Dissenting report – The Hon. Bronwyn Bishop MP, The Hon. Alex Somlyay MP,
Senator Scott Ryan, Senator Simon Birmingham
The 2010 Federal
Election
Report on the
conduct of the election and related matters
Joint Standing
Committee on Electoral Matters
Dissenting
Report
The Hon. Bronwyn
Bishop MP
The Hon. Alex
Somlyay MP
Senator Scott
Ryan
Senator Simon
Birmingham
July 2011
Summary of Opposition recommendations
The Opposition opposes the following
recommendations from the Government Committee members:
1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 10, 11, 13, 14, 16, 24,
25, 26, 33, 34, 36
The Opposition does not oppose the following
recommendations:
9, 12, 15, 17, 18, 19, 20, 21, 22, 23, 27, 28,
29, 30, 31, 32, 35
The Opposition makes
the following recommendations:
- That
a dedicated fraud squad be established within the AEC to investigate and
prepare briefs for the DPP to prosecute cases of fraudulent voting.
- That
the AEC should concentrate on continuing to check the accuracy of the roll by
canvassing and advertising to make people aware of their obligations to
properly initially enrol and advise of change of address when it occurs.
- That
the current system of cleansing the electoral roll is maintained to ensure that
elections are decided by an accurate record of eligible voters.
- That
pre-poll voting be open on the Monday 12 days before the election and that
electors continue to be required to sign a declaration when casting a pre-poll
vote.
- That
the current postal vote application system remains as it is noting the
successful outcomes it achieves.
- That
current dates for the receipt of postal vote applications from overseas voters
are maintained, that voters should not be disadvantaged by being given less
time to receive ballot papers.
- That
electors wishing to cast a valid declaration vote must provide correct
information about their address prior to the close of rolls, failure to do this
will result in their vote not being included in the count.
- That
the voting system used in Federal elections remains constitutionally sound and
calls on the Government to ensure that South Australian ticket voting or a
similar system is not implemented at a Federal level.
-
That
the current system maintains in place where nominations close between ten and
27 days after the issue of the writ and the date for fixed polling is not less
than 24 or more than 32 days after the date of nomination.
-
That
the AEC retains the need for Election Day officials to sign a written contract
acknowledging their important role and responsibilities.
Dissenting report
The Coalition has a
number of concerns with the Joint Standing Committee on Electoral Matters’
(JSCEM) inquiry into the 2010 Election. These concerns are chiefly related to
maintaining the integrity of the electoral roll, ensuring that the successful
postal vote application system remains in place and ensuring that any moves
towards a ticket voting system in the House of Representatives, as is currently
practiced in South Australia, are rejected outright.
In the previous dissenting report
into the JSCEM enquiry into the 2007 Election, Opposition members noted that:
The Commonwealth Electoral Act mandates that Australian
citizens undertake some basic tasks to meet their obligations in relation to
the conduct of elections, namely:
- to enrol to vote,
- to accurately
maintain their enrolment at their permanent place of residence,
- to cast a vote when
an election is called, and,
- to fully extend
preferences to all candidates contesting election for the House of
Representatives in their local electorate.
Three years later, the Labor Party
and the Greens are still avidly pushing that the above requirements are too
difficult for a number of Australians and that Government intervention is
required to ensure people carry out their democratic obligations. The
Opposition remains concerned with the Government members reaffirming their
commitment to introduce automatic enrolment and updates to the roll based on
potentially dubious data from other Government agencies that this will lead to
people being placed incorrectly on the electoral roll who have no right to vote
and others being placed on the roll against their knowledge. Members new to
the Committee since the 2010 Election share this concern.
The Government members on the
Committee have also expanded on previous recommendations and advised that a
system needs to be implemented that would see electors have their ballot papers
filled out by bureaucrats should they fail to number every box. Opposition
members believe that moves towards the South Australian ticket system is a
fundamental attack on a voter’s democratic right to select which candidates
they wish to vote for.
