Chapter 3 Maintaining the electoral roll
Background
3.1
At the announcement of the 2010 federal election, 13 944 532 electors
were on the Commonwealth electoral roll. This indicates that the roll had grown
since the 2007 election by some 347 993 electors.[1]
3.2
Following the original close of rolls on 22 July 2010, enrolment stood
at 14 030 528 electors, and after the final close of rolls following
the High Court’s decision in Rowe v Electoral Commissioner [2010] HCA 46
(Rowe), 14 088 260 electors were enrolled to vote.[2]
3.3
Following removal of the names of deceased electors, the addition of
those electors whose enrolment claims had been received but not processed prior
to the final close of rolls by the Australian Electoral Commission (AEC), and
the reinstatement of those electors removed from the roll in error by the AEC,
the final election enrolment for the 2010 federal election was 14 086 869
electors.[3] This indicates that the electoral
roll grew between the 2007 and 2010 elections by some 440 330 electors.
3.4
While the number of electors on the electoral roll is increasing, the
eligible Australian population is continuing to grow at a faster rate than the
electoral roll. Consequently, the overall enrolment participation rate has
continued to decline.[4]
3.5
The enrolment figures and growth detailed so far in this chapter compare
the election enrolment at the 2007 and 2010 federal elections. The Committee
sees this as the most appropriate way of comparing enrolment between elections,
as it takes into account the changes the AEC is permitted to make at an
election.
3.6
However, an examination of the close of rolls figures for elections from
2001 to 2010 tells a similar tale, as shown by the figures in Table 3.1 below.
Table 3.1 Electors enrolled at close of rolls, by State
and Territory, 2001 to 2010 elections
State or Territory |
2001 |
Change 2001-04 (%) |
2004 |
Change 2004-07 (%) |
2007 |
Change 2007-10 (%) |
2010 |
NSW |
4 201 566 |
2.29 |
4 297 917 |
4.59 |
4 495 336 |
2.58 |
4 611 228 |
Vic |
3 215 913 |
2.25 |
3 288 201 |
4.68 |
3 442 096 |
3.51 |
3 562 802 |
QLD |
2 317 947 |
6.19 |
2 461 396 |
6.13 |
2 612 300 |
4.11 |
2 719 746 |
WA |
1 199 523 |
3.03 |
1 235 839 |
6.24 |
1 312 942 |
3.75 |
1 362 177 |
SA |
1 033 588 |
1.46 |
1 048 729 |
2.60 |
1 075 968 |
2.71 |
1 105 076 |
TAS |
328 539 |
3.23 |
339 156 |
3.13 |
349 788 |
2.51 |
358 567 |
ACT |
219 682 |
2.24 |
224 608 |
6.29 |
238 742 |
3.73 |
247 659 |
NT |
110 469 |
1.01 |
111 581 |
5.66 |
117 901 |
2.63 |
121 005 |
Total |
12 627 227 |
3.01 |
13 007 427 |
4.90 |
13 645 073 |
3.25 |
14 088 260 |
Source Australian
Electoral Commission, Submission 87, p. 22.
3.7
It is evident from the figures in Table 3.1 that the roll grew more
between the 2004 and 2007 federal elections than it did between the 2001 and
2004 or 2007 and 2010 federal elections.
3.8
A significant factor contributing to the greater growth between 2004 and
2007 was the Targeted Enrolment Stimulation exercise (TES) that the AEC rolled
out prior to the 2007 election. The AEC advised that in the lead up to the 2007
election, it spent $36 million on enrolment stimulation activities, which
included:
- a
large-scale Targeted Enrolment Stimulation (TES) program involving fieldwork
visits over a four and a half month period to approximately one million
households, supplemented by mail and telephone contact costing approximately
$6-7 million; and
- over
$29 million on an integrated communications strategy including an extensive
national media advertising campaign, including $14.9 million on pre-election
enrolment advertising.[5]
3.9
This program of enrolment stimulation was not undertaken prior to the
2010 federal election. The Electoral Commissioner told the Committee:
Firstly, that sort of funding was not available to the AEC in
2010 nor is it, in my view, sustainable. If we have to spend $36 million every
election year then that is a significant amount of money over successive
elections. But, perhaps more importantly, it does not lead to a permanent or
long-lasting improvement in the electoral roll. These gains are quickly
dissipated months after the close of rolls as people start to move again and
the same challenges are faced by the AEC to encourage people to update their
enrolment and to get on the roll in the first place.[6]
3.10
For the 2010 federal election, the AEC attempted to stimulate enrolment
by focusing on a mix of refinements to the Continuous Roll Update program (CRU)
and the introduction of new activities such as the Famous People Vote Too
campaign.[7] Various other enrolment
activities were undertaken in the different states and territories in the lead
up to the 2010 election.
