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Preliminary pages
Chair’s foreword
The Electoral and Referendum
Amendment (Improving Electoral Administration) Bill 2012 introduces a suite of
measures in response to seven recommendations of the committee’s report The
2010 Federal Election: Report on the conduct of the election and related
matters.
The amendments in the Bill set out
the procedures to be followed when a ballot-box is opened prematurely; remove
the requirement for an applicant for a pre-poll ordinary vote to complete and
sign a certificate; provide that pre-poll voting cannot commence earlier than four
days after the date fixed for declaration of nominations; bring forward the
deadline for applications for postal votes by one day; provide for further
fixed periods of time to complete inquiries into objections against a proposed
redistribution of electoral boundaries; and allow the Commissioner of Taxation
and other taxation officers to provide some forms of taxpayer information to
the Australian Electoral Commission to maintain the veracity of the roll of
electors.
The Bill also makes a number of
related minor and technical amendments
In referring the Bill, the Selection Committee wished the
Electoral Matters Committee to further scrutinise its amendments and ensure
consideration was given to any unintended consequences. During the committee’s
inquiry, issues arose regarding the exclusion of ballots, the new pre-poll
voting arrangements, and the ability of the AEC to use taxpayer information to update
the electoral roll.
The Bill provides that prematurely opened ballots must be
excluded from the count. At the 2010 federal election, ballot boxes were opened
prematurely due to an official error in two pre-poll voting centres. Due to the
legislative ambiguity regarding the appropriate response to these breaches, the
Australian Electoral Commission sought legal advice. The advice was that it would
be prudent for these ballots to be excluded. The Commission subsequently
recommended to the committee that the appropriate action be clarified in the
Electoral Act and that votes should be reinstated if the incident proved to be
an official error.
The Bill does not contain a vote savings provision and the
committee did not support one in its 2010 federal election report. Having
carefully considered the evidence in this inquiry however, the committee took
the view that votes should be reinstated if a ballot box is handled unlawfully by
any person but no tampering of ballot papers has occurred. The committee’s view
is that this balances voter enfranchisement and electoral integrity. The
committee recommends that the vote savings procedures proposed by the Electoral
Commission to this inquiry be incorporated in the Bill.
The committee heard also that the Electoral Act lacks
clarity on whether the penalties faced by an electoral official who
deliberately and unlawfully interferes with a ballot box or ballot papers are
the same as the penalties facing a member of the public for this offence. The
committee recommends that the Bill be amended to clarify this in the
legislation.
The removal of the requirement for a pre-poll ordinary voter
to complete a certificate will provide efficiencies in polling place management
and align the Commonwealth with a number of state and territory jurisdictions.
Moving the commencement of pre-poll voting back by one day will allow
sufficient time to print the many millions of ballot papers required for a
federal election. Moving the deadline for postal vote applications forward by
one day will reduce the chance that postal ballots will be received too late.
Increasing the fixed periods of time to inquire into further objections to a
proposed electoral boundary redistribution will provide the Electoral
Commission with valuable additional time to conduct these inquiries. Allowing the
Electoral Commission to use certain taxpayer information to update the roll of
electors is a logical extension of existing continuous roll update processes,
and direct enrolment using third party information. The committee is satisfied
that this will not undermine roll integrity.
These provisions of the Bill were recommended in the 2010
federal election report of the committee and continue to be supported by the
committee.
On behalf of the committee I thank the organisations and
individuals who assisted the committee during the inquiry through submissions and
by participating in the public hearing. I also thank my colleagues on the
committee for their work and contribution to this report, and the secretariat
for their work on this inquiry.
Daryl Melham MP
Chair
Membership of the
Committee
Chair
|
Mr Daryl Melham MP
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Deputy Chair
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The Hon Alexander Somlyay MP
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Members
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The Hon
Bronwyn Bishop MP
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Senator
Simon Birmingham
|
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The Hon Alan Griffin MP
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Senator Carol Brown
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Ms Amanda Rishworth MP
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Senator Helen Polley
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Senator Lee Rhiannon
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Senator Scott Ryan
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Committee Secretariat
Secretary
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Mr Stephen Boyd
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Inquiry Secretary
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Dr Kilian Perrem
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Administrative Officers
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Ms Natasha Petrović
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Ms Carissa Skinner
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Terms of reference
On 29 November 2012 the Selection Committee requested the
Committee to inquire into and report on the Electoral and Referendum Amendment
(Improving Electoral Administration) Bill 2012.
Under Standing Order 222(e), reports of the Selection
Committee are treated as having been adopted by the House when they are
presented.
List of abbreviations
AEC
|
Australian
Electoral Commission
|
AEO
|
Australian
Electoral Officer
|
ATO
|
Australian Taxation Office
|
ICCPR
|
International
Covenant on Civil and Political Rights
|
DRO
|
Divisional
Returning Officer
|
GPV
|
General
Postal Voter
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OIC
|
Officer-In-Charge
|
PPVC
|
Pre-poll
voting centre
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PVA
|
Postal vote application
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PVP
|
Postal vote pack
|
the Bill
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Electoral
and Referendum Amendment (Improving Electoral Administration) Bill 2012
|
Recommendation
2 Issues in the Bill
Recommendation 1 (paragraph
2.42)
That the House of Representatives and the Senate pass the
Electoral and Referendum Amendment (Improving Electoral Administration) Bill
2012 after introducing:
- a
vote savings measure to the procedures to be followed if ballot boxes are
opened prematurely. This vote savings measure should incorporate the elements
proposed by the AEC to this inquiry and provide that ballot papers that have
not been tampered with in any way must be reinstated to the count but otherwise
excluded. This savings measure should apply at any stage of the scrutiny to a
ballot box that has been unlawfully handled by any person; and
- an
amendment to the Commonwealth Electoral Act 1918 explicitly stipulating
that any electoral official who deliberately and unlawfully interferes with a
ballot box or ballot papers be subject to the same penalty as any other person
who commits this offence.
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