Chapter 1 Introduction
Referral of the Bill
1.1
On 28 June 2012 the House of Representatives Selection Committee
referred the Electoral and Referendum Amendment (Improving Electoral Procedure)
Bill 2012 (the Bill) to the Joint Standing Committee on Electoral Matters (the
committee) for inquiry and report.
1.2
The Bill was introduced into the House of Representatives the previous
day by the Special Minister of State, the Hon Gary Gray AO MP.
1.3
The Selection Committee outlined the following reasons for referral:
REASONS FOR REFERRAL/PRINCIPAL
ISSUES FOR CONSIDERATION: the bill and explanatory memorandum are particularly
ambiguous when it comes to what specific changes are being made to the process
about postal vote applications and it is necessary for the committee to investigate
the full extent that these changes will have on the current practice.[1]
Overview and purpose of the Bill
1.4
The Bill is described in the Explanatory Memorandum (EM) as implementing
the Government’s response to recommendations 12, 31 and 32 of the committee’s
report entitled The 2010 Federal Election: Report on the conduct of the
election and related matters. Recommendation 12 relates to automating the
issuing of postal votes, and recommendations 31 and 32 called for increasing
the nomination deposits for candidates for the Senate and House of
Representatives.[2]
1.5
The Bill proposes amending the Commonwealth Electoral Act 1918 (the
Electoral Act) and the Referendum (Machinery Provisions) Act 1984 (the
Referendum Act), to change postal voting processes and nominations depositions.
It also proposes to make a ‘number of technical and minor amendments’ to these
acts.[3]
1.6
In his second reading speech, the Special Minister of State commented
that the changes contained in the Bill ‘will substantially improve the interactions
that Australians have with elections and referendums’.[4]
1.7
The EM notes that ‘costs associated with implementation of the measures
contained in the Bill will be absorbed by the Australian Electoral Commission
from existing resourcing’.[5]
1.8
The EM also incorporates a statement of compatibility with human rights.
It concludes that ‘this Bill is compatible with the human rights and freedoms
recognised or declared in the international instruments listed in section 3 of
the Human Rights (Parliamentary Scrutiny) Act 2011’.[6]
Postal voting
1.9
Schedule 1 of the Bill seeks to improve efficiencies in the Australian
Electoral Commission’s (AEC) processing of postal vote applications and the
distribution of postal voting packages.
1.10
Postal voting has increased at every election. At the 2010 federal
election, the AEC received 821 836 postal vote applications, in addition
to the 209 426 General Postal Voters (GPVs) registered; totalling
1 031 262 applications.[7]
1.11
In its report on the 2010 federal election, the committee recommended
that ‘the Commonwealth Electoral Act 1918 and the Referendum
(Machinery Provisions) Act 1984 be amended to specifically allow for the
automated issuing of postal votes by the Australian Electoral Commission’.[8]
Recommendations 13 to 17 of the report—also related to postal voting—are not
addressed in the Bill.
1.12
The Bill provides for centralising the receipt of the majority of postal
vote applications by directing all applications to the Electoral Commissioner
or an Assistant Returning Officer. This is intended to simplify the postal vote
arrangements by enabling the centralised processing by computers and the
centralised dispatch of postal vote packages. The proposed changes also intend
to provide the Electoral Commissioner with flexibility to delegate processing
tasks to a greater range of officers.
1.13
One of the key changes of the Bill is that a ‘person’ rather than an
‘elector’ may apply for a postal vote. This is to allow the increasing number
of postal vote applications to be processed and the postal vote packages
dispatched in a timelier manner, as the applicant’s entitlement will be
assessed upon return of the ballot paper rather than at the issuing stage.
1.14
The Bill allows that the list of applications for postal vote may be
kept in electronic form and is intended to facilitate the application of future
changes in technology.
