|
Parliamentary Joint Committee on Electoral Matters
Navigation: Previous Page | Contents | Next Page
Chapter 7 Formality issues
7.1
The Constitution[1] provides for Australia’s
representatives to be directly chosen by the Australian people. Consequently,
ensuring that the valid votes cast by eligible electors count towards the
election of their representatives is fundamental to Australia’s democratic
electoral system. Opposition members of the Committee note that the
Constitution provides for Australia‘s representatives to be directly chosen by
the Australian people, and, consequently, votes of individual electors should
never be decided by a third party nor directed to a party the elector never had
any intention of voting for. Opposition members believe the South Australian
ticket system is not constitutionally sound.
7.2
At every election, it has been the case that some ballot papers do not
meet formality requirements and so cannot be included in the vote count. This
may be the result of a deliberate choice or a genuine mistake by the elector. The
effect is that these electors are not having a say in who will be their
representatives in Parliament.
7.3
For this reason, it is important after each election to tackle vote
formality issues. It is vital to closely examine informal ballot papers and
attempt to understand the intention of the voter, to explore the underlying
contributing factors to informality, and to act to ameliorate the problem.
7.4
The 2010 federal election saw informal votes for the House of Representatives
at 5.55 per cent (729 304 votes), an increase of 1.6 per cent on the 2007
federal election.[2] Senate informality was
3.75 per cent (495 160 votes), an increase of 1.2 per cent on the previous election.[3]
7.5
In its examination of the level of informal voting at the 2010 federal
election, the Australian Electoral Commission (AEC) observed that:
In every election, it is likely that a small proportion of
the votes cast will not meet the specified voting requirements and will
therefore be deemed informal. Levels of informal voting can provide an
indication of people’s engagement with (and understanding of) the electoral
process and, together with enrolment participation rates and measures of
turnout, are therefore a key indicator of democratic health.[4]
7.6
In recognition of the importance of the informal voting issue, the AEC
now routinely undertakes an analysis of informal voting in the House of
Representatives following federal elections.
7.7
In practical terms, the rising level of informality means that more and
more people (hundreds of thousands) are turning up at designated polling places
(or voting by post) and lodging ballot papers that then do not count towards
the election of their representatives.
7.8
Not all informality is unintentional. The AEC analysis of House of
Representatives informality revealed that 51.4 per cent of informal votes were
assumed to be unintentional, with the remaining 48.6 per cent assumed to be deliberately
informal.[5] Opposition members
contend the actual intentional informal figure is likely to be far higher than
48.6 per cent, with many electors who vote only ‘1’ or place a tick or a cross
deliberately choosing not to number every box. It is important that those who
intend to vote informally do not have their vote counted against their wishes
for a candidate they did not wish to vote for.
7.9
The level of informality for voters genuinely trying to cast a formal
vote is of concern. This means that upwards of 370 000 voters are attempting to
vote, but for various reasons are failing.
Committee view
7.10
The Committee believes that as part of a system that seeks to maximise
participation in the democratic process to elect Australia’s representatives,
reasonable measures should be taken to help ensure that votes are not wasted. In
particular, in cases where it is clear that an eligible voter has attempted to
cast a formal vote, but it is informal perhaps due to confusion over what is
required to make their vote count.
Requirements for a formal vote
7.11
Ballot papers must satisfy certain requirements before being accepted
into the vote count. Each ballot paper must first undergo authenticity checks to
ascertain that:
- it is a genuine
ballot paper—carrying the official mark and initials of the issuing officer;
and
- it does not identify
the voter.[6]
7.12
Each ballot paper is then checked to ensure that the vote cast is ‘formal’
(in keeping with requirements set out in the Commonwealth Electoral Act 1918).
7.13
A House of Representatives vote will be formal if:
- one first preference
is indicated and all boxes are numbered consecutively; or
- one first preference
is indicated and all boxes (except one) are numbered consecutively.
7.14
The Senate voting system provides voters with two options for casting a
vote: above-the-line (group ticket voting) and below-the-line (indicating all
preferences). A voter can vote above-the-line by indicating one, and only one,
first preference against one of the group voting squares, and their preferences
for all the other candidates will be taken to be in accordance with the group
voting ticket (or tickets) lodged with the AEC by that political party or
Senate group. Voters may number more than one preference above-the-line, but preferences
will still be determined as per the voting ticket of their first preference
candidate.
7.15
When voting below-the-line for the Senate the vote will be formal if:
- a first preference is
shown by the number ‘1’ marked in the square opposite the name of one, and only
one, candidate; and
- where there are 10 or
more candidates, not less than 90 per cent of the squares opposite the names of
candidates on the ballot paper are numbered as required, or would be if no more
than three numbers were changed; or
- where there are nine
or fewer candidates, all squares opposite the names of candidates on the ballot
paper (or all but one of these squares with only one square left blank) are
numbered as required, or would be if not more than two numbers were changed.[7]
7.16
In keeping with the principle of erring in favour of enfranchisement,
some deviations in numbering are acceptable, and may allow a ballot paper to
remain in the count. However, a repetition of a first preference is not
acceptable in Senate or House of Representatives voting. Table 7.1 outlines
some of the main deviations that may occur and compares how they will affect
ballot papers in the House of Representatives and the Senate.
Table 7.1 Comparison of acceptable numbering on ballots
papers
Ballot paper marking(a) |
Acceptable on Senate ballot
paper(b) |
Acceptable on House of
Representatives ballot paper |
Single first preference
(figure ‘1’)
|
ATL: Yes
BTL: No |
No |
Single first preference
(figure ‘1’, a tick or a cross) |
ATL: Yes
BTL: No |
No |
Incomplete numbering
(consecutive preferences beginning with 1 are shown, but the last square is
left blank) |
ATL::Yes
BTL: Yes, the blank square
is deemed to express the voter’s last preference |
Yes, the blank square is
deemed to express the voter’s last preference |
Incomplete numbering
(consecutive preferences beginning with 1 are shown, but more than one square
is left blank) |
ATL: Yes
BTL: Yes, if certain
requirements are met
(CEA s. 270(1)(b)) |
No |
Number sequence errors
(missed numbers) |
ATL: Yes
BTL: Yes, if certain
requirements are met
(CEA s. 270(1)(b)) |
No |
Repeated numbers |
ATL: Yes
BTL: Yes, if certain
requirements are met
(CEA s. 270(1)(b)) |
No |
(a) The Commonwealth Electoral Act
(CEA) prescribes the ballot paper formality requirements for federal elections.
(b) The
Senate’s two forms of voting are above-the-line (ATL) and below-the-line (BTL).
Source Australian
Electoral Commission, Scrutineers Handbook: Federal election 2010, Version 3.
7.17
On Senate ballot papers provision is also made for when a voter has
attempted to vote both above and below-the-line. If both votes would have been
formal if recorded on their own then the below-the-line is given precedence and
used for the count, with the ticket vote treated as if it had not been
attempted, as it is assumed that marking all preferences is a better indication
of the voter’s intent.
7.18
If the votes attempted both above and below-the-line would have been
informal if recorded on their own then the ballot is rejected. However, if the
voter made an error when marking their ballot paper that made either, but not
both, their ticket or full preferential vote informal, then the vote may still
be formal in the following cases:
- where the ticket vote
would have been formal if recorded on its own, but the preferential vote would
have been informal if recorded on its own, the ballot paper is formal and the
preferential vote below-the-line is treated as if it had not been attempted; or
- where the
preferential vote below-the-line would have been formal if recorded on its own,
but the ticket vote would have been informal if recorded on its own, the ballot
paper is formal and is treated as if the ticket vote had not been attempted.
7.19
The Senate voting system currently allows more opportunities for saving
informal votes than the House of Representatives arrangements.
Informal voting in the 2010 federal election
7.20
In the 2010 federal election, the rate of informal votes for the House
of Representatives was 5.5 per cent. Other than the 1984 election, this was the
highest informal vote since the introduction of compulsory voting for federal
elections in 1924. In 1984, informality in the House of Representatives
ballooned as a result of confusion from the introduction of above-the-line
Senate voting. However, the Committee accepts that optional preferential voting
in New South Wales and Queensland, and the prevalence of ‘just vote 1’
campaigns in these jurisdictions, has, along with other factors, also
contributed to increased levels of informality in the last few years.
7.21
The total House of Representatives informal vote in 2010 (729 304
informal votes) was equivalent to 7.8 average electoral divisions at the 2010 federal
election. The rise in informality since the 2007 federal election is equivalent
to 2.3 electoral divisions. These equivalents were calculated based on the
national average for enrolment at 31 July 2010, which was 93 804
electors.
7.22
The 2010 federal election saw a substantial increase in assumed
intentional informal voting in the House of Representatives, most readily
identified by ballot papers that are left blank or have slogans or other
messages written on them. This means that some electors see it as their right
to submit an informal vote and Opposition members believe it is thus important
that their votes are not given to bureaucrats to fill out the rest of the form
for them. For the House of Representatives, 48.6 per cent of informal votes
were assumed to be deliberately informal.[8] Notably, the AEC found
that 2010 was the first election since the informal ballot paper survey began
that the proportion of blank ballot papers (210 587)—a key indicator of a
deliberate informal vote—was higher than the proportion of number ‘1’ only
ballots (202 432).[9]
7.23
The AEC analysis of House of Representatives informality revealed that
51.4 per cent of informal votes were assumed to be unintentional, with the
remaining 48.6 per cent assumed to be deliberately informal.[10]
Opposition members believe the actual intentional informal figure is likely to
be far higher than 48.6 per cent, with many electors who use only a ‘1’, a tick
or a cross deliberately choosing to not number every box. It is important that
those who intend to vote informally do not have their vote counted against
their wishes for a candidate they did not wish to vote for.
