Preliminary pages
Chair’s foreword
When considering electoral reforms, our priority must be:
enfranchisement, not disenfranchisement. It is this philosophy that has guided
this inquiry and is reflected in many of the Committee’s recommendations.
This report continues the tradition of examining and
reporting on the conduct of federal elections and relevant legislation which
has been carried out by the Joint Standing Committee on Electoral Matters and
its predecessor, the Joint Select Committee on Electoral Reform.
There is a special quality about elections that are
conducted by independent, impartial and professional electoral bodies like the
Australian Electoral Commission, in accordance with electoral legislation that
is inclusive and continues to meet the needs of the community as those needs
change.
The publication of this report into the conduct of the 2010
federal election comes at a time when the proportion of Australian citizens who
actively take part in electoral matters is in decline. If electoral
participation is considered a key indicator of a society’s democratic health,
there were trends evident in the 2010 federal election that give cause for
concern. The Australian Electoral Commission (AEC) found that there were 3.1
million people who fell into one of the following categories: were eligible to
enrol but were not on the Commonwealth electoral roll; were not marked off a
certified list and presumably did not vote; and of those who did vote their
vote was informal and could not be admitted to the count. This means that
around 20 per cent of the population of Australia’s eligible electors did not
have their say in the election of their parliamentary representatives.
The 2010 federal election was notable for a number of
reasons. The High Court’s decisions in Rowe v Electoral Commissioner
[2010] HCA 46 and the Federal Court’s decision in Getup Ltd v Electoral
Commissioner [2010] FCA 869 regarding the use of electronic signatures
impacted in varying degrees on the election and its conduct by the AEC. It was
also the first winter election since 1987, which created further challenges for
the AEC.
In the AEC’s administration of the 2010 federal election,
there was a regrettable failure of process in pre-poll voting that saw
thousands of votes excluded from the count in the divisions of Boothby in South
Australia and Flynn in Queensland. These issues and the subsequent actions
taken by the AEC are considered by the Committee. The Committee believes that
the AEC dealt with the process failure promptly, transparently and to the
satisfaction of all major players. We all agree that such a failure should
never be repeated. Overall, the Committee considers that the AEC coped well
with the variety of circumstances presented during the conduct of the election,
and as usual, provided a highly professional service.
The Committee again looked into the decline in enrolment
participation and the reasons for it. It is essential that the decline be
reversed as there could be potential ramifications for the legitimacy and ready
acceptance of election results for which Australia is so well regarded. The New
South Wales and Victorian Parliaments have legislated to allow flexibility in
the way their respective electoral commissions go about the business of
enrolment. The Queensland Parliament is also considering enrolment options. The
Commonwealth should act as necessary to arrest the decline in participation.
The Committee makes recommendations for direct enrolment and update of
enrolment in this report.
The trend toward declaration voting was evident again at the
2010 election. However, the number of provisional votes rejected in 2010 is
cause for concern, with 166 148 provisional votes rejected and only
37 340 counted.
While the Government has now legislated to remove restrictive
provisional vote disqualification provisions introduced by the former Government,
and to reinstate the seven-day close of rolls, there is still unfinished
business, particularly in respect of returning some safety net provisions.
Government members and Opposition members of the Committee
disagree about the effects of electoral fraud. While Opposition members
continue to rely on the spectre of electoral fraud to introduce and maintain
restrictive enrolment and voting provisions, Government members value the
traditionally inclusive nature of our electoral legislation. There should be no
doubt that the AEC treats fraud and potential fraud cases with due and diligent
attention.
In this report, the Committee notes, and gives a great deal
of weight to the fact that the Commonwealth Electoral Act 1918 has
traditionally contained safety nets designed to ensure that the franchise can
be exercised by those who are entitled to do so. The Committee has sought to
ensure that this tradition continues, and the matter of reinstatements to the
electoral roll, making recommendations to return to the previous reinstatement
provisions.
Over 11 million ordinary votes were counted by the AEC on
polling night, nearly one million more than in 2007. The 2010 federal election
saw informal votes for the House of Representatives at 5.55 per cent (729
304 votes), an increase of 1.6 per cent (218 482 votes) on the 2007 federal
election. Senate informality was 3.75 per cent (495 160 votes), an increase of
1.2 per cent (164 151) on the previous election. The level of informality for
voters genuinely trying to cast a formal vote is of concern. The AEC figures on
assumed unintentional voting suggest that upwards of 370 000 voters attempted
to vote for a Member of Parliament, but for various reasons failed. The
Committee examined the differences in formality requirements between House of
Representatives and Senate ballot papers with a view to addressing the high
levels of informality in the House, especially in areas where its effects are greatest.