1.15
The Bill also updates the criteria for eligibility for general postal
vote applications. This amendment removes the requirement that to qualify, an
elector’s place of residence must be more than 20 kilometres from a place where
mobile polling will be conducted. This is to ensure that previous changes to
the mobile polling provisions, which have made their locations more flexible,
do not disadvantage voters who may be unable to determine their distance from a
mobile polling station until after the writs are issued. General postal voters
will still be required to be located more than 20 kilometres from a standard
polling place.
Nominations for elections
1.16
The amendments in Schedule 2 seek to address concerns arising from the
increasingly large number of Senate groups contesting elections.
1.17
In its report on the 2010 federal election, the committee concluded that
in some states, in particular New South Wales, ballot papers have become
‘increasingly complex’. The committee were particularly concerned that the size
and complexity of the ballot paper may result in ‘voters unintentionally voting
informally’.[9]
1.18
Accordingly, the committee recommended that the Electoral Act be amended
to ‘increase the sum to be deposited by or on behalf of a person nominated as a
Senator to $2 000’ (recommendation 31) and to ‘increase the sum to be
deposited by or on behalf of a person nominated as a Member of the House of
Representatives to $1 000’ (recommendation 32).[10]
1.19
The Bill proposes to implement these recommendations. It also goes
beyond the recommendation and seeks to increase the number of electors required
to nominate an unendorsed candidate from 50 to 100 electors.
1.20
Further, in the case of unendorsed Senate candidates who wish to make a
request to be grouped, each candidate must be supported by 100 separate
electors, rather than the 50 electors that are currently required to nominate
all candidates in the group.
1.21
The Special Minister of State, in his second reading speech, stated that
these measures are ‘proposed as a means of discouraging candidates who are not
seriously in contention for election and thereby would reduce the number of
candidates on ballot papers’.[11]
Grounds disqualifying a person from enrolment and voting
1.22
Subsection 93(8) of the Electoral Act currently disqualifies a person
who is ‘of unsound mind, is incapable of understanding the nature and
significance of enrolment and voting’ from being on any electoral roll and from
voting at any Senate and House of Representatives election.
1.23
The Special Minister of State maintained that ‘the inclusion of the
words “unsound mind” in the Commonwealth Electoral Act generates considerable
concern in the community’ because it is considered outdated and pejorative.[12]
Furthermore, general practitioners have advised that they are ‘not qualified to
say whether somebody is or is not of “unsound mind”’.[13]
1.24
The Bill replaces the reference to ‘unsound mind’ with a requirement to obtain
a letter or certificate from a ‘qualified person’. The amendment adopts the
definition of ‘qualified person’ from the Freedom of Information Act 1982,
which includes medical practitioners, psychiatrists, psychologists and social
workers.
Registration of political parties
1.25
Part XI of the Electoral Act covers the registration of political parties.
To register a political party, an application must include a list of 500
members of the party. Subsection 123(3) provides:
(3) A
reference in this Part to a member of a political party is a reference to a
person who is both:
(a) a member of the
political party or a related political party; and
(b) entitled to
enrolment under this Act.
1.26
The proposed amendment in the Bill would require that these 500
members—rather than simply being ‘entitled to enrolment’—must be ‘an elector’,
i.e. appear on the electoral roll. This change is intended to allow the AEC to
process applications for the registration of political parties more efficiently,
as it is more straightforward to confirm that an individual is on the electoral
roll than to verify their entitlement to enrol.[14]
Contents and structure of the Bill
1.27
Schedule 1 proposes improvements to the methods for processing postal
vote applications and issuing postal voting packages. The amendments are also
intended to facilitate the application of future changes in technology.
1.28
Schedule 2 is intended to address concerns that having a large number of
Senate candidates not seriously in contention for the election makes ballot
papers unwieldy and increasing complex to complete.
1.29
The amendments in Schedule 3 are predominantly administrative or
technical amendments.
