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Australian Electoral Commission Supplementary
AUSTRALIAN ELECTORAL COMMISSION SUPPLEMENTARY SUBMISSION TO THE JOINT STANDING COMMITTEE ON ELECTORAL MATTERS’ INQUIRY INTO THE 2001 FEDERAL ELECTION SUBMISSION IN RESPONSE TO QUESTIONS ON NOTICE Canberra 7 February 2003 Table of Contents 1. Introduction........................................................................................... 3 2. Submissions relating to overseas voting .............................................. 3 3. Submissions relating to the operation of polling booths........................ 8 4. Mr Peter Andren MP, Member for Calare’s submission...................... 15 5. The Hon. Robert McClelland MP, Member for Barton’s Submission .. 16 6. Ms Julie Irwin MP, Member for Fowler’s submissions ........................ 20 7. Electoral Reform Society of South Australia submission .................... 23 8. Mr J Rogers’ submission .................................................................... 24 9. The Hon Bob Katter MP, Member for Kennedy’s submission............. 25 10. HS Chapman Society submission ...................................................... 26 11. Liberal Party of Australia submission.................................................. 27 12. Australian Labor Party submission ..................................................... 32 13. The Greens NSW submission ............................................................ 34 14. Issues raised by the JSCEM during AEC appearances and at other times .......................................................................................................... -
Report on Economic and Finance Institute of Cambodia
THE HONOURABLE JOHN WINSTON HOWARD OM AC Citation for the conferral of Doctor of the University (honoris causa) Chancellor, it is a privilege to present to you and to this gathering, for the award of Doctor of the University (honoris causa), the Honourable John Winston Howard OM AC. The Honourable John Howard is an Australian politician who served as the 25th Prime Minister of Australia from 11 March 1996 to 3 December 2007. He is the second-longest serving Australian Prime Minister after Sir Robert Menzies. Mr Howard was a member of the House of Representatives from 1974 to 2007, representing the Division of Bennelong, New South Wales. He served as Treasurer in the Fraser government from 1977 to 1983 and was Leader of the Liberal Party and Coalition Opposition from 1985 to 1989, which included the 1987 federal election against Bob Hawke. Mr Howard was re-elected as Leader of the Opposition in 1995. He led the Liberal- National coalition to victory at the 1996 federal election, defeating Paul Keating's Labor government and ending a record 13 years of Coalition opposition. The Howard Government was re-elected at the 1998, 2001 and 2004 elections, presiding over a period of strong economic growth and prosperity. During his term as Prime Minister, Mr Howard was a supporter of Charles Sturt University and its work in addressing the needs of rural communities. Mr Howard was integral to the development of local solutions to address the chronic shortage of dentists and oral health professionals in rural and regional Australia. During his term, Mr Howard was a proponent for the establishment of dental schools in rural and regional Australia including at Charles Sturt University in Orange and Wagga Wagga and La Trobe University in Bendigo. -
2007 Election Overview and Key Issues
2 2007 election overview and key issues Background 2.1 The 2007 federal election was announced by the Prime Minister the Hon John Howard MP on Sunday 14 October 2007. Writs for the election were issued on Wednesday 17 October for the House of Representatives election and a half-Senate election.1 2.2 Once the writs are issued, a timetable is specified in the Commonwealth Electoral Act 1918 for a range of tasks and events including the close of the electoral rolls, the nomination of candidates, the declaration of nominations and polling day. The date of other events associated with the election, including the return of the writs, flow on from these events (table 2.1). 2.3 Following amendments to the Commonwealth Electoral Act in 2006, the close of rolls period changed from seven days after the issue of the writ to 8pm on the day the writs for the election are issued for a person enrolling for the first time or re-enrolling after having been removed from the roll. 2.4 The close of roll amendments also provided for a period of three ‘working days’ after the writs are issued for people to complete and submit a proof of identity compliant enrolment form in limited circumstances: if a person is 17 years of age, but will turn 18 between the day after the issue of the writs and election day (inclusive); if a person will become an Australian citizen between the day after the issue of the writs and the day before election day (inclusive); or 1 Australian Electoral Commission, submission 169, p 5. -
Report on the Conduct of the 2007 Federal Election and Matters Related Thereto
