The table reproduced below was compiled by the Australian
Electoral Commission (Submission 87.9).
Table D.1 Status of
legislation arising from the recommendations in the majority report on the 2007
federal elections and matters related thereto
Rec#
|
Recommendation
|
Leg. Change Required (Yes or No)
Relevant Legislation
|
Status
|
1.
|
The committee recommends that Section 155 of the Commonwealth
Electoral Act 1918 be repealed and replaced by a new section which
provides that the date fixed for the close of the rolls shall be 7 days after
the date of the writ.
Government Response
Supported.
|
Yes
EPV Act
|
Implemented.
|
2.
|
The committee recommends that the provisions of the Commonwealth
Electoral Act 1918 and the Electoral and Referendum Regulations 1940 that
require provisional voters to provide proof of identity:
be repealed; and
that the Commonwealth Electoral Act 1918 be amended
so that where doubt exists in the mind of the Divisional Returning Officer as
to the bona fides of an elector who casts a declaration vote, that the
Divisional Returning Officer is to compare the signature of the elector on
the declaration envelope to the signature of the elector on a previously
lodged enrolment record before making the decision to admit or reject the
vote.
Government Response
Supported.
|
Yes
PV Act
|
Implemented.
Note that legislation passed included provisions requiring
that where the Divisional Returning Officer is not satisfied the signature on
the envelope is the signature of the elector, he or she is to make all
reasonable attempts to contact the elector within 3 days after the election,
to require the elector to provide evidence of his or her identity by the
first Friday following the polling day for that election.
|
Rec#
|
Recommendation
|
Leg. Change Required (Yes or No)
Relevant Legislation
|
Status
|
3.
|
The committee recommends that the Commonwealth
Electoral Act 1918 be amended to provide that where an elector who has
lodged a declaration vote at an election has been removed from the roll by
objection action on the ground of non-residence and
(a) the omission occurred after the election prior to the
election to which the scrutiny relates, or
(b) where there has been a redistribution of the state or
territory that includes the division since the last election but one before
the election to which the scrutiny relates, the omission from the roll was
made before the last such redistribution, then:
if the address at which the elector claims to be enrolled
at the time of voting is within the division for which he or she was
previously enrolled, his or her House of Representatives and Senate votes
will be counted; but
if the address at which the elector claims to be enrolled
at the time of voting is in a different division in the same state/territory,
his or her Senate vote will be counted, but his or her House of
Representatives vote will not be counted.
Government Response
Supported in part.
|
Yes
|
Pending relevant legislation.
|
4.
|
The committee recommends that the Australian Electoral
Commission amend declaration vote envelopes to include fields in which
electors may enter their driver’s licence or Australian passport number, and:
in those cases where electors provide a driver’s licence
or Australian passport number, or the elector has previously met the proof of
identity requirements for enrolment, and the information provided on the
envelope at the time of voting is sufficient to allow update of the electoral
roll, the Australian Electoral Commission should update the roll on the basis
of the information provided on the declaration envelopes; and
in other cases the Australian Electoral Commission
undertake appropriate follow up action to encourage the elector to enrol
through the normal enrolment process.
Government Response
Supported in principle.
|
No
|
Under consideration given costs of implementation.
|
Rec#
|
Recommendation
|
Leg. Change Required (Yes or No)
Relevant Legislation
|
Status
|
5.
|
The government consider amending the Commonwealth
Electoral Act 1918 to:
allow the date of the witness signature on the postal vote
certificate to be the determining date for validity of postal votes; and
to require postal voters and witnesses to confirm that the
required voting actions were completed prior to the close of poll in the
state/territory in which the electoral division for which the voter is
enrolled, is located.
Government Response
Supported.
|
Yes
MOM Act
|
Implemented.
|
6.
|
The committee recommends that the Commonwealth
Electoral Act 1918 and the Referendum (Machinery Provisions) Act 1984 be
amended to remove the requirement that postal vote applications be signed by
an applicant and a witness, in order to facilitate the lodgement of postal
vote applications online, electronically, or in written form, to reduce the
incidence of postal vote applications being deemed defective, thus leading to
delays in the delivery of postal voting packs to electors.
