Chapter 5 Safeguarding the franchise
Background
5.1
Australia has enjoyed electoral legislation that has become increasingly
inclusive. There have been a number of changes to make it more so occurring in
the past 50 years, including extending the franchise to Aboriginal Australians
(1962), allowing British Subjects to retain the franchise when Australian
citizenship became the new qualification (1984), and extending the franchise to
include certain Norfolk Islanders (1992).[1]
5.2
Similarly, other amendments allow itinerant electors to remain enrolled
even thought they do not meet the one month residency qualification for
enrolment. Australian citizens who depart for overseas, who have a fixed intention
to return to Australia within a defined period (currently six years) may remain
enrolled, or enrol from outside Australia under certain conditions, and
provisional enrolment is now available to Australian citizens over 16 years of
age and those who have applied for Australian citizenship.
5.3
However, it has been argued that certain amendments made to the Commonwealth
Electoral Act 1918 in 2006 by the then Government had the effect of
disenfranchising some electors and potential electors.
5.4
In relation to enrolment entitlement, the High Court cases of Rowe v
Electoral Commissioner (Rowe) and Roach v Electoral Commissioner (Roach)
upheld challenges to certain amendments to the Commonwealth Electoral Act
made in 2006. The matters considered by the High Court were the close of rolls
period and prisoner entitlement, respectively.
5.5
The Committee has found it necessary to consider these changes and
subsequent cases as they impacted on the franchise of electors and potential
electors. In the case of Rowe the High Court’s findings directly
impacted on the conduct of the 2010 federal election.
Rowe v Electoral Commissioner
5.6
The High Court case of Rowe was a challenge to the 2006 amendment
of the Commonwealth Electoral Act that reduced the close of rolls period. Prior
to this change, new electors could enrol, previous enrolled electors could
re-enrol, and enrolled electors could update their details in the seven days
following the issue of the writs. The close of rolls period for new enrolments,
re-enrolments and detail updates had been seven days since the 1984 federal
election.
5.7
However, as a result of the changes, for the 2007 and 2010 federal
elections new enrolments and re-enrolments had to be received by the Australian
Electoral Commission (AEC) by 8 pm on the day of the issue of the writs,
and changes to enrolment details had to be received within three days of the
issue of the writs.
5.8
The plaintiffs in Rowe were Shannen Rowe and Douglas Thompson.
Ms Rowe turned 18 on 16 June 2010 and was not enrolled at the time the
election was announced. She did not lodge her completed application with the
AEC until Friday 23 July 2010, which under section 102(4) of the Commonwealth
Electoral Act, at the time, was required to be lodged by 8 pm on Monday 19
July 2010.
5.9
Mr Thompson was enrolled in the electoral Division of Wentworth, but had
moved to a new address in the Division of Sydney in March 2010. He had made
unsuccessful attempts to lodge a claim of transfer form under section 101. He
subsequently completed a form which was signed on 22 July and it was
lodged by facsimile by his solicitor. However, the requirement under section 102(4AA)
was that it be lodged by 8 pm on 21 July 2010.
5.10
Ms Rowe and Mr Thompson subsequently commenced court proceedings on 26
July 2010, challenging the constitutional validity of the legislative changes
that shortened the close of rolls period.
5.11
On 6 August 2010, the High Court, in a 4-3 decision, ruled the
shortening of the close of rolls period to be invalid, as it contravened sections
7 and 24 of the Australian Constitution. The summary of judgment stated:
Chief Justice French, Justices Gummow and Bell, and Justice
Crennan held that these provisions contravened the requirement, contained in ss
7 and 24 of the Constitution, that members of both Houses of the Commonwealth
Parliament be "directly chosen by the people". The Chief Justice
considered that the adverse legal and practical effect of the challenged
provisions upon the exercise of the entitlement to vote was disproportionate to
their advancement of the requirement of direct choice by the people. Justices
Gummow and Bell, with whom Justice Crennan broadly agreed, held that the
provisions operated to achieve a disqualification from the entitlement to vote
and that the disqualification was not reasonably appropriate and adapted to
serve an end compatible with the maintenance of the system of government
prescribed by the Constitution. Justice Crennan held that the democratic right
to vote is supported and protected by the Constitution.[2]
5.12
In contrast, Justice Heyden stated:
The denial of enrolment and voting for an election, for a
legitimate reason, does not intrude too far upon the system of voting. It is,
and has always been, a part of that system. It reinforces the requirement that
persons qualified to vote enrol in a timely way, which is conducive to the
effective working of the system. No denial of the franchise is involved. It
is not possible, logically, for the plaintiffs to suggest that these provisions
are incompatible, but those allowing for a few more days for enrolment are not.[3]
5.13
As discussed earlier in the report, this resulted in new enrolments,
re-enrolments and changes to elector details that had been received by the AEC
by 26 July 2010 being processed. The AEC advised the Committee that this
resulted in an additional 57 732[4] new electors on the
electoral roll, and some 40 408[5] changes to enrolment
details being made.
5.14
The Government subsequently gave effect to this decision in the Electoral
and Referendum Amendment (Enrolment and Prisoner Voting) Act 2011, which
restored the close of rolls period to seven days following the issue of writs.
This Act also made amendments to prisoner voting entitlements.
Roach v Electoral Commissioner
5.15
The entitlement of prisoners to enrol, remain on the roll and vote was
another issue considered by the High Court. In Roach v Electoral
Commissioner [2007] HCA 43, Ms Vicki Roach challenged the constitutional
validity of the 2006 amendments to the Commonwealth Electoral Act that changed
the voting entitlement for prisoners. The effect of the amendments removed the
entitlement for people serving less than a three year term of imprisonment to
vote at federal elections. All prisoners were thus excluded from voting.
5.16
In 2004, Ms Roach was sentenced to six years imprisonment for burglary,
including negligent injury and endangerment. She argued that she should have
the right to vote.
5.17
In Roach, in a 4-2 judgement, the High Court ruled on 26
September 2007, that:
...the 2006 amendments were inconsistent with the system of
representative democracy established by the Constitution. The Court held that
voting in elections lies at the heart of that system of representative
government and disenfranchisement of a group of adult citizens without a substantial
reason would not be consistent with it.[6]
5.18
It was in 2011, three years after the Roach judgement, that the Electoral
and Referendum Amendment (Enrolment and Prisoner Voting) Act 2011 gave
effect to this principle, restoring the right to vote to some prisoners serving
less than three-year terms. However, this means that persons in similar
situations to Ms Roach would still be excluded if serving more than three years
in prison.
5.19
Prisoners serving a term of imprisonment of less than three years[7]
now have the option to remain enrolled for the Subdivision for which they were
enrolled when they began their sentence. If not already enrolled, a prisoner
serving less than three years is entitled to enrol for:
- the
Subdivision for which the person was entitled to be enrolled at that time;
- if
the person was not so entitled, a Subdivision for which any of the person’s
next of kin is enrolled;
- if
neither of paragraphs (a) and (b) is applicable, the Subdivision in which
the person was born; and
- if
none of the preceding paragraphs is applicable, the Subdivision with which the
person has the closest connection.[8]
Committee conclusion
5.20
The Committee took the view that the Rowe and Roach cases
are important, as they demonstrated that there are processes in place to help
safeguard the enrolment and voting franchises.
5.21
The Committee believes that they also signal to governments that
protecting the enrolment and voting franchises must be at the core of any
reforms to Australia’s electoral system.