Section 41 of the Constitution of Australia explained

Section 41 of the Australian Constitution is a provision within Chapter I, Part IV of the Constitution of Australia. It deals with the right of electors of States. During the time of federation, section 41 was used to ensure that no one that was enfranchised under the Constitution would be disenfranchised by the introduction of a replacement statutorily-defined franchise.[1] Modern case lawspecifically those since R v Pearson; Ex parte Sipka in 1983have concluded that this section no longer has any actual effect, and that no express right to vote in Australia can be inferred from it.

Historical importance

Women's suffrage

At the time that the Australian Constitution was drafted, South Australia was the only state which allowed women to vote.[2] The drafters feared that if the Constitution did not allow South Australian women to vote in federal elections, they would vote against federalism.[3] Section 41 therefore would allow South Australian women to vote in federal elections, without conferring the vote on women who were not yet allowed to vote in the other states.

Modern interpretation

King v Jones

R v Pearson; Ex parte Sipka

References

Citations
  • Bibliography
  • Notes and References

    1. R v Pearson; Ex parte Sipka [1983] HCA 6, [11].
    2. Web site: 17 December 2008. Electoral Milestones for Women – Australian Electoral Commission. live. https://web.archive.org/web/20131212103601/http://www.aec.gov.au/elections/australian_electoral_history/milestone.htm. 12 December 2013. Aec.gov.au. dmy-all.
    3. Howard. Colin. 1983. Case Notes: Re Pearson; ex parte Sipka. Melbourne University Law Review. 14. 2. 315. AustLII.