Government Response
Supported.
|
Yes
MOM Act
|
Implemented. Systems design in progress.
|
7.
|
The committee recommends that that the provisions of the Commonwealth
Electoral Act 1918 and the Electoral and Referendum Regulations 1940
which provide that proof of identity for enrolment purposes be required, be
amended to:
require that proof of identity be required for each
elector once only; and
that proof of identity may be established by the provision
of a drivers licence number, Australian passport number, or the signature of
another person on the Commonwealth electoral roll who shall witness and
attest to the identity of the applicant. Any one of these are to be
considered as acceptable forms of proof of identity for electors enrolling
within Australia.
Government Response
First bullet point: Supported in part.
Second bullet point: Supported.
|
Yes
MOM Act
|
Implemented.
|
Rec#
|
Recommendation
|
Leg. Change Required (Yes or No)
Relevant Legislation
|
Status
|
9.
|
The committee recommends that the Commonwealth
Electoral Act 1918 be amended to allow for the creation, implementation
and maintenance of an enrolment website designed to facilitate the receipt
and use of information provided electronically by enrolled electors, in order
to update the electoral roll.
Such a facility should only be provided for use by
currently enrolled electors, who must be required to provide sufficient
information to satisfy the Australian Electoral Commission that they are in
fact the elector to whom the information relates, in the absence of a
signature from the elector.
The facility must not allow any unauthorised access to the
electoral roll and must not permit information contained on the electoral
roll to be accessed or amended directly by any person other than an
appropriately authorised Australian Electoral Commission officer.
Information provided through the facility must only be
used by authorised Australian Electoral Commission officers to update the
electoral roll, where that information has been subjected to and satisfies
the same data integrity checks as is performed on information received
through the submission of signed enrolment form.
Government Response
Supported.
|
Yes
POM Act
|
Implemented.
|
10
|
The committee recommends that the Commonwealth
Electoral Act 1918 be amended to allow the Australian Electoral
Commission to receive and use information for the purposes of directly
updating the electoral roll, where that information has been:
provided by an elector or electors to an agency approved
by the Minister as an agency which performs adequate proof of identity
checks; and
the elector or electors have indicated their proactive and
specific consent to opt in for the information to be used for the purposes of
directly updating the electoral roll, and
the data has been provided by that agency to the Australian
Electoral Commission for the purposes of updating the electoral roll.
Government Response
Supported in principle.
|
Yes
|
Pending relevant legislation.
|
Rec#
|
Recommendation
|
Leg. Change Required (Yes or No)
Relevant Legislation
|
Status
|
11
|
The committee recommends that in order to facilitate the
enrolment of new citizens, that:
section 99A be amended to allow that a person who makes an
application to become an Australian citizen in accordance with the Australian
Citizenship Act 2007, be provisionally enrolled on the Commonwealth
electoral roll at the time of making the application for citizenship, where
they provide proactive and specific consent to opt in, with voting
entitlement gained automatically once Australian citizenship has been granted;
and
section 99B of the Commonwealth Electoral Act 1918,
which provides that applicants for citizenship may apply for provisional
enrolment in an election period, should be repealed as the amended section
99A will render it unnecessary.
Government Response
Supported.
|
Yes
|
Pending relevant legislation.
|
12.
|
The committee recommends that the Commonwealth
Electoral Act 1918 be amended to change the minimum age for provisional
enrolment from 17 to 16 years.
Government Response
Supported.
|
Yes
MOM Act
|
Implemented.
|
13.
|
The committee recommends that the Australian Government
enter into discussions with the State and Territory governments with a view
to achieving a harmonised enrolment regime which leads to the use of a single
enrolment form or enrolment process for the purposes of Commonwealth and
state/territory enrolment.
Government Response
Supported.
|
No
|
Harmonisation initiatives are being pursued through the
Electoral Council of Australia.
|
14.
|
The committee recommends that, in order to encourage the
enrolment of young Australians, the Australian Electoral Commission introduce
a national ‘Schools Bounty Scheme’ under which government and non-government
schools, universities and technical colleges and the like would receive a
specified amount for valid enrolment forms collected and forwarded to the Australian
Electoral Commission.
Government Response
Noted.
|
No
|
Targeted enrolment activities undertaken in the lead up to
the 2010 federal election are outlined at paragraphs 3.6.17 – 3.6.24 of the
AEC’s first submission (submission 87) to this inquiry.
|
Rec#
|
Recommendation
|
Leg. Change Required (Yes or No)
Relevant Legislation
|
Status
|
15.
|
The committee recommends that the Australian Electoral
Commission ensure national consistency wherever possible in the
state/territory-based activities and strategies undertaken to facilitate roll
management activities.
