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Section 25 of the Constitution of Australia

Section 25 of the Constitution of Australia is a provision of the Constitution of Australia headed "Provision as to races disqualified from voting" and providing that "For the purposes of the last section, if by the law of any State all persons of any race are disqualified from voting at elections for the more numerous House of the Parliament of the State, then, in reckoning the number of the people of the State or of the Commonwealth, persons of that race resident in that State shall not be counted."[1]

History

The section was proposed during the concluding stages of the Australian frontier wars in the 1891 constitutional convention by Andrew Inglis Clark, the then Tasmanian Attorney-General.[2] Clark adapted the wording from section 2 of the Fourteenth Amendment to the US Constitution, which was introduced in 1868 following the US Civil War during the Reconstruction era and intended to deter states from excluding certain races from voting in the United States of America. Unlike section 25 in Australia, however, the US provision made no direct reference to race,[3] and was designed for a different purpose with the Confederate States of America. For instance, the population of the Union was 18.5 million around the time of the Reconstruction era, when the 14th Amendment was included as a discretionary provision. However, in the Confederacy, the population during the civil war is listed as 5.5 million free and 3.5 million enslaved - which made a clear statement to the confederate states that representative numbers on a federal level would be effected, if they precluded their respective citizens on grounds such as race, on a state level, after their defeat by the Union in 1865.[4]

Section 2 of the 14th Amendment reads,

Representatives shall be apportioned among the several states according to their respective numbers, counting the whole number of persons in each state, excluding Indians not taxed. But when the right to vote at any election for the choice of electors for President and Vice President of the United States, Representatives in Congress, the executive and judicial officers of a state, or the members of the legislature thereof, is denied to any of the male inhabitants of such state, being twenty-one years of age, and citizens of the United States, or in any way abridged, except for participation in rebellion, or other crime, the basis of representation therein shall be reduced in the proportion which the number of such male citizens shall bear to the whole number of male citizens twenty-one years of age in such state.[5]

At the time what became section 25 was introduced to the draft there was not intended to be a separate federal franchise. Rather, those permitted to vote in lower house elections at state level would form the make-up of the Commonwealth franchise. One argument is that the drafters included it to ensure that a state could not on the one hand exclude people of a race from voting at the Commonwealth level, while also benefiting from their inclusion in the population when determining the number of representatives that state would elect to the House of Representatives.[6] During the convention, it was argued that such a clause should be broader in order to prevent disenfranchisement such as that caused by property ownership qualifications in Western Australia, but this was never expanded on as it would have had no deterrent effect given Western Australia was to receive the minimum five representatives upon federation regardless.[7] Later in the drafting process, section 30 was introduced, allowing the Commonwealth to legislate its own voting franchise, thus enabling the Commonwealth government to theoretically exclude certain races from voting in federal elections with no corresponding effect on the number of representatives in each state.[8] Section 25 was nevertheless retained, despite this ambiguity, leaving future speculation on the application subject to conjecture for the new population of 3,773,801 Australian citizens recorded under the 1901 census[9] - excluding Aboriginals who were not formally included within the census until 1971, due to section 127.[10]

Despite section 25's purported intention to deter future disenfranchisement on the basis of race,[11] following the spirit of the Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution, in practice it has been of little effect to date. The existence of section 127 in the Constitution, which excluded Aboriginal people from being counted in population data, meant that the exclusion of Aboriginal people from state franchise had no effect on a state's population in applying section 24 to determine the make-up of the House of Representatives.[12] Likewise, it had little effect on the exclusion of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islanders in other ways, such as Queensland's exclusion of Aboriginal populations through the Aboriginals Protection and Restriction of the Sale of Opium Act 1897, or other races, as they were either insignificant in number in relation to the broader population or could be excluded by other means, such as on the basis of nationality under the Immigration Restriction Act 1901 and similar barriers, such as language testing,[13] which would not trigger section 25. By the time section 127 was formally repealed in 1967, allowing the Aboriginal population to be fully counted in determining representation in federal parliament, the last state - Queensland - had only included Aboriginal people in their respective franchise just two years earlier.[12]

