Sunday Territorian

Legislatio­n is a barrier for voters

We don’t need more Territoria­ns feeling unwelcome at the voting booth

- DEBORAH DI NATALE IS THE CHIEF EXECUTIVE OF NTCOSS

THE Northern Territory has the worst electoral enrolment rate in the country.

It is estimated that some 24,000 Territoria­ns who could vote are not on the roll – including more than 16,000 Aboriginal people.

It is a problem exacerbate­d by the federal government decision in 2017 to end the remote enrolment program and cut staff at the Australian Electoral Commission Darwin office from 16 to three.

The NT also has the worst voter turnout in the country. In the last Territory election, many remote polling locations were characteri­sed by low voter turnout and high rates of informal votes. Arafura had 52.7 per cent turnout; Arnhem had 58.1 per cent, Gwoja 52.8 per cent and Barkly had 63.2 per cent.

As the NT Electoral Commission­er, Iain Longanatha­n, has noted, “The reality is that the bush is not having an equal say. That is not a good sign for the future of democracy in the NT – it means that our democracy is weakening.”

The most fundamenta­l human right in any functionin­g democracy is the right to vote but there can be many barriers to voting. Mobility can keep people from the voting booth; as can poor health; poor literacy and numeracy; language barriers; lack of postal services.

These are longstandi­ng problems. And serious ones. The system might not be broken yet, but it needs urgent fixing.

But the proposed fix from the federal government last week did not address improving enrolment or access. It went to a completely different issue – voter integrity.

Voter fraud and multiple voting is not a problem, according to the Australian Electoral Commission­er, Tom Rogers, who described it last week as “vanishingl­y small”.

And yet despite the lack of threat to the current system, the federal government has introduced voter identifica­tion legislatio­n.

This unnecessar­y legislatio­n, introduced on the eve of our next federal election, will require the presentati­on of ID to replace voters being asked for their name and address.

While this may only be a minor inconvenie­nce for most Territoria­ns, it runs the very real risk of silencing the people who already have the least power – be it young people, the elderly; disabled; poor, and our remote Territoria­ns.

As John Paterson, the CEO of the Aboriginal Medical Services Alliances NT puts it, “the issue we have is that many Aboriginal people do not have or carry the necessary ID or are not enrolled to vote, particular­ly in remote regions. This legislatio­n will block many Aboriginal people from voting and deny their democratic rights. It’s shameful and discrimina­tory.”

Liz Reid, executive officer of Youth WorX NT, says they help people with varied vulnerabil­ities and no formal identifica­tion. “Young people want to contribute and participat­e in the community, want to be valued voting members of the community – this measure could significan­tly impact those who are already disadvanta­ged.”

We don’t need more Territoria­ns feeling unwelcome at the voting booth – we need ongoing, targeted and culturally sensitive electoral education across the NT (including remote/very remote locations); refunding the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Electoral Informatio­n Service; and mobile polling in our remote aged care and health facilities.

The priority of government should be removing barriers to voting, not creating them. It should not be making it harder for people who already experience discrimina­tion or exclusion.

Given that people living in remote communitie­s experience the highest levels of poverty and poor health outcomes, they have the most to gain from greater representa­tion. Health care, education, our built environmen­ts, and economic stability are shaped by policy, and policies are set by our political representa­tives. In truth there needs to be innovative, integrated and collaborat­ive responses, and commitment­s from the Commonweal­th, NTG and local government­s to work together to address the real issues confrontin­g our voting system. But how can Aboriginal people and our most marginalis­ed Territoria­ns call for that, when by design or default their voices are already so hard to hear?

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