Government Response
Supported.
|
No
|
Implemented through the introduction of a national
enrolment business plan.
|
16.
|
The committee recommends that the Australian Electoral
Commission develop state and territory-based enrolment targets that reflect
the contribution that is expected by each state and territory to the national
enrolment target. Such targets should take account of the particular
challenges faced in each state and territory and be reported annually in the
Australian Electoral Commission’s annual report.
Government Response
Supported.
|
No
|
Implementation in progress.
|
17.
|
The committee recommends that the Australian Government
provide ongoing and appropriate funding for the Australian Electoral
Commission to establish, deliver and maintain a program similar in purpose to
the former Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Electoral Information
Service program to provide ongoing engagement with Indigenous electors.
Government Response
Noted.
|
No
|
Implemented.
As part of the 2009-10 Budget process, the AEC received
$13 million over four years to establish the Indigenous Electoral
Participation Program (IEPP). The IEPP is part of the Government’s Closing
the Gap initiatives.
|
18.
|
The committee recommends that the Commonwealth
Electoral Act 1918 be amended to enable the provision of remote mobile
polling at town camps, such as in Darwin and Alice Springs.
Government Response
Supported.
|
Yes
MOM Act
|
Implemented.
|
Rec#
|
Recommendation
|
Leg. Change Required (Yes or No)
Relevant Legislation
|
Status
|
19.
|
The committee recommends the Commonwealth Electoral Act
1918 be amended to incorporate a definition of homelessness modelled on
those in the Victorian Electoral Act 2002 to facilitate enrolment or
continued enrolment of homeless persons. This definition should include
persons living in:
crisis accommodation; or
transitional accommodation; or
any other accommodation provided under the Supported
Accommodation Assistance Act 1994.
Government Response
Supported.
|
Yes
MOM Act
|
Implemented.
|
20.
|
The committee recommends that the Commonwealth
Electoral Act 1918 be amended to allow mobile polling and/or pre-poll
facilities to be provided at such locations and at such times as the
Australian Electoral Commission deems necessary for the purposes of
facilitating voting.
For example, mobile polling or pre-poll facilities should
be able to be provided where there is likely to be sufficient demand for such
facilities by homeless and itinerant electors, or in such other circumstances
as warrant their use.
Government Response
Supported.
|
Yes
MOM Act
|
Implemented.
|
21.
|
The committee recommends that the Australian Electoral
Commission ensure that staff engaged in providing advice or services to
electors with special needs (eg homelessness, sight impaired) be provided
with appropriate training on how to communicate effectively and with sensitivity
to the needs of such electors.
Government Response
Supported.
|
No
|
Implementation in progress. An online training package,
‘Assisting people who are blind or have low vision’ is available to AEC
staff.
The AEC is currently reviewing and updating its polling staff
training material.
|
22.
|
The committee recommends that the Commonwealth
Electoral Act 1918 be amended to allow pre-poll votes cast at a pre-poll
voting centre in an elector’s home division prior to polling day to be cast
as ordinary votes, wherever practicable.
Government Response
Supported.
|
Yes
POM Act
|
Implemented.
|
Rec#
|
Recommendation
|
Leg. Change Required (Yes or No)
Relevant Legislation
|
Status
|
23.
|
The committee recommends that, in order to ensure a
continuing high standard of integrity applies to votes cast as home division
pre-poll votes, electors who cast ordinary votes at pre-poll voting centres
should still be required to sign a declaration at the time of voting,
indicating that they are entitled to a pre-poll vote. A record of such
declarations is to be kept by the Australian Electoral Commission for
evidentiary purposes.
Government Response
Supported.
|
Yes
POM Act
|
Implemented.
|
24.
|
The committee recommends that the Commonwealth
Electoral Act 1918 be amended to require pre-poll votes cast as ordinary
votes in an elector’s home division prior to polling day to be counted on
polling night in the same manner as ordinary votes cast in polling places on
polling day, wherever practicable.
Government Response
Supported in part.
|
Yes
POM Act
|
Implemented.
|
25.
|
The committee recommends that schedule 2 of the Commonwealth
Electoral Act 1918 be amended to provide that being absent or expecting
to be absent from an elector’s home division on polling day be a valid ground
of application for postal or pre-poll voting.
