Focus on Politics: Australian Capital Territory
Neil Pharaoh
How much do you know about politics in the ACT? Some of its history might surprise you, plus five important lessons from the ACT no matter where you live.˜
While ?Canberra? is often shorthand for federal parliament, the ACT legislative assembly and Canberra politics presents a unique insight into a different form of voting for our capital territory and has some very interesting insights, policy initiatives and outcomes for a small jurisdiction.˜
Prior to 1988 the ACT was administrated by a federal government minister for the capital territories, meaning no elected local, state or territory government.˜ In fact, when the residents of the ACT were asked if they wanted self-government in 1978, over 63.75 per cent of the population wanted to retain existing arrangements, and less than 31 per cent wanted self-government.˜˜
Notwithstanding this rejection of self-government, about a decade later it was thrust upon the people of the ACT in a series of self-government Acts in 1988. This curious jurisdiction went on to elect 3 members of the legislative assembly from the No Self Government Party to the first legislature after self-government was introduced. The people of Canberra definitely know how to lodge a protest vote!
In continuing this trend for quirky parties, rejecting self-government and generally making politicians sweat for their pay cheque, the ACT also has one of the most complex voting systems in Australia.˜˜
In 1992 the Hare-Clark multi-member electorate proportional representation system, with Robson rotation, was introduced to replace the previous D?Hondt method. The Robson rotation means ballots are different. The order on mine will be different to the order of yours, for instance. This unique system creates a few quirks with political stakeholders in what is the statistically most well-educated State or Territory in Australia (and also the highest average income). Psephologists ? political scientists ? eat your hearts out!
Wherever you are in Australia there are five really important lessons from the ACT:
- The political parties have less control on who is elected than every other state or territory in Australia
- Minority governments have largely been the norm since 1988 with only a couple of short exceptions
- Labor has been in government in the ACT since 2001 and if or when re-election occurs in 2024 will have had 23 years of continuous government, across three chief ministers.˜
- The ACT is a jurisdiction which provides innovative economic, social and other policies ?tested? on the population and scaled often across Australia
- It is Australia?s only ?republic? having no crown representative.˜