3.11
The AEC State Manager for Queensland, Ms Anne Bright, informed the
Committee that:
In the lead-up to the election and to complement the AEC’s
national enrolment program, targeted fieldwork occurred in a number of
divisions...Also, a number of other activities in Queensland were undertaken,
including those with a focus on encouraging youth enrolment, such as
collaboration with the Gold Coast City Council and state government agencies
for AEC staff to attend schoolies.[8]
3.12
Ms Jenni McMullan, AEC State Manager for Victoria, discussed some
enrolment highlights in her state, including the roving enroller program run
jointly with the Victorian Electoral Commission, which targeted young people,
particularly those at universities; AEC attendance at the Hip Hop Music
Festival; the Enrol to Vote Week campaign which involved 68 per cent of
Victorian schools; meeting with homeless agencies to provide information on
enrolment and voting; an enrolment drive at the Melbourne Good Food and Wine
Show; and working with communities affected by the bushfires in 2009 as the
rebuilding program gained momentum.[9]
3.13
The AEC Manager for the Northern Territory, Mr Robert Pugsley, informed the
Committee that the AEC’s Indigenous Electoral Participation Program (IEPP) had
commenced in May 2010. He advised that AEC staff had travelled widely
throughout the Northern Territory encouraging Indigenous people to participate
in elections, and stated that:
The IEPP team were in the field from the calling of the
election in a two-phased program to assist Indigenous Territorians. Phase one
was an enrolment focus from the calling of the election to the close of rolls
and phase two had a focus very much on formality education and imparting
specific awareness to people about their various voting options, including how
to vote formally.[10]
3.14
While state and territory based initiatives help to increase enrolment
participation on a smaller scale, the most significant program of enrolment
activity undertaken by the AEC remains the continuous roll updates. The AEC
explained that:
CRU consists of large scale mail-outs to specific addresses
where the AEC believes unenrolled persons reside or people who have changed
address. This is supplemented by small scale fieldwork activity, mainly aimed at
people who do not respond to the earlier mail-outs. The mail component of the
CRU program is the most scalable (millions of letters are sent each year to
unenrolled and potentially eligible persons) and affordable means of generating
enrolment.[11]
3.15
However, the overall effectiveness of CRU in generating enrolment is variable
and remains problematic, despite increased response rates in the lead up to an
election. The AEC noted that:
Since 2005, enrolment response rates to CRU letters (measured
as the number of enrolment forms received divided by the number of letters
mailed based on attributing enrolment activity at addresses mailed to) has
varied considerably. In general, higher response rates are recorded in periods
leading up to the announcement of a federal election and/or in the period
leading up to state electoral events.[12]
3.16
The AEC enrolment activities have not been sufficiently effective in
arresting the trend of declining enrolment participation that has been evident
for over a decade. Figure 3.1 illustrates the widening gap between the eligible
population and enrolled electors.
Figure 3.1 Estimated eligible population and enrolled
electors, 1999–2010
Source Australian
Electoral Commission, Submission 87.1, p. 3.