Government Response
Supported.
|
Yes
MOM Act
|
Implemented.
|
26.
|
The committee recommends that schedule 2 of the Commonwealth
Electoral Act 1918 be amended to allow fear for personal safety to be a
ground for applying for pre-poll or postal votes.
Government Response
Supported.
|
Yes
MOM Act
|
Implemented.
|
27.
|
The committee recommends that, where possible, the
Australian Electoral Commission should, prior to polling day, conduct as much
of the preliminary scrutiny of pre-poll and postal votes on hand in home
divisions as is possible, in order to increase the number of early votes
counted in a timely manner following the close of the polls.
Government Response
Supported.
|
No
|
Implemented.
|
Rec#
|
Recommendation
|
Leg. Change Required (Yes or No)
Relevant Legislation
|
Status
|
28.
|
The committee recommends that the Australian Electoral
Commission implement its proposed mobile polling and other election services
to cater for mine workers in Western Australia for future elections. Such
arrangements should also be provided in other states with a large number of
mine workers such as Queensland and South Australia.
Government Response
Supported.
|
Yes
MOM Act
|
Implementation in progress for next election.
|
29.
|
The committee recommends that the definition of ‘hospital’
and ‘special hospital’ in the Commonwealth Electoral Act 1918 be
amended to reflect the current definitions of aged care under the Aged
Care Act 1997, and that any person residing or working in a residential
aged care facility, including staff, should be able to vote at the mobile
polling facility.
Government Response
Supported.
|
Yes
MOM Act
|
Implemented.
|
30.
|
The committee recommends that the Commonwealth
Electoral Act 1918 be amended to extend the period during which special
hospital mobile polling may be conducted, to 12 days before polling day.
Government Response
Supported.
|
Yes
MOM Act
|
Implemented.
|
31.
|
In order to mitigate against possible accidental multiple
voting, the committee recommends that the presiding officer of a mobile
polling team be required to provide patients and residents of hospitals or
special hospitals who vote with that mobile polling team, with a receipt or
letter to indicate that they have, on that date, cast a vote with that mobile
polling team.
Government Response
Supported.
|
No
|
Implemented.
|
Rec#
|
Recommendation
|
Leg. Change Required (Yes or No)
Relevant Legislation
|
Status
|
32.
|
The committee recommends that where a pre-poll voting
centre (which may be a Divisional Returning Office) is to be located within a
shopping centre, the Australian Electoral Commission work with shopping
centre management to arrange appropriate access by campaign workers during
the times where voting is possible, including where appropriate, specifying a
requirement as part of its lease arrangements, that provides full access for
parties and candidates to conduct their how to vote activities. Where such an
arrangement is not feasible, the Australian Electoral Commission should
ensure that political parties and candidates are advised of the alternative
arrangements to be put in place to allow how to vote material to be made
available in these centres.
Government Response
Supported in principle.
|
No
|
Implemented.
|
33.
|
The committee recommends that, in conjunction with the
recommendation removing the requirement for applicant and witness signatures,
the postal voting application form:
be made simpler and more user-friendly;
be gazetted at least 3 months prior to the expected date
of an election where practicable; and
only that section of the form requiring completion by an
applicant for a postal vote be gazetted as the approved form.
Government Response
First dot point: Supported.
Second dot point: Supported in principle.
Third dot point: Not supported.
|
No
|
Dot point 1 - Implemented.
Dot point 2 - Implemented.
Dot point 3 - Not supported by Government and not
implemented.
|
34.
|
The committee recommends that the Australian Electoral
Commission increase efforts to improve electors’ understanding of the federal
voting systems and take appropriate measures to reduce the rate of informal
voting, especially in electorates with a high percentage of electors from non-English
speaking backgrounds.
Government Response
Supported.
|
No
|
Targeted activities undertaken in the lead up to the 2010
federal election are outlined at paragraphs 1.1.12 – 1.2.12 of the AEC’s
Informality submission (submission 87.4) to this inquiry.
|
Rec#
|
Recommendation
|
Leg. Change Required (Yes or No)
Relevant Legislation
|
Status
|
35.
|
The committee recommends that:
Section 240 (2) of the Commonwealth Electoral Act 1918,
which provides that the numbers on House of Representatives elections ballot
papers are to be consecutive numbers, without the repetition of any number,
be repealed, and
the savings provision contained in paragraph 270 (2),
repealed in 1998, which provided that in a House of Representatives election
in which there were more than three candidates, and where a full set of
preferences was expressed on the ballot paper, but there were non-consecutive
numbering errors, the preferences would be counted up to the point at which
the numbering errors began, at which point the preferences were taken to have
‘exhausted’, be reinstated to the Commonwealth Electoral Act 1918, and
the Government amend the Commonwealth Electoral Act
1918 to provide a penalty provision sufficient to deter the advocacy of
‘Langer style voting’.
