Australia will hold a general election on May 3
28/3/2025 6:20
Australia will hold a
general election on May 3, Prime Minister Anthony Albanese
announced on Friday.
Opinion polls indicate it will be a neck-and-neck race
between Albanese's ruling centre-left Labor party and the
conservative Liberal-National coalition led by Peter Dutton, as
cost of living pressures hit households.
A large number of independent and minor parties are also
seeking reelection and could become king-makers if Labor and the
Liberal-Nationals fall short of majority government.
Labor returned to power in 2022 after nine years of
Liberal-National coalition rule.
Here are some facts on how elections work in Australia:
HOW DOES IT WORK?
Australia is one of the few countries in the world with
compulsory voting for all citizens aged 18 years and older.
Australia does not have a set date for national elections,
but the maximum term for the House of Representatives is three
years. The election is called by the prime minister. The
previous election was on May 21, 2022.
There are two houses of parliament, with the government
formed by the party or coalition holding a majority in the lower
chamber, the House of Representatives. The prime minister is
chosen by the governing party from the House.
WHAT'S THE STATE OF PLAY NOW?
Labor holds 77 House of Representatives seats, the
Liberal-National coalition holds 53 seats, the Greens hold 4,
and 15 are held by micro parties and independents.
Boundaries have been redrawn in New South Wales, Victoria
and Western Australia states since the last election. There will
be 150 House of Representatives seats up for election, reduced
from 151.
If neither Labor nor the Liberal-National coalition has a
majority of seats in the House of Representatives after polling
day, a minority government can be formed with an agreement of
support from independent members or minor parties.
HOW DO AUSTRALIANS VOTE?
Australia has a preferential voting system for the House of
Representatives. Voters rank local candidates in order of
preference on their ballot papers.
A candidate who gets more than 50% of the first-preference
votes wins the seat. If no candidate reaches that threshold, the
one with the fewest votes is excluded and their votes are
distributed to the person each of those voters nominated as
their second preference. This continues until one candidate
passes the 50% threshold.
The upper house, the Senate, has 76 members - 12 from each
of the six states and two from each of Australia's two
less-populous territories. Half of the Senate seats will be
contested at this election.
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