7.24
The AEC noted the media coverage of the call by a former Member of
Parliament, prior to the 2010 federal election, for voters to submit blank
ballot papers.[11] The AEC observed that:
It is not possible to determine whether the increase in blank
ballots is related to Mr Latham’s comments or indeed to any other public
commentary. It is possible that the level of blank ballots was simply a
reflection of the mood of the electorate.[12]
7.25
In its analysis of House of Representatives informal voting, the AEC
provided a breakdown, by state and territory, of the categories of informal
votes (see Table 7.2).
Table 7.2 2010 House of Representatives informality, by
State and Territory
State/Territory |
Number
‘1’ only |
Ticks
and crosses |
Sum of
Number '1' only and Ticks and crosses |
All
other informal categories |
Total
Informal Votes |
New South Wales |
93 466 |
40 405 |
133 871 |
159 892 |
293 763 |
Victoria |
31 005 |
13 606 |
44 611 |
105 088 |
149 699 |
Queensland |
44 247 |
13 626 |
57 873 |
79 522 |
137 395 |
Western Australia |
13 786 |
7 061 |
20 847 |
40 120 |
60 967 |
South Australia |
13 124 |
7 258 |
20 382 |
36 183 |
56 565 |
Tasmania |
2 595 |
1 440 |
4 035 |
9 756 |
13 791 |
Australian Capital Territory |
2 969 |
1 535 |
4 504 |
6 422 |
10 926 |
Northern Territory |
1 219 |
793 |
2 012 |
4 186 |
6 198 |
National |
202 411 |
85 724 |
288 135 |
441 169 |
729 304 |
Source Provided
by the Australian Electoral Commission, based on Analysis of Informal Voting:
House of Representatives, 2010 Federal Election, Research Report Number 12, 29
March 2011.
7.26
It is evident that the highest numbers of informal votes were in New
South Wales, Victoria and Queensland. Accordingly, most of the higher rates of
informal voting by division are also predominantly in these states, in
particular New South Wales (see Table 7.3). Opposition members of the Committee
observe that this shows that many voters are confused by the difference between
the state and federal systems, in particular in NSW and Queensland where
optional preferential voting is used, this is confirmed by noting that the
highest proportion of informal votes where the elector has just put a ‘1’, a
tick or a cross come from these two states.
7.27
When examined by division, the ten divisions with the highest
informality rates are all located in western Sydney: Blaxland, Fowler, Watson,
Chifley, McMahon, Werriwa, Greenway, Barton, Reid and Parramatta.[13]
Table 7.3 2010 Informal vote—Divisions with highest
informality rates
Rank |
Division |
State |
Formal votes |
Informal votes |
Total votes |
Informal % |
Informal swing % |
1 |
Blaxland |
NSW |
73 830 |
12 081 |
85 911 |
14.06 |
5.17 |
2 |
Fowler |
NSW |
76 882 |
11 314 |
88 196 |
12.83 |
4.35 |
3 |
Watson |
NSW |
76 757 |
11 265 |
88 022 |
12.80 |
3.71 |
4 |
Chifley |
NSW |
80 371 |
10 097 |
90 468 |
11.16 |
3.25 |
5 |
McMahon |
NSW |
79 860 |
9 710 |
89 570 |
10.84 |
3.24 |
6 |
Werriwa |
NSW |
75 314 |
8 692 |
84 006 |
10.35 |
3.77 |
7 |
Greenway |
NSW |
79 308 |
9 075 |
88 383 |
10.27 |
4.09 |
8 |
Barton |
NSW |
78 683 |
8 572 |
87 255 |
9.82 |
3.25 |
9 |
Reid |
NSW |
79 628 |
7 680 |
87 308 |
8.80 |
3.22 |
10 |
Parramatta |
NSW |
78 317 |
7 418 |
85 735 |
8.65 |
2.03 |
11 |
Banks |
NSW |
83 869 |
7 665 |
91 534 |
8.37 |
2.61 |
12 |
Lindsay |
NSW |
83 227 |
7 402 |
90 629 |
8.17 |
2.65 |
13 |
Kingsford Smith |
NSW |
82 029 |
7 280 |
89 309 |
8.15 |
2.84 |
14 |
Macarthur |
NSW |
78 203 |
6 899 |
85 102 |
8.11 |
2.54 |
15 |
Lingiari |
NT |
42 927 |
3 482 |
46 409 |
7.50 |
2.65 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Source Parliamentary
Library, Exhibit 3, p. 1.[14]
7.28
In the Senate, the informality rate at the 2010 federal election was
3.75 per cent (495 160 votes). There is clearly a gap between that and the
higher House of Representatives informality of 5.5 per cent.
7.29
However, this was not always the case. Prior to the introduction of
group ticket voting in the Senate for the 1984 federal election, Senate
informality was approaching ten per cent (see Table 7.5 later in the chapter).
7.30
Since its first use at the 1984 election, the more user friendly ticket
(above-the-line) voting is now firmly established as the voting option used by
the vast majority of voters for Senate elections, especially in states with
high candidate numbers. This is clearly illustrated in Table 7.4.
Table 7.4 Method of voting in the 2010 Senate federal
election, by State and Territory
State/
Territory |
Number of Senate
Candidates |
Number of ticket votes
cast |
Percentage of total
Senate vote cast using Ticket |
Number of Below the line
Senate Votes cast |
Percentage of total
Senate vote cast using full preferential |
NSW |
84 |
4 059 558 |
97.76 |
92 966 |
2.24 |
Vic |
60 |
3 122 603 |
97.01 |
96 148 |
2.99 |
Qld |
60 |
2 374 789 |
96.91 |
75 722 |
3.09 |
WA |
55 |
1 196 446 |
96.94 |
37 773 |
3.06 |
SA |
42 |
950 000 |
94.1 |
59 578 |
5.9 |
Tas |
24 |
263 944 |
79.82 |
66 747 |
20.18 |
ACT |
9 |
174 086 |
75.93 |
55 186 |
24.07 |
NT |
15 |
87 665 |
90.67 |
9 022 |
9.33 |
Source Australian
Electoral Commission, Virtual Tally Room, Election 2010.[15]
7.31
As is evident in Table 7.1 earlier in the chapter, comparing the
acceptable numbering on Senate and House of Representatives ballot papers, the
voting safety net for saving potentially informal votes is much wider for the
Senate. However, the above-the-line ticket voting option is what has had the
biggest impact on reducing Senate informality.
Historical context to Senate voting changes
7.32
In 1983, the Joint Select Committee on Electoral Reform (JSCER) was
formed to inquire into and report upon all aspects of the conduct of elections
for the Parliament of the Commonwealth and matters related thereto. Its inquiry
included an examination of federal voting systems.
7.33
The JSCER observed that there had been various experiments with aspects
of voting systems since federation, and outlined key developments in its
report.[16] The AEC also keeps
timelines of Australia’s major electoral developments.[17]
7.34
One of the issues of concern at the time of the JSCER’s inquiry was the
high level of Senate informal votes at the 1983 federal election. For example,
in a parliamentary debate that year, it was observed that:
When we look at the election results around Australia for the
1983 Senate election, we find that the informal vote for the Senate was, in
fact, the third largest bloc of votes nationally for the Senate. The informal
vote for the Senate actually exceeded the vote for the Australian Democrats
around Australia. That is the dimension of the problem. It is even more starkly
highlighted by the fact that the number of informal votes in New South Wales
and Victoria this year exceeded one electoral quota for the Senate. So, the
informal vote could have elected one senator in both of those States.[18]
7.35
In the First Report, the JSCER concluded that the introduction of
‘proportional representation’ in 1948 had resulted in a more evenly balanced
composition of the Senate. However, the troubling trend of rising levels of
informal voting emerged in the Senate. The Australian Electoral Office Survey
of informal voting at the 1977 federal election revealed nine per cent (731 555
ballot papers) informality for the Senate, as compared to 2.52 per cent (204 912
ballot papers) for the House of Representatives.[19]
7.36
Various stakeholders made submissions to the JSCER, advocating changes
to address the informality issue. The Australian Labor Party advocated for
optional preferential voting, as it argued that the full preferential system
led to increased informal votes and forced voters to cast a preference for all candidates.
It recommended that the voter only need express the number of preferences equal
to the number of vacancies in the House of Representatives or the Senate. The
Liberal Party and the National Party opposed optional preferential voting, as
it was similar to, and came with, the disadvantages of a first-past-the-post
voting system.[20]
7.37
The Australian Electoral Office proposed the introduction of a voting
system in which a vote could be cast by ticking a box indicating a registered
‘list’ of party preferences. The vote would then be counted as if it has been
fully completed. The Liberal Party expressed a preference for the ‘list’ system
over optional preferential voting.[21]
7.38
The JSCER decided that the introduction of the ‘list’ system whilst retaining
the existing system—having the option to allocate all preferences—was the most
feasible solution. It recommended that:
- the
current system of voting for each house should be modified as follows—
- for
the Senate, a ‘list’ system should be introduced together with the retention of
the existing system as an option open to those who wish to exercise their
allocation of preferences, provided that a vote is not considered invalid if a
mistake in sequence is made, but the voter intention is clear, i.e. a Senate vote
should be considered formal as far as its intention is ascertainable provided
that numbers are placed in at least 90% of squares;
- a
House of Representatives vote should be considered formal as far as its
intention is ascertainable provided that all except one of the squares is
numbered.[22]
7.39
The then Government sought to give effect to this recommendation with
the introduction of the Commonwealth Electoral Legislation Amendment Bill 1983.
This Bill was part of major electoral reform, and included: the establishment
of an independent Australian Electoral Commission to administer the federal
electoral system; changing the franchise qualification to Australian
citizenship; registration of political parties; and public funding and
disclosure arrangements.