Government Response
Noted.
|
Yes
|
Government noted recommendation.
|
36.
|
The committee recommends that the Australian Electoral
Commission adopt all recommendations contained in the report entitled Review
of Ballot-Paper Formality Guidelines and Recount Policy prepared for the
Australian Electoral Commission by Mr Alan Henderson, except for
recommendation A(v) which is the subject of recommendation 37.
Government Response
Supported.
|
No
|
Implemented, with the exception of recommendation A(v),
which was the subject of recommendation 37.
|
37.
|
The committee recommends that section 268(2) of the Commonwealth
Electoral Act 1918 be amended to provide that in those cases where the
Divisional Returning Officer responsible for considering the question of the
formality of a ballot paper, is satisfied that the ballot paper is not
informal, because the Divisional Returning Officer is satisfied that it is an
authentic ballot paper on which a voter has marked a vote, the Divisional
Returning Officer be required to annotate the ballot paper with the words ‘I
am satisfied that this is an authentic ballot paper’.
Government Response
Supported.
|
Yes
MOM Act
|
Implemented.
|
Rec#
|
Recommendation
|
Leg. Change Required (Yes or No)
Relevant Legislation
|
Status
|
38.
|
The committee recommends that paragraph 209A(b) of the Commonwealth
Electoral Act 1918 and paragraph 25A(b) of the Referendum (Machinery
Provisions) Act 1984 be repealed, and replaced with the words ‘a feature
approved by the Electoral Commission’.
Government Response
Supported.
|
Yes
MOM Act
|
Implemented.
|
39.
|
The committee recommends that the Australian Electoral
Commission be resourced appropriately in order that it continue to provide
high quality electoral services to the Australian population and to do so in
a manner that does not compromise the integrity of the electoral system.
Government Response
Noted.
|
No
|
The 2011-12 Budget includes additional one-off funding of
$10 million in 2011-12. This funding is for maintaining the operating
capacity of the AEC. The funding was granted conditional to a review
being undertaken of the AEC’s resourcing. The review is due for
completion in time to be considered in the context of the 2012-13 Budget.
|
40.
|
The committee recommends that the Australian Electoral
Commission be required to continue with staging the National Tally Room at
future elections.
Government Response
Supported in principle.
|
No
|
The National Tally Room was in operation for the 2010
federal election.
|
41.
|
The committee recommends that the Commonwealth
Electoral Act 1918 be amended to provide a flexible regime for the
authorisation by the Australian Electoral Commission of approved forms, which
will:
allow for a number of versions of an approved form;
enable forms to be tailored to the needs of specific
target groups; and
facilitate online transactions.
Government Response
Supported.
|
Yes
MOM Act
|
Implemented.
|
Rec#
|
Recommendation
|
Leg. Change Required (Yes or No)
Relevant Legislation
|
Status
|
42.
|
The committee recommends that the Commonwealth
Electoral Act 1918 be amended to enable the Australian Electoral
Commission to manage its workloads in non-election periods by allowing
enrolment transactions to be processed outside the division for which the
person is enrolling, provided that those transactions are processed by a
division that is within the same state or territory. This will permit
workloads to be managed in the same manner as is currently permitted during
election periods.
Government Response
Supported in part.
|
Yes
POM Act
|
Implemented.
|
43.
|
The committee recommends that the Commonwealth
Electoral Act 1918 and the Referendum (Machinery Provisions) Act 1984 be
amended to enable the use of electronic certified lists in polling places and
pre-poll voting centres, with appropriate measures implemented to ensure the
security of the equipment and data.
