Thursday, 11 September 2025
Members statements
Camp Sovereignty
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Commencement
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Rulings from the Chair
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Bills
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Electoral Amendment (Group Voting and Vote Counting) Bill 2025
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Introduction
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Business of the house
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Orders of the day
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Documents
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Business of the house
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Adjournment
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Members statements
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Power saving bonus
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Youth crime
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Lutfiye Kavci and Vicki Scott
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Friends of Hillcroft Park
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Diwali and Annakut
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Malvern police station
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Housing
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Chris Gibbs
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Community safety
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Family violence
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Tee Up for Mental Health Golf Day
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Morwell electorate greyhound racing
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Morwell electorate sporting clubs
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Altona development
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Multiculturalism
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Ivanhoe Bowling Club
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3081 Angels
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The Life and Times of Thomas Embling
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Camp Sovereignty
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Kalkallo electorate Scouts
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Kamaruka
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St Paraskevi Greek Orthodox Church
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Emine Davut
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Yilmaz Cesur
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Mick Mirovic
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Diamond Valley College
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Research Lower Plenty Baseball Club
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Eltham Wildcats Basketball Club
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St Vincent’s Care Eltham
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Dau Akueng and Chol Achiek
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Eureka electorate crime
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Cranbourne Food Truck
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Michael O’Keeffe
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Bills
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Parks and Public Land Legislation Amendment (Central West and Other Matters) Bill 2025
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Statement of compatibility
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Second reading
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Mental Health Legislation Amendment Bill 2025
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Statement of compatibility
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Second reading
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Building Legislation Amendment (Fairer Payments on Jobsites and Other Matters) Bill 2025
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Statement of compatibility
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Second reading
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Business of the house
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Orders of the day
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Standing and sessional orders
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Bills
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Domestic Animals Amendment (Rehoming Cats and Dogs and Other Matters) Bill 2025
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Members
- Minister for Health
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Minister for Transport Infrastructure
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Absence
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Questions without notice and ministers statements
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Community safety
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Ministers statements: power saving bonus
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Community safety
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Ministers statements: housing
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Community safety
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Ministers statements: major events
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Ministers statements: Emergency Services and Volunteers Fund
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Community safety
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Ministers statements: working from home
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Constituency questions
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Brighton electorate
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Narre Warren North electorate
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Murray Plains electorate
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Northcote electorate
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Mornington electorate
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Glen Waverley electorate
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Narracan electorate
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Bellarine electorate
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Rowville electorate
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Pakenham electorate
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Rulings from the Chair
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Member conduct
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Bills
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Domestic Animals Amendment (Rehoming Cats and Dogs and Other Matters) Bill 2025
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Domestic Building Contracts Amendment Bill 2025
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Council’s agreement
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Business of the house
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Standing and sessional orders
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Orders of the day
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Motions
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Budget papers 2025–26
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Bills
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Casino and Gambling Legislation Amendment Bill 2025
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Second reading
- Third reading
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Domestic Animals Amendment (Rehoming Cats and Dogs and Other Matters) Bill 2025
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Adjournment
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Victoria Police
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Bright Moon Buddhist Society
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Homelessness
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Fishermans Bend development
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Road maintenance
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Football Victoria
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Country Fire Authority Warrandyte brigade
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Broadmeadows train station
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Swinburne University of Technology
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Cranbourne community hospital
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Responses
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Camp Sovereignty
Ellen SANDELL (Melbourne) (10:37): Right in the heart of our Melbourne CBD, just across the road from the NGV, behind a small grassy hill is a very special sacred place, and it is called Camp Sovereignty. Aboriginal elders lit a ceremonial fire on this site around the Commonwealth Games 20 years ago and reignited this fire in January last year and have kept it going ever since. The site, which governments called Kings Domain but which is about as far away from the King’s Buckingham Palace as you could possibly get, has a long history for First Nations people – before colonisation as a corroboree site and then, shamefully, as an Aboriginal reserve. In 1985 it became a sacred burial ground for 38 people, many of whom had their bodies returned from overseas institutions. Now it is a peaceful place where people come together to talk, yarn, heal and build connection.
So it came as a horrific shock last week when a gang of cowardly, violent neo-Nazis attacked and violently assaulted people at this sacred site. It was a disgusting attack, and it deeply shook so many of our First Nations communities and also our multicultural communities, who are bearing the brunt of a deeply disturbing rise in far-right extremism in our state. Elders at Camp Sovereignty have issued an invitation for the Premier to visit the camp, to visit with elders and victims and to discuss ways the government can support them and fight the rise of far-right extremism. They are calling for government and council investment to rename the site and to build infrastructure for a permanent ceremonial ground. What a great way that would be to show the neo-Nazis they will never, ever win.