Opposition members are also
manifestly concerned with the Committee’s proposed restrictions on postal vote
applications. In the 2010 election, 2.63 per cent of postal votes were
informal compared to 5.55 per cent overall,[1]
this is similar to the 2001, 2004 and 2007 elections and demonstrates the
success of the current system where postal voters have the option to return
their postal vote application form to either the candidate of their choice or
to the Australian Electoral Commission (AEC) directly. Whilst trying to relax
rules for other voters, the Government members on the Committee are seeking to
restrict the rights of postal voters by recommending that all postal vote
applications must be returned directly to the AEC.
The Opposition members on the Committee
are concerned with trying to change a successful arrangement which allows
postal vote applicants to receive information from their chosen candidate and
results in a far lower percentage of informal votes than any other form of
voting. The Opposition believes that Labor and the Greens are simply moving to
punish postal voters for their own political advantage, which is evident by
Recommendation 14 which would see the details of all postal vote applicants
sent to all political parties, irrespective of whether the elector wishes their
details sent there or not.
Fraudulent Voting
The Opposition Committee members
believe that the problems experienced at the 2010 Election show there is a
definite need to establish a fraud squad as part of the Australian Electoral
Commission which would have the power to investigate and prepare briefs for the
Department of Public Prosecutions to prosecute cases of fraudulent voting. A
number of Committee members note that the AEC provided figures which outlined
there were 20 633 cases of multiple voting in 2007, 14 402 cases in 2004 and 16
949 cases in 2001.
Whilst many of these cases could
have been genuine mistakes, it does show that multiple voting is a serious
problem that has not been sufficiently reviewed by the Committee. The AEC
claims that these cases resulted in no prosecutions, although further advice
from the Parliamentary Library confirms that there were in fact three
prosecutions. The Parliamentary Library provided the Opposition members with
advice that the Australian Federal Police cited a lack of resources for its
inability to make successful prosecutions:
Of the 31 incidents of possible enrolment fraud recorded by
the AEC during the 39th Parliament,
25 were referred to the AFP for investigation. The AFP declined to investigate
six of the matters referred to it. In all but one of these cases, the AFP
indicated a lack of resources prevented it from investigating. Six incidents
remain under investigation by the AFP, and six incidents were accepted by the AFP
but did not proceed any further due to lack of evidence. Of the remaining seven
cases, two remain under consideration by the DPP, two were rejected by the DPP
due to lack of evidence, and three resulted in prosecutions.
Indeed, the Australian Electoral Commission
noted in Committee briefing papers that ‘the AEC can only refer matters to the
AFP for investigation and possible prosecution’.
Opposition Committee members feel
there is a strong need to combat fraudulent voting, which has not been
seriously investigated by successive governments in recent years. These
Committee members feel that a dedicated fraud squad within the AEC with the
power to investigate and refer matters to the Department of Prosecutions is
vital to reduce the impact of voter fraud, serve as a deterrent to potential
criminals and to help maintain the integrity of the Electoral Roll.
The Opposition Committee members
recommend:
That a dedicated fraud squad be established within the
AEC to investigate and prepare briefs for the DPP to prosecute cases of
fraudulent voting.
‘Automatic’ enrolment
Noting that Opposition membership has changed since the
inquiry into the Parliamentary Electorates and Elections Amendment (Automatic
Enrolment) Act 2009 (NSW), it still expresses the view as stated, a summary of
which is set out below.
No evidence at the this inquiry addressed the substantive
concerns raised by Opposition members of the Committee in 2010, and a number of
questions about the operation of these provisions following the Victorian 2010
election and NSW 2011 election remain unanswered.
A complete expression of the
arguments against such provisions can be found in the Dissenting Report into
the earlier inquiry, which can be found at: http://www.aph.gov.au/house/committee/em/autobill2009/report/dissent.pdf
Summary of the key issues
The reliance on external data sources that have been
collated and that are utilised for other purposes does not make them fit for
use in forming the electoral roll.
