Commonwealth Electoral Act 1918

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Commonwealth Electoral Act 1918
Coat of Arms of Australia.svg
Parliament of Australia
An Act to Consolidate and Amend the
Law relating to Parliamentary Elections
and for other purposes
Date commenced Various dates
Amendments
1949, 1962, 1973, 1984
Related legislation
Commonwealth Franchise Act 1902

The Commonwealth Electoral Act 1918 was an Act of the Australian Parliament passed in 1918 which replaced the Commonwealth Franchise Act 1902 which had defined who was entitled to vote in Australian federal elections. The 1902 Act set uniform national franchise criteria, establishing the voting age at 21 years and women's suffrage at the national level, also a right to stand for election to the Parliament. That Act also disqualified from voting a number of categories of people, including Indigenous peoples from Australian, Asia, Africa and the Pacific Islands (except New Zealand Maori), even if citizens of the British Empire. A plurality voting system ("first-past-the-post") was established. The 1902 Act also made it clear that no person could vote more than once at each election. The 1902 Act was amended in 1906 to allow postal voting. In 1908, a permanent electoral roll was established and in 1911 it became compulsory for eligible voters to enroll. Compulsory enrollment led to a large increase in voter turnout, even though voting was still voluntary.[1] From 1912, elections have been held on Saturdays.[1]

The 1918 Act was introduced by the Nationalist Party of Billy Hughes and is still the core legislation governing the conduct of elections in Australia, having been amended on numerous occasions since 1918.[2]

Provisions

The 1918 Act replaced first-past-the-post voting with instant-runoff voting ("preferential voting") for the House and the Senate. (Preferential voting had been pioneered by Queensland in 1892.)[1] The voting system was changed by the anti-Labor Hughes after the 1918 Swan by-election, which saw the Labor candidate win with 34% of the vote due to a split in the anti-Labor vote between the Nationalist and Country Party candidates, with 29.6% and 31.4% respectively.

Amendments

1924 amendment

Compulsory voting at federal elections was introduced in 1924,[3][4] as a condition of the Country Party agreeing to form an alliance with the then minority Nationalist Party.

1949 amendments

The Chifley Government amended the Electoral Act in 1949, in time for the 1949 federal election:

Though in 1949 Australian nationality law was also amended to create an Australian nationality, the criteria for the franchise remained that of being a British subject.

1962 amendments

In 1962, the Menzies Government extended the franchise to Indigenous Australians at federal elections,[1][5] though enrolment was voluntary.

1973 and 1974 amendments

The qualifying voting age was lowered by the Whitlam Government in 1973 from 21 to 18 years, and the ACT and Northern Territory became entitled to representation in both Houses for the first time in 1974.

1984 amendments

The Hawke Government made a number of significant changes to the Electoral Act in 1984:

  • An independent Australian Electoral Commission was established to administer the federal electoral system.
  • The number of senators was increased from 64 to 76 (12 from each State and two from each Territory), an increase of 12, and the number of members of the House of Representatives was increased from 125 to 148, an increase of 23.
  • A Senate group ticket voting system ("above-the-line" voting) was introduced.
  • The registration of political parties was introduced to permit the printing of party names on ballot papers.
  • Public funding of election campaigns and disclosure of political donations and electoral expenditure was introduced.
  • The compulsory enrolment and voting requirement was extended to cover Indigenous Australians.
  • The franchise qualification was changed to Australian citizenship, though British subjects on the roll immediately before 26 January 1984 retained enrolment and voting rights.
  • The grace period after an election is called before the electoral rolls are closed was extended to seven days and the time that polling places closed was changed from 8pm to 6pm.[1]

See also

References

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  4. Commonwealth Electoral Act 1924
  5. Commonwealth Electoral Act 1962