Chapter 2 Key issues
Background
2.1
On 14 May 2008 the Senate referred the Commonwealth Electoral (Above-the-Line
Voting) Amendment Bill 2008 to the committee as a particular part of its
inquiry into all aspects of the 2007 federal election.[1]
2.2
In summary, the bill seeks to amend Commonwealth Electoral Act 1918
to:
n remove the
opportunity for parties or groups to lodge group voting tickets (GVTs); and
n change the provisions
relating to voting above the line in Senate elections so that an elector, who
desires to vote above the line, is required to vote partial preferential by
indicating at least four preferences above the line in a half Senate election
or at least seven preferences above the line in a full Senate election.
2.3
The stated purpose of the bill is to ‘improve the democratic outcome of
all Senate elections’.[2] By removing the opportunity
to vote ‘1’ above the line and leave the preference distribution to the group
voting ticket, Senator Bob Brown considers that the voter is advantaged because
they are able to directly choose who is elected if his or her vote is not used,
in full, to elect the party or group of first choice. An additional benefit of
the changed arrangements cited by Senator Bob Brown is that there would also no
longer be competition, inducement or cross-dealing by parties or groups over
preferences, nor public uproar about preference deals.[3]
2.4
The inquiry was advertised in The Australian on 11 June 2008
and on the committee’s website. The committee did not receive specific
submissions in relation to the bill. However, evidence relating to the bill was
included in submissions and at public hearings as part of the broader inquiry
into the 2007 election.
Existing arrangements
2.5
The existing Senate voting arrangements provide electors with the option
of marking a single number ‘1’ above the line or completing all boxes in
numerical order below the line. For electors choosing to vote above the line,
preferences are distributed according to GVTs lodged by parties and groups with
the AEC prior to the election.
2.6
Within 48 hours after the close of nominations, a Senate group may lodge
with the Australian Electoral Officer (AEO) for the state or territory a
written statement setting out a preference order of all candidates in the
election. The preference ordering must be constructed in the same way as a fully
formal below the line vote—all candidates must be numbered. In addition, the
candidates in the group lodging the statement must be ordered ahead of any
other candidate.[4]
2.7
Group voting tickets are published on the AEC website prior to election
day and booklets are available at all polling places showing how each party or
group has decided to have its preferences distributed.[5]
Each party or group can lodge up to three group voting tickets.[6]
2.8
Similar provisions apply to incumbent Senators, who may also lodge a
written statement setting out up to three preference orders of all candidates
in the election. The statement must be signed by the candidate and lodged with
the appropriate AEO, and must show a first preference for the incumbent
Senator.[7]
2.9
The Commonwealth Electoral Act includes specific provisions relating to
the formality of ballot papers for Senate elections (box 2.1).[8]
If a voter chooses to vote both above the line and below the line and completes
both sections formally, the below the line section takes precedence.[9]
Box 2.1 Formality rules
for Senate elections
A Senate ballot paper is
informal if:
·
it is unmarked;
·
it has not received the official
mark of the presiding officer and is not considered authentic;
·
it has writing on it which
identifies the voter; and
·
the voter's intention is not
clear.
A vote above the line will
be informal if:
·
it has no first preference mark;
and
·
if there is more than one first
preference mark.
A vote below the line is
informal if:
·
it has no first preference mark;
·
a tick or cross has been used as a
first preference mark:
·
there is more than one first preference
mark;
·
there are 10 or more candidates
and there are not numbers in at least 90 per cent of the squares next to the
candidates names, which form a sequence of consecutive numbers beginning with
the number 1, without repetition or omission, or numbers which would be such a
sequence with changes to not more than three of them; and
·
there are less than 10 candidates
and there are not numbers in all of the squares next to the candidates names,
or in all but one of those squares (which is left blank), which form a sequence
of consecutive numbers beginning with the number 1, without repetition or
omission, or numbers which would be such a sequence with changes to not more
than two of them.
Source AEC, ‘Voting – The Senate’, viewed on 11 February 2009 at http://www.aec.gov.au/Voting/How_to_vote/Voting_Senate.htm; Commonwealth
Electoral Act 1918, ss 268, 269, 270 and 272.
2.10
Voters overwhelmingly choose to vote above the line. At the 2007 federal
election, 96.8 per cent of electors voted above the line, with some
variation across jurisdictions (table 2.1).
