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Tasmanian Legislative Council

 

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Tasmanian Legislative Council



 
 
The Legislative Council, or upper house, is one of the two chambers of the Parliament of Tasmania
Parliament of Tasmania

The Parliament of Tasmania consists of the Tasmanian Legislative Council, Tasmanian House of Assembly and the Monarch represented by the Governor of Tasmania....
 in Australia
Australia

Australia, officially the Commonwealth of Australia, is a country in the southern hemisphere comprising the Australia of the world's smallest continent, the major island of Tasmania, and numerous list of islands of Australia in the Indian Ocean and Pacific Oceans....
. The other is the House of Assembly
Tasmanian House of Assembly

The House of Assembly, or lower house, is one of the two chambers of the Parliament of Tasmania in Australia. The other is the Tasmanian Legislative Council....
. It sits in Parliament House
Parliament House, Hobart

Parliament House, Hobart has been the meeting place of the Government of Tasmania since 1841. The building was originally designed as a customs house, and from 1841 until 1904 when the customs offices were relocated, the building served both purposes....
 in the state capital, Hobart
Hobart

Hobart is the List of Australian capital cities and most populous city of the Australian island state of Tasmania. Founded in 1803 as a penal colony, Hobart is Australia's second oldest capital city after Sydney....
.

Council has 15 members selected by the preferential
Instant-runoff voting

Instant-runoff voting is the American English term for a voting system used for Single-winner voting system, in which voting rank candidates in an order of preference....
 method within 15 single-member seats. Each seat is intended to represent approximately the same population in each electorate. Members of the Legislative Council are often referred to as MLCs.

Members in the council come up for re-election separately every six years.






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The Legislative Council, or upper house, is one of the two chambers of the Parliament of Tasmania
Parliament of Tasmania

The Parliament of Tasmania consists of the Tasmanian Legislative Council, Tasmanian House of Assembly and the Monarch represented by the Governor of Tasmania....
 in Australia
Australia

Australia, officially the Commonwealth of Australia, is a country in the southern hemisphere comprising the Australia of the world's smallest continent, the major island of Tasmania, and numerous list of islands of Australia in the Indian Ocean and Pacific Oceans....
. The other is the House of Assembly
Tasmanian House of Assembly

The House of Assembly, or lower house, is one of the two chambers of the Parliament of Tasmania in Australia. The other is the Tasmanian Legislative Council....
. It sits in Parliament House
Parliament House, Hobart

Parliament House, Hobart has been the meeting place of the Government of Tasmania since 1841. The building was originally designed as a customs house, and from 1841 until 1904 when the customs offices were relocated, the building served both purposes....
 in the state capital, Hobart
Hobart

Hobart is the List of Australian capital cities and most populous city of the Australian island state of Tasmania. Founded in 1803 as a penal colony, Hobart is Australia's second oldest capital city after Sydney....
.

Overview

The Council has 15 members selected by the preferential
Instant-runoff voting

Instant-runoff voting is the American English term for a voting system used for Single-winner voting system, in which voting rank candidates in an order of preference....
 method within 15 single-member seats. Each seat is intended to represent approximately the same population in each electorate. Members of the Legislative Council are often referred to as MLCs.

Members in the council come up for re-election separately every six years. Elections will be held in three divisions one year, then two divisions the next year; following this pattern. The council can block supply and force any government to election. The council cannot be dissolved as there is nothing in the Tasmania
Tasmania

Tasmania is an Australian island and States and territories of Australia of the same name. It is located south of the eastern side of the continent, being separated from it by Bass Strait....
n constitution to allow this. The council cannot be reformed or abolished because the constitution does not recognise public referenda
Referendum

A referendum , ballot question, or plebiscite is a direct vote in which an entire Constituency is asked to either accept or reject a particular proposal....
. The only way reform could occur is with the council's own approval.

