a dual political system you do not expect to find either government legislating
regulate the legal relations of the Commonwealth with its subjects.
Constitutional Implications in Australia
353
of the federal system’.
43
Since then, in the 1997 Henderson’s Case decision,
the Court has affirmed the principle, while also somewhat reformulating it,
as an implied immunity that protects the capacities of the Commonwealth,
but subjects them to state regulation in their exercise.
44
That case involved
a challenge to the application of the
Residential Tenancies Act 1987 (NSW)
to the Commonwealth’s statutory authority, the Defence Housing Authority.
A majority of the Court affirmed the doctrine, but reformulated it so as to turn
on a distinction between an implied immunity that protected the capacities of
the Commonwealth, but subjected them to state regulation in their exercise.
The usefulness of such a distinction was criticised heavily by McHugh J, and
Kirby J argued that the only coherent formulation of the implication was as a
reciprocal version of the doctrine in Melbourne Corporation.
Tracing their providence back to Dixon J, one of Australia’s most celebrated
legalistic jurists, the Melbourne Corporation and Cigamatic doctrines are now
well-established and accepted implications of Australian federal constitutional
law. They are fundamentally structural protections of government institutions
and, at least for the Commonwealth, constitutional powers. In their formula-
tion and application, they have had little rights-salience.
12.1.3. Representative and Responsible Government
In the last three decades, the High Court has developed important implica-
tions protecting the operation of political democracy in Australia or, in the
Westminster-derived language of the Court, the institutions of ‘representative
and responsible government’. The first implication that was drawn by the
Court in this context was the implied freedom of political communication.
The principle was initially identified by the Court in ACTV v. Commonwealth
and Nationwide News v. Wills in 1992. In these earlier cases, however, there
was substantive disagreement between the judges as to the basis for the impli-
cation and the strength of its relationship to the text of the Constitution. It was
finally refined in the 1997 decision of Lange v. ABC, where a unanimous Court
held that ‘freedom of communication on matters of government and politics is
an indispensable incident of [the] system of representative government which
the Constitution creates’, via provisions such as sections 7, 24, 64 and 128.
45
43
Ibid.
, 377.
44
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