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Liberal Party of Australia |
68 |
|
National Party of Australia |
13 |
|
Country Liberal Party |
1 |
|
Australian Labor Party |
65 |
|
Independents |
3 |
|
Total |
150 |
The election for the House of Representatives must be held by 16 April 2005, the last Saturday within this period.
However an election may be held at any time before that date, and generally elections are called well before there is a constitutional or legal necessity. In recent times Prime Minister William McMahon has gone closest, dissolving the House after two years, 11 months and 8 days. There has been only one instance of an election being held after a parliament expired through effluxion of time. This occurred in 1910.
The Next Half-Senate Election
Unlike the House of Representatives, the Senate is a continuing body. Half the Senate retires on 30 June every three years, except in the case of a simultaneous dissolution of both houses. (The terms of Senators for the Territories, however, coincide with those of the House of Representatives.) Section 13 of the Constitution requires that an election be held within one year before the places become vacant.
There is no constitutional requirement that elections for the House of Representatives and the Senate be held simultaneously, but they are generally held together, primarily to avoid the duplication of costs in holding separate elections and to avoid political consequences. If the elections for the House of Representatives and half the Senate are to be held simultaneously, the date must conform with the constitutional provisions relating to the terms of Senators and the period during which the election must be held. The latest possible date for the next House of Representatives election (16 April 2005) occurs in the period during which a half-Senate election must be held.
The terms of Senators elected in 1998 expire on 30 June 2005. Therefore, in theory, the next half-Senate election must be held between 1 July 2004 and 30 June 2005. However, there are two qualifications to this. Firstly, in practical terms, a half-Senate election cannot be held during July.(1) Secondly, to allow for sufficient time for the Senate writs to be returned by 30 June 2005, so that the Senators may take their seats on 1 July, polling day realistically can be no later than Saturday 29 May 2005.(2) These qualifications mean that the latest possible date for a simultaneous election is the same date as is required for the House of Representatives, 16 April 2005.
Senate Composition from 1 July 2002
|
Liberal Party of Australia |
31 |
|
National Party of Australia |
3 |
|
Country Liberal Party |
1 |
|
Australian Labor Party |
28 |
|
Australian Democrats |
8 |
|
Australian Greens |
2 |
|
Independent |
2 |
|
One Nation |
1 |
|
Total |
76 |
A Double Dissolution
Usually an election for the Commonwealth Parliament is for the House of Representatives and half the Senate. However, s.57 of the Constitution provides that both Houses may be simultaneously dissolved should there be a legislative deadlock between them. A deadlock occurs only when a three month period has elapsed between when the Senate rejects a Bill and the House passes it a second time.(3) Since a dissolution cannot occur within six months of the expiry date for the House of Representatives, this means that the last possible date for the dissolution of both Houses is Wednesday 11 August 2004. (This is calculated by counting back six months from the date of the expiry of the House of Representatives, which will occur on 11 February 2005.)
If there is a double dissolution, the usual timetabling requirements apply. The writs must be issued within ten days of the dissolution, i.e. by Saturday 21 August 2004. The writs may be issued on the same day as the dissolution occurs, but as s.12 of the Constitution requires the writs for Senate elections to be issued by the State Governors, these writs might not be issued on the same day as the dissolution. Should the writs be issued on the same day, and the shortest times apply, nominations would close on Saturday 21 August 2004, and polling would be Saturday 18 September 2004. Should the maximum times apply, the writs would have to be issued by Saturday 21 August 2004, and nominations would have to close by Friday 17 September 2004.
The latest possible polling date for a double dissolution election is Saturday 16 October 2004.
Commonwealth Parliament: latest possible election dates
|
Simultaneous House of Representatives and half-Senate |
16 April 2005 |
|
House of Representatives |
16 April 2005 |
|
Half-Senate |
29 May 2005 |
|
Double Dissolution |
16 October 2004 |