As outlined in the previous report
into these proposals, a 1999 report by the House of Representatives Standing
Committee on Economics, Finance and Public Administration: Numbers on the
Run – Review of the ANAO Report No.37
1998-99 on the Management of Tax File Numbers, found that:
- There were 3.2 million more Tax File Numbers than people in
Australia at the last census;
- There were 185,000 potential duplicate tax records for
individuals; 62 per cent of deceased clients were not recorded as deceased in a
sample match.
Similarly, an ANAO Audit Report
(No.24 2004–05 Integrity of Medicare Enrolment Data) stated that ‘ANAO found
that up to half a million active Medicare enrolment records were probably for
people who are deceased’. [2]
In simple terms, where there are
such examples of inconsistency in Commonwealth data, there cannot be sufficient
faith in this data being used to automatically add people to the electoral
roll.
The potential for error is even
greater when using data from state or territory governments, as the
Commonwealth cannot determine its accuracy and the relevant agencies are
outside the scope of oversight by Commonwealth Parliament or Auditor-General.
The current ‘paper trail’ that sees
electors initiate enrolment with a signed form provides a unique security
feature to address any questions regarding roll integrity. The placement of
people on the roll automatically will undermine this important element of roll
integrity.
Given that there is neither consent
nor a signature required for automatic enrolment, it is doubtful that someone
could be pursued for false enrolment or other aspects of electoral fraud.
Furthermore, given the relatively
light identification requirements present in the Australian electoral system,
removing this security feature only weakens one of the few critical protections
for the integrity of the roll and its policing.
Given that it is not uncommon for
individual electorate results to be determined by less than 1000 votes, even a
1 per cent error in the information sourced from the various agencies could
have significant ramifications for the outcome of a seat, or even an election.
This is not to suggest that current
processes cannot be refined and updated, but a move away from an individual
enrolling on his or her own initiative in compliance with electoral legislation
to a situation where the state can enrol a person of its own accord represents
a drastic and dramatic change in our enrolment processes.
The AEC has previously submitted
that the declining enrolment rate is partly due to the outdated and overly
prescriptive enrolment procedures and requirements. If this concern is to be
taken at face value, then this is a reason to reconsider some of these
practices – it does not justify a movement away from individual registration to
automatic enrolment.
Despite the fact that Government
majority recommends that the power to declare data sources as ‘trusted’ be
given to the AEC, Opposition Members and Senators do not believe this addresses
this problem in its entirety.
We are concerned that the power to
deem data sources ‘trusted’ in determining the use of such data in compiling
the roll as a potential risk to the office.
The inclusion of such data, if
erroneous, would be extremely damaging to public faith in our electoral
process. Furthermore, the inclusion of such data may well be controversial due
to lack of faith in its inclusion or utilisation.
Placing the Electoral Commissioner
at the heart of such a potentially politically charged dispute can only damage
the standing of the office and the AEC.
One change that the ALP has made to
this recommendation since the previous inquiry involves the publication of the
data to be utilised. This reflects a concern raised in the previous inquiry
into this issue that the data sources being utilised in NSW were not required
to be made public.
The Government members’ current
proposal is to allow the determination of such data utilisation to be a
disallowable instrument. But this fails to address the point raised above,
indeed it increases the risk of drawing the Electoral Commissioner into a
dispute that is, by its nature, highly political.
Opposition members believe it would
be a retrograde step to diminish the independence of the AEC to such a degree
that decisions about a basic function such as enrolment would once again be
over-ruled by the Parliament.
Opposition members restate their
view that none of these self-evident risks to the integrity of the electoral
roll and public faith in it are justified.
The current enrolment process is
transparent to all – completion of a form by an eligible individual. Put
simply, filling out an enrolment form is not difficult.
Finally, the argument about roll
divergence between some states and the Commonwealth put by Government members
is not worthy of serious consideration.