The Committee has considered the options presented by
participants to reduce the impact of informality, including optional
preferential voting, progressive informality and the South Australian House of
Assembly ticket voting provisions. After careful consideration, the Committee
has recommended adoption of a savings provision based on that used in South
Australia. The Committee notes that the system has been used in House of
Assembly elections since 1985 and has saved many votes which would otherwise have
been informal. The Committee is particularly attracted to the system because it
reinforces compulsory preferential voting, prohibits advocating other than full
preferential voting, is transparent in that tickets must be lodged with the
Electoral Commission and that it was designed by electoral administrators, not
politicians.
Australians expect that participation in the electoral
process is accessible, convenient and does not impede their ability to go about
their business. At the same time, it is fundamental to ensure accuracy, secrecy
and integrity in enrolment, voting and counting processes. These competing
demands must be satisfied in such a way that the electoral process remains
inclusive while preserving the high levels of integrity necessary to ensure
continued trust and acceptance of election results. The Committee has sought to
achieve such an outcome with the recommendations made in this report.
The Committee received 119 submissions and supplementary
submissions, and took evidence from witnesses at nine public hearings. This
provided the Committee with a substantial body of evidence, which the Committee
has considered. The Committee remains appreciative of the time and effort that
participants gave to assist it in its deliberations.
I express my thanks to Mr Ed Killesteyn, the Australian
Electoral Commissioner, for the frankness of his evidence, and the assistance
provided by staff of the Australian Electoral Commission in meeting requests
for information from the Committee in a professional and timely manner.
I thank the Members and Senators of the Committee for their
work and contribution to this report.
Finally, 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 |
Mr Daryl Melham MP |
|
Deputy
Chair |
The Hon Alexander Somlyay MP |
|
Members |
The Hon Bronwyn Bishop MP |
Senator Simon Birmingham |
|
The Hon Alan Griffin MP |
Senator Bob Brown |
|
Ms Amanda Rishworth MP |
Senator Carol Brown |
|
|
Senator Helen Polley |
|
|
Senator Scott Ryan |
Committee Secretariat
Secretary |
Mr Stephen Boyd |
Inquiry
Secretary |
Ms Samantha Mannette |
Technical
Adviser |
Mr Terry Rushton |
Administrative
Officers |
Ms Emily Costello |
|
Ms Natasha Petrovic |
Terms of reference
On 23 November 2010, the Special Minister of State requested
the Committee to conduct an inquiry with the following terms of reference:
That the Joint Standing Committee
on Electoral Matters inquire into and report on all aspects of the conduct of
the 2010 federal election and matters related thereto.
List of abbreviations
ADF |
Australian Defence Force |
AEC |
Australian Electoral Commission |
AEO |
Australian Electoral Officer |
ANAO |
Australian National Audit Office |
APVIS |
Automated Postal Vote Issuing
System |
ARO |
Assistant Returning Officer |
ATL |
Above-the-line |
ATO |
Australian Tax Office |
BTL |
Below-the-line |
CALD |
Culturally and linguistically
diverse |
CEA |
Commonwealth Electoral Act |
CORE |
Computing Research and Education
Association of Australasia |
CPSU |
Community and Public Sector Union |
CRU |
Continuous roll update |
CSS |
Central Senate Scrutiny |
DFAT |
Department of Foreign Affairs and
Trade |
DRO |
Divisional Returning Officer |
ECSA |
Electoral Commission of South
Australia |
GPV |
General postal voter |
GVT |
Group voting ticket |
HCA |
High Court of Australia |
HTV |
How-to-Vote |
IEPP |
Indigenous Electoral
Participation Program |
JSCER |
Joint Select Committee on
Electoral Reform |
NESB |
Non-English speaking background |
NSWEC |
New South Wales Electoral
Commission |
OIC |
Officer in Charge |
ORS |
Online Recruitment System |
POI |
Proof of identity |
PPVC |
Pre-poll voting centre |
PVA |
Postal vote application |
PVC |
Postal vote certificate |
PVP |
Postal vote pack |
RMANS |
Roll Management System |
TES |
Targeted Enrolment Stimulation |
VEC |
Victorian Electoral Commission |
List of recommendations
3 Maintaining
the electoral roll
Recommendation 1
The Committee recommends that, wherever appropriate, the Commonwealth
Electoral Act 1918 should be amended to allow the Australian Electoral
Commission (AEC) to directly enrol eligible electors on the basis of data or
information provided by an elector or electors to an agency approved by the
AEC, as an agency which performs adequate proof of identity checks, where that
information is subsequently provided by that agency to the AEC for the purposes
of updating the electoral roll. Approval of such agencies by the AEC should be
made by disallowable instrument.
