Does it Exist? LibertyWorks and Australia’s Shrinking Implied Freedom of Political Communication

Sarah Sorial, Shireen Morris
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Abstract

  In this article we examine the recent High Court decision in LibertyWorks Inc v Commonwealth of Australia (‘LibertyWorks’). We argue that this decision fails to properly apply the implied freedom of political communication (the ‘implied freedom’) in four principle ways. First, the majority judgments do not properly grapple with the complexities of legislative purpose. The Foreign Influence Transparency Scheme Act 2018 (Cth) (‘FITS Act’) targets foreign influence rather than just covert and corrupt foreign interference, yet the judgements blur this important distinction throughout. If the true legislative purpose of the FITS Act is to increase transparency to prevent foreign influence, this purpose is illegitimate and incompatible with Australia’s representative government, so the FITS Act should fail on this basis. Alternatively, if the true purpose is to increase transparency to prevent foreign interference, that legislative purpose is not served by the scheme, because it is ineffective in achieving its aim. Second, the majority in LibertyWorks do not properly assess the legislative breadth of the FITS Act, including the wide range of actors to which the obligations to register relate. This, we suggest, imposes a broad and, arguably, unbalanced burden on free debate. Third, the majority do not pay sufficient regard to the different tiers of registration, which create not only public, but also private (and therefore unjustified) catalogues of information. Finally, Steward J’s constitutionally conservative (yet paradoxically activist) claim that the implied freedom may not exist appears to invite a future constitutional challenge to the implied freedom. We argue his Honour may be right, but not for the reasons he elucidates. In our view, the implied freedom was essentially non-existent in this case because it was not robustly applied by the High Court.
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它存在吗?LibertyWorks和澳大利亚缩水的隐含政治传播自由
在这篇文章中,我们研究了高等法院最近在LibertyWorks Inc诉澳大利亚联邦案(“LibertyWorks”)中的裁决。我们认为,这一决定未能在四个原则方面正确适用隐含的政治沟通自由(“隐含自由”)。首先,多数人的判决没有恰当地处理立法目的的复杂性。《2018年外国影响力透明度计划法案》(Cth)(“FITS法案”)针对的是外国影响力,而不仅仅是隐蔽和腐败的外国干涉,然而这些判决始终模糊了这一重要区别。如果FITS法案的真正立法目的是提高透明度以防止外国影响,那么这一目的是非法的,与澳大利亚的代议制政府不兼容,因此FITS法案应该在此基础上失败。或者,如果真正的目的是提高透明度以防止外国干涉,那么该计划就不符合立法目的,因为它无法实现其目标。其次,LibertyWorks的大多数人没有正确评估《FITS法案》的立法广度,包括与登记义务相关的广泛行为者。我们认为,这给自由辩论带来了广泛的、可以说是不平衡的负担。第三,大多数人没有充分考虑不同的登记层次,这些层次不仅创建了公共的,而且创建了私人的(因此是不合理的)信息目录。最后,Steward J在宪法上的保守派(但矛盾的活动家)声称隐含的自由可能不存在,这似乎引发了未来对隐含自由的宪法挑战。我们认为,他的荣誉可能是正确的,但不是因为他所阐述的原因。我们认为,在本案中,隐含的自由基本上不存在,因为高等法院没有有力地适用这一自由。
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