Table 2.1 Senate group voting ticket
use, by jurisdiction, 2007 election
Jurisdiction
|
Ticket
|
Non-ticket
|
Total first preferences
|
|
Votes
|
%
|
Votes
|
%
|
Votes
|
New South Wales
|
4,116,995
|
98.18
|
76,239
|
1.82
|
4,193,234
|
Victoria
|
3,117,212
|
97.95
|
65,157
|
2.05
|
3,182,369
|
Queensland
|
2,352,518
|
97.26
|
66,389
|
2.74
|
2,418,907
|
Western Australia
|
1,170,380
|
97.31
|
32,370
|
2.69
|
1,202,750
|
South Australia
|
937,905
|
93.16
|
68,904
|
6.84
|
1,006,809
|
Tasmania
|
275,112
|
84.17
|
51,734
|
15.83
|
326,846
|
Australian Capital
Territory
|
186,570
|
82.8
|
38,751
|
17.2
|
225,321
|
Northern Territory
|
92,652
|
92.13
|
7,917
|
7.87
|
100,569
|
National total
|
12,249,344
|
96.78
|
407,461
|
3.22
|
12,656,805
|
Source Australian
Electoral Commission, submission 169.1, p 23.
2.11
There has been a continuing trend in most jurisdictions for electors to
vote above the line. Since its introduction in 1983, the proportion of electors
choosing to vote above the line has increased steadily (figure 2.1).
2.12
Explanations for the difference between jurisdictions in the proportion
of electors who vote below the line in the Senate include:
n The larger the number
of candidates the more complex is the voting task for below the line voters and
so the more likely electors are to vote above the line; and
n Differences between
voting systems. Tasmania and the Australian Capital Territory use the
Hare-Clark electoral system, a system that requires voters to vote for
individual candidates rather than party lists. Voters in New South Wales, South
Australia and Western Australia would be more familiar with group voting
tickets through their usage in those State's upper houses.[10]
Figure 2.1 Senate
group ticket voting use, by jurisdiction, 1984 to 2007 elections (per cent)
Source Australian
Electoral Commission, Electoral pocketbook: election 2007 (2009), p 66;
‘Virtual Tally Room (2004), Senate, Senate group voting ticket usage‘, viewed
on 26 May 2009 at http://results.aec.gov.au/12246/results/SenateUseOfGvtByState-12246.htm;
Election 2001 results CD, ‘Use of group voting ticket by party by state, 1998
Senate results: Senate use of group voting tickets (1998)’, viewed on 26 May
2009 at http://www.aec.gov.au/Elections/federal_elections/1998/senate/sen_gv.htm;
Newman G, ‘Senate group voting tickets’, Parliamentary Library research note 6
1999-2000, p 1.
2.13
At the 2007 federal election there were a total of 367 candidates and
136 groups nominated (table 2.2). The large number of groups nominated in
the more populous states has a direct impact on the size and complexity of the
ballot paper. For example, the New South Wales Senate ballot paper was required
to have 25 groups above the line and all 79 candidates (including four
ungrouped candidates) listed below the line.
Table 2.2 Senate nominations, by jurisdiction, 2007
election
Jurisdiction
|
Vacancies
|
Candidates
|
Groups
|
Ungrouped candidates
|
New South Wales
|
6
|
79
|
25
|
4
|
Victoria
|
6
|
68
|
23
|
4
|
Queensland
|
6
|
65
|
24
|
6
|
Western Australia
|
6
|
54
|
21
|
2
|
South Australia
|
6
|
46
|
19
|
2
|
Tasmania
|
6
|
28
|
11
|
0
|
Australian Capital
Territory
|
2
|
16
|
8
|
0
|
Northern Territory
|
2
|
11
|
5
|
1
|
Total
|
40
|
367
|
136
|
19
|
Source Australian
Electoral Commission, Electoral pocketbook: election 2007 (2009), p 52.
2.14
There has been a general increase at Senate elections in the number of
candidates and groups contesting elections, with the number of ungrouped
candidates rising and falling from election to election (table 2.3).
Table 2.3 Senate vacancies, quota and nominations, 1970
to 2007 elections
Election
|
Vacancies
|
State quota (%)
|
Candidates
|
Candidates per
vacancy
|
Groups
|
Ungrouped
|
1970
|
32
|
16.7
(a)
|
101
|
3.2
|
33
|
14
|
1974
|
60
|
16.7
|
245
|
4.1
|
55
|
49
|
1975
|
64
|
16.7
|
271
|
4.2
|
58
|
53
|
1977
|
34
|
16.7
|
151
|
4.4
|
49
|
16
|
1980
|
34
|
16.7
|
182
|
5.4
|
61
|
25
|
1983
|
64
|
9.1
|
248
|
3.9
|
67
|
28
|
1984
|
46
|
12.5
|
202
|
4.4
|
55
|
14
|
1987
|
76
|
8.3
|
255
|
3.4
|
65
|
31
|
1990
|
40
|
14.3
|
223
|
5.6
|
64
|
37
|
1993
|
40
|
14.3
|
266
|
6.7
|
82
|
35
|
1996
|
40
|
14.3
|
255
|
6.4
|
85
|
29
|
1998
|
40
|
14.3
|
329
|
8.2
|
117
|
29
|
2001
|
40
|
14.3
|
285
|
7.1
|
101
|
26
|
2004
|
40
|
14.3
|
330
|
8.3
|
120
|
26
|
2007
|
40
|
14.3
|
367
|
9.2
|
136
|
19
|
Note (a)
The state quota for NSW and Queensland at the 1970 election was 14.3 per cent.
