Not sure why we should be listening to a Cardinal on the issue of a Bill of Rights, especially when their specialisation is religion, not politics or constitutionalism, however Cardinal Pell decided to weigh in on the subject recently.

Gary Sauer-Thompson discussed Pell's framing it within the culture wars, while Graham Young discusses Pell's speech as being intellectually slight and looks at differences between constitutional and statutory rights.
As I have commented before, a Bill of Rights is exclusionary. It stops the executive and legislative from intruding into liberties that are outside the domain of governance. It is particularly ironic in Pell's case as freedom of religion is one of the few entrenched constitutional rights in Australia.

Pell's fictions are exceptionally weak as well and are more stereotypes and talking points than a constitutionally or statutorially sound argument. Pell's argument is not really worth taking on other than for the reason that a Bill or Rights is an important component of limited republican government and constitutional liberalism.
This style of misrepresentation of rights is common in Australian conservative discourse; the bill of rights tag on SSR overflows with rebuttals;
- Confused Constitutionalism
- Executive Dominated Governance
- Bill of Rights and Legislative Supremacy
- Prohibiting Government Constitutionally
The Executive shall execute no law; the Legislative shall make no law; and the Judicature shall endorse no law; that: ...These become areas explicitly outside of executive and legislative governance.






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