Parliament which uses Preferential Voting | House of Assembly (Lower House) |
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Name of Preferential Voting system | Full preferential |
Formality/Informality points | Formal
Informal
NB: South Australian electoral legislation allows candidates to lodge one or two voting tickets. A voting ticket is a written statement of a particular order in which a voter might allocate preferences in an election and is used to interpret the votes of a voter who does not indicate an order of preference covering all candidates. A voting ticket can therefore render a vote formal that would otherwise be informal. |
Directions on the Ballot Paper | Number the squares from 1 to N in the order of your choice (where N equals the number of candidates). You are not legally obliged to mark the ballot-paper. After voting, fold the ballot paper and place it in the ballot box or declaration envelope. (2010 House of Assembly ballot paper) |
Casual Vacancies | A by-election is held to fill a casual vacancy caused by the death, resignation or disqualification of a member or when an election to fill a vacancy is declared void by the Court of Disputed Returns. The Speaker of the House of Assembly must issue the writ for a by-election. |
Related South Australian electoral information