Recommendation 2
The Committee recommends that the Commonwealth Electoral
Act 1918 be amended to allow the Australian Electoral Commission (AEC) to
directly update the enrolment details of electors on the basis of data or
information provided by an elector or electors to an agency approved by the
AEC, as an agency which performs adequate proof of identity checks, where that
information is subsequently provided by that agency to the AEC for the purposes
of updating the electoral roll. Approval of such agencies by the AEC should be
made by disallowable instrument.
Recommendation 3
The Committee recommends that relevant legislation governing
the protection of personal data collected by the Australian Taxation Office
(ATO), which would prevent the ATO from providing enrolment relevant data to
the Australian Electoral Commission (AEC), be amended to allow such data to be
shared with the AEC for the purposes of facilitating enrolment.
Recommendation 4
The Committee recommends that, wherever appropriate, the Commonwealth
Electoral Act 1918 be amended to enable electors who provide satisfactory
evidence of identity and address to a pre-poll issuing officer at a pre-poll
voting centre or a declaration vote issuing officer at a polling place, to
enrol for that address at the time of voting, by completing and signing an
enrolment compliant declaration vote certificate into which their ballot papers
are to be inserted.
Recommendation 5
The Committee recommends that, should the Government accept
Recommendation 4 above, the Commonwealth Electoral Act 1918 be amended,
wherever appropriate, to enable electors who enrol at the time of voting to be
added to the electoral roll used for the election and to enable votes cast by
those electors to be admitted to the scrutiny for that election.
Recommendation 6
The Committee recommends that, wherever appropriate, the Commonwealth
Electoral Act 1918 be amended to specifically permit the use of electronic
or digitally formed signatures for enrolment purposes.
Recommendation 7
The Committee recommends that Part IX of the Commonwealth
Electoral Act 1918 be amended to provide that an elector should not be
removed from the electoral roll by objection on the grounds that they do not
live at a particular address, and have not lived at the address for a period of
at least one month, in situations where the Australian Electoral Commission is
aware from information or data sources in its possession that the elector lives
at a different address in the same electoral division.
Recommendation 8
The Committee recommends that paragraphs 114 (4), 118 (4A),
and any other relevant provisions of the Commonwealth Electoral Act 1918,
be amended to provide the Australian Electoral Commissioner with a discretion
not to object to the enrolment of an elector where the Electoral Commissioner
is aware that the elector resides at a different address in the same electoral
division.
4 Polling and voting
Recommendation 9
The Committee recommends that the Commonwealth Electoral
Act 1918 be amended, wherever appropriate, to specifically provide that a
ballot box containing votes cast by electors may not be opened before the close
of polling other than in accordance with the relevant provisions of the Act.
Recommendation 10
The Committee recommends that the requirement at section 200DH
of the Commonwealth Electoral Act 1918 for an applicant for a pre-poll
ordinary vote to complete and sign a certificate be repealed.
Recommendation 11
The Committee recommends that section 200D of the Commonwealth
Electoral Act 1918 be amended to provide that an application for a pre-poll
vote cannot be made before the Monday, 19 days before polling day.
Recommendation 12
The Committee recommends 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.
Recommendation 13
The Committee recommends that the Commonwealth Electoral
Act 1918 be amended to provide specifically that completed postal vote
application forms must be returned directly to the Australian Electoral
Commission for processing.
