| THE
notorious "tablecloth" ballot paper caused voter chaos across
NSW yesterday and raised fears of a record high informal vote.
Angry voters were
forced to grapple with the biggest ballot paper in Australian history
to elect 21 people to the State's Legislative Council.
Measuring
nearly a metre square and containing the names of 264 candidates and 80
political parties, the "tablecloth" spilled out of the enlarged
voting booths which were meant to cope with the oversized paper.
People sat on floors,
swore or threw their hands up in despair as they tried to deal with
the voting sheet.
The informal vote
was set to soar as disgusted voters said they would "just tick
anything to get it over with" and many elderly people found the
"tablecloth" simply daunting.
Some people asked
polling officers if they could keep the ballot paper as a souvenir to
send to friends interstate and overseas.
Premier Bob Carr
said yesterday the massive ballot paper presented a challenge for NSW
voters.
"I have been
to five polling booths this morning, there were complaints about it,"
he said.
NSW Electoral Commissioner
Ian Dickson said voters had been forced to wait for an hour to vote
in smaller suburban booths in Sydney.
People voting at
Town Hall in the city waited more than 30 minutes early in the day.
"It is working.
It is as I expected, there have been delays, but people are turning
up knowing what to expect," Mr Dickson said.
"It's the smaller
booths that have been the problem, where we just haven't been able to
fit any more tables or people inside. |
Voters in a flap over big paper
The Sunday Telegraph
28 March, 1999
by Nathan Vass

[Courtesy of NewsLtd
Photo Library]
|
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"Older
people have battled with the paper, but officials are helping them fold
it and then they're pushing it into the box with a ruler or whatever."
There
are queues, but people are accepting it." Mr Dickson said he expected
the informal vote for the Upper House election to exceed 10 per cent,
compared to 7 per cent in 1995.
And pollsters predicted
yesterday's informal vote could climb to more than 10 per cent.
Polling officers
reported most people preferring to vote "above the line" -allowing
parties to distribute people's preferences rather than filling in all
264 boxes "below the line".
The Electoral Commission
increased the number of polling booths around the State by a third for
yesterday's
election.
But there were still
delays inside polling places as voters tried to fold the paper and jam
it into the narrow slits of the ballot box.
Tables were supplied
at some polling places, but at others people resorted to sitting on
the floor and spreading the ballot paper in front of them so they could
work out how to vote for individual candidates below the line.
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Even more demeaning
for voters was the realisation that while they sat on the floor, the
21 people they elect will be paid $110,000 a year and receive a minimum
$40,000 pension for life.
But using bigger
booths to cope with the ballot paper turned out to be like trying to
stop an elephant with a pea-shooter.
It was obvious travelling
around booths yesterday that the elderly were most confused by the "tablecloth".
Many
old people asked booth workers to fill the ballot papers in, fold them
and jam them into the boxes.
Electoral staff
arrived early at polling stations to pre-fold ballot papers to make
the "tablecloth" easier to use.
Not surprisingly,
polling officers were kept busy all day helping people fold their ballot
papers and force them into boxes once they had voted. Premier Carr has
promised to lift registration fees from $500 to $3500 to stand for the
Upper House. The minimum membership required to register a party would
rise from 200 people to 1000.
The cost to taxpayers
for the Upper House election blew out by $2 million as the record field
lined up, encouraged by the success of obscure candidates
at the 1995 election.
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