As outlined previously, the fact
that NSW and Victoria have legislated for automatic enrolment provisions that
do not sufficiently address the above issues is no reason for the Commonwealth
to simply follow.
To allow State Parliaments to
effectively set the standards for the Commonwealth electoral roll through the ‘joint
roll at all costs’ approach advocated by the Government members is to allow
‘the tail to wag the dog’.
Each proposal should be considered
on its own merits, regardless of the activities of other jurisdictions. A joint
roll is obviously desirable, but not at the cost of a loss of integrity or the
potential for political disputation around electoral administration.
AEC and ALP submissions
Disappointingly, Opposition members
must note that the Australian Electoral Commission and Australian Labor Party
have very similar recommendations when it comes to automatic enrolment and
believes that it is not up to the AEC to take such a partisan line:
The ALP renews its call for an automatic enrolment system to
be introduced before the next Federal Election following significant confusion
regarding enrolment and successful challenges in both the Federal Court and
High Court to enrolment determinations made by the AEC in the 2010 Federal
Election. (Australian Labor Party, Submission 55, p. 1)
Recommendation 1: The AEC recommends that legislation
proceed to amend the Electoral Act to allow the direct update of enrolment.
Recommendation 2: The AEC recommends that the
Electoral Act be amended to enable the AEC to directly enrol eligible electors
on the basis of data provided by specific sources. (Australian Electoral
Commission submission 87, p. 13)
It is particularly concerning that
the Australian Electoral Commission seems to be pushing a political agenda when
it comes to updating enrolments, these are decisions which should be made by
the nation’s elected representatives and not unelected bodies employed to carry
out these decisions. The AEC should not be recommending that the Electoral Act
be changed, but should be carrying out any changes decided by the Parliament.
The changes recommended suit a specific political agenda which would have wide
ranging implications affecting the integrity of the electoral roll.
Election Day enrolment
No case has been made that there is
a need for Election Day enrolment. And no evidence addressing the previous
concerns of Opposition members, maintained by current Opposition members, has
been raised in this inquiry.
Election Day enrolment poses a
number of problems.
As well as exposing the roll to
fraudulent enrolments, it will potentially cause significant delays on Election
Day, additional to those that have been reported and are of increasing concern,
especially at peak voting times.
It cannot be expected of election
officials, only engaged on a casual basis, given the pressures and time
constraints placed upon them on polling day to closely cross-check every
enrolment form accurately. The Opposition notes the evidence of the CPSU to
the inquiry that experienced casual officials are not offering themselves for
duty as previously because of the impact of the new Labor changes to pension
arrangements which can result in the loss of pension entitlements.
Secondly, the recommendation will
cause additional queues on polling day. It will also provide delays in
finalising the count while awaiting verification of the enrolments received
that day. It is a significant additional administrative burden for the AEC at
a time when measures, such as processing pre-poll votes as ‘ordinary votes’
have been taken to quicken the vote counting process on Election Day.
Thirdly, Election Day enrolment
will inadvertently provide an incentive to people to not comply with the
existing law and initially enrol or update their election details when they
move residence. The knowledge that one can simply turn up on Election Day and
enrol to vote after turning eighteen, taking out citizenship or moving
residence will only weaken the effectiveness of the AEC enrolment and education
campaigns. This will reduce the accuracy and integrity of the roll between
elections.
Finally, Election Day enrolment
breaches an important principle – that candidates should know their electors.
The Opposition opposes Recommendations
1-5 of the Committee’s report and recommend:
That the AEC should concentrate
on continuing to check the accuracy of the roll by canvassing and advertising
to make people aware of their obligations to properly initially enrol and
advise of change of address when it occurs.
Electronic signatures
Opposition members do not oppose
the use of electronic signatures for signing electoral enrolment forms,
however, the Coalition reaffirms its commitment to the integrity of the
electoral roll and believes that electronic signatures should only be accepted
if appropriate photographic identification is also included. This could
include a current driver’s licence or passport details which are the two forms
of identification currently accepted on the AEC enrolment form.
