The Constitution Alteration (Monopolies) Bill 1910, was put to voters for approval in a referendum held in 1911 that sought to alter the Australian Constitution to give the Commonwealth power to nationalise any corporation deemed by both houses of parliament to be a monopoly.

Question

Do you approve of the proposed law for the alteration of the Constitution entitled 'Constitution Alteration (Monopolies) 1910'?

Proposed Changes to the Constitution

The proposal was to add section 51a to the Constitution to read as follows (substituted text in bold):

<blockquote>51a. When each House of the Parliament, in the same session, has by Resolution declared that the industry or business of producing manufacturing or supplying any specified goods, or of supplying any specified services, is the subject of a monopoly, the Parliament shall have power to make laws for carrying on the industry or business by or under the control of the Commonwealth, and acquiring for that purpose on just terms any property used in connexion with the industry or business.</blockquote>

Results

<noinclude>The referendum was not approved by a majority of voters, and a majority of the voters was achieved in only one state, Western Australia.</noinclude>

{| class="wikitable"

|+ Result

|-

! width:180px" rowspan="2" | State

! width:70px" align=center rowspan="2" | Electoral roll

! width:70px" align=center rowspan="2" | Ballots issued

! width:140px" align=center colspan="2" | For

! width:140px" align=center colspan="2" | Against

! width:70px" align=center rowspan="2" | Informal

|-

! width:70px" align=center | Vote

! width:70px" align=center | %

! width:70px" align=center | Vote

! width:70px" align=center | %

|- align="right"

! style="text-align:left;" | New South Wales

| 868,194

| 384,188

| 138,237

| align="middle" | 36.72

| 238,177

|

| 7,618

|- align="right"

! style="text-align:left;" | Victoria

| 723,377

| 448,566

| 171,453

| align="middle" | 38.95

| 268,743

|

| 8,041

|- align="right"

! style="text-align:left;" | Queensland

| 293,003

| 162,135

| 70,259

| align="middle" | 44.26

| 88,472

|

| 3,200

|- align="right"

! style="text-align:left;" | South Australia

| 216,027

| 133,802

| 50,835

| align="middle" | 38.42

| 81,479

|

| 1,344

|- align="right"

! style="text-align:left;" | Western Australia

| 138,697

| 61,482

| 33,592

|

| 26,561

| align="middle" | 44.16

| 898

|- align="right"

! style="text-align:left;" | Tasmania

| 102,326

| 58,053

| 24,292

| align="middle" | 42.43

| 32,960

|

| 753

|- bgcolor=#FFE0C0 align="right"

! style="text-align:left;"| Total for Commonwealth

| noWrap align="right" | 2,341,624

| noWrap align="right" | 1,248,226

| noWrap align="right" | 488,668

| noWrap align="middle" | 39.89

| noWrap align="right" | 736,392

|

| noWrap align="right" | 21,854

|-

! style="text-align:left;"| Results

| colSpan="8" | Obtained majority in one state and an overall minority of 247,724 votes. Not carried

|}

Discussion

This was the first of many times that similar questions were asked at a referendum. On every occasion the public decided not to vest power in the government over monopolies.

  • 1913 Australian Referendum (Monopolies)
  • 1919 Australian Referendum (Monopolies)

See also

  • Referendums in
  • Politics of Australia
  • History of Australia

References

Further reading

  • Standing Committee on Legislative and Constitutional Affairs (1997) Constitutional Change: Select sources on Constitutional change in Australia 1901–1997. Australian Government Printing Service, Canberra.
  • Bennett, Scott (2003). Research Paper no. 11 2002–03: The Politics of Constitutional Amendment Australian Department of the Parliamentary Library, Canberra.
  • Australian Electoral Commission (2007) Referendum Dates and Results 1906 – Present AEC, Canberra.