There has been no direct High Court judgements relating to the application of section 25. This is largely because its existence has always been of little to no effect to date, and because any dispute over its application is unlikely to have been in relation to a population large enough to have any effect on the representation numbers in Parliament. It has however been referred to in numerous cases, in relation to matters such as universal franchise, voting equality, and the definition of people of the Commonwealth. High Court Justice Kirby referred to it in passing as support for the proposition that racial qualifications have been eliminated from voting.[14]

Reform

The repeal of section 25 has been put to referendum twice.[15] In 1967, alongside the referendum in relation to Aboriginals, it was put forward to be repealed as part of an amendment to the Constitution that would have removed the nexus between the number of representatives in the House of Representatives and the number of senators in the Senate.[16] The nexus question failed to get a majority nationwide, as it was a separate question from the second question relating to the repeal of section 127 and amendment of section 51(xxvi) the 'race power', which was overwhelmingly successful.[17] Receiving just 40% of the yes vote under the nexus question,[18] the question of the repeal of section 25 would have easily been supported if it was inclusive directly within the second question, that received 90.77% of the Australian votes and set the record for the "highest ‘yes’ vote ever recorded in a federal referendum".[19]

Later, in 1974, section 25 was to be repealed as part of a constitutional amendment enshrining the concept of "one vote, one value" in the Constitution by ensuring electorates at state and federal level would be based on population and not geographic size or other methods. Again, this referendum was defeated and it was not a direct question related to the repeal of section 25, receiving only 47% of the national yes vote, and only attaining a majority in New South Wales. Both of these referendums to repeal section 25 failed for reasons far more complex, than any controversy or spurious arguments around the application of section 25.

Recommendations for the repeal of section 25 date back as far as the 1959 Parliamentary Joint Committee on Constitutional Review.[20]

The 1975 Australian Constitutional Convention referred to the section as outmoded and expended and recommended it be repealed. Likewise, the Constitutional Commission in 1988 suggested it be repealed on the basis that it was outmoded and archaic.[15] In a roundtable discussion on reforming the Constitution by the House Standing Committee on Legal and Constitutional Affairs in 2008 - Chapter 5.9 of the submission stated that,

Section 25 no longer has any significant legal effect, as the Racial Discrimination Act 1975 (Cth) would prevent the States from discriminating against people on grounds of race. Nevertheless, section 25 ‘recognises that people might constitutionally be denied the franchise on the ground of race'.[21]

In their submission to the Expert Panel on Constitutional Recognition of Indigenous Australians in 2010, the Centre for Comparative Constitutional Studies recommended section 25 to be repealed.[22]

Section 25 has often been described as a relic from Australia's constitutional history which should be removed.[23]

Contemporary proposals

Along with the Joint Select Committee on Constitutional Recognition of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Peoples in 2015,[24] the Expert Panel has described their contribution in 2012 as only the 'first word, not the last word'.[25] The Joint Select Committees in 2015 and 2018 discussed the removal of section 25 as a roundtable discussion question and recommended it to be repealed.[26][27]

More recently, it has been suggested section 25 be removed on the basis that it contemplates the possibility that a state may disenfranchise a race of people.[28] The Expert Panel on Recognising Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Peoples in the Constitution, in a report released in January 2012, among other things, recommended that section 25 be removed.[29] As Anne Twomey suggests, some of the emotive criticism surrounding section 25 is possibly misguided, with some contributors on the panel seeming to be of the belief that section 25 allows a state to prohibit people of a race from voting in the future, given the wording of the section. She argues that section 25 neither allows nor disallows such action, but merely disapproves or deters it.[30][31] However, she advises removing it as part of a wider effort to remove race from the Constitution appropriate given it has no practical effect at present, due to the existence of the Racial Discrimination Act 1975.[32]

