Fun Facts

Fun facts about democracy in Australia

Did you Know?

  • Australia was one of the first countries to let women vote (1902), but Aboriginal people couldn’t vote until 1962
  • The longest serving Prime Minister worked for a total of 18 years and 5 months
  • Australia is one of the few countries where voting is compulsory
  • You can enrol to vote from age 16 (but can’t vote until 18)
  • The first Aboriginal person in Federal Parliament was Neville Bonner in 1971
  • Parliament House in Canberra has over 4,500 rooms
  • The Australian Constitution has been changed only 8 times out of 44 attempts since 1901
  • When Parliament House was built, they used Kimberley sandstone for some of the walls
  • The Kimberley region often has the highest voter turnout in remote Australia
  • Halls Creek Shire was the first in the Kimberley to have a majority of Aboriginal councillors

The youngest person ever elected to a Kimberley shire council was 19 years old.

Voting Facts

  • Election day is always on a Saturday
  • We use pencils to vote (not pens)
  • You can vote from Antarctica if you’re working there
  • The shortest time someone was Prime Minister was 7 days
  • The youngest person ever elected to Parliament was 22 years old
  • Some remote polling places have only 20 voters, while some city ones have over 100,000

Some remote communities in the Kimberley get mobile polling teams - AEC mob come to community.

Democracy in action

  • Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people were given the right to vote in Federal elections in 1962
  • There are over 7,000 polling places during a federal election
  • The first Aboriginal person to sit in WA Parliament was Ernie Bridge from the Kimberley (1980)

Carol Martin from Broome was the first Aboriginal woman in any Australian Parliament (2001).