Source Australian
Electoral Commission, submission 169.1, p 20.
2.15
While counting of Senate ballot papers commences on election night,
counting can continue for several weeks after the election. On election night
and in the days following the election, ballot papers are assessed for
formality. Those with a vote cast above the line are sorted and first
preference results telephoned through to divisional returning officers. Subsequently
the numbers of above the line ballot papers are fed into the Central Senate
Scrutiny System.[11]
2.16
All below the line ballot papers are sent to central scrutiny centres,
where they are data entered into the computerised Senate counting system. All below
the line ballot papers are entered into the system twice, with the second data entry
providing a check on the accuracy of data entered the first time.[12]
At the 2007 election, only 407,461 formal below the line votes were sent
to the AEC central scrutiny centres for data input into the computerised Senate
scrutiny system.[13]
Proposed arrangements
2.17
The Commonwealth Electoral (Above-the-Line Voting) Amendment Bill
2008 proposes to amend the Commonwealth Electoral Act to repeal provisions
relating to group voting requirements and introduce partial preferential
above-the-line voting. The current option of voting below-the-line would be
retained.
2.18
The bill proposes specific amendments that relate to:
n Repeal of group and
individual voting tickets — requirements to lodge group voting tickets for
candidates and for a sitting Senator to lodge an individual voting ticket are
removed (clauses 6 and 7);
n Arrangements for
candidates to be eligible to be listed above the line (clause 1 defines ‘group
voting square’) — candidates are entitled to be listed above the line if two or
more candidates have applied to do so (clause 2);
n Formality — an
elector who desires to vote above the line, is required to vote partial
preferential by indicating at least four preferences above the line in a half
Senate election or at least seven preferences above the line in a full Senate
election. Formality is tied to the minimum number of preferences being
indicated, with those preferences commencing at ‘1’ and being consecutively
numbered (clauses 14 to 19);
n Allocation of
preferences within a group — the allocation of preferences within a group is
deemed to be according to the order listed on the ballot paper for that group
(clause 20); and
n Computerised scrutiny
— all formal ballot papers are required to be sent to the Australian Electoral
Officer (in each state or territory) for inclusion in the computerised Senate
scrutiny (clauses 21 to 22).[14]
2.19
The Explanatory Memorandum to the bill notes that there would be a
financial impact arising from the extra financial resourcing for the AEC for the additional personnel and resources required to count the ballot papers.[15]
Impact of proposed changes
2.20
While the bill seeks to change the way preferences are determined for
votes cast above the line, the proposed voting system also may have
implications for the nature of representation in the Senate. This is due to the
votes being ‘exhausted’ and removed from the count when the number of
preferences expressed by the voter has been reached but there are still vacant
Senate positions to be filled.
Greater choice?
2.21
Introducing the bill, Senator Bob Brown noted the impact of above the
line voting in removing a voter from making decisions about the allocation of
preferences:
This bill removes [the group voting ticket] requirement from
the party or group and returns to the voter the sole obligation to allocate
preferences. The voter is advantaged because she or he decides the flow of
preferences and directly chooses who is next elected if her or his vote is not
used, in full, to elect the party or group of first choice.
There would no longer be competition, inducement or cross‑dealing
by parties or groups over preferences, nor public uproar about preference
‘deals’.
These amendments to the Commonwealth Electoral Act enhance
democracy. They provide voters full control of the destiny of their vote and
consequently, the make-up of the Senate.[16]
2.22
These sentiments were supported by several inquiry participants.[17]
Mr Rupert Kilcullen noted the ability of parties to direct preferences,
rather than electors, was supported by current arrangements:
At present “above the line” voting allows the political
parties to fill in all the preferences for voters who vote “above the line”.
This leads to “preference deals” that distort the expression of voter opinion.
Although it is in theory possible for voters to find out what the party’s
preference order is, and it is usually reported in the media, in fact most
voters do not know how their party will transfer their vote.