7.40
In his second reading speech on the Bill, the then Special Minister of
State expressed concern about the high number of informal votes in the Senate
elections, stating:
On Senate voting, the Government has accepted the
recommendation of the Committee to provide; firstly, that a voter may mark one
square indicating the adoption of his preferred party's how to vote ticket and,
secondly, for the validation of any person's vote up to the point where the
voter's intention remains clear. It has been a matter of notoriety that the
complexity of the ticket has contributed to a substantial informal vote and
also just as significantly to the throw-away vote, known as a donkey vote. The
Joint Committee had before it material from the Australian Electoral Office
which showed how the most trivial mistakes were the major factors in the Senate
informal vote. The figures were taken from an analysis of the 1977 Senate and
House of Representatives vote. The Senate informal vote was 9 per cent
nationwide compared to 2.5 per cent for the House of Representatives. Of the
Senate informal votes almost eight out of 10, 78 per cent, had been
disqualified on one or two grounds, that is incorrect numeric sequence, or some
squares left blank. This meant the disfranchisement in that election for the
Senate of almost 600,000 Australians, more than the population of Tasmania. The
situation is palpably absurd and this legislation will go a long way towards
correcting it.[23]
7.41
In the course of debate on the 1983 Bill various concerns were raised in
relation to aspects of the change to the Senate voting system:
Senator Peter Baume
argued that the attempt to address Senate informality would have other
undesirable consequences:
It is true that the voting process in the Senate can be
simplified, but the use of the list system will reduce the effectiveness of the
whole concept which lies behind a preferential system of voting...
While this might minimise informal votes in one respect, it
could well encourage them in another. The fact is, of course, that at present
90 per cent of all electors are able to cast formal votes. That is a credit to
the voters. It just puts out of court the claim by the Government that the
community cannot handle a full preferential voting system. Clearly, the
community can handle it. The fact that 90 per cent of votes are formal
indicates to us that the task should be rather to increase that number of
formal votes than to try to change it and move to a list system which carries
at least as many problems as it does advantages.[24]
- The then Leader of
the National Party of Australia argued that the ‘list’ voting was an
oversimplification and ‘an insult to the intelligence of the average Australian
voter to assume that he cannot fill in a significant number of squares’ to
indicate preferences.[25]
- Senator Sir John
Carrick argued that the ‘pre-occupation with eliminating informal votes ends up
in a first-past-the-post system...[that] will certainly weaken the integrity of
the preferential and proportional systems’.[26]
- Mr Steel Hall MP, objected
to the further simplification of the Senate ballot paper by also allowing a
tick and a cross to be deemed a figure ‘1’.[27]
7.42
Many of the JSCER’s recommendations were given effect by the Commonwealth
Electoral Legislation Amendment Act 1983. The Act introduced above-the-line
voting and Group Voting Tickets (GVTs). Senate candidates could choose to form
groups and submit a GVT to the AEC setting out the order in which preferences
should be distributed if a voter chose to vote above-the-line by just marking
one box with a number ‘1’, a tick or a cross.
7.43
These changes had the desired effect of reducing Senate informality. However,
in most elections since 1984 the rate of informal votes in the House of
Representatives has exceeded Senate informality.
7.44
Table 7.5 shows the percentage of informal votes in House of
Representatives and Senate elections since 1977. The marked difference between
levels of informal votes in the Senate and House in the late 1970s and early
1980s has again emerged, but the case has reversed with the House of
Representatives now recording a higher level of informal votes than the Senate.
Table 7.5 Percentage
of informal votes for the House of Representatives and the Senate, 1977 to 2010
elections
Election |
1977 |
1980 |
1983« |
1984 |
1987 |
1990 |
1993 |
1996 |
1998 |
2001 |
2004 |
2007 |
2010 |
House |
2.5 |
2.5 |
2.1 |
6.3 |
4.9 |
3.2 |
3.0 |
3.2 |
3.78 |
4.8 |
5.2 |
3.95 |
5.55 |
Senate |
9.00 |
9.6 |
9.9 |
4.3 |
4.1 |
3.4 |
2.6 |
3.5 |
3.24 |
3.9 |
3.8 |
2.55 |
3.75 |
Source Australian
Electoral Commission, for 1977 to 2007: Informality percentage House of
Representatives and Senate, http://www.aec.gov.au/Voting/Informal_Voting/summary.htm,
viewed 22 June 2011.
«1983 figures include missing and discarded ballots
7.45
The examination of the historical context of the changes to the Senate
voting system to address high levels of informal votes and the higher level of
informal votes in the House of Representatives currently being experienced,
reveal compelling similarities between the type of mistakes made on ballot
papers and the groups whose votes are affected.
7.46
When discussing the issue in 1983, South Australian Senator Graham
Maguire stated:
The Australian Electoral Office conducted a study of all
informal ballot papers at the 1977 federal election and the report showed
uniformly in all States that the errors which caused informal votes were
basically of two types: Incorrect numbering sequence and cases where people had
left some squares blank. It was quite striking that in virtually every State
about 77 per cent or 78 per cent of informal votes could be put down to those
two types of errors. So clearly people were trying to fill in their ballot
papers. People were trying to cast formal votes, but they were just frustrated
by this system which required 30 or 40 preferences to be placed on a ballot
paper...
...
Who votes informally is a very important question that has to
be faced up to. We carried out an investigation in my State some years ago. We
found that, in many suburbs where there are large numbers of senior citizens,
where migrants have arrived recently from certain countries or where there are
citizens with low levels of schooling, we got high informal votes.[28]
7.47
Today, the Joint Standing Committee on Electoral Matters faces many of
the same policy and practical challenges in reducing informality in the House
of Representatives as faced by the Joint Select Committee on Electoral Reform
when it looked at the high level of Senate informality in 1983.
Factors affecting informal voting
7.48
In its analysis of informal voting for the House of Representatives in
the 2010 federal election, the AEC observed that:
There are many factors that could influence a voter to
intentionally or unintentionally cast an informal vote and it is not possible,
in many cases, to accurately quantify or even separately identify the impact
these factors might have. Of those factors identified as significant influences
on (unintentional) informal voting at previous HoR elections, English language
proficiency and the number of candidates appear to be the strongest predictors
of informality rates (or changes in informality rates) in 2010.[29]
7.49
The key factors contributing to informal voting brought to the attention
of the Committee included: lack of English language proficiency, high number of
candidates, socioeconomic considerations, and the differences between voting
systems at both the federal and state and territory levels. However, Opposition
members believe none of these factors justify authorising a bureaucrat to deem
the rest of the elector’s ballot paper being cast in accordance with a
registered ticket.
English language proficiency
7.50
In its analysis of informality in the 2010 federal election, the AEC
found English language proficiency to be one of the strongest predictors of
unintentional informality.[30] It stated that:
Five out of the 10 divisions with the highest informality
rates at the 2010 House of Representatives election also had the five highest
proportions of persons who, at the 2006 Census of Population and Housing,
indicated that they did not speak English well, or did not speak English at
all.[31]
7.51
Elections analyst, Mr Antony Green, also acknowledged the links between
high migrant populations and higher informal voting rates. He advised the
Committee that:
…certainly there are many people who came to Australia from
overseas who have voted in other systems, and we are one of the only countries
in the world that numbers a ballot paper. We are certainly the only country in
the world that insists you number every box on the ballot paper.[32]
7.52
The AEC strategies to assist people from culturally and linguistically
diverse (CALD) backgrounds and minimise informality in the 2010 federal
election included:
- translating a range
of information (including the Official Guide to the 2010 Federal Election -
a leaflet that was distributed to all households) into 22 different languages
for use in the polling place. Additionally, all translated election
communication materials were available on the AEC website in an “information in
your language” section. This information was also accessible through an AEC
telephone translation service which provided assistance in 16 languages...[;and]
- employing
multi-lingual staff in divisions with a high percentage of people with
culturally and linguistically diverse (CALD) backgrounds; an interactive “How
to vote practice tool” was available on the AEC website to enable electors to
practise filling in their ballot papers; this was promoted through the
advertising and public relations materials.[33]
7.53
The AEC also undertook a pilot project in western Sydney in the lead-up
to the 2010 federal election. Areas that had high informality rates in previous
federal elections were targeted: Blaxland, Watson, Chifley, McMahon, Fowler,
Reid, Parramatta, Werriwa, Banks and Bennelong. The AEC noted that:
The primary objective of this project was to increase voter
knowledge in relation to casting a formal vote. The secondary objectives were
to engage and build community connections and to evaluate the content methodology
used in delivering community education.[34]
7.54
The pilot project was managed by consultants working closely with the
AEC. Bilingual educators, in many cases with extensive links in the relevant
community, were engaged and trained by AEC staff. In conducting the workshops,
the AEC noted that:
The educators were provided with appropriate tool kits and
information and presentation material. Each workshop was attended by an AEC
staff member who provided technical expertise and support for the relevant
bilingual educator.[35]
7.55
The pilot project was cut short by the announcement of the 2010 federal
election. In total, 90 workshops were conducted, with 1772 participants across
13 language groups in the three week period leading up to the 2010 federal
election, at a total cost of just under $210 000.[36]
7.56
While formal written feedback on the courses was limited, educators
confirmed an increase in the knowledge and understanding exhibited during the
course of the workshop.[37]
7.57
In the 2010 federal election, eight of these western Sydney divisions in
which the workshops were conducted were ranked in the top ten highest
percentages of divisions with informal votes.[38]
7.58
The AEC conducted a voter survey at seven locations in western Sydney on
polling day. Forty-five of those interviewed had attended a workshop and found
it useful. However, the AEC found that those interviewed were ‘...no less
likely than other western Sydney respondents who speak languages other than
English to vote informally, nor were they more confident about voting than
those who had not attended a workshop’.[39]
7.59
In its evaluation of the project targeting voters from non-English
speaking backgrounds (NESBs) in western Sydney the AEC concluded that the
project had little impact on informality rates in those divisions, but was
optimistic about the potential impact of a longer term project of this kind.