The Parliament of the Commonwealth of Australia Report on the conduct of the 2007 federal election and matters related thereto Joint Standing Committee on Electoral Matters June 2009 Canberra © Commonwealth of Australia 2009 ISBN 978-0-642-79156-6 (Printed version) ISBN 978-0-642-79157-3 (HTML version) Chair’s foreword The publication of this report into the conduct of the 2007 federal election marks 25 years since the implementation of major reforms to the Commonwealth Electoral Act 1918 which were implemented by the Commonwealth Electoral Legislation Act 1983 and came into effect for the 1984 federal election. These reforms included changes to redistribution processes, the implementation of public funding of election campaigns and the establishment of the Australian Electoral Commission (AEC). 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. Federal elections in Australia are remarkably complex logistical events. The 2007 election was the largest electoral event undertaken in Australia’s history, with 13,646,539 electors on the electoral roll, to whom 13,364,359 sets of ballot papers were issued, with some 12,930,814 actually being counted in House of Representatives Elections. Australian citizens enjoy a fundamental right to vote which has its basis in sections 7 and 24 of the Constitution. It is evident, however, that at least 466,794 electors were unable to exercise the franchise correctly at the 2007 election, either because they were not on the electoral roll, or they were on the roll with incomplete or incorrect details. -
Liberal Party of Australia (NSW Division)
PUBLIC SUGGESTION The Federal Redistribution 2009 NSW ". Public Suggestion Number 113 by The Liberal Party of Australia (NSW Division) 88 Pages • LIBERAL NEW SOUTH WALES Page: 2 The Redistribution Committee for New South Wales Level 4, Roden Cutler House 24 Campbell Street SYDNEY NSW 2000 Dear Committee Members, It is our pleasure to submit Suggestions on behalf of the Liberal Party of Australia, (New South Wales Division). We have used the Electoral Boundary Mapping System (EBMS) software provided by the AEC so that our Suggestions can easily be viewed and analysed by Committee Members and staff. Please be advised our Suggestions comprise the following: 1. A written submission with a summary of suggestions, a commentary on the methodology we have used in formulating them, the suggestions in detail as summarised by the EBMS software tracking movements between divisions and a map of each of the suggested 48 divisions generated by the EBMS mapping software; 2. The Suggestions in PDF format for display on the Committee's website, to facilitate a smooth commencement to the period allowed for Comments; and 3. The Suggestions in EBMS format which facilitates ease of analysis for Committee Members and Staff. Yours sincerely, Mark Neeham State Director _.• LIBERAL If., SOUTH WAIlS Level 9,140Will iam Street, East Sydney Mail: Locked Bag 2, Kings Cross NSW 1340 Tel: (02) 8356 0300 Fax: (02) 9331 2349 Email: secretariat©nsw.liberal.org.au METHODOLOGY At the outset, we should note that the Suggestions of the Liberal Party fully comply with the statutory requirements of Section 66 (3) of the Commonwealth Electoral Act . -
Proposed Redistribution of the New South Wales Into Electoral Divisions
Proposed redistribution of New South Wales into electoral divisions OCTOBER 2015 Report of the Redistribution Committee for New South Wales Commonwealth Electoral Act 1918 Feedback and enquiries Feedback on this report is welcome and should be directed to the contact officer. Contact officer National Redistributions Manager Roll Management Branch Australian Electoral Commission 50 Marcus Clarke Street Canberra ACT 2600 PO Box 6172 Kingston ACT 2604 Telephone: 02 6271 4411 Fax: 02 6215 9999 Email: [email protected] AEC website www.aec.gov.au Accessible services Visit the AEC website for telephone interpreter services in 18 languages. Readers who are deaf or have a hearing or speech impairment can contact the AEC through the National Relay Service (NRS): – TTY users phone 133 677 and ask for 13 23 26 – Speak and Listen users phone 1300 555 727 and ask for 13 23 26 – Internet relay users connect to the NRS and ask for 13 23 26 ISBN: 978-1-921427-38-1 © Commonwealth of Australia 2015 © State of New South Wales 2015 The report should be cited as Redistribution Committee for the New South Wales, Proposed redistribution of New South Wales into electoral divisions. 15_0526 The Redistribution Committee for New South Wales (the Committee) has completed its proposed redistribution of New South Wales into 47 electoral divisions. In developing and considering the impacts of the redistribution proposal, the Committee has satisfied itself that the proposed boundaries meet the requirements of the Commonwealth Electoral Act 1918 (Electoral Act). The Committee unanimously agreed on the boundaries and names of the proposed electoral divisions, and recommends its redistribution proposal for New South Wales. -
Australia 2007 by Aurelie Marfort