Voters for major parties often do not realize that their
party’s “surplus” votes may go to a minor party (e.g. Liberal votes to Family
First). Preference deals have led (for example in the 1999 election of the NSW
Legislative Council) to the election of candidates with very little genuine
public support.[18]
2.23
Mr Antony Green considers that ticket voting has introduced two tactics
that are distorting the proportionality of the Senate’s electoral system. The
first (preference ‘harvesting’) is a tactic which might be employed by minor
and ‘micro’ parties to keep preferences away from major parties. The second
(preference ‘corralling’) involves deals done between minor and major parties
to engineer results.[19]
2.24
Although Mr Eric Lockett supported the intent of the bill, he noted that
voters when voting above the line would only retain the right to allocate
preferences between parties, not preferences between candidates within parties.[20]
2.25
Some of the election results that have highlighted the impact of group
ticket voting and associated preference dealing include the election of a
Family First candidate in Victoria at the 2004 election, a preference swap
between the major parties at the 1984 election to prevent the election of a
Nuclear Disarmament Party candidate and the extensive use of preference
corralling at the 1998 election as swaps between the major parties, Greens and
Australian Democrats worked to prevent victories by candidates from Pauline
Hanson’s One Nation.[21]
2.26
While the current arrangements for below the line voting are to be
retained under the amendments proposed by the bill, the ability of electors to indicate
more than one preference above the line and the abolition of group voting
tickets may give electors more choice about directing their preferences across
groups. That said, preference allocation within a group will remain under the
control of parties and groups, with preferences determined by the order of
candidates on the group‘s nomination form.[22]
2.27
The requirement for electors to number at least four groups at a half
Senate election and at least seven groups at a full Senate election adds
additional complexity to current arrangements, without necessarily bringing any
consistency across state jurisdictions with existing upper house voting
systems. The possible impact on formality is discussed further below.
2.28
The above the line voting system used in Senate elections is largely
replicated in South Australia, Victoria and Western Australia, with different
systems used in other states (box 2.2).
2.29
Several inquiry participants called for the harmonisation of voting
arrangements, considering that such an approach could lead to reductions in
informality.[23] The Hon Peter Lindsay MP
told the committee that:
There seems little doubt that differences between voting
procedures at the Commonwealth and state levels, and between the voting systems
for the Senate and the House of Representatives, may also contribute to voting
informality:
n in the ‘full
preferential’ system used in elections for the House of Representatives, the
elector must number every square on the ballot paper to cast a formal vote, but
not all elections in Australia use a full preferential system;
n New South Wales and Queensland both practice ‘optional preferential’ voting at the state level; and
n Senate above-the-line
option can confuse House of Representatives voters.[24]
2.30
When electors do not indicate preferences beyond the minimum number of
preferences required for a formal vote it is possible that their vote, if not
allocated to a group that remains in the count, is excluded at an early stage.
Such an outcome is likely to occur when an elector’s limited preferences are
allocated to minor parties and groups that do not poll large numbers of first
preference votes.
2.31
Such an approach, which has the characteristics of optional preferential
voting, albeit with a minimum number of preferences rather than a single
preference as used in some state lower house elections, is seen by some as
arguably more democratic than full preferential voting because electors are not
forced to nominate a preference for all candidates. Prior to the introduction
of optional preferential voting in Queensland, the Queensland Electoral and
Administrative Review Commission summarised the benefits of optional
preferential voting over compulsory preferential voting for electors:
The Commission is concerned that electors are currently
recording views that they may not have, by ranking in order of preference all
candidates offering in their electoral district. If they do not have a complete
set of preferences they have either to invent preferences, or arbitrarily
assign rankings to candidates about whom they know nothing and care less or
accept that their ballot paper will be excluded from the scrutiny.
The Commission believes that it is not unreasonable or
oppressive to require every adult citizen to play a meaningful role in the
choice of their government … but having accepted that duty be discharged, it is
inappropriate for the electoral system to corral votes on behalf of candidates
or parties who electors do not wish to support but merely consider less
objectionable than the other on the ballot paper.[25]
Box 2.2 Upper house
voting systems by state
New South Wales
Elections for the NSW Legislative
Council elect half of the 42 members within a single electorate. The names
of the candidates are shown on the ballot paper and if endorsed by a registered
political party their affiliation with that party is also shown. A group must
have at least 15 candidates before it can have a group voting square above the
thick black line. Candidates not included in a group (‘ungrouped candidates’)
are shown in a column on the extreme right of the ballot paper. The group or
party determines the order of its candidates within the group, but the order in
which the groups or parties appear on the ballot paper is determined by a draw
conducted by the Electoral Commissioner.
Voters may choose to vote above or below the line. If
voting above the line an elector places the number 1 in one of the group voting
squares, with the option of placing additional preferences 2, 3, etc in the
other group voting squares. If a single preference is expressed, preferences
are distributed to other members of the group, after which the vote is exhausted.
If a voter chooses to vote below the line, a minimum of preferences 1 to
15 must be marked, although preferences beyond this may be expressed.
