Australian Capital Territory Legislative Assembly

From Freepedia

Image:ACT Legislative Assembly.JPG The Australian Capital Territory Legislative Assembly (or, more formally and fully, the Legislative Assembly for the Australian Capital Territory) is the unicameral Parliament of the ACT. It sits in premises located on Civic Square, close to the centre of the city of Canberra.

It was created by four acts of the Commonwealth Parliament in 1988, and held its first election in March 1989. Until this point, the Territory had been the responsibility of the Federal Minister for Territories. It has 17 members, elected for three-year terms by the Hare-Clark system of proportional representation. The 17 members come from three constituencies - Brindabella and Ginninderra, which have five members, and Molonglo, which as seven members. The Assembly was originally elected by a modified d'Hondt system, but a 1992 referendum supported the Hare-Clark method, and this was introduced in 1993.

Members of the Legislative Assembly vote to elect a Chief Minister - in practice, the leader of whichever party can form government. The Chief Minister, in turn, selects up to five ministers to form a cabinet. The leader of the second-largest party in the assembly usually becomes the Leader of the Opposition.

The Assembly is unique in terms of Australian states and territories, as the Australian Capital Territory has neither a Governor nor an Administrator.

Election dates for the Assembly are fixed in legislation, with elections held in October every four years. Elections are always held on Saturdays. Until 1997, elections were held in February. They are now held in October. The term of the Assembly was increased in 2004 from three years.

As with the Northern Territory Legislative Assembly, the ACT Assembly lacks the full powers of a state legislature. As a result, legislation passed by the Assembly can be overruled by a Commonwealth act, although this is rare in practice. The Commonwealth also retained control of the Territory's justice system until handing it over to the Assembly in 1992. The Assembly assumes many of the functions of a local council, as it covers such a small area, and the city of Canberra has no other local government.

Current distribution of seats

Party Seats held
Australian Labor Party 9
Liberal Party 7
ACT Greens 1

See also

External links



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