The AEC found that:
The workshops did not directly result in a reduction in
informality in the targeted divisions during the 2010 federal election.
However, they were perceived by attendees as useful. Given an average of
170-180 workshop participants in each of the target divisions consisting of
around 100,000 voters, an immediate impact in informality statistics could not
be expected. However, the adoption of the program on a continual basis with
opportunity for repeat visits and broader topic coverage could be expected to have
an impact on informality figures over time.[40]
7.60
SydWest Multicultural Services provides support services in the south
western Sydney area to refugees and humanitarian entrants, including many from NESBs.
It recognises that a lack of functional English is a significant challenge for
people from NESBs carrying out a range of necessary activities, including
casting a valid vote. Mr Agwa stated:
We do admit that language is the big issue, therefore it is
important to engage with these people and give them resources so they can be
able to cast their vote and exercise their democratic rights effectively and
efficiently.[41]
7.61
The problem is not only restricted to new arrivals, as some Indigenous
voters face the challenge of low functional English language skills. The Hon
Warren Snowdon MP, the Member for Lingiari in the Northern Territory, raised
this as a matter of concern in relation to Indigenous voters. He commented
that:
...we had the highest enrolment figures but lowest turnout by
percentage and highest informal vote over the 2001-2010 period. That is an
issue. It reflects one issue that we need to be confronting that prior to 1996,
there was a very active Aboriginal education voter enrolment division within
the Electoral Commission. That was subsequently removed and therefore the
capacity for people to get educated about their voting obligations was not what
it ought to be. I think that is reflected in these voting figures, in the
turnout and in the high informality, and is a question which I think we need to
be confronting.[42]
Number of candidates
7.62
Generally, there has been a steady rise in the number of candidates
contesting House of Representatives and Senate elections over the last few
elections. In addition to cost implications, increasing numbers of candidates
have resulted in a more complicated—and at times unwieldy—ballot paper that
represents a logistical challenge to the AEC and a practical challenge to
voters trying to cast a formal vote.
7.63
The AEC expanded on how this has evolved since federation, and observed
that:
…the task faced by the average voter is now clearly more
complex than when full preferential voting was introduced in 1918. Up until
then, there had been seven general elections, at which a total of 525 vacancies
were filled, and for which a total of 1060 nominations were received. Over
those seven elections, the overall average number of candidates per vacancy was
2.02. Over the last eight general elections, from and including that of 1990,
1,191 vacancies have been filled, for which a total of 7,775 nominations have
been received, at an average of 6.53 candidates per vacancy. This trend came to
a climax at the 2009 Bradfield by-election, contested by 22 candidates, at
which the informal vote reached 9%, by a substantial margin the highest ever
recorded in the division, and more than double the rate for that division at
the 2007 election.[43]
7.64
The impact of the increasing number of candidates in Senate and House of
Representatives election is discussed in more detail in Chapter 9.
Differences between voting systems
7.65
Having differences between the voting systems for the Senate and the
House of Representatives at the federal level itself, and with states and
territories, can be confusing and pose a problem for voters trying to cast a
formal vote.
7.66
Mr Antony Green observed in his analysis of previous elections that
occurrences of a first preference only being marked on House of Representatives
papers was higher in both New South Wales and Queensland, where optional
preferential voting is used for state elections.[44]
7.67
This is supported by AEC statistics that show a substantially higher
informal vote (with only number ‘1’, ticks or crosses) for New South Wales
(133 871 votes) and Queensland (57 873 votes).[45]
7.68
When considering the differences at the federal level itself, Mr Green
commented that:
While the interaction with state laws on optional
preferential voting plays a part in varying the incidence of '1' only voting by
state, what we also know from research is that the use of the Senate ballot
paper, and its instruction that voters place a '1' above the line on the ballot
paper plays a part in inducing '1' only voting in the House.
Research at by-elections
has shown that without the distraction of the senate ballot paper, the
incidence of '1' only voting declines...[46]
7.69
When the Commonwealth Electoral Legislation Amendment Bill 1983 (which
introduced group voting tickets in the Senate) was considered, the potential for
confusion was foreshadowed in debate, with Senator Baume stating:
We think it is far simpler for people to know that when they
vote, the process they use will be to follow a full preferential listing of
numbers and that that will occur whether they are voting for the House of
Representatives or for the Senate. It is very difficult to ask people to use
ticks or crosses on one of their voting papers and to write numbers on the
other voting paper and not to expect that some inefficiency or unavoidable
error will occur as a result.[47]
Committee view
7.70
The Committee agrees that greater harmonisation of voting systems is
desirable. It would be much easier for a voter to be able to look at a ballot
paper for the election of representatives to the Senate, House of Representatives
or their state or territory Parliament, and have confidence that the same thing
is expected of them to make their vote count.
7.71
While the Committee acknowledges that at present national harmonisation
of voting systems is unlikely, it believes that the Government must take the
necessary steps to mitigate the impact that confusion over—or indeed ignorance
of—different voting systems may have on levels of informal voting.
Socioeconomic considerations
7.72
In evidence to the Committee, the Victorian Electoral Commissioner, Mr Steve
Tully, noted the correlation between socioeconomic disadvantage and levels of
informal voting. He observed that:
The data is also there to support the view that informality
is directly related to the electorate in which people live. In the eastern
suburbs of Melbourne, informality is a lot lower than it is in the western
suburbs. The population make-up is also different, and I do not think it is
drawing too long a bow to say that there are socioeconomic and other factors
involved in informality—and literacy, I suspect, is also a big issue in
informality, particularly with blank ballot papers.[48]
7.73
A comparison of socioeconomic indexes for electoral divisions[49]
with the electoral divisions ranked by levels of high informal voting[50],
reveal some correlations. For example, of the top 15 electoral divisions ranked
by index of relative socioeconomic disadvantage and ranked by highest levels of
informal voting in 2010, there were four divisions present on both lists
(Lingiari, Fowler, Watson and Chifley).[51]
Addressing informality through education
7.74
The AEC delivers various education services, including school and
community visits, sessions at their electoral education centre, and
professional development workshops for educators.
7.75
Information is available on the AEC’s website regarding the conduct of
elections. In the lead up to the 2010 federal election the Official Guide to
the 2010 federal election went directly to households, and was available in
a range of languages, Braille and a sound recording to make it accessible to a
wide range of electors.
7.76
The AEC also conducts targeted programs to help specific groups more
effectively exercise their voting franchise. Over many years these activities
have included:
- providing printed How-to-Vote
information in up to 21 different languages;
- including formality
information in the Official Guide to the Election at federal elections;
- providing telephone
translation services through specialist providers; and, more recently,
providing special programs in targeted divisions in the lead up to an election;
- adapting press
advertising for placement in Indigenous media, and placing translated press and
television advertising in media for persons from non-English speaking
backgrounds;
- directly mailing
community organisations and groups, and migrant resource centres, with
translated how to vote correctly fact sheets, posters and DVDs featuring
translated television advertisements;
- employing staff with
particular language skills in polling places in targeted divisions;
- providing extra
training to polling staff in divisions with a high level of persons from non-English
speaking backgrounds;
- translating the three
questions issuing officers are required to ask of electors into 21 languages
for use in targeted polling places;
- playing looped video
information in targeted polling places in divisions with persons from
non-English speaking backgrounds;
- providing
information to Candidates through the Candidate’s Handbooks, advising
candidates about minimising unintentional informality through the design of
their How-to-Vote cards;
- providing an
interactive How-to-Vote practice tool on the AEC website; and
- conducting school and
community education sessions in areas with high levels of persons from
non-English speaking backgrounds (with a view to providing information to
students and other persons who speak English from such families in order that
they may assist in passing information to parents).[52]
7.77
As discussed earlier in the chapter, the AEC pilot project in western
Sydney sought to address the high levels of informal voting in those electoral
divisions.
7.78
The Indigenous Electoral Participation Program (IEPP) provides targeted
assistance to Indigenous electors and potential electors. The IEPP commenced in
2010 and is funded for four years as part of the Government’s Closing the Gap
initiatives. It is a national program that aims to:
- increase levels of
knowledge of democratic and electoral processes;
- increase levels of
enrolment;
- increase levels of
participation in democratic and electoral processes; and
- decrease levels of
informal voting.
7.79
Ms Bright, the AEC State Manager for Queensland, outlined the work of
the IEPP in Queensland, stating that:
Education sessions for Indigenous Queenslanders were
conducted by staff of the AEC’s Indigenous Electoral Participation Program at
some 18 very diverse locations around the state, from the Gold Coast right up
to the Torres Strait, as far west as Cunnamulla and St George and right out
west to Mount Isa. Staff also used these events to promote employment
opportunities for Indigenous people at the upcoming election. In addition, an
electoral awareness officer program was trialled throughout Queensland for the
election. One hundred and fifty Indigenous officers were engaged to assist with
educating electors and to provide information in communities about enrolling,
the voting process and how to cast a formal ballot. In the Cape, the Torres
Strait and areas of metropolitan Brisbane where these officers worked, the rate
of informality decreased.[53]
7.80
The AEC Manager for the Northern Territory, Mr Pugsley, advised the
Committee that IEPP staff were also in the field in the Northern Territory in
the weeks leading up to the 2010 federal election.[54]
7.81
At the 2010 federal election, there was a decrease in voter turnout in
the Northern Territory to 82.7 per cent.[55] Statistics for various
mobile polling stations in the Northern Territory also revealed high levels of
vote informality in some remote areas.[56]
7.82
However, Mr Pugsley was optimistic about the future impact of the IEPP
program. He noted that the IEPP program had only been operating for a few weeks
prior to the 2010 federal election being called.[57]
Committee conclusion
7.83
The Committee acknowledges the role that education must play in helping
to address informality. Targeted programs conducted by the AEC such as the
Indigenous Electoral Participation Program assisting Indigenous people, and the
pilot project in western Sydney to assist voters from non-English speaking backgrounds,
are valuable and should continue.
