Australian electoral system: Difference between revisions

→‎Compulsory voting in Australia: Fixing the first-person text and other tweaks to the prose
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(→‎Compulsory voting in Australia: Fixing the first-person text and other tweaks to the prose)
 
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Both the Centre squeeze effect and the moderating effect of viable more extreme parties cause a polarization in the centre and an underserving of moderates.
 
Another major reason that Australia has a two-party system is that the House is elected by electoral division (also called seats, electorates, or constituencies). To win an electoral division, a candidate must gather 50% of the preferences of the voters in that electorate, after [[IRV|redistribution of preferences from eliminated candidates]]. This leads to minority parties not winning seats, as, although there may be a large total number of first-preference voters for the minority party, they are distributed among the divisions, and do not gain a majority of preferences in any particular seat. Since each multi winner district has a limited number of seats this means that there is a lower bound on the percentage of voters who need to support them in each district not across the country.
 
The system of electoral division means that a party can win a majority of seats without enjoying a majority of voter support, if the "majority party by voters" voters are many in number in a few electorates, and few in number in the majority of electorates. Moreover, losing ballots in each electorate have no affect on the composition of the House of Representatives. When done purposely, this phenomenon is known as [[Gerrymandering]]. Thankfully Australia sees little true Gerrymandering, as division boundaries are directed by the independent Australian Electoral Commission.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.aph.gov.au/About_Parliament/House_of_Representatives/Powers_practice_and_procedure/Practice7/HTML/Chapter3/Electoral_divisions|title=Electoral divisions|website=Parliament of Australia|url-status=live}}</ref> To remedy this issue, an electoral system that guarantees a measure of [[Proportional Representation|proportional representation]] has to be used.
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== Compulsory voting in Australia ==
 
Although in theory it is compulsory to vote in Australia and 95% of Australians do, it is not a strictly enforceable law. All that is really required by law is that the voter show up to a polling place between 7am and 6pm on polling day (always a Saturday) and have their name ticked of the electoral roll. Once in the polling booth, due to the secret ballot, what you do is up to you, that is whether you choose to register a "formal ballot" or an "informal (spoilt) ballot paper". A fine for failing doregister soat willthe setvoting youbooth backfrequently $50results in a fine, unless youone havehas a 'valid and reasonable excuse' as defined by the [[Australian Electoral Commission]] (AEC), what actually constitutes a valid excuse is of course a safely guarded secret. Even if one fails to turn up on polling day and receive a letter after the election, one still has the opportunity to provide a reasonable excuse (perhaps saying "I did vote; there must be an error in your records").
 
But even if you fail to turn up on polling day and receive a letter afterwards for a fine unless you can provide a reasonable excuse, even then all you have to say is that 'I did vote'. They cannot prove that you didn't, maybe your name wasn't crossed off the electoral roll properly.
 
=== Advantages of compulsory voting in Australia ===
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=== Disadvantages of compulsory voting ===
The small fee for non-compliance doesn't deter many voters.
I really cannot be bothered voting. It's only $50 a year for non-compliance
 
== External links ==
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[[Category:Forms of government]]
[[Category:Australia]]