Tasmania's Legislative Council has never been controlled by a single political party; voters in Tasmania
Tasmania

Tasmania is an Australian island and States and territories of Australia of the same name. It is located south of the eastern side of the continent, being separated from it by Bass Strait....
 have always supported independents over candidates endorsed by political parties. Labor
Australian Labor Party

The Australian Labor Party is an List of political parties in Australia.Known as the Australian Labor Party#Etymology for short, the party is the current governing party of Australia, since the Australian federal election, 2007....
 endorses a few candidates in some Legislative Council elections. The Labor party is the most successful of any political party in the council, there have been 18 Labor members in the Council's history. The Liberal
Liberal Party of Australia

The Liberal Party of Australia is an List of political parties in Australia.Founded a year after the Australian federal election, 1943 to replace the United Australia Party, the centre-right Liberal Party competes with the centre-left Australian Labor Party for political office....
s maintain the view that the Legislative Council 'is not a party house', however in past elections the party has endorsed candidates with little success. The Liberals have only ever had two members in the Legislative Council—one of these, Peter McKay
Peter McKay (Australian politician)

Peter Charles McKay was a member of the Tasmanian Legislative Council from 1976 until 1999.McKay was first elected as an independent member in the Electoral division of Pembroke after his father, Ben McKay died in office....
, was first elected as an independent in 1976 but became a Liberal in 1991. The party instead backs independent conservatives, many of whom were previously Liberal candidates or members at state or federal level. The Tasmanian Greens
Tasmanian Greens

The Tasmanian Greens are a political party in Australia who developed from numerous environmental campaigns in Tasmania, including the flooding of Lake Pedder and the building of the Franklin Dam....
 endorse candidates in elections but have yet to win a seat on the council.

Candidates for Legislative Council elections are required to limit their expenditure to a specified limit ($10,000 in 2005; increasing by $500 per year). In addition, no other person or political party may incur expenditure to promote a candidate. This is a unique requirement in Australia: no other Australian state or federal elections are subject to expenditure limits.

As the Government is formed in the House of Assembly, a much smaller proportion of the Ministry comes from the Council. Currently the member for Derwent
Electoral division of Derwent

The Electoral division of Derwent is one of the fifteen electorates or 'seats' in the Tasmanian Legislative Council. It is situated in the south of the state and is named after the Derwent River, Tasmania....
 Michael Aird
Michael Aird

The Honourable Michael Anthony Aird is a Tasmanian politician. He has been an Australian Labor Party member of the Tasmanian Legislative Council in the Electoral division of Derwent since 1995....
 holds the Treasury portfolio, member for Rumney
Electoral division of Rumney

The Electoral division of Rumney is one of the 15 electorates or 'seats' in the Tasmanian Legislative Council . The division is located in Southern Tasmania to the east of the Electoral division of Pembroke....
 Lin Thorp
Lin Thorp

Lin Estelle Thorp is an Australian Labor Party politician and member of the Tasmanian Legislative Council in the Hobart based electoral division of Rumney since 1999....
 holds the Human Services portfolio and member for Pembroke
Electoral division of Pembroke

The Electoral Division of Pembroke is one of the 15 electorates or 'seats' in the Tasmanian Legislative Council or upper house. It is located on Hobart's Eastern Shore and includes a number of suburbs; Risdon Vale, Tasmania, Geilston Bay, Tasmania, Rose Bay, Lindisfarne, Tasmania, Warrane, Tasmania, Mornington, Tasmania, Bellerive, Tasmania...
 Allison Ritchie
Allison Ritchie

Allison Maree Ritchie was an Australian Labor Party politician in the Tasmanian Legislative Council . She was a member of the Hobart based seat of electoral division of Pembroke....
 the Planning and Workplace Relations portfolio.

History

The Tasmanian Legislative Council was first created in 1825 as a unicameral legislature. The Australian Colonies Act passed by the British Parliament gave Van Diemens Land a free government when it split from New South Wales
New South Wales

New South Wales is Australia's oldest and most populous States and territories of Australia, located in the south-east of the country, north of Victoria and south of Queensland....
. Starting as a body with six nominee members chosen by the Governor of Tasmania, an Imperial Act in 1828 enabled its expansion to 15 members, with the Governor as Presiding Officer.

The Council remained fully nominative until 21 October 1851, when the council was expanded to 24 members, with sixteen of them facing the voters and eight nominated by the Governor, who ceased to be a member. The first Speaker of the new Council was Sir Richard Dry
Richard Dry

Sir Richard Dry, Order of St Michael and St George was an Australian politician, who was Premier of Tasmania from 24 November 1866 until 1 August 1869 when he died in office....
. The franchise
Suffrage

Suffrage is the civil right to vote, or the exercise of that right. In that context, it is also called political franchise or simply the franchise....
 for these elections was extremely limited—only men over 30 could vote, and were required to own a certain amount of property. Former convicts, who made up a significant percentage of the colony's population, were not able to vote. The 1851 arrangements were a compromise struck by the Governor between the colonists' demands for representative government and the British Colonial Office's wish to control the colony through the Governor.