Government Response
Supported.
|
Yes
MOM Act
|
Implemented. Systems design in
progress.
|
44.
|
The committee recommends that the technical and
operational changes proposed by the Australian Electoral Commission in
submission 169, Annex 10, with the exception of those relating to
photographing and photocopying of the roll (s 90A), (see recommendation 52)
and prisoner voting (ss 93(8AA), 208(2)(c) and 221(3)) (see recommendation
47), be incorporated into the Commonwealth Electoral Act 1918 and Referendum
(Machinery Provisions) Act 1984 when other amendments to these Acts are
progressed.
Government Response
Supported.
|
Yes
|
Implemented in part.
These legislative amendments have been substantially
implemented in Schedules 7 and 9 of the MOM Act and the Statute Law
Revision Act 2010, however several amendments are pending further
legislation.
|
Rec#
|
Recommendation
|
Leg. Change Required (Yes or No)
Relevant Legislation
|
Status
|
45.
|
The committee recommends that any recommendations in this
report that propose amending the Commonwealth Electoral Act 1918 should,
where also appropriate, be incorporated into the Referendum (Machinery
Provisions) Act 1984, to ensure consistency between the provisions
applying to elections and referenda.
Government Response
Supported.
|
Yes
All legislative amendments to the Commonwealth
Electoral Act 1918 based on recommendations of the 2007 JSCEM Report also
provided consistent amendments to the Referendum (Machinery Provisions)
Act 1984.
|
Implemented.
|
46.
|
The committee recommends that the penalties imposed under
s 328 of the Commonwealth Electoral Act 1918 ($1,000 for a natural
person and $5,000 for a body corporate) be revised to ensure that they
provide a greater deterrent.
Government Response
Supported.
|
Yes
|
Pending relevant legislation.
|
47.
|
The committee recommends that the Government amend the Commonwealth
Electoral Act 1918 to reinstate the previous three-year disqualification
for prisoners removed from s 93(8)(b) in 2006, to reflect the High Court of
Australia’s judgement in Roach v Australian Electoral Commissioner that
s 93(8AA) and s 208(2)(c) are constitutionally invalid.
Government Response
Supported in principle.
|
Yes
EPV Act
|
Implemented.
|
48.
|
The committee recommends that current provisions of the Commonwealth
Electoral Act 1918 regarding the eligibility of overseas electors to
enrol and vote at elections be retained.
Government Response
Noted.
|
No
|
Implemented.
|
Rec#
|
Recommendation
|
Leg. Change Required (Yes or No)
Relevant Legislation
|
Status
|
49.
|
The committee recommends that the Australian Electoral
Commission continue to work with organisations representing electors who are
blind or have low vision to investigate the viability and sustainability of
assisted voting arrangements aimed at providing secret and independent voting
for electors who are blind or have low vision.
Government Response
Supported.
|
Yes
POM Act
|
Assisted telephone voting was made available as an interim
solution for the 2010 federal election. The AEC is now scoping the longer
term solution, involving the provision of secret and independent voting
services from any telephone.
|
50.
|
The committee recommends that the Commonwealth
Electoral Act 1918 be amended so that:
where an item in the table in s 90B of the Act entitles a
Senator or Member to receive one copy of a roll or certified list, that item
be amended to permit the Senator or Member to opt for the relevant copy to be
supplied in electronic rather than hardcopy form; and
where an item in the table in s 90B of the Act entitles a
Senator or Member to receive three copies of a roll or certified list, that
item be amended to permit the Senator or Member to opt to receive one of the
copies in electronic rather than hardcopy form, and to receive either zero,
one or two hardcopies.
Government Response
Supported.
|
Yes
MOM Act
|
Implemented.
|
51.
|
The committee recommends that the current counting system
used for Senate elections be retained.
Government Response
Supported.
|
No
|
Implemented.
|
52.
|
The committee recommends that the current arrangements
relating to the provision of electoral roll information to prescribed
organisations for the purposes of identity verification under the Financial
Transaction Reports Act 1988 or carrying out customer identification
procedures under the Anti-Money Laundering and Counter-Terrorism Financing
Act 2006 be retained.
Government Response
Noted.
|
No
|
Implemented.
|
Rec#
|
Recommendation
|
Leg. Change Required (Yes or No)
Relevant Legislation
|
Status
|
53.
|
The committee recommends that the current provisions of
the Commonwealth Electoral Act 1918 relating to the inspection of
electoral rolls be amended to explicitly prohibit the unauthorised
photographing or photocopying of any roll that is made available for public
inspection.
Government Response
Supported.
|
Yes
MOM Act
|
Implemented
|