Armed Forces Bill

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Armed Forces Bill
Long titleA Bill to Regulate Membership in the Armed Forces Among Members of Parliament
Introduced by
  • Sir Charles Burgardt, Prime Minister
  • Duke of Northumbria, Shadow Secretary of State for Defence
Dates
Laid before Parliament
  • 11 December 2022
  • 7 January 2023
Status: Not passed

The Armed Forces Bill (Bill C6101, Bill L622) is a bill introduced in the House of Commons of Baustralia, by Sir Charles Burgardt, the last day in his tenure as Prime Minister. It failed with a majority of nays. Its second draft was introduced by the Duke of Northumbria as Shadow Secretary of State for Defence. It failed with one nay past majority. The third reading never took place by the end of the session.

Background

1st reading

In the Burgardt ministry's legislative agenda for December, two bills remained as the Stonian by-election started. The Prime Minister submitted the Acts of Parliament the day before the election, with the first bill receiving royal assent regarding a transition to absolute primogeniture, and the second being the Armed Forces Bill.

The Armed Forces Bill pushes Members of Parliament also serving with the Baustralian Armed Forces to serve in a reserve component and not in the regular force. MPs who later leave the Parliament must apply to serve in the regular force once again. With a high ratio of MPs concurrently serving in the Forces, and many flag and general officers also being MPs, the bill proved very unpopular.

2nd reading

The second reading proposed creating an education branch of the forces to allow MPs to teach their skills, and as such take an active role, or join the reserves as for any other branch under the same conditions as the first reading. It was introduced the evening of 7 January 2023. Throughout the next day, it remained a close ballot, with oppositions gaining lead by one vote. It failed by one vote, by Liberal MP Arthur van der Bruyn, the only Liberal to vote against the bill.

Votes

Current votes
First reading Second reading
Aye Nay Abstain Aye Nay Abstain
Sir Charles Burgardt Rory Leonard Arthur Lacey-Scott-FitzLacia Anna Calero Manggala Prasetia Arthur Lacey-Scott-FitzLacia
Carson Snyder Oliver Doig Anna Calero Soren FitzGibbons Rory Leonard
Ian Douglas Smith II Thomas Jacobs Carson Snyder Sir Oliver Doig
Logan Perry-Ardens Soren FitzGibbons Logan Perry-Ardens Brianna Broersma
Oliver Doig Sir Charles Burgardt Thomas Jacobs
William Perks Matthew Hughes Sir James Gardner
Majority of 6 required. William Perks
Arthur van der Bruyn

Aftermath

If passed, 18 of 21 members of Parliament would be affected in some way. The following are the effects:

The following members will switch to reserve components but will keep their posts.
Adm of the F Lord John Timpson Royal Household First and Principal Naval Aide-de-Camp
Adm Sir Nick Sullivan Royal Household Great Officer of State
Gen Sir Greg Watts Royal Household Great Officer of State
VAdm Sir Oliver Doig Royal Household Great Officer of State
The following members will switch to reserve components and will lose their posts.
Cdre Sir James Gardner Baustralia Squadron Flag Officer-in-Command
Cdre Brianna Broersma Naval Regulating Branch Provost Marshal (HRN)
Brig Carson Snyder Military Police Branch Provost Marshal (Army)
S/Capt Logan Perry-Ardens Medical Branch Deputy Surgeon General
Cdr Lady Ella Parker Administrative Corps Purser of the Navy
LtCol Ava Calero Royal Baustralian Regiment Deputy Commanding Officer
Capt William Perks Royal Baustralian Regiment 1 Platoon Commander
Capt Rory Leonard Baustralian Dragoons 1 Platoon Commander
Capt Soren FitzGibbons Baustralian Dragoons Quartermaster
Capt Manggala Prasetia Parker Regiment Quartermaster
CPO(Reg) Arthur van der Bruyn HMS Promise Master-at-Arms
The following members have no post but must change unit affiliations.
L/Cpl Arthur Lacey-Scott-FitzLacia Baustralian Dragoons
OS Matthew Hughes HMS Promise
OS Thomas Jacobs HMS Trent