1992 Australian Capital Territory electoral system referendum
1992 Australian Capital Territory electoral system referendum
15 February 1992
Please put the number '1' in one of the boxes below to show which electoral system you believe should be used to elect members of the Australian Capital Territory Legislative Assembly. EITHER A proportional representation (Hare–Clark) system OR A single member electorates system[1]
The 1992 Australian Capital Territory electoral system referendum was a referendum held on 15 February 1992, asking voters in the Australian Capital Territory (ACT) to choose their electoral system. The referendum took place alongside the 1992 ACT election.
By a comfortable margin, voters chose Hare–Clark, which came into effect at the 1995 ACT election. A second referendum, also held in 1995, saw voters support entrenching the principles of Hare–Clark.[2][3]
Background
Under Hare–Clark, the ACT would be divided into two five-member electorates and one seven-member electorate (these became Brindabella, Ginninderra and Molonglo respectively).[4] The only other Australian jurisdiction using Hare–Clark was Tasmania, which used the system for its lower house.
Under single-member electorates, 17 different seats would be created, each electing one MLA.[4] This was the system used in the lower houses of all Australian states (excluding Tasmania, which used it for its upper house) and the federal House of Representatives.[5]
Campaign
Beginning in 1990, ongoing debate took place about the ACT's electoral system.[6] Opinion polling in 1990 and 1991 showed single-member seats with a significant lead, including as high as 53% compared to 27% for Hare–Clark.[7] However, this began to change as the referendum date approached.[4] A January 1992 poll showed single-member seats with only a one-point lead, and in the final Canberra Times/Datacol poll conducted just days before the vote, Hare–Clark had taken the lead with 51% compared to 29% for single-member seats.[4][8]
Result
Hare–Clark was comfortably chosen as the preferred system, with 65.3% of voters supporting it, while 34.7% voted in favour of single-member electorates.[9] The result was projected on the night of the referendum, with Hare–Clark supporters declaring it as a victory for "people power".[10]