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$900 stimulus payment will go ahead

The High Court has ruled that the Federal Government’s stimulus package payments of up to $900 can go ahead. ย  The decision comes after a challenge from University of New England academic Bryan Pape who argued the payments were a gift, not a tax measure, and that the Government had no power to distribute them. […]
Patrick Stafford
Patrick Stafford

The High Court has ruled that the Federal Government’s stimulus package payments of up to $900 can go ahead.

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The decision comes after a challenge from University of New England academic Bryan Pape who argued the payments were a gift, not a tax measure, and that the Government had no power to distribute them.

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But Government Solicitor-General Stephen Gageler argued that the Constitution provided the Parliament power to allocate money from the consolidated revenue fund.

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The court’s full bench ruled this morning that the legislation that introduced the stimulus package was valid, while Chief Justice Robert French said the court would explain its decision at a later date.

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The decision means that payments of up to $900 will be made to millions of Australian from Monday 6 April.

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Pape said outside the court that it was a “triumph” that a citizen could challenge such a large Government initiative and that he was looking forward to hearing the court’s full decision.

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