Senate Votes Down Coalition Attempt to Block 60-Day Dispensing, Allowing Cheaper Prescriptions Plan to Proceed

Senate Votes Down Coalition Attempt to Block 60-Day Dispensing, Allowing Cheaper Prescriptions Plan to Proceed

Patients with chronic conditions ‍are set to ⁢receive two months of medicine for ⁤the price of one from 1 September, after ‍the Senate voted down a Coalition ⁤push ‌to tear up Labor’s ​60-day dispensing⁣ changes.

The changes, which‍ are estimated to save six million Australians up ⁢to $180 a year for each medicine,⁤ faced⁢ a disallowance motion brought by the opposition in the ⁣Senate on Thursday morning.

The Coalition ‌attempted to delay its own disallowance until 4 September to give the government time to pause‍ its policy – an offer the health minister, ‌Mark Butler, declined to take up.

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Labor, the Greens and senators David Pocock, Lidia Thorpe and Jacqui Lambie voted‌ in the Senate to reject the delaythen to bring on the disallowance motion 31 votes to 26.

The motion was in the name of the shadow health‌ minister, Anne Ruston, the‍ Nationals ‍leader ​in the‍ Senate, Bridget McKenzie, One⁤ Nation senators Pauline Hanson and Malcolm Roberts, and former Liberal David Van. But when the moment⁤ arrived, none pressed it.

The Senate president,⁤ Sue⁣ Lines, announced the motion would remain on the books until the next sitting ⁢day, in case another senator wanted to adopt the motion.

In question⁣ time, Anthony Albanese ‌denounced the “farce”, describing the⁤ motion as an “orphan” after the Coalition “lost six votes trying to⁢ block ‍the vote being ⁤held”.

After question time, the Labor senator Louise Pratt adopted the⁣ orphaned disallowance motion,⁤ allowing the Senate to ⁣finally⁢ vote it down.

McKenzie ⁣immediately announced that the Coalition had lodged “another disallowance” motion that could see the measure put to a vote in ⁤the⁣ week of 4 September.

“This highlights for ‌the​ government⁤ that we are very very serious, it is not good enough to say this ‍is not⁤ going ⁢to have a ⁣negative impact, that people’s‍ healthcare delivery particularly in the regions won’t be impacted‌ when it actually will,” she said.

Butler told reporters in Canberra that this ‍was a “destructive” move, quipping that ‍the “circus ⁤continues” after a⁣ day of procedural difficulties ​in the Senate.

Coalition senators argued with the Senate president ⁢as she​ sided with Labor⁤ at key‌ moments, and⁣ joked at Pratt’s ⁣expense that she might be expelled for adopting their motion.

At one point Thorpe exclaimed “stop disrupting the Senate” before a knowing ‌laugh, well aware of her reputation as its principal disruptor. Pocockappeared to tune out the‌ procedural noise while reading a ⁣volume on the housing crisis.

The ‌60-day dispensing changes are supported by ⁤doctors’ groups including the Australian Medical Association and the Royal Australian College of General Practitioners as well⁢ as patient⁣ groups including‍ the Consumer Health Forum.

The ⁤changes will now take effect from 1 September, but Butler revealed ⁣the government‍ is still seeking legal advice about whether ‍60-day scripts‌ will ‌be valid if…

2023-08-10 02:06:49
Source ‍from www.theguardian.com

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