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I think the public opinion section should include the Guardian Essential poll result on whether the process was a good one and should be used again.
Diff showing my wording and source Because the survey was a novel process, it is part of the public opinion to know whether the process was liked or disliked by the public. --
122.108.141.214 (
talk)
22:31, 21 November 2017 (UTC)reply
Exclude - I don't think the public's opinion on whether the same process should be used for other issues is relevant here. (It is reasonable to include the opinion / approval rate of the process for this issue, but the use of the process for other issues is out of scope.)
Mitch Ames (
talk)
11:18, 22 November 2017 (UTC)reply
I've made some edits to improve this section, but am considering removing it outright. My concern is that it misrepresents the nature of how the parliament works: as Australia has a
representative democracy it's entirely normal for how MPs vote on individual issues to differ from the majority view on that issue in their electorate, especially as MPs belonging to a party almost always vote on the party line (ALP MPs are actually required to do so). In particular, this is a perennial issue with conscience votes such as that granted to MPs by the major parties on this issue given that MPs are explicitly freed from following any party line and vote in line with their personal views. The section lacks this context, and is entirely wrong-headed.
Nick-D (
talk)
23:46, 8 December 2017 (UTC)reply
I think the text that is there is reasonable to have somewhere, insofar as many MPs sought to respect the views of their electorate and it was the subject of much discussion. However, I think "Democratic representation" is a stupid title for that content for the reasons you note.
The Drover's Wife (
talk)
00:06, 9 December 2017 (UTC)reply
For the two maps near the top, "Results by state and territory" & "Results by electorate", there are different intensities of colour, presumably representing vote percentages, but no key to interpret them beyond yes/no.
Chriswaterguytalk06:09, 6 August 2020 (UTC)reply
So one person received multiple survey forms in the mail because a couple didn't update their address on the electoral roll, and could have filled them in, but didn't, and then wrote an article about it? Wow!!! How is that a big deal, or even a controversy? It's not—get real! --
Canley (
talk)
01:45, 14 November 2020 (UTC)reply