Trump Talks
Meloni Slams Trump Over G7 Photo Claim as U.S.-Italy Relations Deteriorate
South Korea’s Lee Jae Myung Strengthens Ties With Trump at G7 Summit, Discusses North Korea and Future Golf Meeting
Colombia Opens New Investigation Into Former President Álvaro Uribe Over Paramilitary Allegations
JD Vance Delays Iran Peace Talks as U.S.-Iran War Deal Faces New Uncertainty
Trump’s Iran Strategy: What Has Been Achieved After Three Months of Conflict?
US Raises Concerns Over Possible ASML EUV Machine Transfer to China
Trump Says Anthropic No Longer Seen as National Security Threat
Canada, British Columbia Launch $5 Billion Infrastructure Partnership to Boost Housing, Transit, and Healthcare
Carney, Trump Hold Detailed Trade Talks as USMCA Future Faces Uncertainty
Trump Questions USMCA Renewal as Trade Talks Continue
IRGC Expands Secret Iraq Cells to Target Gulf States Hosting U.S. Forces 