3.17
In March 2009, the Electoral Commissioner told the Committee that an
estimated 1.2 million eligible electors were not on the electoral roll.[13]
By the end of December 2009, this had risen to approximately 1.39 million
electors,[14] and at 30 June 2010 the
number had grown to 1.59 million.[15] Opposition members of
the Committee note that it is an individual elector’s responsibility to join
the electoral roll and to update their details as one of the key duties of
citizenship. These members believe it is vital for our nation’s democratic
health to ensure that elections are decided by a voter list that is accurate. Opposition
members feel that adding people to the roll through means other than the
individual enrolling themselves would jeopardise this outcome.
3.18
The continued drop in participation is of concern to the AEC, which
informed the Committee that declining enrolment participation has implications
for the health of Australia’s democracy. The AEC asserted that:
Priority still needs to be given to ensure that those who are
eligible to enrol do so; that those who are enrolled vote; and that rates of
unintentional informality are minimised.[16]
3.19
Following the 2007 federal election, the Australian National Audit
Office (ANAO) undertook a performance audit into the AEC’s preparations for,
and conduct of, the 2007 federal election. In that review, the ANAO also raised
concerns about enrolment decline, finding that:
The most significant long-term issue facing the AEC remains
the state of the electoral roll. Notwithstanding the significant effort made by
the AEC to recover and improve the enrolment rate prior to the 2007 federal
election, on polling day the enrolment rate was well below the target of 95 per
cent of the estimated eligible population. As a result, an estimated 1.1
million eligible electors were missing from the rolls on polling day.
...[The] AEC’s existing approaches to improving enrolment
rates have become less effective (as well as becoming more costly). In
addition, the number of enrolment forms being processed by the AEC has been
falling since 2001-02 and, for 2008-09, was at the lowest level since 1996-97.
A continuation of this decline would further reduce the completeness of the
electoral roll at future elections.[17]
3.20
Some participants told the Committee that the decline may be due in part
to the stringent objection processes mandated by the Commonwealth Electoral
Act 1918, coupled with the inability of the AEC to use existing data
sources that indicate where electors reside to update enrolment details for
those electors. The Democratic Audit of Australia observed that:
The problem has long been identified and appropriate
solutions are at hand. The problem, of course, lies in the current legislative
restrictions placed on the capacity of the AEC to utilise data from trusted
agencies to enrol or reinstate eligible electors in the same way it can employ
the same data to delete persons from the roll who have moved address. Put
bluntly, it is a technical problem that admits a technical solution.[18]
3.21
Elections analyst, Mr Antony Green, told the Committee that the current
enrolment system is biased toward removing people from the roll:
The process to this date has tended to automate the process
of removing people from the roll when they move, but then someone has to manually
lodge an application to go back onto the electoral roll.[19]
3.22
The AEC supports changes to balance out the effects of objection action
on the roll. It argued that with a direct enrolment process, it could utilise
data from external agencies to add eligible person to the roll. The AEC
anticipates that direct enrolment would provide the following benefits:
- assist eligible
persons in meeting their obligation to enrol;
- build on the direct
update model already supported by the Australian Government; and
- balance existing
provisions which enable the AEC to commence action to remove an eligible
elector from the electoral roll where it believes, based on data received from
a number of sources (including Centrelink, Australia Post, state and territory
motor registries and electoral commissions), that an elector is no longer
entitled to be enrolled for an address.[20]
3.23
Conversely, an alternate view suggests that our system of compulsory
enrolment places an obligation to ensure up to date enrolment directly on the
individual. The Nationals argued that:
Our system also, rightly, attaches a level of individual
responsibility to an individual’s right to vote. Under the Commonwealth
Electoral Act voting is compulsory in this country for Australian citizens aged
over 18 years and it is incumbent upon all voters to ensure their details on
the electoral roll are correct at all times. These responsibilities are not
onerous or difficult to fulfil.[21]
Committee conclusion
3.24
The Committee remains concerned about the long-term effects of the
decline in enrolment participation rates, and notes that the decline has
continued despite ongoing efforts on the part of the AEC to arrest it using
measures currently permitted under the Commonwealth Electoral Act. Opposition
members feel it is vital that every effort is made to ensure that the electoral
roll is accurate, and oppose any move to include electors who have not enrolled
to vote. These members believe that the AEC would be better suited to review
their current campaigns to encourage people to enrol rather than seek to change
the legislation so that they enrol people against their knowledge.