There have been arguments that the application of the Racial Discrimination Act now means that a state could not prevent people of a race from being able to vote, and that due to this section 25 is spent. However, as the Racial Discrimination Act is not constitutionally enshrined, such protection is not permanently guaranteed. Regardless, the High Court may read down the Act from applying in this way so as not to allow the Commonwealth to infringe on a state's ability to legislate on its own constitutional matters as in Austin v Commonwealth.[33] Additionally, the Racial Discrimination Act may be suspended under section 8(1) - as it was through the Northern Territory Intervention in 2007.[34] The Hindmarsh Island bridge case highlighted the fact that the effectiveness of the Racial Discrimination Act could easily be defeated by new legislation and the 'race power'.[35][36]

References

  1. ^ Australian Constitution s 25.
  2. ^ Williams, George. "Removing racism from Australia's constitutional DNA". (2012) 37(3) Alternative Law Journal 151, p. 151.
  3. ^ Twomey, Anne (August 2012). "An Obituary for Section 25 of the Constitution". Sydney Law School Legal Studies Research Paper No 12/57.
  4. ^ "The Civil War: Facts". National Park Service. 2015. Retrieved 10 August 2021.
  5. ^ "Citizenship Rights, Equal Protection, Apportionment, Civil War Debt". National Constitution Centre. 2021. Retrieved 12 October 2021.
  6. ^ Twomey (2012), p. 3.
  7. ^ Twomey (2012), p. 4.
  8. ^ Twomey (2012), p. 7.
  9. ^ "The Federation Census, 1901". Parliament of Australia. 2017. Retrieved 11 August 2021.
  10. ^ "Marking 50 years of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people in population estimates". Australian Bureau of Statistics. 2018. Retrieved 12 August 2021.
  11. ^ "Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Australians and the Constitution". The Conversation. 2012. Retrieved 28 April 2021.
  12. ^ a b Twomey (2012), p. 15.
  13. ^ Irving, Helen. "One Hundred Years of (Almost) Solitude: The Evolution of Australian Citizenship" (PDF). (2001)
  14. ^ Mullholand v Australian Electoral Commission [2004] HCA 41
  15. ^ a b Twomey (2012), p. 20.
  16. ^ "Commonwealth of Australia 1967 Referendum". Trove. 2021. Retrieved 19 August 2021.
  17. ^ "1967 Referendum". Australian's Together. 2020. Retrieved 24 April 2021.
  18. ^ "The 1967 Referendum". Parliament of Australia. 2020. Retrieved 29 April 2021.
  19. ^ "Announcement of 1967 referendum results in the Commonwealth of Australia Gazette". National Archives of Australia. 2019. Retrieved 25 April 2021.
  20. ^ "Other proposals for constitutional change". Parliament of Australia. 2021. Retrieved 15 March 2021.
  21. ^ "Reforming our Constitution: A roundtable discussion". House of Representatives Committees. 2008. Retrieved 29 September 2021.
  22. ^ "Submission to the Expert Panel on Constitutional Recognition of Indigenous Australians" (PDF). Centre for Comparative Constitutional Studies, University of Melbourne Law School. 2010. Retrieved 25 April 2021.
  23. ^ Harvey, Matt; Longo, Michael; Ligertwood, Julian; Babovic, David, eds. (2010). "Constitutional Law in Context". Constitutional Law. LexisNexis. ISBN 9780409324464.
  24. ^ "Indigenous constitutional recognition and representation". Parliament of Australia. 2020. Retrieved 12 April 2021.
  25. ^ "Joint Select Committee on Constitutional Recognition of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Peoples". Parliament of Australia. 2013. Retrieved 28 April 2021.
  26. ^ "Final report". Parliament of Australia. 2015. Retrieved 10 October 2021.
  27. ^ "Final report". Parliament of Australia. 2018. Retrieved 12 April 2021.
  28. ^ Williams, George. "Race and the Australian Constitution" (PDF). (2013) 28(1) Australasian Parliamentary Review 4.
  29. ^ "Report of the expert panel on recognising Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples in the Constitution". ANTaR. 2012. Retrieved 19 April 2021.
  30. ^ Twomey (2012), p. 23.
  31. ^ Hinton, Martin. "Is Australia's Constitution Racist?". Law Society of South Australia Bulletin Article - March Edition
  32. ^ Twomey, Anne (September 2014). "A revised proposal for indigenous constitutional recognition". (2014) 36(3) Sydney Law Review 381.
  33. ^ Twomey (2012), p. 22.
  34. ^ "The Suspension and Reinstatement of the RDA and Special Measures in the NTER". Australian Human Rights Commission. 2021. Retrieved 12 October 2021.
  35. ^ "Constitutional reform: FAQs - Why reform of the Constitution is needed". Australian Human Rights Commission. 2021. Retrieved 30 October 2021.
  36. ^ Kartinyeri v Commonwealth [1998] HCA 22