7.84
The Committee notes the range of education-based and other activities
that the AEC has undertaken in recent years to try to decrease the levels of
unintentional informality, especially in areas where there are high levels of
persons from non-English speaking backgrounds. It is clear, however, that
despite these efforts informality continues to rise.
7.85
The Committee believes that unintentional informal voting is a growing
and complex problem that requires action beyond the improvements that education
programs have been able to deliver. Opposition members of the Committee point
out that there has been no extensive research as to what proportion of informal
voting is deliberate and what is accidental. At the moment, the AEC merely
assumes that all ballots that are numbered ‘1’ only are accidentally informal
and those that are blank are deliberately informal. Clearly there needs to be
more extensive research done. The Opposition members believe education programs
do deliver better outcomes, particularly in states with optional preferential
voting and believes that people are entitled to vote informally if they wish.
7.86
The Committee notes the 1983 amendments for reducing informality in the
Senate. However, the increasing amounts of informal votes in House of
Representatives elections means action is required to reduce these numbers
before the House of Representatives is faced with the alarmingly high levels of
the Senate prior to 1983. The Opposition members note that this is a false
comparison as no House of Representatives ballot paper would ever resemble a
Senate paper in terms of numbers of candidates nominating. It is also necessary
to point out that Senate electors are still able to fill out every square if
they wish.
Saving informal votes in the House of Representatives
7.87
The Committee notes the Australian Labor Party’s observation about
addressing informality:
The AEC has made significant efforts to try to address it,
but those do not seem to be really improving the situation. I think we do need
to look at something a bit more fundamental.[58]
7.88
There are various options that could be explored to reduce the amount of
informal votes. Mr Antony Green proposed that the Committee consider optional
preferential voting, a system of progressive informality and the South
Australian ticket voting system, as options for lowering the informal vote in
the House of Representatives.[59]
Optional preferential voting
7.89
Some have suggested optional preferential voting as a way to reduce
informality in the House of Representatives, as it provides voters with the
flexibility to indicate as few or as many preferences as suits.[60]
Groups such as the Electoral Reform Society of South Australia support optional
preferential voting on the basis that it would make it easier for voters and
fairer for ungrouped candidates, in the case of the Senate.[61]
7.90
Others object to an optional preferential voting system.[62]
Not only opposing its introduction at the federal level, The Nationals
advocated for greater harmonisation of voting systems, calling for full
preferential voting to be standard at the federal and state and territory
levels.[63]
7.91
In terms of addressing informality, Mr Andy Becker, a former South
Australian Electoral Commissioner, noted that:
Optional preferential voting (OPV) does go some small way
toward saving such votes but the rationale is not directed solely to that end.
The main purpose of OPV is to enable a voter not to have to indicate a
preference if he or she does not have one. The consequence is that a great many
ballot papers exhaust in the process of preference distribution and take no part
in the final distribution.[64]
Committee conclusion
7.92
The Committee has repeatedly considered the optional preferential voting
system when proposed in the course of its various post-election reviews and
other inquiries, but continues to support a system of full preferential voting
at the federal level.
Progressive informality voting system
7.93
Elections analyst, Mr Antony Green, proposed a new voting system of
‘progressive informality’ that retains compulsory preferential voting, but
relaxes the formality criteria.Under
his proposed system ballot papers with valid first preferences would be
admitted to the count and the ballot papers with incomplete preferences would
only be excluded at the point that preferences were required to be counted.[65]
7.94
Mr Green outlined his counting procedure as follows:
- Initial count admits any vote with a valid first preference.
- If one candidate has a majority of first preference votes, no
further checks for formality are required on ballot papers
admitted to the count under Step (1).
- If preferences require to be counted to determine a winning
candidate, the ballot papers of a candidate are re-examined
for formality before they are distributed. Any ballot papers
that do not have a valid next preference are excluded from the count.
- Having excluded some first preferences as informal, a check is made to determine that the leading candidate has not now
reached 50% of the new formal total. If preferences are still
required to determine the winner, proceed to step (5).
- Distribute preferences. Return to step (3) and determine if
further distributions need to be undertaken.[66]
7.95
Under this model an elector’s vote is counted if their first preference
candidate secures a majority of first preference votes. However, if further
preferences are required, and the ballot paper has no other preferences marked,
the vote will be deemed informal at that point.
7.96
In a situation where a candidate secures an absolute majority on first
preferences, those incomplete ballot papers will count toward the result. The candidate
will win the election; however, during the full distribution of preferences,
those ballot papers (if any) that were deemed formal at the first preference
count for the remainder of the candidates would be informal at the point where
the candidate was excluded, if no further preferences were indicated.
7.97
Under that situation, ballot papers for the winning candidate may be
treated differently to ballot papers for the other candidates.
7.98
Another relevant factor is that the number of ballot papers deemed
formal at the first count, may be different to the number of ballot papers
deemed formal at the end of the full distribution. It is likely, therefore,
that the number of ballot papers counted toward the final result would be
different to the number of ballot papers that counted toward the candidate
being elected. Opposition members are in strong disagreement with this
assessment, the idea that a vote which exhausts under an optional preferential
system because the elector deliberately chooses not to preference certain
candidates does not make their vote informal. Opposition members feel that pointing
out that some votes may exhaust is a very poor argument against ‘progressive
informality’ or optional preferential voting, and that saying that these votes
are informal is very deceptive.
7.99
Similarly, the result achieved in a division in which a candidate
achieves an absolute majority of first preference votes, would treat incomplete
ballot papers in a different way than in a division where a full distribution of
preferences is required to determine the result.
7.100
Mr Green acknowledged that while progressive informality gives effect to
the intent of more voters than the current rules, there are disadvantages in
that: it does disadvantage minor parties and independents as the ballot papers
given their first preference are more likely to have to be excluded and thus
become informal if full preferences are not indicated; and election night
counts would be less reliable, as ballot papers with first preferences counted
on election night may later need to be excluded.[67]
7.101
In evidence to the Committee, Mr Green argued that his progressive
informality model struck the right balance between saving votes and respecting
compulsory voting. He asserted that:
Under progressive informality, you cannot vote 1 and hope
your vote will exhaust before it reaches somebody and have an effect on the
count. If you voted 1 and your preferences need to be counted, your vote will
still end up informal. But what I am arguing, which the AEC has argued since
the 1987 informal vote report and which is evident if you look at the South
Australian research in detail, is that for every vote we reject from the count
to protect compulsory preferential voting—in other words, if somebody has not
filled in all their preferences and those preferences are required—there are
nine votes with a valid first preference that could have counted and did not
need to have their preferences counted. So we have a very high test of
formality to protect compulsory preferential voting when nine in 10 of those
votes are not damaging compulsory preferential voting anyway.[68]
7.102
At the Committee’s request, the AEC considered Mr Green’s progressive
informality model and what effect it could have had on House of Representatives
informality in the 2010 federal election. The AEC concluded that of the 729 304
informal votes, 273 035 could possibly have been saved at the first preference
count, with a further 85 724 potentially saved if ticks and crosses were also
accepted, and potentially another 4 816 if other symbols such as alphabetic
characters were accepted. However, a number of ballot papers may then be
rendered informal if a distribution of preferences was required.[69]
7.103
The Committee also notes the following AEC observations about the
progressive informality model:
- the progressive
informality system and optional preferential voting systems are practically
equivalent, sharing many of the same merits in minimising unintentionally
formality;
- the system would be
more effective than the current system in giving effect to first preferences
expressed by voters;
- broadly, progressive
informality would be simpler to implement than the South Australian ticket
system; and
- the impact of the
system on the clarity of election night results is likely to only be marginal
and have less impact than uncounted declaration votes.[70]
7.104
Dr Brent of the Democratic Audit of Australia also commented on the
similarity between optional preferential voting and progressive informality,
suggesting that progressive informality was ‘really OPV with a bit of a
semantic change’.[71]
Committee conclusion
7.105
The Committee supports a system of full preferential voting. It notes
the similarities between progressive informality and optional preferential
voting.
7.106
The Committee does not consider the progressive informality voting
system proposed by Antony Green to be a viable option. In particular, the
Committee is concerned about ballot papers being treated differently from one
electoral division to another. It is not equitable to say that in the event an
elector has voted with a single ‘1’, that if the elector’s first preference
happens to be for a candidate that received an absolute majority then it can be
treated as formal, but if their first preferences is for another candidate and
additional preferences are required then the ballot paper will be deemed
informal.
7.107
The Committee believes that the progressive informality system could
potentially be more confusing, for voters and election officials administering
the count, than the current system that the Committee is seeking to improve.
7.108
The Committee also believes that, wherever possible, ballot papers
deemed to be formal should be treated consistently, both within and across
electoral divisions. Progressive informality, unlike the South Australian
savings provision dealt with below, does not treat ballot papers deemed formal
in an equal and consistent manner.
South Australian ticket voting
7.109
The South Australian voting system is full preferential, but has a
savings provision (SA ticket voting) for the House of Assembly which permits
candidates to lodge one or two preferences ticket, and provides that some
ballot papers may be rendered formal if a voter has only indicated some
preferences on their ballot paper where the preferences indicated are
consistent with the ticket or tickets lodged.
