ACT Party Leader David Seymour is defending the Regulatory Standards Bill getting only 30 hours of public submissions allocated.

Speaking to media, Seymour said the bill was “probably the most consulted on bill this century” given it would be the bill’s fourth time through the house.

But, Labour’s Regulation spokesperson Duncan Webb said it was the “most rejected bill we’ve ever seen” and Seymour wanted to “slip it through under the radar”.

Toop said it was a “travesty” that there would only be 30 hours for people to be heard in by Select Committee and the bill would insert “far-right ideology” into the law making process.

“I don’t believe there’s ever been a bill in this Parliament where every single written submission has been heard. A lot of people make written submissions and they ask not to be heard. That’s normal.” Seymour said.

Labour’s Duncan Webb said the bill had so far been “rejected every time” and Seymour did not want the bill to go through a full process.