The focus of this paper is on free or conscience votes in the NSW Parliament
between 1981 and 2013. As such, its purpose is to add to the small but growing
body of literature in this field.
A full list of free votes between 1981 and 2013 is set out at Appendix A,
which includes all those votes identified occurring in one or both Houses and
permitted by one or more of the major parties.
Free votes open up a broad range of issues relevant to parliamentary
politics. They differ from other votes in Parliament in terms of the type of
issues concerned, involving as they do some of “the most divisive issues
of the day”, often attracting “intense lobbying”. In
Australia, in particular, where party control is enforced over individual MPs
to an unusual extent, where all other votes are “subject to an implicit
three-line whip”, free votes can offer rare insights into their personal
values and thinking and may even present opportunities for inter-party
allegiances, albeit short-lived. [1]
The terms “free vote” and “conscience vote” are
often used interchangeably, as indeed they are at certain points in this paper.
However, the term “free vote” is preferred for the reason that it
less pejorative than “conscience vote”, which suggests that members
do not vote according to their conscience as a rule. [2]
Free votes occur when political parties decide that their members are free
to vote as they choose on a particular matter, rather than along party
lines.[2]
The research undertaken for this paper has traced the first free votes in
modern times to the decriminalisation of homosexuality in the early 1980s. As
discussed in the literature, the identification of free votes is by no means
straightforward. They are not identified as such in Hansard, nor are they
identified either in the Assembly’s Votes and Proceedings or in
the Council’s Journal. It is also the case that some free votes
have been allowed on a matter for one major party but not for others, or for
the Coalition parties but not the ALP. Further, most free votes are on Bills,
often Private Members’ Bills, but in NSW other issues have also been
dealt with in this way, notably votes on the removal of a judge or magistrate
under s 53 of the Constitution Act 1902. [2]
The approach adopted in this paper is largely quantitative in nature,
focusing on the voting patterns across parties and gender, for example;
however, it also attempts to present a more qualitative perspective on the
subject by reference to what individual MPs said in the Hansard debates. A
general point is that, while the question of “how” individual
members voted on conscience issues can be decided clearly enough, understanding
“why” they voted a particular way on a specific issue is a far less
exact science.[2]
Studies of free votes in comparable Westminster Parliaments have suggested a
number of key findings, not all of which are necessarily consistent. The broad
conclusion of most studies is that party is “the most important factor in
predicting voting behaviour during bills involving conscience issues”.
Based on a review of the literature, Lindsey commented in his 2011 study
Conscience Voting in New Zealand: “Sometimes, it is the only
factor that counts. This has also been found to apply in federal systems at
both the state and provincial level”. This finding echoes that of a 2011
Canadian study which concluded:
Like virtually every other empirical study of free voting, even when
confidence is relaxed and MPs are free to vote their consciences, most MPs
still vote along party lines.
In her 2013 comparative study of free votes in the Australian, Canadian, New
Zealand and UK Parliaments, specifically on the issues of abortion, euthanasia
and same-sex unions, Plumb offered a variation on this theme. Using the Rice
Index she found that, “although party is a good predictor of voting
behaviour on the three issues”, in all jurisdictions differences in
levels of intra-party unity could be found across the ideological spectrum,
with “centre-right” parties being the least cohesive, followed by
centrist parties and with “centre-left” parties tending to show the
greatest level of cohesion on the issues studied.[
3]
Following a broadly chronological order, some comment is made on all 33 free
votes that have been identified from 1981 to 2013. In some cases, notably where
free votes were allowed for all major parties and where at least one vote was
taken on division at the Second or Third Reading stages in the Legislative
Assembly, the analysis is more detailed. The first of these “case
studies” refers to the landmark debate on the decriminalisation of
homosexuality from the early 1980s; others relate to the issues of human
cloning and research involving human embryos, same-sex adoption, the Sydney
medically supervised injecting room, surrogacy law and, from 2013, the status
of the unborn child under the criminal law. Primarily in the context of these
case studies, the analysis of free votes in the NSW Parliament attempts to
address these questions:
· Were the voting patterns along party lines for both Houses?
· What, if any, was the perceived influence of party leaders?
· What were the voting patterns based on gender?
· In NSW is it possible to determine voting patterns based on religious
affiliation?
· If so, is religion a factor influencing some if not all free votes for
certain members?
· At what stage in the parliamentary term were free votes held?[4]
Findings – Government and Private Members’ Bills:
Free votes have been recorded in this paper on 14 Government Bills, all of them
Labor Government measures, with all of them passing into law. This can be
contrasted with the 12 free votes recorded on Private Members’ Bills,
three of which were passed into law, with eight others defeated and with the
fate of one remaining to be determined (Zoe’s Law Bill 2013 (No
2)).[
19.1]
Findings - party leader and residual party loyalty: In NSW,
the voting patterns indicate that party loyalty was the decisive influence in
certain cases, notably for Labor on the issue of Sydney’s Drug Injecting
Centre, upon which the Party presented a united front; on other issues,
concerned with same-sex adoption and surrogacy, cloning and human embryo
research, as well as Zoe’s law, there was considerable diversity of
opinion within the Party, which was allowed to be expressed through the
mechanism of the free vote. The same was true of the decriminalisation of
homosexuality in the 1980s, where a significant number of Labor members voted
against the Bill.