3.25
The majority of the Committee agrees with Dr Peter Brent, who made the
point that appropriate solutions for arresting enrolment decline are at hand. A possible
solution has already been canvassed by this Committee during a previous inquiry
and was the subject of the Committee’s report Inquiry into the implications
of the Parliamentary Electorates and Elections Amendment (Automatic Enrolment)
Act 2009 (NSW) for the conduct of Commonwealth elections (Automatic Enrolment
Report).
3.26
The majority of the Committee is of the view that enrolment decline
should be arrested as a matter of urgency, and agrees with Mr Antony Green that
the current system is biased toward removing people from the roll, with recent
amendments to enrolment and the objection process preventing too many electors
from exercising the franchise. Objection matters are dealt with later in this chapter.
Opposition members are of the view that enrolment decline should be addressed
and the AEC might need to consider its current efforts to increase
participation. They feel that addressing the enrolment decline should not come
at the expense of the integrity of the electoral roll.
Flexible enrolment and roll maintenance processes
3.27
State parliaments are also concerned about the effects of enrolment
decline. The New South Wales and Victorian parliaments have legislated to
allow more flexible enrolment and electoral roll maintenance processes to be
adopted in their jurisdictions in an attempt to arrest enrolment decline.
3.28
In New South Wales, the New South Wales Electoral Commission (NSWEC)
uses data from state agencies to directly enrol new electors and update the
electoral roll details of existing electors. As at 28 January 2011, some
8 388 enrolment transactions had occurred with some 58 per cent being
new enrolments and 42 per cent changes of address.[22]
3.29
In Victoria, the Victorian Electoral Commission (VEC) used data supplied
by the Victorian Curriculum and Assessment Authority which it matched against
Births, Deaths and Marriages data and data from the Department of Justice to
ensure that students were eligible to enrol. As a result of the data matching, some
6 576 students were directly enrolled.[23]
3.30
Under roll sharing arrangements with these states, the AEC obtains the
details of these electors and sends information to facilitate their addition to
the Commonwealth electoral roll. However, as enrolment at the federal level
must be elector initiated, these state direct enrolments are not translating
into Commonwealth enrolments. The AEC advised that only two per cent of
these directly enrolled persons in New South Wales have subsequently enrolled
on the Commonwealth electoral roll.[24]
3.31
The Committee has previously reported that flexible enrolment processes
adopted in other jurisdictions could have implications for the Commonwealth
electoral roll, including confusing voters and increasing levels of divergence,
with the Commonwealth roll ultimately becoming more incomplete.[25]
However, Opposition members do not see this as a reason to reduce the integrity
of the Commonwealth electoral roll by relying on potentially unreliable state
information for people who have been automatically enrolled as a result of
state legislation. They stressed that it is more important for those who have
been enrolled automatically at a state level to confirm that their details are
in fact correct, by taking the time to enrol for federal elections through the
AEC, as is the responsibility of every Australian citizen.
3.32
The AEC considered roll divergence to be a problem, stating that:
The New South Wales and Victorian legislation therefore presents considerable risk that over time there will
be significant
divergence between Commonwealth and New South Wales and Victorian rolls. Should proposed
reforms in Queensland
also be legislated, then (in the absence
of appropriate Commonwealth action) this
would have the
effect
of over three-quarters of
the current Commonwealth
electoral roll subject to significantly
different enrolment arrangements.
This will
likely result in an increase in the number of ‘Commonwealth-only’, ‘state/territory-
only’ electors, or electors with ‘dual
enrolment’ records on the roll maintained by the AEC and increasing confusion of electors
-who often do not differentiate between state and Commonwealth jurisdictions.[26]
3.33
The Committee invited the Electoral Commissioners for Victoria and New
South Wales to discuss the arrangements that had been put in place in their
respective states.
