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1967 Australian referendum (Parliament)


FieldValue
name1967 Parliament referendum
date
countryAustralia
title**Question 1**
Do you approve the proposed law for the alteration of the Constitution entitled—
'An Act to alter the Constitution so that the number of members of the House of Representatives may be increased without necessarily increasing the number of Senators'?
yes2,298,669
no3,411,940
total5,801,584
electorate6,182,585
map{{Switcher
Note

the first part of the 1967 referendum, increasing the number of Members in the [[House of Representatives (Australia)

Do you approve the proposed law for the alteration of the Constitution entitled—

'An Act to alter the Constitution so that the number of members of the House of Representatives may be increased without necessarily increasing the number of Senators'? | [[File:1967 Australian referendum (Parliament).svg|350px]] | Results by electorate. | [[File:Australian referendum, 1967 (Parliament).svg|350px]] | Results by state. The first part of the 1967 Australian referendum to change the Constitution was the Parliament question, which related to the relative number of members in each house of the Australian Parliament − the so-called "nexus". The 1967 Australian referendum called by the Holt government on 27 May 1967 consisted of two parts, with the second question relating to Aboriginal Australians.

Section 24 of the Australian Constitution requires that the number of members in the House of Representatives be, as nearly as possible, twice the number of members in the Senate. The most important effect of the "nexus" in the Australian Constitution is to prevent the dilution of the collective voting power of the Senate, which represents the Australian states equally, in any joint sitting of both houses following a double dissolution election. The nexus ensures that Senators will always have about one-third of the votes in a joint sitting, and Members of the House of Representatives about two-thirds. The referendum question asked the public to vote on whether "the number of members of the House of Representatives may be increased without necessarily increasing the number of Senators". It was defeated, with 59.75% of voters voting "No" to this question.

Question

Results

StateElectoral rollBallots issuedForAgainstInformalVote%Vote%New South WalesVictoriaQueenslandSouth AustraliaWestern AustraliaTasmaniaTotal for CommonwealthResults
2,315,8282,166,5071,087,6941,044,45848.9934,355
1,734,4761,630,594496,82630.871,112,50621,262
904,808848,728370,20044.13468,6739,855
590,275560,844186,34433.91363,12011,380
437,609405,666114,84129.05280,52310,302
199,589189,24542,76423.06142,6603,821
6,182,5855,801,5842,298,66940.253,411,94090,975
*Obtained majority in one state and an overall minority of 1,113,271 votes.* **Not carried**

References

References

  1. {{Cite Legislation AU. Cth. act. coaca430. Constitution. 24 Constitution of House of Representatives.
  2. (6 April 1967). "Constitution Alteration (Parliament) 1967 and Constitution Alteration (Aboriginals) 1967: The arguments for and against". Commonwealth of Australia.
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