Electoral Roll cleansing
Opposition members believe that the
responsibility for an elector to keep their details up to date. Recommendations
7 and 8 will result that if a person actually lives at a different address to
the one they claim when they attend a polling booth, they will still have their
vote counted. The proposal that electors who provide an incorrect address
should have their vote counted sets a dangerous precedent relating to providing
information to Government authorities and makes current provisions for electors
to provide identification when enrolling essentially meaningless.
The Labor and Greens parties
continue to argue that the current requirements that electors enrol to vote,
accurately maintain their enrolment when they change address and then cast a
vote when an election is called is far too onerous for some Australian
citizens. The Coalition believes that enrolling to vote and casting a vote on
Election Day is the responsibility of each individual citizen.
Opposition members oppose
Recommendations 7 and 8 on the basis that these moves will reduce the integrity
of the electoral roll and recommend:
That the current system of cleansing
the electoral roll is maintained to ensure that elections are decided by an
accurate record of eligible voters.
Pre-poll enrolments
Opposition Committee members feel
that section 200DH of the Commonwealth Electoral Act 1918 being repealed
will increase the likelihood of voter fraud and threaten the integrity of the
Electoral roll. Providing a signature when placing a pre-poll vote is not an
onerous responsibility for the elector and these Committee members believe
there is not only no reason to repeal this section of the Electoral Act but
doing so could lead to an increase in fraudulent voting.
Opposition members believe that pre-poll
voting should not open until the Monday 12 days before polling day, as opposed
to the Monday 19 days before polling day as recommended by the Government
members on the Committee. This would ensure that electors are still given
ample time to cast a pre-poll vote prior to Election Day should they need to.
The Opposition members are
concerned that allowing pre-poll voting for 19 days prior to Election Day takes
the focus of polling day itself, which is where the overwhelming majority of
votes should be cast. By having pre-poll 12 days before polling day this will
also ensure that the AEC has sufficient time to accept nominations and check
all details before printing ballot papers.
Opposition Committee members therefore
oppose Recommendations 10 and 11 and recommend:
That pre-poll voting be open on
the Monday 12 days before the election and that electors continue to be
required to sign a declaration when casting a pre-poll vote.
Postal vote applications
Opposition Committee members note
the Australian Electoral Commission’s submission advises that approximately two
thirds of electors, over 550,000 people, sent their postal vote application
back to a political party. The Opposition believes that changing this system
will confuse electors who are comfortable with the current arrangement which
has worked very well for a number of years.
The current system not only gives
elderly, disabled and less mobile electors the opportunity to cast their vote
as is their democratic right, it also ensures they have access to how-to-vote
information from their chosen candidate. The success of this system is
demonstrated by the fact that informal voting amongst postal voters was 2.63
per cent compared to 5.55 per cent overall. The Opposition members are very
concerned that changing this system will lead to an increase in the informal
rate amongst postal voters.
Electors choose this option in the
full knowledge they will receive a How-to-Vote card from their chosen political
party and the recommendation that all PVAs are now returned only to the AEC
contravene the right of an elector to receive voting information. Many postal
voters, who are often elderly or disabled, would be confused by a change to
this system and it could see an increase in the informal vote for postal voters.
Opposition Committee members believe the AEC is seeking unnecessary restrictions
on postal voters. The same Committee members note that the AEC has gone to
great lengths to assist blind and vision impaired people vote, which is to be
applauded, but their recommendation to deny electors the right to send their
PVA to their chosen candidate goes against this.
It is disappointing to see that
once again the AEC’s recommendation mirrors the position of the Australian
Labor Party. Opposition Committee members strongly believe it is not within
the purview of the AEC to recommend changes of this nature, but simply to
provide information about the process.
