- Tasmanian Legislative Council
Infobox Legislature
name = Tasmanian Legislative Council
coa_pic =
coa_res =
coa-pic =
coa-res =
session_room =
house_type = Upper house
houses =
leader1_type = President
leader1 = Susan Lynette Smith
party1 = Independent
election1 = 10 May 2008
leader2_type = Chair of Committees
leader2 = Gregory Raymond Hall
party2 = Independent
election2 = 10 May 2008
members = 15
p_groups = Labor party
Independent
election3 = 18 March 2006
meeting_place = Parliament House,Hobart ,Tasmania ,Australia
website = [http://www.parliament.tas.gov.au/lc/council.htm www.parliament.tas.gov.au]The Legislative Council, or upper house, is one of the two chambers of the
Parliament of Tasmania inAustralia . The other is the House of Assembly. It sits in Parliament House in the state capital,Hobart .Overview
The Council has 15 members, one from each of fifteen electorates. These are commonly known as seats. Each seat is intended to represent approximately the same population in each electorate. Members of the Legislative Council are often referred to as MLC's.
Members in the council come up for re-election separately every six years. Elections will be held in three divisions one year, then two divisions the next year; following this pattern. The council can block supply and force any government to election. The council cannot be dissolved as there is nothing in the
Tasmania n constitution to allow this. The council cannot be reformed or abolished because the constitution does not recognise publicreferendum s. The only way reform could occur is with the council's own approval.Tasmania's Legislative Council has never been controlled by a single political party; voters in
Tasmania have always supported independents over candidates endorsed by political parties. Labor endorses a few candidates in some Legislative Council elections. The Labor party is the most successful of any political party in the council, there have been 18 Labor members in the councils history. The Liberals maintain the view the legislative council 'is not a party house', however in past elections the party has endorsed candidates with little success. The Liberals have only ever had two members in the Legislative Council one of these Peter McKay was first elected as an independent in 1976 but became a Liberal in 1991. The party instead backs independent conservatives; many of which were Liberal candidates in previous state of federal elections. TheTasmanian Greens endorse candidates in elections but have never won a seat on the council.Candidates for Legislative Council elections are required to limit their expenditure to a specified limit ($10,000 in 2005; increasing by $500 per year). In addition, no other person or political party may incur expenditure to promote a candidate. This is a unique requirement in Australia: no other Australian state or federal elections are subject to expenditure limits.
Only a few members of the council have become ministers. Currently the member for Derwent
Michael Aird holds the Treasury portfolio, member for RumneyLin Thorp holds the Human Services portfolio and member for PembrokeAllison Ritchie the Planning and Workplace Relations portfolio.History
The Tasmanian Legislative Council was first created in 1852. The "Australian Colonies Act" passed by the British parliament gave
Van Diemens Land a free government. The council had members chosen by both election and theGovernor of Tasmania . In 1856 the Legislative Council passed legislation to create theTasmanian House of Assembly (lower house).Until recently the Tasmanian Legislative Council was considered the most undemocratic in Australia.Fact|date=October 2008 Rather than being elected by proportional vote (like the Tasmanian lower house or the
Australian Senate ), members are determined in single member seats. Before 1999 the Council had a rural-bias; electoral boundaries were made to include rural communities and didn't have equal populations within each division.In the 1990s; various Tasmanian governments attempted to cut the size of parliament. Various reports proposed reducing the Tasmanian Legislative Council from 19 seats to 15. Others including the Morling Report; [http://www.parliament.tas.gov.au/tpl/InfoSheets/reform_1998.htm] proposed abolishing the Council and merging some of the electorates into the
Tasmanian House of Assembly . However the council wouldn't agree to any of these proposals. DuringTony Rundle 's government the Legislative Council finally allowed the Parliamentary Reform Bill 1998 passage, reducing the number of seats in the chamber from 19 to 15.In 1999 the new electorates were created by a Distribution Tribunal, in the following years there was much confusion by voters, as to which electorate they were a part of.
The first woman to sit on the Legislative Council was
Margaret McIntyre , in 1948. The first woman to chair the upper house wasPhyllis Benjamin in 1956.Current Distribution of Seats
References
ee also
*
Parliaments of the Australian states and territories
*List of members of the Tasmanian Legislative Council
*List of Legislative Council divisionsExternal links
* [http://www.parliament.tas.gov.au Tasmanian parliament website]
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