Recommendation 14
The Committee recommends that, should the Government accept
Recommendation 13 above, that the Commonwealth Electoral Act 1918 be
amended to require the Australian Electoral Commission (AEC) to provide
particular information contained on postal vote applications processed by the
AEC:
- political
parties who have endorsed candidates for the Senate for the state or territory,
or candidates for the House of Representatives division in which the applicant
for a postal vote claims to be enrolled; and
- candidates
for election to the Senate for the state or territory, or candidates for the
House of Representatives division in which the applicant for a postal vote
claims to be enrolled.
The information provided must:
- be
made securely available to eligible parties and candidates;
- be
protected by appropriate safeguards;
- contain
only the surname, given names, date of birth, claimed enrolled address and
claimed enrolled division of the applicant, and, if provided by the applicant,
the address to which the postal vote is to be delivered; and
- must
not include any information that is subject to broader restrictions on release
of information currently provided for in the Commonwealth Electoral Act 1918.
Recommendation 15
The Committee recommends that subsection 184(5), and any other
relevant provisions, of the Commonwealth Electoral Act 1918 be amended
to provide that the deadline for the receipt of postal vote applications be
6 pm on the Wednesday, three days before polling day.
Recommendation 16
The Committee recommends that section 184, and any other
relevant provisions, of the Commonwealth Electoral Act 1918 be amended
to provide that the cut-off for postal vote applications received in Australia
for addresses outside Australia be 6 pm on the Monday, five days before
polling day.
Recommendation 17
The Committee recommends that the Australian Electoral
Commission send postal vote applications received in Australia after the
cut-off, for addresses outside Australia, by facsimile, email or by other
electronic means, to the most appropriate overseas post for processing, in
order that, wherever possible, a postal voting pack may be sent to the
applicant in sufficient time for the elector to cast a vote prior to polling
day.
Recommendation 18
The Committee recommends that section 222 of the Commonwealth
Electoral Act 1918, and any other relevant provisions, be amended to enable
the Australian Electoral Commission (AEC) to undertake a trial at the next
election during which absent votes may be issued as ordinary votes in selected
polling places where electronic certified lists containing state or territory
certified list data are deployed.
- Votes
issued in this manner must be placed in envelopes designed for the purpose of
the trial and are to be forwarded to the Divisional Returning Officers for the
divisions for which the vote is issued as soon as practicable following the
close of polling.
- When
received by the Divisional Returning Officer for the enrolled division, the
votes must be removed from the envelopes in accordance with the processes
established for the trial and treated and counted as ordinary votes.
- The
AEC must keep adequate records of the trial for the purposes of evaluation by
the Joint Standing Committee on Electoral Matters following the next federal
election.
Recommendation 19
The Committee recommends that Part XVA of the Commonwealth
Electoral Act 1918 be amended to specifically allow electronic certified
lists to be used as a basis for issuing pre-poll votes as ordinary votes.
Recommendation 20
The Committee recommends that the Australian Electoral
Commission continue to work with organisations representing electors who are
blind or who have low vision to develop sustainable voting arrangements which
will provide secure, secret and independent voting for electors who are blind
or who have low vision.
Recommendation 21
The Committee recommends that Part XVII of the Commonwealth
Electoral Act 1918 be amended so that provisions similar to those which
allow blind and low vision voters to cast a secret ballot by telephone or any
other suitable electronic means be applied to Antarctic electors.
Recommendation 22
The Committee recommends that Part XVII of the Commonwealth
Electoral Act 1918 be amended to enable the production of a list of all
Antarctic electors to be used at all Antarctic Polling Stations.
Recommendation 23
The Committee recommends that the Government review the
minimum font sizes specified in section 328B of the Commonwealth Electoral
Act 1918 as being required for the authorisation on How-to-Vote cards.
6 Reinstatement to the roll
Recommendation 24
The Committee recommends that the Commonwealth Electoral
Act 1918 be amended to provide that where an elector who had lodged a
declaration vote at an election has been removed from the electoral roll by
objection action on the ground of non residence; and
- the
removal from the roll occurred after the election prior to the election to
which the scrutiny relates, or
- where there has been a redistribution of the state or territory that includes the
division since the last election but one before the election to which the
scrutiny relates, the removal from the roll was made after the last such
redistribution, then:
- if the
address at which the elector claims to be enrolled at the time of voting is
within the electoral division for which he or she was previously enrolled, his
or her House of Representatives and Senate votes will be counted; but
- if the
address at which the elector claims to be enrolled at the time of voting is in
a different electoral division in the same state or territory, his or her
Senate vote will be counted, but his or her House of Representatives vote will
not be counted.