3.34
The Victorian Electoral Commissioner, Mr Steve Tully, described the
flexibilities provided to the VEC, stating that:
On 3 August 2010 the Victorian parliament passed legislation
on a number of things, including the abolition of the three-month rule,
provision for automatic enrolment of people on the Victorian Electoral
Commission’s initiative, provision for the enrolment and voting on election day
and at pre-poll centres, and provision for electronically assisted voting in
certain voting centres for an expanded franchise. This resulted primarily from
the Victorian government parliamentary committee on electoral matters majority
reports. That committee investigated concerns about falling participation
rates. The package of reforms is integrally and intrinsically connected and, in
short, means that every citizen over the age of 18 in Victoria who attends a
voting centre in Victoria has the ability to vote.[27]
3.35
When asked if there were differences between the Victorian model and
that used by the NSWEC, Mr Tully told the Committee that:
Basically, the intention is the same. We will be looking to
work with the Australian Electoral Commission on getting our state-only
electors on the national roll and we will be working on processes that are as
simple as possible to comply with...
...[We] know, from other data sources, where most people on
the move are but we are all suffering from the syndrome of non-compliance to various
letters by people who are on the move. Such people used to respond at rates of
around 30 per cent but now respond at much lower rates—and the trend is
continuing.[28]
3.36
In respect of those school leavers who had been automatically enrolled,
Mr Tully explained that:
We wrote to them telling them that they were on the roll and
they had 14 days to let us know if we had got it wrong. We received no
correspondence that I can recall from anyone saying that we got it wrong, due
to the safeguards that we had in the process.[29]
3.37
Mr Tully confirmed that roll divergence was a potential problem, despite
the VEC working with the AEC to minimise its impact as much as possible.[30]
3.38
In a meeting with the NSWEC, the Committee learned that it was working
closely with the AEC, to ensure that, where possible, the SmartRoll processes
adopted in New South Wales also provided some benefit to the Commonwealth roll by
ensuring that enrolment forms and declaration envelopes used to facilitate state
enrolment were also compliant with Commonwealth enrolment legislation.[31]
3.39
The AEC holds the view that something needs to be done to provide
flexible approaches to enrolment and roll maintenance processes, not just to
arrest the decline in participation, but also to move workloads out of the election
period, wherever possible. The Electoral Commissioner stated that:
Our submission recommends that further enrolment measures,
which we believe will not only lead to more long-lasting benefits to the
accuracy, integrity and completeness of the electoral roll but also will assist
in significantly shifting the timing of enrolment transactions away from the
election periods, when workloads are at their most intense, to an earlier part
of the overall electoral cycle. The implementation of online update, which the
joint standing committee recommended, the government has now supported and
parliament has passed, is a significant first step. But our view is that we now
need to go further with our recommendation suggesting direct update of the
electoral roll based on third party information as well as direct enrolment of
new enrolees. We are also recommending that the joint standing committee give
further consideration to the potential for online enrolment, moving away from
the current paper process for new enrolees.[32]
3.40
The Committee rigorously discussed the flexibilities sought by the AEC
during the hearing in Canberra on 4 March 2011. It became obvious during the
hearing that there were opposing views held on the issue of direct enrolment. In
justifying the AEC’s support for direct enrolment, Mr Killesteyn explained
that:
The AEC is not suggesting that direct enrolment is the
panacea for the sorts of trends we are seeing in relation to non-enrolment.
What we are simply suggesting is that direct enrolment is one part of a set of
tools that we have, and should have, at our disposal to try to deal with that
large number.
We do not think this will solve the problem. We think it is a
range of measures, which includes our continuing processes—particularly around
continuous roll update, mechanisms and strategies which we are about to unfold
this year—to be closer to the point at which the person is changing their
address with other agencies—and I can go into the detail of some of that if you
like—that direct update using third party data—that is, when the person is
already on the roll we use third party data to change their address—and then,
finally, direct enrolment. It is a whole suite of programs...[33]
3.41
The AEC noted that the New South Wales and Victorian Parliaments had
also enacted legislation to enable electors to enrol on Election Day providing
that they were able to produce evidence of identity at the time of casting a
provisional vote.[34]
3.42
While data sharing for the purposes of direct enrolment and direct
update of enrolment is not currently permitted, the AEC submitted that it currently
uses data to enable it to send letters to electors as part of CRU processes.