Opposition Committee members feel
that Recommendation 14 is not consistent with an individual elector’s right to
a secret ballot by distributing information about which form an individual
elector is choosing to vote. An elector has the right to privacy not only
about which they party they choose to vote for but also about how they cast
their vote, be it as an ordinary vote, a postal vote, an absentee vote or a pre-poll
vote. This recommendation singles out postal voters by not giving them the
same right to a secret ballot that other voters receive.
Postal voters are also used to a system
where they receive how-to-vote information only from the candidate of their
choice, allowing all candidates access to this information takes away the
responsibility of the candidate to contact the elector with information about
the postal voting option whilst giving them the opportunity to post a How-to-Vote
card. The Opposition members believe that voters send their postal vote
application back to a political party, having made up their mind about which
candidate they wish to vote for, with the full knowledge they will receive a
How-to-Vote card from that candidate alone.
Similarly, postal voters who have
previously returned their application directly to the AEC, not wishing to have
their details sent to a political party, will now receive unwanted information
from candidates.
For these reasons the Opposition
members completely reject Recommendations 13 and 14, the Opposition recommend:
That the current postal vote application system remains
as it is noting the successful outcomes it achieves.
The present system protects the
secret ballot option for postal voters and gives electors the opportunity to
receive information or not receive information as is their democratic right.
The proposed changes will mean postal voters will not have access to a secret
ballot, as does every other type of elector, and will receive unwanted
information from candidates. This change is simply to ensure that Labor and
the Greens are able to distribute their how-to-vote information without having
to pay for the costs of distributing postal vote applications, and ignores the
democratic rights of postal voters and puts the extremely low informal rate of
postal votes in jeopardy.
Cut-off date for receipt of postal vote applications
Opposition Committee members feel
that moving the day for postal vote applications received in Australia for
addresses outside Australia to be 6 pm Monday before polling day will
disadvantage postal voters by giving them less time to send in their
application and will particularly disadvantage Australian Defence Force
personnel serving overseas, often in remote locations. It is better to focus
on the efficiency of the AEC in processing forms rather than giving electors
less time to send in their application. The task of the AEC is to serve voters,
not to make their own job easier.
Opposition Committee members feel
that the AEC should conduct a study about the effectiveness of the cut-off date
used at the March 2011 NSW Election, which is being proposed for Federal
Elections. It is important to determine whether these dates affected the
number of postal vote applicants and whether the cut-off dates resulted in
postal voters missing out on their chance to vote. These members feel that the
Committee should consider the findings of any such study before implementing
the NSW system at a Federal level.
The Opposition therefore opposes
Recommendation 16 and recommend:
That current dates for the receipt of postal vote
applications from overseas voters are maintained, that voters should not be
disadvantaged by being given less time to receive ballot papers.
Declaration votes
Recommendation 24 outlines that if
a person resides at a different address to the one they claim when they attend
a polling booth, they will still have their vote counted when they actually
live at a different address.
Opposition members believe that the
responsibility for an elector to keep their details up to date and to provide
their correct address when they attend a polling booth is not an onerous
responsibility for an elector and notes that the overwhelming majority of the
Australian population carries out these requirements with no issue. The
proposal that electors who provide an incorrect address when attending a
polling booth should have their vote counted sets a dangerous precedent
relating to providing information to Government authorities and makes current
provisions for electors to provide identification when enrolling essentially
meaningless.
The Labor and Greens parties
continue to argue that the current requirements that electors enrol to vote,
accurately maintain their enrolment when they change address and then cast a
vote when an election is called is far too onerous for some Australian
citizens. The Coalition believes that enrolling to vote and casting a vote on
Election Day is the responsibility of each individual citizen.
Opposition members oppose
Recommendations 24 on the basis that these moves will reduce the integrity of
the electoral roll and recommend:
That electors wishing to cast a valid declaration vote
must provide correct information about their address prior to the close of
rolls, failure to do this will result in their vote not being included in the
count.
South Australian ticket voting
Opposition members strongly oppose
Recommendation 25 and believe the consequential proposal contained in Recommendation
26 will be ineffective and is little more than a political fig-leaf to cover
the political agenda of Government members to count informal votes.
