New South Wales referendums, 1995

New South Wales referendums, 1995
Independence of judges Vote %
Yes 65.9
No 34.1
Four-year terms Vote %
Yes 75.5
No 24.5

Referendums concerning the independence of judges and four-year parliamentary terms were put to New South Wales voters on 25 March 1995. The referendums coincided with that year's New South Wales general election. Both changes had the support of the major political parties and were approved by large majorities.

Independence of judges

Voters were asked to strengthen protections of the political independence of judges and magistrates. The text of the question was "Do you approve of the Bill entitled: A Bill for an Act to prevent Parliament from changing laws about the independence of judges and magistrates without a referendum?"

  Votes %
Yes 2,225,166 65.9
No 1,151,255 34.1
Total Formal 3,376,421 100.0
Informal 222,720
Total Votes 3,599,141

Four-year terms

Voters were asked to fix parliamentary terms at four years. Until then, premiers would call early elections if the political situation seemed more favourable than it might at the end of the term. This practice was a source of irritation for voters and opposition parties alike.

The Fahey Coalition inherited the fixed four-year terms proposal. Fahey's predecessor, Nick Greiner, had promised a referendum on the subject, among other things, to three independents in order to keep office in 1991.

The text of the question was "Do you approve of the Bill entitled: A Bill for an Act to require the Parliament of New South Wales to serve full 4-year terms and to prevent politicians calling early general elections or changing these new constitutional rules without a further referendum?"

  Votes %
Yes 2,449,796 75.5
No 795,706 24.5
Total Formal 3,245,502 100.0
Informal 353,639
Total Votes 3,599,141

See also

References

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