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Victorian Legislative Council

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Victorian Legislative Council
Type
Type
Leadership
Bob Smith, Labor Party
since 19 December 2006
Seats40
Meeting place
Parliament House, Melbourne, Victoria
Website
www.parliament.vic.gov.au

The Legislative Council, or upper house, is one of the two chambers of the Parliament of Victoria, Australia. The other is the Legislative Assembly. Both sit in Parliament House in Spring Street, Melbourne. It serves as a house of review, in a similar fashion to its federal counterpart, the Australian Senate. Although it is possible for legislation to be first introduced in the Council, most bills receive their first hearing in the Legislative Assembly. The Council is presided over by a President, equivalent to the Assembly's Speaker.

The Council was created in 1851, four years before the Assembly.

Today the Council has 40 members serving four-year terms. They represent 8 electoral regions, with five members representing each region.

Old system, to 2006

The Legislative Council Chamber, as photographed in 1878.

The Legislative Council was formerly elected from 22 single-member electorates called "provinces". The members of the council sat for two assembly terms so two members sat for each province. This is a list of the provinces as of 2005:

The following provinces also existed but were abolished at various dates up to 2002:

The old system tended to favour the Liberal Party of Australia and the National Party of Australia (often in coalition) over the Australian Labor Party and other parties. This caused many instances where a Labor-controlled Assembly faced an opposition-controlled Council — a rare occurrence elsewhere in Australia.

New system, since 2006

The system changed for the 2006 Victorian election, as a result of major reforms passed by the Labor government, led by Steve Bracks, in 2003. Under the new system members serve fixed four-year terms unless the Assembly is dissolved sooner. The state is divided into the following eight electoral regions:

Each region consists of 11 contiguous Legislative Assembly districts with about 420,000 electors who elect five members of the Legislative Council by the single transferable vote. There are now 40 members of the Legislative Council, four fewer than before. The changes have introduced proportional representation. The opportunity was also taken to remove the Council's ability to block supply. The reforms have made it easier for minor parties to gain election to the chamber and possibly gain the balance of power, as opposed to majority control by a single major party.

Distribution of Seats

Party Seats held
Template:Australian politics/party colours/Labor Australian Labor Party
19
Template:Australian politics/party colours/Liberal Liberal Party
15
Template:Australian politics/party colours/Nationals National Party
2
Template:Australian politics/party colours/Greens Greens
3
Template:Australian politics/party colours/DLP Democratic Labor Party
1

See also

References

at the Victorian Parliament website