Opposition members challenge the
terminology around this proposal. This is not about ‘saving’ votes that are
somehow valid and discarded on technicalities.
This proposal is about ballot
papers that have not expressed a valid preference being deemed to do so and
admitted to the count according to preferences expressed by other than the voter
themselves.
A commitment to full preferential
voting has long been a bipartisan one at the Commonwealth level. As the
‘Langer’ incident illustrated, when challenges to this have been forthcoming,
the Commonwealth Parliament has acted to ensure that the requirement of voters
to express a complete set of preferences regarding the candidates for election
has been maintained and reinforced.
There is no doubt that there has
been an increase in informal votes cast. But there is no agreement whatsoever
on the reasons for this.
The Opposition believes that the Government
members of the Committee have, for the convenience of their argument, failed to
give due consideration to the following factors:
- the institution (by ALP Governments) of optional preferential voting
in state elections in NSW and Queensland;
- the ‘Just vote 1’ campaigns that have subsequently followed in
elections in those states, again by the ALP; and
- the impact of the ‘vote informal’ campaign at the last election
by former Labor Opposition Leader Mark Latham.
Government members of the Committee
have contrived an argument that somehow these informal votes which it wishes to
count are unintentionally informal by virtue of not expressing a valid
preference. A short examination of their arguments is important at this point.
The AEC analysis outlines that 51.4
per cent of informal votes were ‘assumed to be unintentional’. Opposition
members do not agree with this conclusion, and highlight the term ‘assumption’.
This is not a fact, it is merely an assertion.
The Government members of the Committee
outline their plan to address this, through the institution of a mechanism to
count votes that do not express a complete set of preferences ‘...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…’. (Paragraph 7.10)
No explanation is provided on how
one can be ‘clear’ that an attempt to make a valid vote has been undertaken
when it is informal ‘perhaps due to confusion’.
Despite a helpful analysis of the
history of the institution of above-the-line voting for the Senate in 1984,
Government members arrive at conclusions not supported by the evidence in
stating ‘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.’ (Paragraph
7.47)
This statement is simply wrong.
First, the level of informality in
the House of Representatives in 2010 was approximately half of that of the
Senate in 1983.
Second, completing a Senate ballot
prior to the introduction of above-the-line voting was obviously and patently
more complex than any House of Representatives ballot paper in the 2010
election.
Another critical inconsistency
between the proposed measure and that of the Senate voting system relates to public
information.
When voting for the Senate, it is
made clear that voting above-the-line for one party distributes preferences
according to a ticket lodged by that party. Information about party tickets is
freely available from the AEC on polling day, from political parties and on the
AEC website. While it is obvious that voter knowledge of this process is far
from perfect, it is required to be made available to voters.
Conversely, the proposed ‘SA model’
relies on secrecy.
Not only are voters still prohibited
from voting in an optional preferential fashion, it is illegal to advocate this
fact.
This is where the Opposition’s objection to Recommendation
26 is pertinent.
The advent of new technologies and
social media forms makes such a ban almost irrelevant. The AEC cannot enforce
such a ban in a timely fashion, due to many of these means (e.g. Twitter) being
virtually anonymous, international and not located within Australia.
The recent Canadian election
provided an example of this. Despite a ban on broadcasting results of the
eastern provinces before voting concluded in western provinces, some threatened
to do so via Twitter (see: http://www.cbc.ca/news/technology/story/2011/04/21/cv-section329-reaction.html).
While no specific campaign was
undertaken as threatened, Canadian authorities would have been powerless to act
to prevent it if it had.
This demonstrates the
ineffectiveness of any proposal that relies on laws to prohibit particular
information being circulated to voters.
The combination of Recommendations
25 and 26 is substantially worse than the alternative offered by Antony Green,
‘progressive informality’ and poses a substantial risk to the integrity of
elections. The majority proposal would also result in less informal votes
being, to use the Government’s language ‘saved’, than would Mr Green’s proposal
or a optional preferential model.
