Everything about Western Australian Legislative Assembly totally explained
The
Legislative Assembly, or lower house, is one of the two chambers of parliament in the
Australian state of
Western Australia. It sits in
Parliament House in the state capital,
Perth.
The Legislative Assembly today has 57 members, elected for four-year terms from single-member
electoral districts. Members are elected using the
preferential voting system. As with all other Australian states and territories, voting is compulsory for all those over the legal voting age of 18.
Role and operation
Most legislation is initiated in the Legislative Assembly. The party or coalition with the most seats in the lower house is invited by the
Governor to form a government. The leader of that party, once
sworn in, subsequently becomes the
Premier of Western Australia, and a team of the leader's, party's or coalition's choosing (whether they be in the Legislative Assembly or in the
Legislative Council) can then be sworn in as
ministers responsible for various portfolios. As Australian political parties traditionally vote along party lines, most legislation introduced by the governing party will pass through the House of Assembly.
History
The Legislative Assembly was the first elected legislature in
Western Australia, having been created in
1890, when Western Australia gained self-government. It initially consisted of 30 members, all of who were elected although only male landowners could vote. This replaced a system where the Governor was responsible for most legislative matters, with only the appointed
Legislative Council to guide him.
Suffrage was extended to all adult males in
1893, although
Indigenous Australians were specifically excluded. Women gained the right to vote in
1899, making Western Australia the second of the Australian colonies (behind
South Australia) to do so. In
1921,
Edith Cowan became the first woman to be elected to parliament anywhere in Australia when she won the Legislative Assembly
seat of West Perth for the
Nationalist Party.
Electoral distribution and reform
Western Australia uses a zonal electoral system for both its houses of parliament. In most Australian jurisdictions, each seat in the Legislative Assembly represents an approximately equal number of voters. However, in Western Australia, as at
30 September 2007, an MP may represent 28,519 metropolitan voters within the
Metropolitan Region Scheme area, or 14,551 country voters. At the 2006 census taken on
8 August 2006, 73.76% of Western Australia's residents lived in the metropolitan region, but only 34 of Western Australia's 57 Legislative Assembly seats, representing 60% of the total, were located in the metropolitan region. There has been strong support over time in some quarters for the principle of
one vote one value, particularly from the
Australian Labor Party who were at particular disadvantage under the system. Up until 2005, reform had proceeded gradually—the most dramatic changes had occurred with the enactment of the
Electoral Districts Act 1947 and the
Acts Amendment (Electoral Reform) Act 1987, the latter of which raised the number of metropolitan seats from 29 to 34. On
20 May 2005, with the official enactment of the
Electoral Amendment and Repeal Act 2005 (No.1 of 2005), the distinction was abolished, but all seats presently in place will remain until the next election, currently scheduled for early 2009. A redistribution of seats announced by the Western Australian Electoral Commission on
29 October 2007 which places 42 seats in the metropolitan area and 17 in the country, with the only distinction being that any seat with an area of or greater (that is, 4% of the State's land area) may have a variation from the state norm of 21,350 voters in excess of the ±10% normally permitted.
Current distribution of Assembly seats
| Party |
Seats held |
2008 - Assembly |
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30 |
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18 |
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5 |
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4 |
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Further Information
Get more info on 'Western Australian Legislative Assembly'.
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