On 24 October 1856, an Act was proclaimed permitting the introduction of a bicameral, representative Parliament with the creation of the Tasmanian House of Assembly
Tasmanian House of Assembly

The House of Assembly, or lower house, is one of the two chambers of the Parliament of Tasmania in Australia. The other is the Tasmanian Legislative Council....
, where the power of the executive government resided, and the abolition of nominee positions on the Council. The Speaker's position was renamed President. An interesting feature of the Act is that it does not enable the Governor to dissolve the Legislative Council.

Like other democratic upper houses of that period, it was established using single-member seats elected using the first-past-the-post system, with Hobart and Launceston
Electoral district of Launceston

The Electoral district of Launceston was a multi-member electoral district of the Tasmanian House of Assembly. It was based in Tasmania's second city, Launceston, Tasmania, and the surrounding rural area....
 being created as multi-member seats. Voters would simply cross off the names of those whom they did not wish to vote for. Members were elected to a six-year term, and terms were staggered in such a way that two or three members' terms expired each year and elections were held in the first week of May. In the event of resignation or death of a member during their term, a by-election
By-election

A by-election or bye-election is an election held to fill a political office that has become vacant between regularly-scheduled elections....
 would be held to complete their term.

The 1907 reforms which saw the House of Assembly switch to using the Hare-Clark system, introduced preferential voting
Instant-runoff voting

Instant-runoff voting is the American English term for a voting system used for Single-winner voting system, in which voting rank candidates in an order of preference....
 to the Council. A redistribution in 1946 broke up the two multi-member seats into single-member seats.

Suffrage gradually improved from the late 19th century onwards, with the property franchise being first eased then abolished; ex-convicts, ex-servicemen and then women being granted the vote; the age of majority being reduced; and finally, full adult suffrage in 1968. The first woman to sit on the Legislative Council was Margaret McIntyre
Margaret McIntyre

Margaret Edgeworth David McIntyre Order of the British Empire was the first woman elected to the Parliament of Tasmania , representing the seat of Cornwall in the Tasmanian Legislative Council....
 in 1948. The first woman to chair the upper house was Phyllis Benjamin
Phyllis Benjamin

Phyllis Jean Benjamin Order of Australia, Order of the British Empire Australian Labor Party politician, was a member of the Tasmanian Legislative Council in the electorate of Hobart from 10 May 1952 until retirement in 1976....
 in 1956.

In the 1990s, various Tasmanian governments attempted to cut the size of parliament. Various reports proposed reducing the Tasmanian Legislative Council from 19 seats to 15. Others including the Morling Report proposed abolishing the Council and merging some of the electorates into the Tasmanian House of Assembly
Tasmanian House of Assembly

The House of Assembly, or lower house, is one of the two chambers of the Parliament of Tasmania in Australia. The other is the Tasmanian Legislative Council....
. However the council wouldn't agree to any of these proposals. During Tony Rundle
Tony Rundle

Anthony Maxwell Rundle was the Premier of the Australian State of Tasmania from 18 March 1996 to 14 September 1998. He succeeded Ray Groom and was succeeded himself by Jim Bacon....
's government the Legislative Council finally allowed the Parliamentary Reform Bill 1998 passage, reducing the number of seats in the chamber from 19 to 15, and redistributing all seats through an independent Distribution Tribunal, abolishing a previous rural bias which had led to unequal seats. However, the seats were not named after their geographic location, often using arcane land district or county
Cadastral divisions of Tasmania

The Cadastral Divisions of Tasmania refer to the division of Tasmania into land districts and parishes for cadastral purposes, which are part of the cadastral divisions of Australia....
 names unfamiliar to most residents, so considerable confusion for voters ensued in determining which seat they were to vote within.

Current Distribution of Seats


See also

  • Parliaments of the Australian states and territories
    Parliaments of the Australian states and territories

    The Parliaments of the Australian states and territories are legislative bodies within the federal framework of the Australia. Before the formation of the Commonwealth in 1901, the six Australian colonies were self-governing, with parliaments which had come into existence at various times between 1825, when the New South Wales Legislative Cou...
  • List of members of the Tasmanian Legislative Council
  • List of Legislative Council divisions
    Tasmanian Legislative Council electoral divisions

    The Tasmanian Legislative Council has fifteen single member constituencies.Members of the Legislative Council serve for a six year term. An election is called one year for two of the fifteen divisions, the next year an election is called in three divisions, this is done on a rotating basis....


External links