The implementation of these
recommendations could well see an electronic campaign being conducted outside
the power of Australian law to prevent, halt or address that may encourage
people to only ‘vote 1’ for one party in order to mislead voters that this
would mean votes were informal.
Under this provision these votes
could then be counted according to the wishes of a party who had people
associated with it conduct such a campaign. Such an incentive has no place in
electoral law.
Opposition members have numerous
other concerns with these proposals.
First, the constitutionality of
‘deeming’ votes to have been lodged a particular way is questionable. Unlike
the case of the Senate ticket voting system, the information about how these
votes are to be counted is specifically withheld from voters.
Second, this represents a substantial
disenfranchisement of the voter in order to advantage political parties. In our
compulsory enrolment and attendance regime, we require citizens to attend and
effectively vote (the absence of a requirement to vote validly is not widely
understood, indeed it may be the increasing level of understanding this due to
campaigns such as that by Mr Latham that is increasing the informal vote).
Currently, a voter can cast an
informal vote by not filling out the ballot paper as instructed. They may also
register a ‘protest’ by only partially completing the ballot paper.
This proposal would remove that
right of a voter and effectively appropriate that vote for a candidate and/or
political party.
This represents a new level of
involvement and privilege by candidates and certain political parties in the
election process. Not only do we, by law, require them to enrol and attend, the
state would now ‘deem’ their vote to be cast a certain way in the complete
absence of the intention of such by the voter.
This represents nothing less than
the institution of a fraudulent method of counting votes, compounded by the
fact that it is proposed to be effectively done ‘in secret’ by prohibiting its
broadcast.
Opposition members are resolutely
opposed to any proposal that purports to count votes in a way not so marked or
cast by voters themselves.
In Australian football parlance,
this proposal is the equivalent of a drawn Grand Final being decided not by
extra time or by a replay, but by adding the number of near misses to the
scores to determine a winner after the siren sounds.
Opposition members therefore oppose
Recommendations 25 and 26 and the Opposition recommend:
That the voting system used in
Federal elections remains constitutionally sound and calls on the Government to
ensure that South Australian ticket voting or a similar system is not
implemented at a Federal level.
Close of nominations
The Opposition believes that
Recommendations 33 and 34 are unnecessary and that the current arrangements are
suitable for conducting elections effectively and efficiently. If the AEC
feels that the current timing is too restrictive, it is better to focus on
their own administration of the election, rather than giving themselves more
time to complete their required tasks.
Furthermore, the Opposition
believes that these recommendations would be completely redundant should their
recommendation be accepted that pre-poll voting not begin until the Monday 12
days before polling days as opposed to a week prior to this.
The Opposition opposes Recommendations
33 and 34 and recommend:
That the current system
maintains in place where nominations close between ten and 27 days after the
issue of the writ and the date for fixed polling is not less than 24 or more
than 32 days after the date of nomination.
Contracts for Election Day officials
The Coalition opposes Recommendation
36 which would potentially increase the risk that a potential worker for the
Australian Electoral Commission is employed without appropriate knowledge of
what their job entails, including undertaking an agreement to remain impartial
at all times to ensure confidence in the Australian electoral system.
It is not an onerous responsibility
for an AEC employee to sign an agreement which outlines the unique nature of
their job and the vital responsibilities that come with it, including this
information in an electronic copy of an employment agreement alongside other ‘fine
print’ details in the contract will see that many employees are unaware of
their unique responsibilities.
It is therefore important that the
AEC requires employees, both temporary and ongoing, to sign an agreement on
paper which outlines their important role.
The Opposition opposes Recommendation
36 and recommend:
That the AEC retains the need
for Election Day officials to sign a written contract acknowledging their
important role and responsibilities.
The Hon. Alex Somlyay MP
Deputy Chair
|
The
Hon. Bronwyn Bishop MP |
Senator Scott Ryan |
Senator
Simon Birmingham |