International Snapshot: Australia 2007 By Aurelie Marfort IRV system was crucial to ensure democratic results for the last Australian federal legislative election. Introduction: On November 24 th 2007, Australia elected its House of Representatives with instant runoff voting (IRV), as it has for more than eight decades. After four straight election defeats, the Labor Party won a landslide majority of seats. Under IRV, Labor's initial 44% of first choices turned into a clear majority after considering the choices of supporters of third party candidates with too little support to win seats. The Green Party's 7.79% share of the national vote largely went to Labor in House races; that share earned several senate seats elected by proportional voting. Due in large part to compulsory voting, turnout was 94.77%; Australians rank near the top of national comparisons of voter satisfaction with their government. Background: IRV or preferential voting was introduced in Australia in 1918 to deal with the “spoiler” problem created by the rise of the Country Party. Australia’s democracy faced negative side effects with the increased voter choice, as the Country Party split the right-of-center vote in rural areas, thus allowing some left-of-center Labor Party candidates to win with a minority of votes. Prime Minister Bill Hughes’ conservative government enacted IRV so as to allow competition and choice between parties but without putting seats in jeopardy. Since 1918, use of IRV has gradually been extended, and it is now applied to the House of Representatives of the Australian Parliament, in the federal, state and territory legislatures, to municipal elections, party primaries, and for some elections to corporate boards. -
Including Covers
ISSUE 32, PUBLISHED 1 AUGUST 2016 ISSN 1836-5698 (Print) ISSN 1836-5779 (Online) AustralasianAustralasian JournalJournal ofof HerpetologyHerpetology CONTENTS PAGE 2 2 Australasian Journal of Herpetology Australasian Journal of Herpetology Issue 32, 1 August 2016 Contents Carphodactylidae reviewed: Four new genera, four new subgenera, nine new species and four new subspecies within the Australian gecko family (Squamata: Sauria). ... Raymond T. Hoser, 3-25. A division of the genus Corucia Gray, 1855, the Giant Skink, from the Solomon Islands, into five geographically separated species. ... Raymond T. Hoser, 26-32. A re-evaluation of the Crocodile Skinks, genus Tribolonotus Duméril and Bibron, 1839 sensu lato including the division of the genus into three, description of three new species, a new subspecies and the placement of all within a new tribe. ... Raymond T. Hoser, 33-39. These dragons are not all the same! A break up of the Australian agamid species Adelynhosersaur spinipes (Duméril and Bibron, 1851) into three subspecies. ... Raymond T. Hoser, 40-46. Stuck in the jungle! A break up of the Australian agamid species Hypsilurus boydii (Macleay, 1884). ... Raymond T. Hoser, 47-49. No longer a monotypic lizard genus. A new species of Gnypetoscincus Wells and Wellington, 1983 from the Wet Tropics of North Queensland, Australia. ... Raymond T. Hoser, 50-52. A new subspecies of Daraninagama robinsonii (Boulenger, 1908) from the Cameron Highlands, Malaysia (Squamata: Sauria: Agamidae) and a critical review of a critical review. ... Raymond T. Hoser, 53-60. A redefinition of the Tiliqua Gray, 1825 (sensu lato) group of lizards from the Australian bioregion including the erection of a new genus to accommodate a divergent species. -
The Table, Volume 86, 2018
VOL. 86 FOR 2018 T H E J O U R N A L O F T H E S OC I E T Y O F C L E R K S - AT- T H E - TA B L E I N COMMONWE A LT H PA R L I AME N T S VOLUME 86 2018 £15.00 Journal of the Society of Clerks-at-the-Table in Commonwealth Parliaments Please check colours, board and finish with Kinnaird marketing Green and red should match Vol.75 2007 edition???? The Table THE JOURNAL OF THE SOCIETY OF CLERKS-AT-THE-TABLE IN COMMONWEALTH PARLIAMENTS EDITED BY LUKE HUSSEY VOLUME 86 2018 THE SOCIETY OF CLERKS-AT-THE-TABLE IN COMMONWEALTH PARLIAMENTS HOUSE OF LORDS LONDON SW1A 0PW 86 The Table v3 .indd 1 21/11/2018 08:54 The Table 2018 ©The Society of Clerks-at-the-Table in Commonwealth Parliaments 2018 ISBN 0-904979-43-1 ISSN 0264-7133 86 The Table v3 .indd 2 21/11/2018 08:54 CONTENTS Editorial 1 Archibald Milman and the 1894 Finance Bill 10 COLIN LEE Party voting in the New Zealand House of Representatives 40 DAVID WILSON The Lord Speaker's Committee on the size of the House of Lords: a new approach to turning the oil tanker 48 TOM WILSON Conduct in the Jersey States Assembly 55 MARK EGAN The Strathclyde Review: effective scrunity of secondary legislation? 58 PAUL BRISTOW Miscellaneous notes 63 Comparative study: dissolution of Parliament 115 Privilege 144 Standing orders 163 Sitting days 179 Unparliamentary expressions 182 Books on parliament in 2017 191 Index 197 iii 86 The Table v3 .indd 3 21/11/2018 08:54 86 The Table v3 .indd 4 21/11/2018 08:54 The Table The Journal of the Society of Clerks-at-the-Table in Commonwealth Parliaments EDITORIAL This edition of The Table sees a welcome return to Colin Lee’s series on Archibald Milman, this time considering the passage of the legislation giving effect to the 1894 Budget through the House of Commons, and the procedural issues that arose. -
These Dragons Are Not All the Same! a Break up of the Australian Agamid Species Adelynhosersaur Spinipes (Duméril and Bibron, 1851) Into Three Subspecies
