Summary
Five bills were introduced in the Senate on 31 March 2026: the National Disability Insurance Scheme Amendment (Integrity and Safeguarding) Bill 2025, the Copyright Amendment Bill 2026, the Commonwealth Environmental Water Holder Commission of Inquiry Bill 2026, the Export Finance and Insurance Corporation Amendment (Strategic Reserve) Bill 2026, and the Treasury Laws Amendment (Fuel Excise Relief) Bill 2026. The fuel excise relief bill failed across three second reading divisions, while limitation of debate motions on the Export Finance and Insurance Corporation bill were also defeated. The Copyright Amendment Bill 2026 failed its second reading divisions, and the NDIS integrity bill recorded mixed committee stage results before its second reading was defeated. In question time, senators questioned Minister Wong on the inflationary impact of the fuel excise cut, on parliamentary expansion, and on action taken regarding aid worker Zomi Frankcom. Minister Watt was questioned on environment funding levels relative to biodiversity targets, and Minister Ayres was asked about enforcement mechanisms for voluntary artificial intelligence data centre expectations.
Questions
Australian Parliament
Senator McGrath asked who was requesting parliament expansion—the Australian people or Labor—during a cost-of-living crisis. Minister Wong deflected by stating Labor is happy with parliament's current size and composition, suggested the question reflected the questioner's self-interest as a senator, and noted that any review is routine JSCEM process still underway.
Economy
Senator Hume asked how much the government's temporary fuel excise cut would add to inflation, questioning whether it was properly costed. Minister Wong stated that Treasury estimates indicate the excise cut could directly reduce headline inflation by around half a percentage point, then pivoted to criticising the Coalition's alternative proposal on energy policy.
Frankcom, Ms Lalzawmi (Zomi)
Senator Faruqi asked what concrete action the government has taken to secure justice for aid worker Zomi Frankcom, including referral to the ICC or imposing consequences on Israel. Senator Wong responded that the government has repeatedly raised accountability with Israel, pressed for transparency in their investigation, raised the matter with President Herzog, and launched an international declaration to protect humanitarian workers, but did not commit to the specific actions Faruqi requested.
Environment
Senator Pocock asked whether the government can meet its environmental commitments with current funding levels, noting that only 0.1 per cent of the federal budget ($474 million) was spent on nature protection in 2025 while $26 billion in subsidies harm biodiversity. Minister Watt highlighted the government's past funding commitments for native species recovery programs and acknowledged various groups are making funding requests during the budget cycle, but did not directly address whether additional funding would be allocated to meet the 2030 targets.
Artificial Intelligence
Senator Pocock asked how the government would enforce voluntary national expectations for data centres and hold multinational tech companies accountable, noting that legislation was required for the social media age ban. Minister Ayres outlined the expectations framework focused on national interest, energy, skills, and innovation, and emphasized that compliance would be achieved through state-level engagement on planning approvals, but did not directly address the enforcement mechanism or accountability question.
Migration
Senator Roberts questioned why the government's refugee program is not accepting Christian refugees from Nigeria and South Africa while allegedly prioritizing Muslim-majority countries, suggesting the government discriminates based on religion. Minister Watt deflected by rejecting Roberts' framing as divisive, criticizing One Nation's track record on migration issues, and reaffirming that the government does not discriminate based on religion when assessing migration applications on merit.
Fuel Crisis Misinformation
Senator Paterson asked whether the Prime Minister was correct that Bunnings had run out of jerry cans. Minister Wong did not directly address whether Bunnings' inventory was depleted, instead pivoting to discuss the broader context of global energy market disruptions caused by Middle East conflict and the government's policy response.