Victoria
Elections
for the Victorian Legislative Council elect 40 members in eight 5‑member
electorates across the state. Candidates not included in a group are shown
below the line in a column on the extreme right of the ballot paper. Two or
more candidates nominating for a region may request that their names be grouped
on the ballot paper and be grouped in a specific order. The order of groups on the ballot paper is determined by a
random computerised draw.
Voters may
choose to vote above or below the line. If voting above the line only the
single preference ‘1’ needs to be placed in one of the group voting squares.
Further preferences are allocated
according to the full list of preferences lodged by that party or group. If an
elector votes below the line a minimum of preferences 1 to 5 must be marked,
although preferences beyond this may be expressed.
Western Australia
Elections
for the Western Australian Legislative Council elect 36 members from six
multi-member regions, with each having
six members.
The voting
system is similar to the Senate, with a fully preferential voting system and the
elector having the option of voting to
the left or right of the line (rather than above or below the line). Two or
more candidates may make a request to be included as a group on the ballot
paper. On the left of the line, electors having the option of voting for
political parties or groups by placing a single preference ‘1’. If an elector
chooses to vote to the left of the line preferences are allocated according to
group voting tickets lodged with the electoral commission. If an elector wishes
to vote to the right of the line, they must mark all candidates in preference
order.
South Australia
Elections
for the South Australian Legislative Council elect half of the council’s
22 members in a single state-wide electorate. The voting system is similar
to the Senate, with a fully preferential voting system and the elector having the option of voting above or
below the line. If voting above the line, the elector only marks a first
preference with remaining preferences allocated according to a group voting
ticket lodged by the party/group. If voting below the line, the elector must
mark all candidates in preference order.
Tasmania
Elections
to the Tasmanian Legislative Council elect 15 members, with each member
representing a separate electoral division. Elections are conducted on a 6 year
periodic cycle. Elections for 3 members are held in May one year, with elections for 2 members held in May the
following year and so on.
The ballot
paper names of candidates will be listed in a single column with a box printed
next to each name. For candidates nominated by a political party, the name of
the political party will appear under the candidate’s name. The rotation of
candidates’ names within the column is determined by Robson rotation.
When there
are 3 or more candidates, an elector is required to allocate at least three
preferences. If there are less than three candidates, the elector must mark as
a minimum the number of candidates less
one.
Source Electoral
Commission NSW, ‘Legislative Council’, viewed on 7 June 2009 at www.elections.nsw.gov.au/state_government_elections/state_electoral_system/legislative_council;
Victorian Electoral Commission, ‘Victorian voting systems’, viewed on 7 June
2009 at http://www.vec.vic.gov.au/votingsystems.html#stateuh; Western
Australian Electoral Commission, ‘A guide for candidates: Legislative Council’,
viewed on 7 June 2009 at www.waec.wa.gov.au/pp_candidate/documents/CandidatesGuideLC.pdf;
South Australian Electoral Commission, ‘Electoral questions and answers’,
viewed on 7 June 2009 at www.ecsa.sa.gov.au/apps/uploadedFiles/news/276/SEO_QA06_13feb06.pdf;
Tasmanian Electoral Commission, ‘Tasmanian Legislative Council elections:
Information for candidates’, viewed on 7 June 2009 at www.ecsa.sa.gov.au/apps/uploadedFiles/news/276/SEO_QA06_13feb06.pdf.
2.32
Where the number of candidates is large and ballot papers exhaust prior
to the end of the count, a large number of voters are in effect not able to
determine who is elected. For example, at the 2007 NSW Legislative Council
elections, which utilises an optional preferential voting system, more than
350,000 votes (9.2 per cent) out of 3.8 million had exhausted
preferences and were excluded from the count by the end of counting.[26]
2.33
The effect of votes being exhausted during the count in multi‑member
electorates is that candidates can be elected later in the count with
significantly less than a full quota. For example, at the 2007 NSW Legislative
Council elections, the final three out of 21 candidates were elected with
around 100,000 votes each (57.7 per cent of a quota) after a full
distribution of preferences, compared to a quota of 173,239 votes
initially required to win a seat.[27]
2.34
The main argument against optional preferential voting, which is also
true of partial preferential voting, is that that large numbers of exhausted
votes can undermine the legitimacy of elections, with the potential for a
‘first past the post’ system to eventuate, especially when large numbers of
voters choose a limited number of preferences. Professor John Wanna summarised
the possible impacts of optional preferential voting based on experiences over
successive Queensland state elections:
In democratic terms, the use of optional preferential voting
in Queensland appears to empower the voter, allowing individuals to decide
whether or not to allocate preferences to some or all candidates. But in the
hands of parties anxious to maximize their electoral advantage, optional
preferential voting risks becoming a de facto first-past-the-post system—in
which candidates can be elected with around 35 per cent of the formal vote.
Optional preferential voting has the potential, then, to inflate majorities
while penalising the most divided side of politics.