Admittedly, the evidence at this stage is relatively sparse for comparable
Parliaments, but tentatively at least, it can be suggested that the level of
intra-party unity on the “centre-left” tends to be relatively low
on certain issues in NSW; as low as 0.2 in the Assembly on same-sex adoption,
with 40% of Labor members voting against the Private Member’s Bill.
However, the level of unity tends to be higher where Labor Government Bills are
under consideration, although even on some of these occasions around one in
four or one in five Labor members voted against the measure.
Across all parties, it is probably right to say that Premier Wran’s 1984
Private Member’s Bill decriminalising homosexuality was the one clear
occasion where the party leader appears to have exercised a discernible
influence on the vote. Less clear is the influence of Barry O’Farrell on
the Same-sex Marriage Bill 2013, although with this Private Member’s Bill
being defeated by a close margin of two votes that influence may have proved
decisive.
Consistent with the comparative finding that “centre-right”
parties tend to be the least cohesive, a high level of voting diversity is
found in the NSW Liberal Party, on most if not all issues considered in this
paper. Of the main case studies presented in the paper, the greatest degree of
unity recorded was on Zoe’s Law Bill (No 2), at which time the Liberals
were in Government. In that case, the Party leader, Barry O’Farrell,
voted with the majority of his party colleagues on behalf of the Bill, although
that is not to make a case for the influence of party leadership on voting
behaviour. Liberal Party voting on key free votes is summarised below.
The National Party’s voting patterns have been recorded and tend towards
a similar pattern to Labor’s, except that the weight of votes falls more
on the socially conservative side of the political divide. On some issues there
was unanimity, but not on all, with a diversity of opinion expressed, for
example, in respect to surrogacy, cloning and human embryo research, less so on
same-sex adoption and Zoe’s Law.
Of the minor parties, the largest numerically in this State are the NSW Greens,
which up until 2011 only had representation in the Legislative Council; the
2011 election brought their numbers up to five in the Upper House. Consistent
with voting patterns observed in other jurisdictions, on all free votes
canvassed in this paper the NSW Greens voted in unison in the Upper House. The
same applies to the Christian Democrats, under the leadership of the Reverend
Fred Nile, as it does to the Shooters and Fishers Party.[19.2]
Findings – gender: The voting patterns recorded in this
paper indicate that, on certain issues at least, a discernible gender
difference existed, notably in respect to most same-sex equality and
reproduction and human life issues, including Zoe’s Law Bill (No 2). This
gender difference tended to be more clearly expressed in the Upper House, which
may suggest that, without a geographical constituency to represent, some female
Council members, on the conservative side of politics in particular, may have
felt less constrained when exercising a free vote. But that is purely
speculative.[19.4]
Findings – religion: There are clearly times when voting
on free votes has been influenced by personal religious belief. This is
obviously the case in respect to the Christian Democrats in the Upper House,
but also for other members in both Houses with strongly held religious views.
One might say that this is the very point of a free vote; that members are
called upon to deliberate and decide on difficult moral and social issues
guided by a range of factors and influences, not least personal convictions of
a moral and/or religious nature. It is what gives free votes their special
quality, taking members outside the machinery of party politics and standing
them squarely on their own moral ground.[19.5]
Findings – parliamentary terms: The most interesting
free votes discussed in this paper from the perspective of their timing in
parliamentary terms are those from 1984 and 2010. Wran’s Private
Member’s Bill was brought in at the very start of a new Parliament,
basically to clear the decks of a divisive issue that had been the subject of
three contentious Bills in the previous Parliament. Conversely, the three Labor
Government Bills from 2010 upon which all major parties allowed a free vote
were introduced at the very end of a Parliament and, perhaps more tellingly,
towards the predicted end of a long period of Labor power beginning in
1995.[19.6]
Findings – free votes and parliamentary democracy: It is
clear that “conscience issues” provide members with an opportunity
to step outside their party roles, thereby tending to lend to parliamentary
debate more personal colour and intellectual interest than is usual. With free
votes there is more occasion and inclination to listen to the views of others,
to acknowledge and even accommodate arguments which a member may not agree with
at first.
Important as that perspective on free votes may be, the argument can also be
made that they should not be looked upon as panaceas for whatever ills are
perceived to beset parliamentary democracy. The predictability of voting
created by the party system is fundamental to a functioning political system
founded on the principle of responsible government; the advantages that attend
that system as a rule deserve proper appreciation. Free votes are exceptions to
the rule, agreed to primarily for party political convenience. Viewed in that
light they can be seen as something of a “safety valve”, permitting
contentious issues to be dealt with without fracturing party discipline, worthy
and interesting in themselves, but also an adjunct to the party political
system they operate within.[19.7]