section, constitution, australia, provision, constitution, australia, headed, provision, races, disqualified, from, voting, providing, that, purposes, last, section, state, persons, race, disqualified, from, voting, elections, more, numerous, house, parliament. Section 25 of the Constitution of Australia is a provision of the Constitution of Australia headed Provision as to races disqualified from voting and providing that For the purposes of the last section if by the law of any State all persons of any race are disqualified from voting at elections for the more numerous House of the Parliament of the State then in reckoning the number of the people of the State or of the Commonwealth persons of that race resident in that State shall not be counted 1 Contents 1 History 2 Reform 2 1 Contemporary proposals 3 ReferencesHistory EditThe section was proposed during the concluding stages of the Australian frontier wars in the 1891 constitutional convention by Andrew Inglis Clark the then Tasmanian Attorney General 2 Clark adapted the wording from section 2 of the Fourteenth Amendment to the US Constitution which was introduced in 1868 following the US Civil War during the Reconstruction era and intended to deter states from excluding certain races from voting in the United States of America Unlike section 25 in Australia however the US provision made no direct reference to race 3 and was designed for a different purpose with the Confederate States of America For instance the population of the Union was 18 5 million around the time of the Reconstruction era when the 14th Amendment was included as a discretionary provision However in the Confederacy the population during the civil war is listed as 5 5 million free and 3 5 million enslaved which made a clear statement to the confederate states that representative numbers on a federal level would be effected if they precluded their respective citizens on grounds such as race on a state level after their defeat by the Union in 1865 4 Section 2 of the 14th Amendment reads Representatives shall be apportioned among the several states according to their respective numbers counting the whole number of persons in each state excluding Indians not taxed But when the right to vote at any election for the choice of electors for President and Vice President of the United States Representatives in Congress the executive and judicial officers of a state or the members of the legislature thereof is denied to any of the male inhabitants of such state being twenty one years of age and citizens of the United States or in any way abridged except for participation in rebellion or other crime the basis of representation therein shall be reduced in the proportion which the number of such male citizens shall bear to the whole number of male citizens twenty one years of age in such state 5 At the time what became section 25 was introduced to the draft there was not intended to be a separate federal franchise Rather those permitted to vote in lower house elections at state level would form the make up of the Commonwealth franchise One argument is that the drafters included it to ensure that a state could not on the one hand exclude people of a race from voting at the Commonwealth level while also benefiting from their inclusion in the population when determining the number of representatives that state would elect to the House of Representatives 6 During the convention it was argued that such a clause should be broader in order to prevent disenfranchisement such as that caused by property ownership qualifications in Western Australia but this was never expanded on as it would have had no deterrent effect given Western Australia was to receive the minimum five representatives upon federation regardless 7 Later in the drafting process section 30 was introduced allowing the Commonwealth to legislate its own voting franchise thus enabling the Commonwealth government to theoretically exclude certain races from voting in federal elections with no corresponding effect on the number of representatives in each state 8 Section 25 was nevertheless retained despite this ambiguity leaving future speculation on the application subject to conjecture for the new population of 3 773 801 Australian citizens recorded under the 1901 census 9 excluding Aboriginals who were not formally included within the census until 1971 due to section 127 10 Despite section 25 s purported intention to deter future disenfranchisement on the basis of race 11 following the spirit of the Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution in practice it has been of little effect to date The existence of section 127 in the Constitution which excluded Aboriginal people from being counted in population data meant that the exclusion of Aboriginal people from state franchise had no effect on a state s population in applying section 24 to determine the make up of the House of Representatives 12 Likewise it