On 2020-08-25 09:01, Tom Worthington wrote:

> There is no law preventing the Parliament meeting online, just a lack of will 
> to do it. It is time for MPs and Senators to follow the example of tens of 
> thousands of other Australians and make the minor changes to their routine to 
> work online.

Why?

The theatre of Parliament is one place where our Representatives are publicly 
held to account.  Online meetings would make the business of government even 
less accessible and less accountable than it is now by creating a sense of 
remoteness, by drawing a veil over body language and party dynamics.  The 
nature of the technology would reduce the impact of the stirring policy speech 
to that of an SMS text.

And where do you draw the line?  Would Senate Estimates be held using Zoom?  I 
want to see incompetent ministers and public officials squirming in their chair 
under close questioning.

The incident where Scott Morrison produced a lump of coal in Parliament 
(presumably supplied by a coal lobbyist) and the reaction of those on the front 
benches said more about the Coalition's attitude to coal than could possibly be 
conveyed in a zoom meeting.

David Lochrin
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