Difference between revisions of "Congress of Australia"
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− | {{ | + | {{Australia Menu}}{{-}} |
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{{Government | {{Government | ||
|name = Congress of Australia | |name = Congress of Australia | ||
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|leader_title = | |leader_title = | ||
|partof = [[Australia]] | |partof = [[Australia]] | ||
− | }} | + | }}{{TOCright}} |
+ | '''Congress of Australia''' is sometimes referred to as the '''Senate of Australia''', hence the elected officials are referred to as '''Senators''' instead of Congress members. '''[[Speaker of the Senate (Australia)|Senate Speaker]]''' was an active position until 2011, a role that one of the [[Congress member]]s (Senators) held. | ||
− | + | The [[Congress elections|Congressional/Senate elections]] take place on the 25th day of each month. Only the top 5 parties can nominate candidates for the elections. | |
− | + | Until October 2008, Congressional/Senate Elections were held as part of the general elections which included both [[Presidential elections|Presidential (Prime Minister)]] & Congressional/Senate Elections and they were held on the 1st of each month. Up to this point, citizens voted for the party list in a certain region, not the individual candidates. | |
− | + | From October 2008 up to September 2012, citizens voted for an individual candidate on a party list in a certain region. As of September 2012, citizens vote for lists of party representatives instead of individual candidates which is valid for a whole country, not a certain region. | |
+ | '''The first [[Congress elections|Congressional/Senate elections]]''' in {{CountryLink|Australia}} were held on eDay 11 (''{{HistoryDate|11}}'') when first ever general elections were held in the [[New World]]. Unfortunately, not a lot of data is known from this period and the first known results are from December 2008. | ||
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+ | ==Congress elections in Australia== | ||
*[[Congress of Australia 2008]] | *[[Congress of Australia 2008]] | ||
*[[Congress of Australia 2009]] | *[[Congress of Australia 2009]] | ||
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*[[Congress of Australia 2019]] | *[[Congress of Australia 2019]] | ||
*[[Congress of Australia 2020]] | *[[Congress of Australia 2020]] | ||
+ | *[[Congress of Australia 2021]] | ||
+ | *[[Congress of Australia 2022]] | ||
+ | *[[Congress of Australia 2023]] | ||
+ | *[[Congress of Australia 2024]] | ||
==Numbers of Congress seats by parties== | ==Numbers of Congress seats by parties== | ||
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{|class="wikitable" style="text-align:center" | {|class="wikitable" style="text-align:center" | ||
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!The last month present in the Congress | !The last month present in the Congress | ||
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− | |[[KnightHawks Military Council]] || | + | |[[KnightHawks Military Council]] || 599 || June 2021 |
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− | |[[Australian Parliamentary Party]] || | + | |[[Australian Parliamentary Party]] || 521 || June 2021 |
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|[[Australian National Party]] || 423 || May 2019 | |[[Australian National Party]] || 423 || May 2019 | ||
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|[[Australian Communist Party]] || 80 || April 2012 | |[[Australian Communist Party]] || 80 || April 2012 | ||
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+ | |{{eLink|party|3496|Australian Union Party}} || 72 || June 2021 | ||
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|{{eLink|party|5092|Revolutionary Socialist Union}} || 68 || December 2016 | |{{eLink|party|5092|Revolutionary Socialist Union}} || 68 || December 2016 | ||
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|[[True Blue Party]] || 55 || November 2009 | |[[True Blue Party]] || 55 || November 2009 | ||
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+ | |{{eLink|party|3503|eAustralia's Queen's Party}} || 53 || June 2021 | ||
+ | |- | ||
+ | |{{eLink|party|5092|Revolutionary greenthumbs}} || 49 || January 2020 | ||
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|[[Procreate and Populate Party]] || 45 || May 2010 | |[[Procreate and Populate Party]] || 45 || May 2010 | ||
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|[[Australian Military Party]] || 45 || May 2010 | |[[Australian Military Party]] || 45 || May 2010 | ||
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− | |{{eLink|party|5092| | + | |{{eLink|party|5092|The Imperial Party}} || 34 || June 2021 |
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|[[DIY Party of Australia]] || 27 || July 2011 | |[[DIY Party of Australia]] || 27 || July 2011 | ||
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|{{eLink|party|4556|Australian Liberation Front}} || 15 || July 2014 | |{{eLink|party|4556|Australian Liberation Front}} || 15 || July 2014 | ||
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{{Lists of Congresses by country}} | {{Lists of Congresses by country}} | ||
− | [[Category:Australia]] | + | [[Category:History of Australia]] |
− | [[Category: | + | [[Category:Congress of Australia| ]] |
[[Category:Lists of congresses by country|Australia]] | [[Category:Lists of congresses by country|Australia]] |
Latest revision as of 03:37, 14 January 2024
Country ● History ● Organizations ● Citizens ● Prime Ministers (Presidents) ● Governments ● Senates ● Parties ● Military
Congress of Australia is sometimes referred to as the Senate of Australia, hence the elected officials are referred to as Senators instead of Congress members. Senate Speaker was an active position until 2011, a role that one of the Congress members (Senators) held.
The Congressional/Senate elections take place on the 25th day of each month. Only the top 5 parties can nominate candidates for the elections.
Until October 2008, Congressional/Senate Elections were held as part of the general elections which included both Presidential (Prime Minister) & Congressional/Senate Elections and they were held on the 1st of each month. Up to this point, citizens voted for the party list in a certain region, not the individual candidates.
From October 2008 up to September 2012, citizens voted for an individual candidate on a party list in a certain region. As of September 2012, citizens vote for lists of party representatives instead of individual candidates which is valid for a whole country, not a certain region.
The first Congressional/Senate elections in Australia were held on eDay 11 (1 December 2007) when first ever general elections were held in the New World. Unfortunately, not a lot of data is known from this period and the first known results are from December 2008.
Congress elections in Australia
- Congress of Australia 2008
- Congress of Australia 2009
- Congress of Australia 2010
- Congress of Australia 2011
- Congress of Australia 2012
- Congress of Australia 2013
- Congress of Australia 2014
- Congress of Australia 2015
- Congress of Australia 2016
- Congress of Australia 2017
- Congress of Australia 2018
- Congress of Australia 2019
- Congress of Australia 2020
- Congress of Australia 2021
- Congress of Australia 2022
- Congress of Australia 2023
- Congress of Australia 2024
Numbers of Congress seats by parties
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