Nationals MP George Christensen crosses the floor on penalty rates

Nationals MP George Christensen has crossed the floor to vote with Labor as it unsuccessfully tried to stop cuts to penalty rates.

Nationals Member for Dawson George Christensen during Question Time in the House of Representatives at Parliament House in Canberra, Thursday, March 2, 2017. (AAP Image/Mick Tsikas) NO ARCHIVING

Nationals Member for Dawson George Christensen during Question Time in the House of Representatives at Parliament House. Source: AAP

A government backbencher has followed through on his threat to cross the floor by supporting a push by Labor to stop cuts to penalty rates.

Nationals MP George Christensen voted with the opposition in the lower house on Tuesday night, after the changes were put forward by Labor's employment spokesman Brendan O'Connor.

The move was narrowly defeated 73-72.

The amendments would have given effect to Mr Christensen's private bill - introduced on Monday - to prevent a Fair Work Commission ruling to cut Sunday rates for some workers.

It would have also stopped rates from being cut under enterprise agreements if an employee was worse off than under an award wage.

"Just crossed floor & voted to save penalty rates from Fair Work Commission cuts & unions bargaining them away in EAs. Sad vote lost 73-72," Mr Christensen tweeted.

While the Queensland MP has publicly declared his intention to protect the take-home pay of Australians, it's the first time he has voted against his government on the issue.

He told parliament on Monday he was "breaking ranks" with the coalition because it concerned peoples' livelihoods and ability to put food on the table.

Mr O'Connor said while there were "major deficiencies" in Mr Christensen's bill, Labor's priority was to put workers first.

Mr Christensen on Wednesday doubted that his decision to cross the floor would come at a cost.

"There's not going to be any significant repercusions, this was an issue I feel strongly about and I didn't vote against the government on a motion of confidence or supply," he told Sky News.

"I'm a member of the government and I still support the government."

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2 min read
Published 20 June 2017 7:58pm
Updated 21 June 2017 7:48am
Source: AAP


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