If voters deliberately choose to ‘just vote one’ (plumping)
and intend their vote to exhaust if their candidate comes 3rd or worse, then
this does not undermine democracy. However, if voters simply follow party
instructions to vote for one candidate and out of ignorance or unfamiliarity do
not allocate preferences, then if their votes exhaust this could be a denial of
a true democratic outcome.[28]
Increased complexity?
2.35
The chief reason for moving to above the line voting in Senate elections
in 1984 was to lower the informality rate. Prior to the changes, a formal vote
in the Senate required electors to correctly number all candidates in
preference order without the party names of candidates appearing on the ballot
paper. At the 1983 federal election, NSW electors were required to correctly
allocate preferences to 62 candidates. Mistakes in sequential numbering
contributed to the rate of informality of 11.1 per cent in the state, with
over 341,000 informal votes.[29]
2.36
The adoption of above the line Senate voting has contributed to a
continuing reduction in the rate of informality at Senate elections since it
was first adopted for the 1984 election (figure 2.2).
Figure 2.2 Informality rate, Senate, 1967 to 2007 elections
(per cent)
Source Australian
Electoral Commission, submission 169.1, p 22.
2.37
Where state upper house voting systems are similar to that used for
Senate elections (Victoria, Western Australia and South Australia), informality
rates at state elections are higher than that recorded in the state at federal
elections (table 2.4). This is likely to reflect the differences between voting
systems in the upper and lower houses within these jurisdictions. In New South
Wales, where an optional preferential voting system is used above the line, the
proportion of informal votes at the 2007 state election was almost three times
that of the federal election held later the same year.
Table 2.4 Informality
rates for recent selected upper house state elections and 2007 Senate election,
by jurisdiction (per cent)
|
Most
recent state election (%)
|
Previous
state election (%)
|
2007
federal election Senate informality rate (%)
|
New South Wales
|
6.11% (2007)
|
5.34% (2003)
|
2.2%
|
Victoria
|
4.28% (2006)
|
3.67% (2002)
|
3.2%
|
Western Australia
|
3.33% (2005)
|
2.64% (2001)
|
2.4%
|
South Australia
|
5.2% (2006)
|
5.4% (2004)
|
2.4%
|
Source Australian
Electoral Commission, 2007 election pocketbook (2008), p 56; Electoral
Commmission NSW, Report on the 2007 state election (2007), p 12; Victorian
Electoral Commission, Report to parliament on the 2006 Victorian state election
(2007), p 96; Western Australian Electoral Commission, 2005 state general election:
election report (2006), p 29; South Australian Electoral Commission,
Election report: South Australian election 18 March 2006 (undated), p 48.
2.38
In some jurisdictions, electoral authorities have examined the reasons
behind informal votes being cast in upper house elections. Confusion between
Senate and state systems can be a factor, although most informal votes appear
to result from errors made when voting below the line:
n In Victoria, the increase in informality for Legislative Council elections in 2007 and 2003 was
largely attributed to changes in the voting system for the Council. With the
new system allowing voters to express a single preference above the line, only
7.92 per cent of informal votes were above the line, while 45.87 per
cent were below the line;[30]
n In South Australia,
where the Legislative Council voting system is similar to the Senate,
informality is largely driven by errors made by voters when voting below the
line — If blank and apparently deliberately spoilt papers are excluded,
56 per cent of informal votes were cast below the line.[31]
2.39
The Australian Greens supported the proposed changes in their submission
to the government’s green paper on donations, funding and expenditure,
considering that individuals should have a greater say on preference
distribution:
The objective of electoral reform is to make our electoral
system more transparent, fairer and more democratic. In keeping with these
objectives is the need to give voters greater control and expression in
allocating their vote. One means to achieve this is to restore the distribution
of party preferences to the voter rather than leave it in the hands of the
party preference arrangements as is currently the case.
… These amendments to the Commonwealth Electoral Act enhance
democracy. They provide voters full control of the destiny of their vote and
consequently, the make-up of the Senate.[32]
2.40
All of the remaining major parties pointed to the simplicity of current
voting arrangements as a way of reducing informality and generally supported
existing arrangements. The Australian Labor Party noted that:
All I can say is that on most of these matters I tend to
start from: the simpler the system, the better the system when it comes to
voting and when it comes to funding and disclosure. When it comes to most of
these electoral matters you want to keep the systems as simple as possible, and
that is why I am an advocate for a ‘1’ above the line, just because, when you
look at the figures, that is what most people choose to do, as opposed to going
below the line. I worry that having preferential voting above the line will
further complicate it.
