philperth2010 wrote on Feb 7
th, 2019 at 5:19pm:
I cannot believe Wilson could be so obviously in conflict and not stand down from the committee..
So let's see-
it was a Parliamentary Committee.
Parliamentary Committees ask for submissions.
These submissions are open for anyone to make.
You can ask your wife, brother, husband etc whether they wish to make a submission, because they are not debarred by statute, rule or convention.
However you can not ask a distant relative in whose business you own shares because....?
So let's look at the Australan Law Library and see what that says -
" The Senate has published a document entitled How to make a submission to a Senate Committee inquid which indicates that
parliamentary privilege only applies after the relevant committee has formally accepted the submission. The equivalent House of Representatives document, Preparing a submission to a Parliamentary Committee inquiry does not explicitly make this point,
though it does indicate that a committee has a discretion to decide whether or not to accept a submission. The point of this mechanism is to allow a committee to decline to clothe with parliamentary privilege a submission that contains, for example, scurrilous or defamatory material, or because it contains material that is not relevant to the particular inquiry. "
http://classic.austlii.edu.au/au/journals/AIAdminLawF/2004/16.pdfSo please tell us where this conflict of interest arises.