3.43
The AEC has indicated that it would use the data received from some of
its existing suppliers in any future roll maintenance model, also that it has
had some preliminary discussions with the Australian Tax Office (ATO), which
has indicated its willingness to message persons who notify ATO of address
changes, that they should also contact the AEC to inform of the change of
address.
3.44
The Committee wrote to the Electoral Commissioner requesting details of
the discussions with ATO and seeking information about possible data sharing
opportunities.
3.45
The AEC responded by letter confirming that discussions were in
progress, advising that the ATO was intending to message clients who advised
changes of address and providing a link to the AEC website.
3.46
The AEC noted, however, that under existing legislation governing the
privacy of taxpayer information, the ATO would be prohibited from sharing name
and address data with the AEC.[35]
Committee conclusion
3.47
It is evident to the Committee that there are serious implications for
the electoral system if action is not taken to arrest the decline in enrolment.
Opposition members believe that the AEC needs to urgently review the
effectiveness of its current campaigns to inform people of their duty to add
themselves to the Commonwealth electoral roll and to update their details when
they change addresses.
3.48
The Committee notes that enrolment is compulsory, but also notes that despite
compulsion, the trend of decline in enrolment participation has been evident since
before the turn of the century.
3.49
The Committee considers roll completeness to be a critical component of
roll integrity. It is clear that an incomplete electoral roll has the potential
to diminish the Australian community’s continued acceptance of the legitimacy
of election results. Opposition members believe it is also important to ensure
that the information on the electoral roll is correct, allowing those to vote
whose details are incorrect would raise far more questions about the legitimacy
of election results than a roll which is allegedly incomplete. Opposition
members asserted that if the legitimacy of electoral results was to be
seriously addressed, setting up a fraud division within the AEC with effective
powers to prepare prosecutions would be the first step.
3.50
The Committee agrees with the Australian Electoral Commissioner, Mr Killesteyn,
who told the Committee that:
From my perspective as an administrator faced with the sorts
of figures that we are now being confronted with for the lack of
electoral participation, I not only have a duty as an administrator
enforcing the act to enforce the obligation but I also have a duty to
facilitate the entitlement. All of the processes we are putting out
there for debate are both about enforcement and facilitation.[36]
3.51
The Committee reiterates the position it took when examining enrolment
issues following the 2007 federal election. That is, ‘the threshold issue
facing Australia’s democracy is to ensure that enrolment and roll update
processes be made as accessible as possible in order to enable the franchise,
whilst not compromising the integrity of the electoral roll and subsequently
the electoral system’.[37]
3.52
To this end the Committee draws attention to the recommendations made in
its earlier report into the implications of the Parliamentary Electorates
and Elections Amendment (Automatic Enrolment) Act 2009, which are designed
to provide some flexibility in the maintenance of the electoral roll.
3.53
While the Committee does not intend to restate the findings of that inquiry,
it is satisfied from re-examining some of the matters considered then that
urgent action needs to be taken to address the issue of declining enrolment and
believes that the New South Wales and Victorian Parliaments have enacted
appropriate legislation to help address this issue in their respective
jurisdictions.
3.54
The majority of the Committee accepts that the Commonwealth should adopt
a model that allows direct enrolment of electors on the basis of accurate and
reliable data provided to the AEC, and the direct update of enrolment details
based on that same data wherever required. However, Opposition members believe
that the only data that should be truly relied upon is an individual elector’s
enrolment form when they join the roll or update their details. They felt that
relying on any other information would dramatically reduce the integrity of the
roll.