… I just think that the more complex the system the higher
the informal vote rate. That is what history shows; that is what the system
used to show. The simpler the system, the more votes will be counted.[33]
2.41
The Liberal Party of Australia also expressed support for a simple
system:
I think the simpler the better, as a general proposition. I
remain to be convinced of the virtues of optional preferential voting. I know
that is not necessarily the view of all members of this committee. A change to
that system federally would really need to be worked through very carefully.[34]
2.42
The Nationals also supported existing arrangements:
From the party’s perspective, we are happy with the current
arrangements. … What has assisted are the improved party registration
processes, which have cut down the size of the Senate paper, for instance, and
have also led to a cut-down in the number of bogus parties.[35]
Possible implications for election administration
2.43
The Explanatory Memorandum for the bill notes that there would be a
financial impact arising from the extra resourcing for the AEC for the additional personnel and resources required for the counting of ballot papers.[36]
2.44
At the 2007 federal election, only 407,461 formal Senate votes
(3.22 per cent) were below the line or non-ticket votes and were sent to AEC central Senate scrutiny centres for data input into the computerised Senate scrutiny system.
2.45
Under the amendments proposed by the bill, all ballot papers would need
to be sent to central scrutiny centres and require data entry. Such a
requirement may also create additional logistical and security issues for the AEC in managing large quantities of ballot papers in central scrutiny centres.
2.46
The additional data entry and complexity of counting Senate ballot
papers under the voting system proposed by the bill may lead to a delay in
completing the count and the return of the writs.
2.47
An indication of the potential resources and timelines for counting
required under the proposals is available from the counting systems required
for NSW Legislative Council elections in 2003, the first council election
conducted under a voting system that allowed voters to nominate at least one
preference above the line. The NSW Electoral Commission count of the votes,
which required data entry for 1.6 million ballot papers, was completed
18 days after the election:
At the 2003 election, there were 284 candidates and 15 groups.
Of the 3,931,308 votes cast, approximately 1.6 million required data entry.
These were data entered by 250 operators per shift, supported by up to 120
warehouse clerical staff per shift. There were 3 x 6 hour data entry shifts
worked each day. The remaining 2.3 million ballot papers, marked with a single
1 above the line were entered into the system in bulk totals as “tickets” for
the respective groups.
The 1.6 million ballot papers went through two rounds of data
entry. However, due to logistical problems with the storage and movement of
ballot papers between separate buildings and within an environment not
conducive to ballot paper data entry of this scale, it was considered that the
potential risk of misplacement of batches was such that first and second rounds
of data entry would be undertaken by the same operator. While this was not
desirable, it was considered to be an area of very low risk given that the
system was designed such that the operator could not see the result of the
first round of data entry when entering the second round.
The entire operation continued predominantly at full scale
until Wednesday 2 April at the warehouse when most ballot papers had been
batched and Friday 4 April at the data entry centre, when the number of ballot
papers awaiting data entry could not support 250 operators for 18 hours a day.
Data entry was eventually completed on Wednesday 9 April.[37]
2.48
Given this experience with 1.6 million ballot papers, it is clear
that the counting of more than 12.5 million Senate ballot papers would be
a significant exercise for the AEC, an exercise up to 30 times greater
than under current voting arrangements.
Other proposals to give electors more control over the allocation of
preferences
2.49
The impact of group ticket voting and alternate methods of above the
line voting has been raised in previous election inquiries undertaken by the
Joint Standing Committee on Electoral Matters. The current requirements that a
booklet be made available at polling booths showing the order of preferences in
the group voting tickets lodged with the AEC was a recommendation of the then
Joint Standing Committee on Electoral Matters’ inquiry into the 1998 election.[38]
2.50
While the Electoral Reform Society’s preferred voting system was for
optional preferential voting in the Senate, the Society considered that if
above the line voting was to be retained that details on voting tickets should
be more widely available and that voters should be able to mark a blank Senate
ballot paper to allow electors to choose carefully before the election and take
it with them to the polling booth to complete. The Society noted that:
While Section 216 [of the Commonwealth Electoral Act] stipulates
that details on voting tickets need to be available at polling places, this
information is actually of very little use at such a late stage in the
election. Rather than provide details on voting tickets at polling booths, this
needs to be provided before Election Day.
It is preferable that it be in printed form. Consideration
needs to be given to either the Australian Electoral Commission distributing
the voting tickets – perhaps in their booklet “Your official guide to the 2007
federal election”, or legislating so that the political parties must provide
this detail in print form.[39]
2.51
Mr Eric Lockett considered that above-the-line voting should be done
away with altogether and below-the-line voting should be made easier by
reducing the proportion of boxes a voter is required to number.[40]
Mr Lockett noted that:
I am reluctant to specify how many boxes should be numbered,
but current computerised tallying of Senate votes should enable an appropriate
figure to be chosen. An empirical, retrospective analysis could be done to find
how great a role lower-order preferences have historically played in determining
outcomes and how much difference it would have made if preferences beyond a
specified figure were disregarded. The number of exhausted votes would be
likely to increase, but I strongly suspect that the proportion of boxes
required to be marked could be substantially reduced without affecting outcomes
in terms of who is elected.