7 Formality
issues
Recommendation 25
The Committee recommends that Parts XVI, XVIII, and any other
relevant provisions of the Commonwealth Electoral Act 1918 be amended to
include a savings provision for House of Representatives ballot papers, based
on the South Australian House of Assembly ticket voting provisions. Such a
provision should serve to save ballot papers marked by the use of a tick, a
cross, or the number 1, and which do not express preferences for all
candidates, in cases where the first and subsequent preferences (if any) match
an order of preferences lodged with the Australian Electoral Commission by a
political party or candidate in the election. This will serve to reduce the
impact of unintentional informal voting resulting from incomplete preferences
being indicated by electors on House of Representatives ballot papers.
Recommendation 26
The Committee recommends that Part XXI of the Commonwealth
Electoral Act 1918 be amended to specifically prohibit advocating the
completion of House of Representatives ballot papers other than by full
preferential numbering. The offence should attract a penalty sufficient to
deter such actions.
8 Redistribution of electoral boundaries
Recommendation 27
The Committee recommends that Part IV of the Commonwealth
Electoral Act 1918 be amended to provide that, where a
redistribution has commenced, because of the operation of subsections 59(2)(b)
or 59(2)(c), and a Senate election, or an election of members of the House of
Representatives, or a Senate election and an election of members of the House
of Representatives conducted concurrently, is announced before that
redistribution is completed, proceedings in the redistribution are to be
suspended until the date specified in the writ or writs as the date for the
return of the writ.
Recommendation 28
The Committee recommends that should the Government agree to
recommendation 27 above, that Part IV of the Commonwealth Electoral Act 1918 also be amended to allow the Redistribution Committee or the augmented
Electoral Commission (as the case may be) to recommence the redistribution at
the step which would, if the redistribution had not been suspended, follow the
step last completed in that redistribution. The redistribution timetable, and,
if necessary, the projection time for the redistribution should be adjusted
accordingly.
Recommendation 29
The Committee recommends that section 72, and any other
relevant sections, of the Commonwealth Electoral Act 1918 be amended toprovide that, where an augmented Electoral Commission has formed an opinion
that its proposed redistribution is significantly different to the
Redistribution Committee proposal, a further fixed period be provided during
which the actions required by subsection 72(13) of the Act are to be
undertaken.
Recommendation 30
The Committee recommends that the Commonwealth Electoral
Act 1918 be amended to provide that, where a further fixed period is
provided during which the actions required by subsection 72(13) of the Act are
to be undertaken, the number of days specified in subsection 72(2) of the Act
also be increased by the same number of days provided for in the further fixed
period.
9 Other issues
Recommendation 31
The Committee recommends that subsection 170(3) of the Commonwealth
Electoral Act 1918 be amended to increase the sum to be deposited by or on
behalf of a person nominated as a Senator to $2,000.
Recommendation 32
The Committee recommends that subsection 170(3) the Commonwealth
Electoral Act 1918 be amended 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 33
The Committee recommends that the Commonwealth Electoral
Act 1918 be amended to reduce the nominations period for an election by one
day so that nominations close not less than nine or more than 26 days after the
issue of the writ, rather than ten and 27 days, respectively.
Recommendation 34
The Committee recommends that, should the Government accept
recommendation 33 above, the Commonwealth Electoral Act 1918 be amended
to require the date fixed for polling is not less than 24, or more than 32
days, after the date of nomination.
Recommendation 35
The Committee recommends that Part XVIII of the Commonwealth
Electoral Act 1918 be amended to require that once the first preference
count in polling places or counting centres on polling night, or in scrutinies
conducted after polling day, has been completed and appropriate records made,
all Senate ballot papers indicating a first preference for individual
candidates below the line may be parcelled together for return to the
Divisional Returning Officer.
Recommendation 36
The Committee recommends that section 202A of the Commonwealth
Electoral Act 1918 be amended to remove the requirement that the
officer and employee undertaking be signed. Instead, the officer and employee
undertaking should be made and accepted as part of the offer of employment.
Recommendation 37
The Committee recommends that any recommendations in this
report that propose amending the Commonwealth Electoral Act 1918 should,
where also appropriate, be incorporated into the Referendum (Machinery
Provisions) Act 1984, to ensure consistency between the provisions applying
to elections and referenda.