7.110
In the 2010 South Australian state election, 32 638 House of Assembly
votes were saved by South Australia’s ticket voting system. In the two previous
elections in 2006 and 2002, 43 553 and 37 897 votes were saved.[72]
7.111
The Committee received evidence that at the 2010 state election the
informal vote in South Australia, which was 3.3 per cent under ticket voting
provisions, would have been 6.5 per cent had federal rules applied.[73]
7.112
In the South Australian House of Assembly, provided a ballot paper is
not marked in a way that identifies the voter, it is formal if:
- consecutive
preferences are indicated against the names of all candidates, commencing with
a ‘1’, a tick or a cross;
- consecutive numerical
preferences commencing with a ‘1’ (or a tick or a cross) are indicated against
the names of all candidates except one; or
- the previous criteria
are met, and the elector has corrected an error (for instance by crossing out
and renumbering), but the correction still leaves the elector’s intention
clear.[74]
7.113
South Australian House of Assembly ballot papers are informal if:
- it is marked in a way
that positively identifies the voter;
- it is blank or if no
first preference is indicated by either a ‘1’, a tick or a cross;
- more than one first
preference is indicated (i.e. if a ‘1’, tick or cross appears in or against two
or more squares);
- there is a break in
the consecutive numerical preferences, a duplication, or two or more
preferences are omitted; or
- the ballot paper was
not placed in a ballot box, even if it meets other formality requirements.[75]
7.114
Uniquely, a savings provision in section 93 of the Electoral Act 1985
(SA), allows some votes to be saved in certain circumstances. Under the
South Australian ticket voting system, candidates are entitled to lodge one or
two voting tickets.[76] An incomplete ballot
paper may then be saved when:
- a first preference
has been marked (with a ‘1’, tick or a cross) for a candidate who has lodged
one or more tickets; or
- a first preference
and some—but not full—preferences have been marked that are consistent with the
ticket(s) lodged.
7.115
If these requirements are met, then the vote can be saved and
preferences will be allocated according to the voting ticket(s) with which it
is consistent. In cases where there is only a first preference indicated and
two tickets are lodged, subsection 93(3) provides that:
...then the ballot paper is to be grouped with other ballot
papers marked in the same manner and—
- if
the number of those ballot papers is an even number—half of them will be taken
to have been marked in accordance with one ticket and half in accordance with
the other; or
- if
the number of those ballot papers is not an even number—
- one
of the ballot papers will be taken to have been marked in accordance with
whichever of the 2 tickets is determined by lot by the returning officer; and
- half
the remainder (if any) will be taken to have been marked in accordance with one
ticket and half in accordance with the other.[77]
7.116
In cases where a first preference and some further preferences are
indicated, subsection 93(5) provides that:
- Where—
- a voter
marks a ballot paper by placing the number 1 in the square opposite the name of
a particular candidate and proceeds to indicate further preferences by
consecutive numbers; and
- there
are 2 voting tickets registered for the purposes of the election in relation to
the candidate; and
- the
preferences indicated by the voter are consistent with one or both of those
voting tickets; and
- the
ballot paper would, apart from this subsection, be informal,
the ballot paper, if consistent with both voting tickets,
will be treated as if it had been marked only with the number 1 and dealt with
in accordance with subsection (3), but if it is consistent with one only
of the voting tickets, it will be taken to have been marked in accordance with
that voting ticket.[78]
7.117
This means that if the preferences indicated on an otherwise informal
ticket deviates from the preference on the ticket(s) lodged by the candidate
for whom first preference is marked it will not be saved by the ticket voting
provision.
7.118
On polling night, the votes that may potentially be saved are still
counted as informal at the polling place, with the savings provision
subsequently applied by Returning Officers once they are satisfied that the
necessary requirements have been met, specifically, that the candidate has
lodged one or two tickets and that the preference(s) indicated are consistent
with one or both of those tickets.[79]
7.119
The South Australian Electoral Commissioner acknowledged that the ticket
voting requirements do represent an additional administrative challenge for
election workers. Ms Mousley noted that:
You will find that the voting ticket provisions are somewhat
difficult for polling place staff to understand. Primarily, they are employed
once every four years and, whilst some staff have problems with preferences,
particularly with the number of candidates, the higher the number, just
following the preferences and sorting to informal or formal, is problematic in
itself. With the voting ticket provisions we advise our polling place managers
on the night of election itself that a fully preferential vote is sorted to
formal and anything that is not fully preferentially marked is put out to informal.[80]
7.120
The likelihood of ballot papers with some preferences being saved by
tickets reduces as more preferences are indicated. The Electoral Commission of
South Australia (ECSA) confirmed that:
If the partial numbering does not match a voting ticket it
will fail in formality. We do some analysis on informality. Unacceptable
preferencing is around 21.8 per cent. The great majority of informals are
blanks or messages.[81]
7.121
Mr David Gulley of the ECSA, advised the Committee that the majority of
South Australian House of Assembly votes saved by their ticket voting system
are first preferences only (marked with a ‘1’, tick or a cross). He observed
that:
In our election reports we have reported a figure of less
than 0.1 per cent of total formal ballot papers are partially preferenced where
they fail the ticket, so the great majority of ticket votes are single 1s,
ticks or crosses. The highest figure that I could find was in the 2002 report
where it referred to the previous election. In the 2002 election it was less
than 0.1 per cent of the formal vote, but 0.6 per cent in 1997.[82]
7.122
A vote cannot be saved unless a candidate has lodged at least one
preference ticket with the ECSA. Candidates can choose not to lodge tickets.
7.123
The AEC advised that in the 2010 South Australian election, there were
40 candidates who did not lodge a voting ticket (28 Greens, 9 Fair Land Tax –
Tax Party, and three independent candidates).[83] As Table 7.6
illustrates, the number of candidates in 2010 choosing not to lodge tickets was
unusually high compared with previous years.
Table 7.6 Number of candidates who
lodged no, one or two tickets for the 2010 South Australian election
Year |
Number who lodged no
voting ticket |
Number who lodged a
single voting ticket |
Number who lodged two
voting tickets |
1993 |
6 |
148 |
73 |
1997 |
2 |
94 |
101 |
2002 |
2 |
244 |
56 |
2006 |
1 |
157 |
111 |
2010 |
40 |
206 |
7 |
Source Australian
Electoral Commission, Submission 87.4, Attachment B, p. 12.
7.124
Despite this unprecedented rise in candidates not lodging tickets in
2010, discussions during the inquiry revealed that, generally, having first
preference votes for them saved is a good incentive for parties and candidates
to lodge tickets.[84]
7.125
Concerns about this model of ticket voting being seen as a move away from
full preferential voting are addressed in section 126 of the South Australian Electoral
Act 1985, which prohibits advocating forms of voting other than full
preferential voting.
7.126
The provision prohibiting advocating methods of voting other than full
preferential helps protect against problems encountered in the past.[85]
7.127
It is pertinent for the Committee to consider the issues associated with
Langer-style voting, as they highlight how individuals or groups, for a variety
of reasons, may seek to subvert a savings provision aimed at reducing
informality.
7.128
The background to this is that as part of the major electoral reforms of
1983, a safety net was introduced for ballot papers where full preferences had
been indicated, but a sequencing error had occurred. It provided that on ballot
papers on which all squares were numbered, if there was a mistake in the
sequence and numbers were repeated, for example 1,2,3,4,5,5,6,7,8, then the
ballot paper would be formal, and the preferences would remain valid until the
point at which the error occurred.
7.129
In the lead up to the 1996 federal election a political activist, Mr
Albert Langer, encouraged electors to deliberately make sequencing errors on
their House of Representatives ballot papers, so as to deny major parties
preferences, but still have the elector’s desired preferences counted.
Mr Langer’s activities included an advertisement in The Australian
with instructions on how to cast their vote in this way. This style of voting
became known as Langer voting.
7.130
The AEC took legal actions against Mr Langer, as his activities were in
breach of the Commonwealth Electoral Act. At the time, section 240 of the Act
provided that a voter must indicate their first preference with a ‘1’ and then
number all the remaining squares, and section 329A made it an offence (with a
maximum penalty of six months imprisonment) to encourage voters to vote other
than in accordance with section 240.
7.131
This matter and associated issues were heard in the Victorian, Federal
and High Courts. The outcome was that Mr Langer served three weeks of a ten
week sentence, and the constitutional validity of section 329A was upheld.[86]
7.132
In 1998, following consideration of this issue in the inquiry into the
1998 federal election, section 240 of the Commonwealth Electoral Act was
subsequently amended to explicitly provide that numbers could not be repeated,
and the savings provision allowing the repetition of numbers was removed.
7.133
The Langer experience is a useful cautionary tale that savings
provisions must be carefully designed to strike a balance between seeking to
better give effect to voters’ intentions and upholding the system of full
preferential voting.
7.134
During its hearings, the Committee considered the possible effect of
Langer voting on a system based on SA ticket voting. The ECSA confirmed that
under the SA savings provision a Langer voter would be informal.[87]
7.135
While the South Australian Electoral Act 1985, section 126,
prohibits the advertising of the ticket voting provision, the reality is that a
campaigner would not benefit from conducting a Langer-style campaign.
7.136
Unlike the sequencing savings provision that was in place at the 1998
federal election, which Langer sought to exploit, the ticket voting system is
still a full-preferential voting system. If an elector only indicates one or
two preferences and their ballot paper is saved, their vote will still be
full-preferential in keeping with the ticket lodged by their first preference
candidate. It cannot be manipulated to become a de-facto optional preferential
system.