Schedule 1 – Postal voting
1.30
Item 2 amends section 28 and provides that the Electoral Commissioner
may delegate all or any of his or her powers under the Electoral Act, other
than powers or functions in relation to redistribution. This power is necessary
to support the amendments within this Bill, which gives the Electoral
Commissioner primary responsibility for the receipt and processing of postal
vote applications.[15] Item 1 changes the
definition of an ‘officer’ in subsection 4(1) to reflect this change.
1.31
Item 3 repeals the definition of ‘appropriate DRO’ (Divisional Returning
Officer), making the Electoral Commissioner rather than a DRO responsible for
the receipt and processing of postal vote applications. Related item 4 broadens
the meaning of ‘division’ to ensure that the amendments in the Bill, in
relation to postal voting, apply to all possible postal vote applicants. A
reference to a division will include that to which a person would be enrolled
if they were an elector.[16]
1.32
Items 5 and 6 provide for one of the key changes in Schedule 1. It
proposes that a ‘person’ rather than an ‘elector’ may apply for a postal vote.[17]
1.33
Item 10 would require the Electoral Commissioner to allocate a number to
each application for a postal vote, which would subsequently be matched to the
returned postal vote certificates that contain the ballot papers.[18]
Item 16 inserts a new subsection requiring the numbering of certificates
and ballot papers before they are dispatched to a postal vote applicant.
1.34
Item 19 allows for public inspection of applications for a postal vote
and for the list of applications to be kept in electronic form. In order to
ensure the privacy of applicants, proposed subsection 189(2) specifies that the
only information on the list to be inspected is an applicant’s full name and
address. Provision is made to exclude the address of silent electors from this
list.[19]
1.35
A large proportion of the items within this schedule not covered here
are substitutions of references to ‘Electoral Commission’ and ‘DRO’ with ‘Electoral
Commissioner’. This is to provide consistency for the intention that the
Electoral Commissioner will have primarily responsibility for the majority of
matters related to postal voting. A number of other items are consequential to
item 5 and substitute ‘the person’ for ‘the elector’. The remainder of the
items in Schedule 1 are minor administrative amendments consequential to the
substantive changes or drafting improvements.
1.36
Item 52 to 102 relate to the Referendum (Machinery Provisions) Act
1984 and mirror the changes made to the Electoral Act, where required.
1.37
Part 2 of Schedule 1 make provision for the application of Part 1
amendments to have effect for elections and referendums occurring after the
commencement of this schedule. It also deems that delegations in force under
section 28 of the Electoral Act and section 138 of the Referendum Act prior to
these changes to delegation provisions will continue to have effect as if it
were a delegation under the amended provision.[20]
Schedule 2 – Nominations for elections
1.38
Item 1 increases the number of people who are required to nominate an
unendorsed candidate for the Senate or the House of Representatives from 50
electors to not less than 100 electors. This item also requires that in the
case of unendorsed Senate candidates who wish to make a request to be grouped,
each nomination must be supported by 100 separate electors, rather than the
current requirement of 50 electors for all candidates.[21]
1.39
Item 4 increases the nomination deposit that a Senate candidate must
provide from $1 000 to $2 000.[22]
1.40
Item 5 increases the nomination deposit that a candidate for the House
of Representatives must provide from $500 to $1 000.[23]
1.41
Item 7 notes that these changes will apply to elections and referendums
for which writs are issued following the commencement of this schedule. Other
items in this schedule reflect the changes to nomination requirements outlined
above.
