Australian referendum, 1977 (Referendums)

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Constitution Alteration (Referendums) 1977 proposed to allow residents in the territories to vote in referendums. Residents in territories were to be counted towards the national total, but would not be counted toward any state total. The question was put to a referendum in the Australian referendum, 1977.

It is proposed to alter the Constitution so as to allow electors in the territories, as well as electors in the states, to vote at referendums on proposed laws to alter the Constitution.

Do you approve the proposed law?

Result
State On

rolls

Ballots

issued

For Against Informal
   %    %
New South Wales 3,007,511 2,774,388 2,292,822  %83.92 439,247  %16.08 42,319
Victoria 2,252,831 2,083,136 1,647,187  %80.78 391,855  %19.22 44,094
Queensland 1,241,426 1,138,842 670,820  %59.58 455,051  %40.42 12,971
South Australia 799,243 745,990 606,743  %83.29 121,770  %16.71 17,477
Western Australia 682,291 617,463 437,751  %72.62 165,049  %27.38 14,663
Tasmania 259,081 246,063 150,346  %62.25 91,184  %37.75 4,533
Total for Commonwealth 8,242,383 7,605,882 5,805,669  %77.72 1,664,156  %22.28 136,057
Obtained majority in all six States and an overall

majority of 4,141,513 votes.

Carried

At the time of Federation the very few people who lived in the Northern Territory voted as residents of South Australia. Territorians could therefore vote in constitutional referendums. When the Territory was surrendered to the Commonwealth in 1911, however, its citizens lost the vote in such referendums, due to the failure to refer to Territory voters in s. 128. Residents of the Australian Capital Territory were similarly restricted. In 1967 demonstrations against this restriction upon civil rights occurred in Alice Springs, as Territorians expressed their resentment at not being able to vote in the Aborigines referendum.

In the 1974 referendum the Whitlam Government attempted to amend s. 128 in a double-pronged proposal. Territorial voting rights in referendums were sought, but the Government also proposed that constitutional amendments could be carried with just half of the States — instead of a majority of States — voting in favour. Only New South Wales supported the proposal, but it is likely that had the Territories section been a separate question, it would have been ratified.

In 1977 the question of Territory votes was relatively uncontroversial, being carried in every State, gaining a national YES vote of 77.7 per cent, though Queensland (40.4 per cent) and Tasmania (37.8 per cent) had quite large NO votes. It has been claimed that the high vote of approval was a reminder of Australia's honourable record of electoral reform — that the amendment had 'Australian political tradition behind it'. Despite John Paul of the University of New South Wales dismissing the change as the granting of a 'hollow privilege', the Canberra Times stated that people in both Territories should be grateful, 'for the universal acknowledgment that their natural right to vote in future referendums will now be given the force of law'.

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