had little effect on the exclusion of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islanders in other ways such as Queensland s exclusion of Aboriginal populations through the Aboriginals Protection and Restriction of the Sale of Opium Act 1897 or other races as they were either insignificant in number in relation to the broader population or could be excluded by other means such as on the basis of nationality under the Immigration Restriction Act 1901 and similar barriers such as language testing 13 which would not trigger section 25 By the time section 127 was formally repealed in 1967 allowing the Aboriginal population to be fully counted in determining representation in federal parliament the last state Queensland had only included Aboriginal people in their respective franchise just two years earlier 12 There has been no direct High Court judgements relating to the application of section 25 This is largely because its existence has always been of little to no effect to date and because any dispute over its application is unlikely to have been in relation to a population large enough to have any effect on the representation numbers in Parliament It has however been referred to in numerous cases in relation to matters such as universal franchise voting equality and the definition of people of the Commonwealth High Court Justice Kirby referred to it in passing as support for the proposition that racial qualifications have been eliminated from voting 14 Reform EditThe repeal of section 25 has been put to referendum twice 15 In 1967 alongside the referendum in relation to Aboriginals it was put forward to be repealed as part of an amendment to the Constitution that would have removed the nexus between the number of representatives in the House of Representatives and the number of senators in the Senate 16 The nexus question failed to get a majority nationwide as it was a separate question from the second question relating to the repeal of section 127 and amendment of section 51 xxvi the race power which was overwhelmingly successful 17 Receiving just 40 of the yes vote under the nexus question 18 the question of the repeal of section 25 would have easily been supported if it was inclusive directly within the second question that received 90 77 of the Australian votes and set the record for the highest yes vote ever recorded in a federal referendum 19 Later in 1974 section 25 was to be repealed as part of a constitutional amendment enshrining the concept of one vote one value in the Constitution by ensuring electorates at state and federal level would be based on population and not geographic size or other methods Again this referendum was defeated and it was not a direct question related to the repeal of section 25 receiving only 47 of the national yes vote and only attaining a majority in New South Wales Both of these referendums to repeal section 25 failed for reasons far more complex than any controversy or spurious arguments around the application of section 25 Recommendations for the repeal of section 25 date back as far as the 1959 Parliamentary Joint Committee on Constitutional Review 20 The 1975 Australian Constitutional Convention referred to the section as outmoded and expended and recommended it be repealed Likewise the Constitutional Commission in 1988 suggested it be repealed on the basis that it was outmoded and archaic 15 In a roundtable discussion on reforming the Constitution by the House Standing Committee on Legal and Constitutional Affairs in 2008 Chapter 5 9 of the submission stated that Section 25 no longer has any significant legal effect as the Racial Discrimination Act 1975 Cth would prevent the States from discriminating against people on grounds of race Nevertheless section 25 recognises that people might constitutionally be denied the franchise on the ground of race 21 In their submission to the Expert Panel on Constitutional Recognition of Indigenous Australians in 2010 the Centre for Comparative Constitutional Studies recommended section 25 to be repealed 22 Section 25 has often been described as a relic from Australia s constitutional history which should be removed 23 Contemporary proposals Edit Along with the Joint Select Committee on Constitutional Recognition of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Peoples in 2015 24 the Expert Panel has described their contribution in 2012 as only the first word not the last word 25 The Joint Select Committees in 2015 and 2018 discussed the removal of section 25 as a roundtable discussion question and recommended it to be repealed 26 27 More recently it has been suggested section 25 be removed on the basis that it contemplates the possibility that a state may disenfranchise a race of people 28 The Expert Panel on Recognising Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Peoples in the Constitution in a report released in January 2012 among other things recommended that section 25 be removed 