7.137
Former South Australian Electoral Commissioner, Mr Tully, acknowledged
that while administering a provision that is not widely known was ‘tricky’, the
amount of votes saved made it worthwhile. He observed that:
The complexity of having what some people regarded as a
secret provision was often a bit challenging to explain but, nonetheless, its
impact was significant. My recollection in two elections that I conducted in
South Australia—both were extraordinarily close—was that ticket votes accounted
across the state for about four per cent. In other words, if there were not
ticket votes informality would have increased by a further four per cent.[88]
7.138
However, the fact that the operation of the SA ticket system in the
House of Assembly is not widely publicised, and by extension, not widely known,
could give rise to concerns about the extent to which voters are aware that
their ballot papers are being deemed formal and preferences distributed as per
their first preference candidate’s voting ticket.
7.139
While having acknowledged that the SA ticket system does have some
positive input into the democratic process by saving unintentional informal
votes of voters confused by the different voting systems,[89]
Emeritus Professor Dean Jaensch argues that ticket voting makes too many
assumptions and turns the informal ballot into a formal one, without asking the
permission of the voter concerned.[90]
7.140
In its analysis, the AEC similarly made the distinction between the
Senate group ticket system—which allows the voter to make the choice to vote
above-the-line and have their preferences distributed as per the group ticket
or to vote below-the-line and indicate their own preferences—and the South
Australian system that does not explicitly provide voters with a choice.[91]
7.141
The AEC observed that the effect of potentially allocating preferences
that were not intended by the voter is to some degree mitigated by the fact
that further preferences will not necessarily need to be drawn on. The AEC
commented that:
...[in most cases] the second
and later preferences on many ballot papers never need to be revisited after
the formality check. In particular, many voters in seats where a preference
distribution is not needed to determine the result, and many voters in other
seats who cast first preference votes for candidates not excluded during the
count (e.g., most major party candidates), would be significantly advantaged by
the adoption at the federal level of the South Australian system, since in many
cases their first preference votes would be counted, and the later preferences
attributed to them due to the operation of the voting ticket system either
would not be counted, or would not change the result in the seat.[92]
7.142
Elections analyst, Mr Antony Green, advised that:
The South Australian provision almost overwhelmingly captures
one-only votes. There are a small number of cases where someone has gone 1 and
2 and it gets saved, but the vast majority are people who have just voted 1,
and we know from past research that between a third and a half of the ballot
papers are from people who just voted 1. Of course, it is higher in New South
Wales and Queensland because of the experience of optional preferential voting
at the state level.[93]
7.143
In the context of the 2010 South Australian election, Mr Green found
that:
Of the 32,638 ticket votes admitted to the South Australian
count, only 2,020 or 6.2% would have been required to have their preferences
examined to determine the winning candidate in a contest. The other 93.8% could
have been formal based on their first preferences because further preferences
did not need to be examined to determine the winner.[94]
7.144
Mr Andy Becker, a former South Australian Electoral Commissioner, was
involved in the development and implementation of the SA ticket voting system. Mr
Becker has a long professional history in the administration of elections in
South Australia and nationally.
7.145
He informed the Committee that the rationale for the savings provision
was that:
...with a compulsory system every effort should be made to
make it as easy as possible for an elector to comply with the legislation and
in doing so be as effective as possible in casting a meaningful vote.[95]
7.146
The SA ticket voting savings provisions that emerged were
administrator-driven rather than government or politically driven. Mr Becker
recalled that in 1985 the drafting instructions provided by the SA Government
at the time were ‘fairly loose’ and he, as Electoral Commissioner, working in
conjunction with the Parliamentary Counsel, had considerable latitude in
developing South Australia’s new Electoral Act.[96]
7.147
Mr Becker outlined for the Committee the emergence of ticket voting as
the preferred savings option. He recollected that:
We then went and reviewed a lot of the legislation interstate
and some of the provisions that they had like the safety net provisions in New
South Wales for optional preferential voting. That in itself did not appeal to
me greatly because it seemed to me that, in many cases in New South Wales in
the lower house, they were electing people with fewer than 50 per cent of the
vote. So that is when the alternative of putting in voting tickets came up for
consideration. What that really enabled us to do was to separate out the
instructions that we give to the elector from the instructions that we give to
the scrutineer people performing scrutiny. Everything up to and including
polling day is saying you shall vote—number every square and do not leave any
blank. There are safety provisions saying if you leave the last square blank
that that is still considered a preference. However, we then said when it comes
to the scrutiny we put in the safety provision in exactly the same way as we
have for the Senate that, in the event of a voting ticket having been lodged,
we should give effect to that ballot paper that might have a tick, a cross or a
1 and a voting ticket has been lodged for that tick, cross or 1, and we will
give effect to that ballot paper in accordance with the voting ticket.
Generally speaking that was considered fairly well by all
sides. There was a heck of a lot of debate about it but it passed in the end.[97]
7.148
In evidence to the Committee, Mr Becker advised that twenty-six years
later the provisions had served South Australia well for seven elections, and
that he was not aware of any objection to, nor any attempt to amend, the
legislation covering voting tickets.[98]
7.149
That has also been the experience of South Australian Electoral
Commissioner, Ms Mousley, who advised that:
I have only been commissioner in South Australia for the 2006
and 2010 elections and I cannot see any evidence from the election reports
where there has been any record of concerns that were raised throughout the
election because of that provision.[99]
7.150
The South Australian Deputy Electoral Commissioner, Mr David Gulley,
also shared that view, telling the Committee that:
I have been with the commission since 1995 and deputy
commissioner since 1998. I am not aware of any great concerns with the process,
other than some punters out in the community think it is undemocratic, as they
do with other things.[100]
7.151
Senator Nick Xenophon, a Senator for South Australia, similarly found that:
From my observation, the South Australian system—and I may be
wrong in terms of the comments of the Liberal Party and the Labor Party; I do
not know what they commented—has not been controversial. In my 10 years in the
legislative council, I am not aware of a push to change that system.[101]
7.152
Table 7.7 is a comparison of acceptable number on ballot papers in the
Senate, House of Representatives and the South Australian House of Assembly.
Table 7.7 Comparison
of acceptable numbering on ballots papers in the Senate, House of
Representatives and the South Australian House of Assembly
|
Acceptable
on ballot paper for the: |
Ballot paper marking(a) |
Senate(b) |
House of Representatives |
South Australian House of
Assembly
(Ticket voting) |
Single first preference
(figure ‘1’)
|
ATL: Yes
BTL: No |
No |
Yes
If candidate lodged ticket(s) |
Single first preference
(figure ‘1’, a tick or a cross) |
ATL: Yes
BTL: No |
No |
Yes
If candidate lodged ticket(s) |
Incomplete numbering
(consecutive preferences beginning with 1 are shown, but the last square is
left blank) |
ATL::Yes
BTL: Yes, the blank square
is deemed to express the voter’s last preference. |
Yes, the blank square is
deemed to express the voter’s last preference. |
Yes
If candidate lodged
ticket(s) and is consistent with one or both of the tickets |
Incomplete numbering
(consecutive preferences beginning with 1 are shown, but more than one square
is left blank) |
ATL: Yes
BTL: Yes, if certain
requirements are met
(CEA s. 270(1)(b)) |
No |
Yes
If candidate lodged
ticket(s) and is consistent with one or both of the tickets |
Number sequence errors
(missed numbers) |
ATL: Yes
BTL: Yes, if certain
requirements are met
(CEA s. 270(1)(b)) |
No |
No |
Repeated numbers |
ATL: Yes
BTL: Yes, if certain
requirements are met
(CEA s. 270(1)(b)) |
No |
No |
(a) The Commonwealth Electoral Act
(CEA) prescribes the ballot paper formality requirements for federal elections.
(b) The
Senate’s two forms of voting are above-the-line (ATL) and below-the-line (BTL).
Source Australian
Electoral Commission, Scrutineers Handbook: Federal election 2010, Version 3; and
the Electoral Commission of South Australia, Scrutineers Handbook, R018, 2010.
7.153
At the Committee’s request, the AEC undertook an analysis of the House
of Representatives informality under the current system, and the potential
impact on informality under the proposed options of progressive informality and
the SA ticket voting provision.[102] Accordingly, the AEC made
certain assumptions, including that: all candidates lodge tickets; ballot
papers do not identify voters; ballot papers match tickets; and it relates to the
first count only.[103]
7.154
From this analysis, it appears that the South Australian ticket voting
system, if applied to House of Representatives ballot papers, could save a
significant portion of informal votes. For the 2010 federal election, this
could have been as much as 42.12 per cent (307 156 votes), assuming that all
the relevant candidates had lodged tickets.
Figure 7.1 Indicative analysis of ‘1’ only votes by
division
Source Provided
by Opposition members of the Committee.
7.155
As can be seen in Figure 7.1, the highest concentration of ‘1’ only
votes were cast in New South Wales and Queensland, where optional preferential
voting is permitted in state elections.
7.156
To properly appreciate the scale of the informal voting problem, it is
important to also consider it at the level of electoral divisions.
A breakdown of House of Representatives informality by division revealed a
number of divisions with high levels of ballot papers marked with a ‘1’ only, a
tick or a cross. Table 7.8 depicts the ten divisions with the highest numbers
of informal votes of that type. A full list of all divisions, by state, is in
Appendix C.
