Student sample for assessment
Written by a Year 9 student in Bendigo, Victoria, Australia.
Australia's parliament consists of two houses that must both agree before a bill—a proposed law—becomes law. The House of Representatives has 151 members, while the Senate has 76 senators. Most bills start in the House of Representatives. This system of two houses exists to ensure that laws are examined carefully and that the government cannot simply pass legislation without scrutiny. Each house acts as a check on the other. When a bill is introduced in the House of Representatives, it goes through four stages: first reading, where the bill is formally introduced; second reading debate, where members discuss whether the bill should pass; committee stage, where detailed examination occurs; and third reading, where final approval is given. Once the House of Representatives passes a bill, it moves to the Senate, where it undergoes the same four stages. The Senate can approve the bill, reject it, or propose amendments. This means the Senate functions as a genuine check—it cannot simply rubber-stamp what the House of Representatives has decided. If the Senate repeatedly rejects government legislation, a double dissolution can occur, which allows new elections to be held. However, most bills pass both houses because the government typically has enough support. Once both houses pass a bill, the Governor-General gives royal assent, which is the formal approval that makes the bill an official law. This final step exists to recognise the British tradition of parliament, but in practice it is a formality. The process ensures that laws must survive scrutiny in both houses, making it difficult to pass legislation hastily.