3.55
However, the Committee is not specifically recommending the adoption of
the models presently utilised in New South Wales or Victoria. The Committee
agrees with the Australian Electoral Commissioner that a model adopted at the Commonwealth
level requires transparency regarding the data sources it utilises.[38]
Recommendation 1 |
3.56 |
The Committee recommends that, wherever appropriate, the Commonwealth
Electoral Act 1918 should be amended to allow the Australian Electoral Commission
(AEC) to directly enrol eligible electors on the basis of data or information
provided by an elector or electors to an agency approved by the AEC, as an
agency which performs adequate proof of identity checks, where that
information is subsequently provided by that agency to the AEC for the
purposes of updating the electoral roll. Approval of such agencies by the AEC
should be made by disallowable instrument. |
Recommendation 2 |
3.57 |
The Committee recommends that the Commonwealth Electoral
Act 1918 be amended to allow the Australian Electoral Commission (AEC) to
directly update the enrolment details of electors on the basis of data or
information provided by an elector or electors to an agency approved by the AEC,
as an agency which performs adequate proof of identity checks, where that
information is subsequently provided by that agency to the AEC for the
purposes of updating the electoral roll. Approval of such agencies by the AEC
should be made by disallowable instrument. |
3.58
The Committee notes the assistance being provided to the AEC by the ATO in
notifying people who have advised the ATO of a change of address that they
should also update their enrolment details. The Committee is also aware that
cooperation beyond that is limited, as data sharing arrangements between the
AEC and the ATO are not currently permissible.
3.59
The Committee believes that if the ATO were permitted to share enrolment
relevant data with the AEC it would provide a genuine and lasting improvement
to roll maintenance processes and roll integrity.
Recommendation 3 |
3.60 |
The Committee recommends that relevant legislation governing
the protection of personal data collected by the Australian Taxation Office
(ATO), which would prevent the ATO from providing enrolment relevant data to
the Australian Electoral Commission (AEC), be amended to allow such data to
be shared with the AEC for the purposes of facilitating enrolment. |
3.61
The Committee believes that enrolment at the time of voting provides an
important safety net for a system which allows for direct enrolment and update.
The Committee is satisfied that such an option should be available at the
Commonwealth level, but believes that enrolment obtained in this manner should
only be permitted for the address which appears on the evidence of identity
document.
Recommendation 4 |
3.62 |
The Committee recommends that, wherever appropriate, the Commonwealth
Electoral Act 1918 be amended to enable electors who provide satisfactory
evidence of identity and address to a pre-poll issuing officer at a pre-poll
voting centre or a declaration vote issuing officer at a polling place, to
enrol for that address at the time of voting, by completing and signing an
enrolment compliant declaration vote certificate into which their ballot
papers are to be inserted. |
Recommendation 5 |
3.63 |
The Committee recommends that, should the Government accept
Recommendation 4 above, the Commonwealth Electoral Act 1918 be amended,
wherever appropriate, to enable electors who enrol at the time of voting to
be added to the electoral roll used for the election and to enable votes cast
by those electors to be admitted to the scrutiny for that election. |
3.64
The Committee also notes the decision of the Federal Court of Australia
in Getup Ltd v Electoral Commissioner [2010] FCA 869, which was
discussed briefly in Chapter 2.
3.65
The Committee believes that the use of electronic or digitally formed
signatures should now be specifically provided for in the Commonwealth
Electoral Act.
Recommendation 6 |
3.66 |
The Committee recommends that, wherever appropriate, the Commonwealth
Electoral Act 1918 be amended to specifically permit the use of electronic
or digitally formed signatures for enrolment purposes. |
Objections to enrolment
3.67
The matter of objecting to the enrolment of electors on the basis that
the AEC believes a person does not reside at a particular address also has implications
for the completeness of the electoral roll.
3.68
The Committee heard during this inquiry, and during the inquiry into the
2007 federal election, that the enrolment system is biased toward taking
persons off the roll rather than facilitating the enrolment of electors.
3.69
The matter merits consideration because it impacts on the ability of
electors to be reinstated to the electoral roll at elections, and contributes
significantly to the number of votes which are disqualified from progressing
into the scrutiny.