29 As Anne Twomey suggests some of the emotive criticism surrounding section 25 is possibly misguided with some contributors on the panel seeming to be of the belief that section 25 allows a state to prohibit people of a race from voting in the future given the wording of the section She argues that section 25 neither allows nor disallows such action but merely disapproves or deters it 30 31 However she advises removing it as part of a wider effort to remove race from the Constitution appropriate given it has no practical effect at present due to the existence of the Racial Discrimination Act 1975 32 There have been arguments that the application of the Racial Discrimination Act now means that a state could not prevent people of a race from being able to vote and that due to this section 25 is spent However as the Racial Discrimination Act is not constitutionally enshrined such protection is not permanently guaranteed Regardless the High Court may read down the Act from applying in this way so as not to allow the Commonwealth to infringe on a state s ability to legislate on its own constitutional matters as in Austin v Commonwealth 33 Additionally the Racial Discrimination Act may be suspended under section 8 1 as it was through the Northern Territory Intervention in 2007 34 The Hindmarsh Island bridge case highlighted the fact that the effectiveness of the Racial Discrimination Act could easily be defeated by new legislation and the race power 35 36 References Edit Australian Constitution s 25 Williams George Removing racism from Australia s constitutional DNA 2012 37 3 Alternative Law Journal 151 p 151 Twomey Anne August 2012 An Obituary for Section 25 of the Constitution Sydney Law School Legal Studies Research Paper No 12 57 The Civil War Facts National Park Service 2015 Retrieved 10 August 2021 Citizenship Rights Equal Protection Apportionment Civil War Debt National Constitution Centre 2021 Retrieved 12 October 2021 Twomey 2012 p 3 Twomey 2012 p 4 Twomey 2012 p 7 The Federation Census 1901 Parliament of Australia 2017 Retrieved 11 August 2021 Marking 50 years of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people in population estimates Australian Bureau of Statistics 2018 Retrieved 12 August 2021 Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Australians and the Constitution The Conversation 2012 Retrieved 28 April 2021 a b Twomey 2012 p 15 Irving Helen One Hundred Years of Almost Solitude The Evolution of Australian Citizenship PDF 2001 Mullholand v Australian Electoral Commission 2004 HCA 41 a b Twomey 2012 p 20 Commonwealth of Australia 1967 Referendum Trove 2021 Retrieved 19 August 2021 1967 Referendum Australian s Together 2020 Retrieved 24 April 2021 The 1967 Referendum Parliament of Australia 2020 Retrieved 29 April 2021 Announcement of 1967 referendum results in the Commonwealth of Australia Gazette National Archives of Australia 2019 Retrieved 25 April 2021 Other proposals for constitutional change Parliament of Australia 2021 Retrieved 15 March 2021 Reforming our Constitution A roundtable discussion House of Representatives Committees 2008 Retrieved 29 September 2021 Submission to the Expert Panel on Constitutional Recognition of Indigenous Australians PDF Centre for Comparative Constitutional Studies University of Melbourne Law School 2010 Retrieved 25 April 2021 Harvey Matt Longo Michael Ligertwood Julian Babovic David eds 2010 Constitutional Law in Context Constitutional Law LexisNexis ISBN 9780409324464 Indigenous constitutional recognition and representation Parliament of Australia 2020 Retrieved 12 April 2021 Joint Select Committee on Constitutional Recognition of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Peoples Parliament of Australia 2013 Retrieved 28 April 2021 Final report Parliament of Australia 2015 Retrieved 10 October 2021 Final report Parliament of Australia 2018 Retrieved 12 April 2021 Williams George Race and the Australian Constitution PDF 2013 28 1 Australasian Parliamentary Review 4 Report of the expert panel on recognising Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples in the Constitution ANTaR 2012 Retrieved 19 April 2021 Twomey 2012 p 23 Hinton Martin Is Australia s Constitution Racist Law Society of South Australia Bulletin Article March Edition Twomey Anne September 2014 A revised proposal for indigenous constitutional recognition 2014 36 3 Sydney Law Review 381 Twomey 2012 p 22 The Suspension and Reinstatement of the RDA and Special Measures in the NTER Australian Human Rights Commission 2021 Retrieved 12 October 2021 Constitutional reform FAQs Why reform of the Constitution is needed Australian Human Rights Commission 2021 Retrieved 30 October 2021 Kartinyeri v Commonwealth 1998 HCA 22 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Section 25 of the Constitution of Australia amp oldid 1098663430, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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