Table 7.8 Top ten divisions with informal votes that were
number ‘1’ only, ticks or crosses
Division |
Number
‘1’ only |
Ticks
and crosses |
Sum of
Number '1' only and Ticks and crosses |
All
other informal categories |
Total
Informal Votes |
Fowler |
4 163 |
2 361 |
6 524 |
4 790 |
11 314 |
Watson |
4 346 |
1 886 |
6 232 |
5 033 |
11 265 |
McMahon |
3 311 |
2 182 |
5 493 |
4 217 |
9 710 |
Barton |
3 666 |
1 422 |
5 088 |
3 484 |
8 572 |
Blaxland |
3 573 |
1 454 |
5 027 |
7 054 |
12 081 |
Chifley |
3 171 |
1 460 |
4 631 |
5 466 |
10 097 |
Werriwa |
2 910 |
1 636 |
4 546 |
4 146 |
8 692 |
Reid |
3 047 |
1 084 |
4 131 |
3 549 |
7 680 |
Banks |
2 979 |
1 119 |
4 098 |
3 567 |
7 665 |
Kingsford Smith |
2 713 |
978 |
3 691 |
3 589 |
7 280 |
Source Relevant
rows extracted from Appendix C, Table C.2.
7.157
There were nine divisions,[104] all in New South Wales,
which had between 4 000-6 500 informal votes of this type. Six divisions[105]
with more than 3000 votes of this kind and 31 divisions with more than 2000
votes of this type.[106] A savings provision
along the lines of the SA ticket voting system would mean that if a candidate
has lodged a ticket these votes would be saved.
7.158
When the Committee sought the Australian Labor Party’s view on the SA
ticket voting system, the ALP noted that:
The AEC has made significant efforts to try to address it,
but those do not seem to be really improving the situation. I think we do need
to look at something a bit more fundamental. It seems like the South Australian
position has led to some improvement.[107]
7.159
However, the SA ticket voting system has its opponents. The Nationals
did not support the adoption of the South Australian model at the federal
level, and stated that:
We advocate the status quo in terms of the current federal
system. We think that is the ideal system and with uniform adoption of that we
think that you would significantly reduce informality.[108]
7.160
The Liberal Party of Australia strongly opposed the SA ticket voting
system. Federal Director, Mr Brian Loughnane, was adamant that:
The Liberal Party is strongly opposed to the introduction of
the model that has operated in South Australia since 1985. We believe that the
integrity, more than anything, of the voting system is critical. We believe
that the South Australian model works in contradiction to the principles of
compulsory preferential voting where a vote is required to allocate a
preference to both their most and least desired candidate.
If the South Australian model were adopted federally it would
create yet another voting system which would complicate and confuse the
electorate. We do not believe that it would reduce the incidence of unintended
informal voting. I would be happy to expand on any of those points, but the
position of the Liberal Party on this issue is very clear. We have obviously
had extensive experience since 1985 on the application of it in South Australia. We do believe that it contradicts the principle of compulsory preferential
voting and is at odds with the concept of the integrity of the voter’s choice.[109]
7.161
The AEC cautioned that if seeking to apply the South Australian ticket
model at the federal level, a careful examination to ensure that the model
complies with section 24 of the Constitution—that members of the House of
Representatives be directly chosen by the people—is required. The AEC noted the
challenge on constitutional grounds that arose with the introduction of group
ticket voting in the Senate in 1984.[110]
7.162
In the High Court case McKenzie v Commonwealth [1984] HCA 75 (McKenzie),
a Senate candidate for Queensland claimed that Form E in the schedule to the Commonwealth
Electoral Act setting out the ballot paper format for above and below-the-line
voting was beyond the power of the Parliament. Mr McKenzie sought an injunction
to stop the new style of ballot papers being distributed, which would have
prevented the election from being held as planned on 1 December 1984.
7.163
Effectively, McKenzie v Commonwealth was a challenge to the use
of ticket voting in the Senate. The challenged provisions were upheld by the
High Court. There are clear parallels between this case and the arguments that
could emerge if the SA ticket savings provision was adopted at the federal
level. Opposition members believe the key difference in this case is that while
voters for the Senate are told that if they just vote ‘1’, use a tick or a
cross their preferences will be distributed elsewhere, in the proposed SA
ticket system, it will be illegal to advise people to just vote ‘1’, use a tick
or a cross and most electors will remain uninformed about how their vote will
be counted.
7.164
In his judgement in McKenzie v Commonwealth, Chief Justice Gibbs discussed
the new method of Senate voting, stating that:
The voter may mark his vote either by placing numbers in the
squares opposite the names of the candidates below the line or simply by
placing the figure "1" or a tick or a cross in one only of the
squares above the line: s. 239. Where the paper has been marked in a square
above the line, it is deemed to have been marked in accordance with the group
voting ticket or tickets lodged by the candidates in the relevant group: s.
272.[111]
7.165
Gibbs CJ ruled that the ticket voting was not inconsistent with the
Constitutional requirement that Senators be directly elected. He found that:
...it is right to say that the electors voting at a Senate
election must vote for the individual candidates whom they wish to choose as
senators but it is not right to say that the Constitution forbids the use of a
system which enables the elector to vote for the individual candidates by
reference to a group or ticket. Members of Parliament were organized in
political parties long before the Constitution was adopted and there is no
reason to imply an inhibition on the use of a method of voting which recognizes
political realities provided that the Constitution itself does not contain any
indication that such a method is forbidden. No such indication, relevant to the
present case, appears in the Constitution.[112]
7.166
Arguably, it could be inferred that what was found to be valid for
Senate voting is likely to be applicable to House of Representatives voting.
7.167
In its comparison of the progressive informality and South Australian
ticket voting systems, the AEC found that broadly, ‘progressive informality
would be simpler to implement’.[113] It also indicated that
with either system, it anticipated practical implementation issues, including
revisions of handbooks, changes to computer systems for vote tabulation, and
whether, if required, the display of all voting cards would be practicable at a
federal election.[114]
7.168
Optional preferential and progressive informality were generally
regarded by submitters as ‘practically equivalent’.[115]
Opposition members contend that as such it should be noted that a correct
comparison between optional preferential and the South Australian ticket system
shows that optional preferential voting saves more votes than the SA system.
7.169
When considering the SA ticket voting model and optional preferential
voting as options for the House of Representatives, Mr Andy Becker concluded
that:
I believe that if the ticket voting option is not acceptable
for federal purposes, that the current situation should be left unchanged as it
provides a much safer outcome than optional preferential voting.[116]
7.170
Opposition members of the Committee strongly oppose any measures that
allow the counting of votes and preferences in absence of such being expressed
by the voter on the ballot paper. Unlike the Senate ticket voting system, used
for elections for multiple positions, the House of Representatives ballot paper
is far less complex and for a single election only. Opposition members believe
any attempt to compare the SA ticket model with the Senate model is an attempt
to mislead voters about important differences between the two.
7.171
Opposition members believe that the institution of such a measure
constitutes a nothing less than a fraudulent means of counting votes. To be
clear, votes will be counted and assigned to candidates where no expression of
preference for that candidate is marked on the ballot paper. These and other
concerns of Opposition members are detailed further in the Dissenting Report.
Committee conclusion
7.172
The Committee continues to support the full preferential voting system
at the federal level. However, the high level of informal ballot papers for the
House of Representatives requires that action be taken to address the hundreds
of thousands of votes being unintentionally wasted.
7.173
The Committee notes the similarities between Antony Green’s system of
progressive informality and optional preferential voting, and that, based on
the AEC’s analysis, more votes would potentially be saved under the South
Australian system of ticket voting. It also notes that Opposition members of
the Committee vehemently oppose this proposition as being both constitutionally
unsound and saving less informal votes than optional preferential.
7.174
When the Committee last considered the South Australian savings
provision following the 2007 federal election, it noted that had the SA ticket
voting system been in place federally, 154 000 House of Representatives votes
could potentially have been saved at that election.
7.175
However, at the time the previous Committee did not recommend the
adoption of the SA savings provision as it had reservations that the practical
effect of the model may be to encourage optional preferential voting.[117]
7.176
During the course of the inquiry into the conduct of the 2010 federal
election, the Committee had the opportunity to delve further into the
background to, and practical operation of, the SA ticket voting system.
7.177
The Committee is now satisfied that SA ticket voting is consistent with
the full-preferential voting system. Campaigners would derive no benefit
articulating this savings provision or from a Langer-style campaign, because
even when a ballot paper with few preferences is saved, the vote will still be
a full preference vote in line with the relevant candidate’s ticket.
7.178
The Committee also notes concerns expressed that the constitutional
validity of applying the SA ticket voting system to the House of Representatives
could be challenged.
7.179
However, the Committee believes that the issue of using ticket voting at
federal elections has been substantively dealt with by the High Court in McKenzie
v Commonwealth [1984] HCA 75. The legality of group ticket voting in the
Senate was upheld and the principle has not been subject to challenge since.
7.180
The Committee supports the introduction of a savings provision, along
the same lines as the SA ticket voting system, as part of the solution to
addressing the challenge of growing informality in the House of Representatives.
Recommendation 25 |
7.181 |
The Committee recommends that Parts XVI, XVIII, and any
other relevant provisions of the Commonwealth Electoral Act 1918 be
amended to include a savings provision for House of Representatives ballot
papers, based on the South Australian House of Assembly ticket voting
provisions. Such a provision should serve to save ballot papers marked by
the use of a tick, a cross, or the number 1, and which do not express
preferences for all candidates, in cases where the first and subsequent
preferences (if any) match an order of preferences lodged with the Australian
Electoral Commission by a political party or candidate in the election. This
will serve to reduce the impact of unintentional informal voting resulting
from incomplete preferences being indicated by electors on House of
Representatives ballot papers. |
Recommendation 26 |
7.182 |
The Committee recommends that Part XXI of the Commonwealth
Electoral Act 1918 be amended to specifically prohibit advocating the
completion of House of Representatives ballot papers other than by full
preferential numbering. The offence should attract a penalty sufficient to
deter such actions. |
Navigation: Previous Page | Contents | Next Page
Back to top