Preliminary Pages
Chair’s foreword
The Commonwealth
Electoral (Above-the-Line Voting) Amendment Bill 2008 seeks to make a
number of changes to the method of voting at Senate elections. Group voting
tickets would be abolished and electors would be required to number at least
four preferences when voting above the line in a half Senate election and at
least seven preferences in a full Senate election. Ballot papers would exhaust
once the last preference expressed by the elector was reached, unlike the
current system which requires electors to indicate a single preference above
the line with preferences directed to all other candidates in the order
indicated on the group voting ticket.
The changes proposed by
Senator Bob Brown would potentially affect the nature of Senate representation
by reducing the pool of available votes through exhaustion. Other significant
repercussions flowing from the amendment include restricting the ability of
political parties and candidates to choose the order in which preferences would
flow, and impinge on the ability of voters to both express a valid vote and
‘control’ the flow of their preferences.
The current system, introduced after the 1983 election when
almost 10 per cent of ballot papers nationwide were ruled informal, has
many advantages —allowing voters to express a single preference (‘1’) with
preferences distributed in a sequence established in advance by candidates and
political parties and made available in the public domain, whilst still giving
those electors who choose to do so the opportunity to mark all candidates in
order of preference if they vote below the line.
The relative simplicity of current arrangements needs to be
carefully balanced against any change that makes it more difficult for voters
to cast a valid vote. With informality at Senate elections declining to an all
time low of 2.5 per cent at the 2007 election, the proposed changes risk
disenfranchising hundreds of thousands of electors, including the elderly,
first-time voters, those with lower levels of education, Indigenous Australians
and Australians from non-English speaking backgrounds. For every one percentage
point increase in the Senate informality rate, around 130,000 electors are
disenfranchised because they have not recorded a valid vote.
The committee has not made any recommendations on the Commonwealth
Electoral (Above-the-Line Voting) Amendment Bill 2008. There are a number
of alternate options that require further and continuing discussion.
I would like to thank the Members and Senators of the
committee for their contribution to the report and those that participated in
the inquiry by making submissions or appearing at the public hearings. I would
also like to thank the committee secretariat for their work in preparing this
report.
Daryl Melham
MP
Chair
Membership of the Committee
Chair
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Mr Daryl Melham MP
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Deputy
Chair
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Mr Scott Morrison MP
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Members
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Mr Michael Danby MP
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Senator Simon Birmingham
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Hon Bruce Scott MP
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Senator Bob Brown
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Mr Jon Sullivan MP
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Senator Carol Brown
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Senator Steve Hutchins
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Senator the Hon Michael Ronaldson
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Committee Secretariat
Secretary
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Mr Stephen Boyd
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Inquiry
Secretary
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Mr Kai Swoboda
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Technical
Advisor
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Mr Terry Rushton
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Administrative
Officers
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Ms Renee van der Hoek
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Ms Natasha Petrovic
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Terms of reference
On 14 May 2008 the Senate agreed to the following
resolution:
That the Commonwealth Electoral
(Above-the-Line Voting) Amendment Bill 2008 be referred to the Joint Standing
Committee on Electoral Matters as a particular part of its inquiry into all
aspects of the 2007 Federal Election for inquiry and report not before June
2009.