There have been 18 referendums in New South Wales, 8 of which concerned proposals to amend the New South Wales Constitution, half of which concerned the Legislative Council. While the Constitution of Australia was adopted after the 1898 and 1899 referendums in all of the proposed states, the Constitution of New South Wales, promulgated in 1902, was an Act of the Parliament of New South Wales which could be amended by Parliament. Since 1927 the Constitution has included provisions that can only be amended following approval in a referendum.[1] 8 of the referendums, including 5 on the sale of alcohol, did not involve any proposed amendment to the Constitution.[2] While these have traditionally been called referendums, they could also be described as plebiscites.[3]
Local Government Areas (also known as Councils or LGAs) can also propose Constitutional amendments such as when the Council wants to make changes to the method by which the Mayor is elected to office by direct election or indirect election by the Councillors. Councils may also conduct polls which are optional to vote in and may be limited to certain voters on a proposal to gain community opinion on building infrastructure or other matters, the result of these polls (like a plebiscite) is non-binding on the Council.[4]
The Constitution Act 1902 as made in 1902 was an act of the New South Wales Parliament. In contrast to the Constitution of Australia it was not approved by a referendum and did not contain any provision requiring a referendum to alter it. In 1929 the parliament passed an amendment to the Constitution Act which inserted section 7A, requiring a referendum before the Legislative Council could be abolished.[5] In 1930 Labor MLCs put forward two bills, one to repeal section 7A, the other to abolish the Council. Believing that a referendum was necessary before the bills could become law, the Legislative Council permitted the bills to pass without a division on 10 December. The validity of section 7A and the inability to repeal the section without a referendum were upheld by the Supreme Court on 23 December 1930,[6] a majority of the High Court on 16 March 1931,[7] and the Judicial Committee of the Privy Council on 31 May 1932.[8]
^ ab"Referendums in New South Wales". parliament.nsw.gov.au. Results of referendums in New South Wales. Archived from the original on 15 September 2024. Retrieved 11 October 2021.
^"Liquor (Amendment) Act, 1954". Government Gazette of the State of New South Wales. No. 201. 10 December 1954. p. 3763. Retrieved 25 October 2021 – via Trove.