3.70
However, it is clear that amendments made by the then Government in 2004
to subsections 114(4) and 118(4)[39] and to Schedule 3 in
2006[40] of the Commonwealth
Electoral Act, which specifically removed any discretion that existed for the
AEC to make an informed decision about the enrolment of electors who no longer
reside at the enrolled address has influenced the growth in the rejection rate
of provisional and other declaration votes. These matters are discussed in some
detail in Chapter 6.
3.71
The Committee deals with the matters particular to objections processes
here (even though also related to reinstatements) on the basis that they are
inherently a roll maintenance issue and rest comfortably in this chapter.
3.72
Opposition members expressed a number of concerns with the
recommendations in this chapter.
3.73
Firstly, Recommendations 1 and 2 regarding automatic enrolment, and the
AEC's use of means other than an individual's enrolment form to initially enrol
voters or update enrolment details. Coalition concerns were outlined in the
Dissenting Report to the Committee's inquiry into the implications of the Parliamentary
Electorates and Elections Amendment (Automatic Enrolment) Act 2009 (NSW) for
the conduct of Commonwealth elections, and are further expanded upon in the
Coalition Members' and Senators' Dissenting Report for this inquiry.
3.74
Opposition members of the Committee are also concerned that the AEC has
made a recommendation that is by its nature highly politically contentious and
that poses such a dramatic change to our enrolment and roll management
processes. These concerns have been expressed at numerous hearings.
3.75
Opposition members believe that consideration should be given to
legislation to provide the AEC with the power to investigate allegations of
fraudulent voter behaviour. It is important that such investigations are not
discarded due to lack of resources and the provision of a legislative duty to
investigate by the AEC will ensure this does not eventuate.
3.76
Finally, Opposition members qualify their support for Recommendation 6
regarding the proposed acceptance of electronic signatures by the AEC.
Coalition members believe that such signatures should only be accepted
following the provision of photographic identification such as a driver licence
or a passport.
Committee conclusion
3.77
The Committee is of the view that changes made to the objections process
by the then government in 2004, have prevented many electors who have been removed
from the roll in error by the AEC, from subsequently being reinstated to the
roll when they have cast a declaration vote for the same address from which
they were removed, or for another address in the same electoral division.
3.78
In many such cases, the recommendations about direct enrolment and
direct update of enrolment (Recommendations 1 and 2) made by the Committee
earlier in this chapter have the potential to mitigate this particular
situation to a degree, as they will allow the AEC to update the roll on the
basis of information that it receives from other sources.
3.79
However, there will inevitably be a time delay between the release of
this report and implementing the respective recommendations, should the
Government accept and support them. Similarly, a significant proportion of the
electors who have already been or will be removed from the roll because of the
operation of the relevant subsections, will find no relief is available to
them.
3.80
The Committee believes that there is no valid reason to remove the
franchise from a person, who, despite not living at their enrolled address,
still lives in the electoral division in which they are enrolled.
3.81
The Committee is also of the view that the requirement that the
Electoral Commissioner ‘must’ object to the enrolment of a person for a
Subdivision of a Division in the circumstances outlined above is not justified
and that the Electoral Commissioner should be able to exercise discretion in
such circumstances.
3.82
The Committee, therefore, makes the following recommendations aimed at
ensuring that objection action, on the grounds of non-residence, are only made
where appropriate. This is necessary to stop electors being removed from the
roll in error.
Recommendation 7 |
3.83 |
The Committee recommends that Part IX of the Commonwealth
Electoral Act 1918 be amended to provide that an elector should not
be removed from the electoral roll by objection on the grounds that they do
not live at a particular address, and have not lived at the address for a
period of at least one month, in situations where the Australian Electoral Commission
is aware from information or data sources in its possession that the elector
lives at a different address in the same electoral division. |
Recommendation 8 |
3.84 |
The Committee recommends that paragraphs 114 (4), 118 (4A),
and any other relevant provisions of the Commonwealth Electoral Act 1918, be amended to provide the Australian Electoral Commissioner with a discretion
not to object to the enrolment of an elector where the Electoral Commissioner
is aware that the elector resides at a different address in the same
electoral division. |