Schedule 3 – Other Amendments
1.42
Item 3 proposes to replace the words in paragraph 93(8)(a) ‘by reason of
being of unsound mind’ with ‘in the opinion of a qualified person’. The change
involves having a ‘qualified person’ give an opinion on whether a person is ‘incapable
of understanding the nature and significance of enrolment and voting’. If so
found, then that person will not have his or her name placed on, or retained
on, any electoral roll.[24]
1.43
Item 4 inserts a definition of ‘qualified person’ for the purposes of
making the determination, as outlined at item 3. The definition is taken from
the Freedom of Information Act 1982.[25]
1.44
Items 8 and 9 provide that where a person has requested that their
enrolled address be suppressed because the personal safety of the person or
their family would be placed at risk if disclosed on the electoral roll, they
are no longer required to repeat the request if they change their enrolment
address.[26]
1.45
Item 10 and 11 are consequential to item 3 and 4 and allow a ‘qualified
person’ to provide a statement in relation to subsection 93(8).[27]
1.46
Items 12 and 13 allows for decisions by DROs in relation to applications
for enrolment from outside Australia and for itinerant electors to be reviewed internally.[28]
1.47
Item 14 requires that, for the purposes of registration, a member of a
political party must be ‘an elector’, i.e. someone who is on the electoral
roll. Currently the Electoral Act only provides that a member of a political
party must be ‘entitled to enrolment’.[29]
1.48
Items 15 to 26 amend the method by which the AEC advertises an
application for the registration of a political party. Currently notices are published
in the Commonwealth Gazette. It is proposed that this be replaced with a
requirement to publish this information on the AEC’s website and in a newspaper
circulating generally in each state and territory. It will also allow for
publication of the notice in any other way that the Electoral Commissioner
considers appropriate.[30]
1.49
Item 36 repeals subparagraph 184A(2)(a)(ii) which provides that a person
may register as a General Postal Voter if the applicant’s real place of living
is more than 20 kilometres from a place where mobile polling will be
conducted. Since 2010, amendments to the mobile polling provisions have become
more flexible, and so the places where mobile polling teams will visit are not
determined until the writs for an election are issued. Accordingly there is a
greater chance that
someone who might be a registered General Postal Voter on the basis of this
provision will actually live within 20 kilometres of a place where mobile
polling will be conducted. This amendment removes the reference to mobile
polling.[31]
1.50
Item 37 changes paragraph 235(1)(d) to require an elector to vote
provisionally in cases where they are marked on the electoral roll as having
voted, replacing the current phrase that ‘the person has already voted at that
polling place’. This anticipates the future application of electronic certified
lists that can be shared across polling places.
1.51
Item 38 proposes the insertion of a new section 238A to provide for the
handling of discarded ballot papers. In cases where a person discards their
ballot paper rather than placing it in a ballot box, an AEC officer will
collect the ballot, write discarded on the back of the ballot, and place it in
an envelope.[32]
1.52
Item 40 introduces a provision to Schedule 3 of the Electoral Act which
will qualify the rules which operate to exclude votes from being counted if the
date of the signature of the authorised witness or applicant on the certificate
is after polling day. Under the new provision, votes will be admitted to the
scrutiny if the envelope containing the ballot is received before the close of
polling and that receipt is verified by an AEC officer noting, ‘received by me’
and dating it. This measure seeks to save votes where it seems obvious the
future date was written in error.[33]
1.53
Item 41 to 46 relate to the Referendum (Machinery Provisions) Act
1984 and mirror the changes in items 38 and 40.
1.54
Item 47 in Part 2 outline the commencement of the various items in
Schedule 3.
1.55
Other items in this schedule not specifically mentioned are drafting
improvements or minor consequential amendments.
Date of effect
1.56
The measures will commence on the day the Act receives Royal Assent.
Amendments will apply to elections and referendums for which writs are issued
after the commencement of the Bill. Items 12 and 13 of Schedule 3, which relate
to internal review of decisions, apply to applications made before
commencement.[34]
Objective and conduct of the inquiry
1.57
The objective of the inquiry is to investigate the adequacy of the Bill
in achieving its policy objectives and, where possible, identify any unintended
consequences.
1.58
Details of the inquiry were placed on the committee’s website. On 29
June 2012 the Committee Chair, Daryl Melham MP, issued a media release
announcing the inquiry and seeking submissions. The committee received ten
submissions. These are listed at Appendix A.
1.59
A public roundtable was held in Canberra on 16 July 2012. A list of the
witnesses who appeared at the hearing are available at Appendix B. Submissions
and the transcript of evidence are available on the committee’s website at:
www.aph.gov.au/em.