Furthermore, with the elimination of the need to field two
candidates to qualify for a party preference ticket, below-the-line voting
should be made even easier by a decline in the overall number of candidates.[41]
2.52
Another proposal is that the current requirement to express only a
single preference above the line be retained, with the option given to voters
to express any further preferences. Such a proposal could be implemented in a form
that retains group voting tickets or as a full optional preferential system.[42]
2.53
Alternatively, preferences allocated above the line could be allocated
among all candidates within a group rather than cascading them in the order
determined by the party. Such an approach could be based on the Robson Rotation
system used in Tasmania and the Australian Capital Territory, whereby the order
of candidates within a group differs across ballot papers.[43]
Committee conclusion
2.54
The choice of voting system for the Senate, including arrangements for
the ordering of ballot papers, mechanisms for allocating preferences and the
counting of votes, has implications for participation by electors, the nature
of campaigning and the representative nature of the Senate.
2.55
The current voting system for the Senate, in place since 1984, appears
to be widely accepted by the community, with almost 97 per cent of formal
votes at the 2007 election cast above the line. Additionally, the current
voting system offers a relatively simple approach to voting that leads to a
very high proportion of formal votes being cast, taking account of the
additional complexity introduced by different voting systems across states and
territories.
2.56
The current system may provide parties with a strategic advantage in
arranging their preference distribution. However, concerns about this need to
be balanced against the level of acceptance and the relative simplicity of
current arrangements.
2.57
In the committee’s view, the changes proposed
by the bill will reduce the ability of Australians to participate fully in the
electoral system by abolishing a very simple method of voting above the line
and replacing it with the requirement that an elector number at least four
preferences in a half Senate election and at least seven preferences in a full
Senate election.
2.58
There is no doubt for the committee that the inevitable effect of the
introduction of compulsory partial preferential above-the-line voting for the
Senate, as proposed, will be to push up the rate of informal voting in Senate
elections, depriving a significant number of voters of the ability to cast a
valid Senate vote. In combination with the likelihood that a significant proportion
of votes may be exhausted and removed from the count, the changes have the
potential to undermine the legitimacy of an election result by lowering the
number of votes required to gain election.
2.59
For every one percentage point increase in the Senate informality rate,
around 130,000 electors are disenfranchised by not recording a valid vote
— if the national Senate informality rate were to double from the 2.5 per
cent seen in 2007, it would deprive 662,000 Australians of a valid Senate vote.
Those likely to be most effected are the elderly, first-time voters, those with
lower levels of education, Indigenous Australians and Australians from
non-English speaking backgrounds.
2.60
Another consequence of the proposed introduction
of compulsory preferential voting for the Senate is likely to be the
re-appearance of the practice of ballot flooding (running numerous bogus Senate
tickets so as to create a huge ballot paper and confuse voters), which was
largely stamped out by the 1984 reforms.
2.61
Given that different state and territory voting systems can impose
additional complexity on the voting task for some electors, current federal arrangements
provide for a relatively simple voting system, maximising the likelihood that a
vote will be counted. Electors retain the capacity to direct their preferences in
the manner of their own choosing by voting below the line.
2.62
The committee does, however, consider that there are several options
that should be examined to make below‑the‑line voting more accessible
for electors seeking to gain more control over the distribution of preferences.
2.63
The first is to provide more information to electors about group voting
tickets by requiring the AEC to make blank ballot papers available to electors
so that they can complete their preference allocation prior to polling day
based on the electors analysis of group voting tickets (which are published on
the AEC website prior to polling day).
2.64
The second is to change arrangements for votes cast below‑the‑line
to require a smaller number of preferences to be indicated, say up to 15, for a
vote to be included as a formal vote. Such an approach has been adopted for
below the line votes in Victoria (minimum of five preferences for multi‑member
electorates with up to 26 candidates in each electorate at the 2006 state
election) and New South Wales (minimum of 15 preferences in a single
electorate, with 333 candidates at the 2007 state election). Based on the 2007
federal election, such a change would reduce the number of preferences to be
completed below the line by around half for electors in NSW, Victoria and Queensland and around one third for electors in Western Australia and South Australia.
2.65
A further option is available in relation to changing the above‑the‑line
voting provisions to give voters the option of marking more than one
preference. This approach would retain group voting tickets to distribute
preferences if an elector marks a single preference but, if more than one
preference were made, a vote would exhaust at the last preference expressed.
2.66
The committee has not made any recommendations in relation to these
options, believing that there should be further and continuing discussion of the
various approaches.
Daryl Melham MP
Chair
2 June 2009