40 Australasian Journal of Herpetology Australasian Journal of Herpetology 32:40-46. ISSN 1836-5698 (Print) Published 1 August 2016. ISSN 1836-5779 (Online) These dragons are not all the same! A break up of the Australian agamid species Adelynhosersaur spinipes (Duméril and Bibron, 1851) into three subspecies. RAYMOND T. HOSER 488 Park Road, Park Orchards, Victoria, 3134, Australia. Phone: +61 3 9812 3322 Fax: 9812 3355 E-mail: snakeman (at) snakeman.com.au Received 10 January 2016, Accepted 15 April 2016, Published 1 August 2016. ABSTRACT Fieldwork in wetter forests in hillier parts of coastal New South Wales and Queensland (Australia) spanning some two decades yielded morphologically distinct variants of the putative species Adelynhosersaur spinipes (Duméril and Bibron, 1851). Museum records from the Australian Museum in Sydney and the Queensland Museum in Brisbane show these populations to be allopatric and separated by significant dry zone gaps, which these lizards would have extreme difficulty in bridging. As each population are clearly evolving independently, they are herein formally named as subspecies according to the International Code of Zoological Nomenclature (Ride et al. 1999). Only the nominate form has an available name. The three new subspecies being named herein are Adelynhosersaur spinipes adelynae subsp. nov., A. spinipes jackyae subsp. nov. and A. spinipes wilkiei subsp. nov. respectively. Keywords: Taxonomy; Nomenclature; Lizards; Dragon; Queensland; New South Wales; Australia; rainforest; Adelynhosersaur; Hypsilurus; -
FUTURE DIRECTIONS for Local Government City of Ryde Submission
FUTURE DIRECTIONS for Local Government City of Ryde Submission Executive Summary The City of Ryde welcomes the opportunity to provide this submission on Future Directions for Local Government and wishes to make the following key points: 1. Consultation The City of Ryde is concerned that the consultation undertaken by the Panel has been inadequate given the significant impact the recommendations could have on local communities. Council has supplemented the consultation program and has included the outcomes with this submission. We strongly recommend that prior to any further action being taken or recommendations being finalised that further more extensive consultation be undertaken. 2. Larger local government areas The City of Ryde does not believe that the case that ‘bigger is better’ has been made by the Panel. A significant amount of research and a number of experiences identified in our submission do not support the Panel’s position with regard to the amalgamation of metropolitan Councils. We believe that amalgamation would be at the expense of recognising communities of interest and appropriate local representation. We also believe that the value placed by residents on adequate local representation has not been quantified or recognised by the Panel. 3. Relationship with State Government As outlined in our submission, the City of Ryde feels that the Panel’s recommendations specifically with regard to Ryde are at odds with current and developing State plans and regions. We feel that based on this the recommendation that Ryde align with Parramatta, Auburn and Holroyd is inconsistent and illogical. In addition, it is clear that many areas of reform for local government will require significant and long term commitment from the State sector. -
UQFL231 Frank Moorhouse Collection
FRYER LIBRARY Manuscript Finding Aid UQFL231 Frank Moorhouse Collection Size 158 boxes, 1 parcel Contents Literary drafts, personal papers, correspondence, research notes, newspaper cuttings, financial records, subject folders, cassette tapes. Date range 1957 onwards Biography Frank Moorhouse began his writing career as a cadet journalist on the Sydney Daily Telegraph. Later he worked on several country newspapers and became editor of the Australian Worker in 1963. His involvement in the politics of journalism and writing led to terms as a union organiser for the Workers Education Association and the Australian Journalists Association. Moorhouse was also president of the Australian Society of Authors (1981-1983) and was involved in the efforts of writers to protect their copyright against large-scale photocopying. Particularly early in his career, Moorhouse was known for his use of the ‘discontinuous narrative’, an innovative narrative method using interconnected stories. In the 1960s and 70s, he was identified as a ‘Balmain writer’, one of a group of politically radical and sexually experimental writers, whose influences included the ‘Sydney Libertarianism’ of John Anderson. Many of Moorhouse’s early works were set in ‘le ghetto Balmain’, particularly The Americans Baby (1972), which established him as a leading short fiction writer. Balmain was also the subject of much of his anthology, Days of Wine and Rage (1980). Moorhouse was co-founder of the short story magazine Tabloid Story (1972) and edited the last issue (1973) of Coast to Coast and other short story anthologies. He has also written screenplays and articles for newspapers and periodicals. He was one of the first recipients of an Australia Council Creative Fellowship, living and working in Europe for four years researching and writing his historical novel Grand Days (1993) and its sequel Dark Palace (2000).