Plenty of election stories in this morning’s papers, but the majority are the sort of warmed-over generic previews that could have been written any time in the past few weeks (or, with some name changes, months). If you’re looking for hard news, the most interesting might be the piece by Phillip Coorey in The Age, foreshadowing a preference deal between Labor and the Greens.
Sure enough, a press release from the Greens this morning confirmed the story: Labor “will direct its Senate preferences to the Australian Greens ahead of all other political parties”, and “Local branches of the Greens have chosen to direct preferences to the Labor party ahead of the Coalition in a number of lower house seats”.
Even a large part of this could have been written months or years ago. Every election, Labor and the Greens circle each other warily before signing up to a deal on preferences that turns out to amount to very little. But it’s worth thinking about just how important those preferences might be this year, and what each party hopes to gain.
The Greens’ attitude is powerfully shaped by the experience of 2004, when Labor announced a preference deal and promptly ratted on it a day or two later, dealing instead with the Assemblies of God Party, Family First and ultimately delivering a Victorian Senate seat to Steve Fielding instead of the Greens’ David Risstrom (and almost doing the same thing in Tasmania).
This year, as I explained last week, the Greens would have to be very unlucky not to end up with the balance of power in the Senate. But they are haunted by the fear that Labor will again pay heed to its own fundamentalist wing and do something to deprive them of one of the necessary seats. That may be an irrational fear — I think Labor was burnt badly by the Fielding experiment — but as long as they hold it, Labor Senate preferences will be worth going out on a limb for.
In the lower house, Labor preferences are irrelevant — there is no seat where they are likely to be eliminated before the Greens. But Greens preferences, as everyone reminds us, will be critical to Labor’s fortunes in a host of marginal seats.
But beware the equivocation here, from “preferences”, meaning where votes actually go when they’re counted, to “preferences”, meaning what a party says on its how-to-vote cards. They’re not the same thing. The first matters a lot, but it doesn’t follow that the second matters much, if at all.
It’s scary how many people still don’t understand this, but preferences in the lower house, unlike the Senate, aren’t controlled by the parties. While some parties have mostly obedient voters who just follow the how-to-vote cards, others, such as the Greens or previously One Nation, attract a more ornery crowd who make up their own minds. And of course the smaller the party, the less likely its voters are to get given a how-to-vote card in the first place.
Greens voters mostly come from the left, and Greens preferences flow strongly to Labor regardless of what the party says on its how-to-vote cards. Directing preferences to Labor rather than leaving them open might make a difference of about 5%, maybe less. In a typical outer-suburban marginal, where the Greens vote isn’t very much to begin with, that’s only going to be about 0.2% or 0.3% of the total.
In a close election, of course, that could still swing enough seats to be decisive, and even if this election doesn’t look like being close, party strategists have to operate on the assumption that every seat matters. More to the point, Labor was never likely to do anything with its Senate preferences other than give them to the Greens, so the commitment costs it nothing (and, as 2004 demonstrated, it will rat on it anyway if it turns out to be inconvenient).
That extra 0.3% or so might not make a difference, but getting it as a free bonus is still a pretty good deal.
All very nice & dandy Richard, whilst the preferences split 80/30 to Labor.
However, what happens if the current indicated trend by Green voters that only 60% intend to preference Labor eventuates?
That gets the Coalition to 50% and ‘hasta la viata’ Labor
Charles, hope you are reading. You wrote: “Labor was never likely to do anything with its Senate preferences other than give them to the Greens, so the commitment costs it nothing (and, as 2004 demonstrated, it will rat on it anyway if it turns out to be inconvenient).”
But presumably at some point well before the election (printing and distribution of ballots) the parties must lock in their preference scheme (for “above the line” option)? How can Labor change its mind? Except that I suppose the submission to the electoral commission by the parties is secret?
@Michael – Sure, the proportion of Greens votes going to Labor might change. My point is that it’s not the how-to-vote cards that change it; the Greens voters, for whatever reason, change their minds.
@Michael R – True, the Senate preferences have to be locked in, two days after nominations close. But that’s still 12 days off, so there’s plenty of time for double-crossing. For the Reps, it’s not unknown for parties to print two different versions of their how-to-vote cards & decide at the last minute which one to hand out.
Michael,
The Senate preference allocations by all parties are available on the AEC website and Antony Green’s ABC elections website at least before the opening of pre-polling (2 ? weeks) prior to election day, and no doubt, elsewhere. Usually this means that political tragics know, but the average voter isn’t aware of what their above the line Senate vote will imply. So any ratting on a deal is evident by the time voting commences. It remains a matter of guesswork to assess the order in which candidates will be eliminated, and how the various deals will play out.
While Labor has (justifiably) copped a lot of flak for the Fielding fiasco, that outcome depended on the (declining) Democrats also preferring the FF candidate to the Greens. It was the collapse of the Labor vote which meant the exchange with the DLP, FF and others backfired.
When above-the-line voting was introduced, the preference allocations were displayed in each polling booth, but that practice was abandoned. Possibly it slowed throughput in busy booths, or it wasn’t sufficiently used to be justified.
Peter
My point simply is that in the last election there was unified dissatisfaction with Coalition by Labor & Greens.
This time there will be many Rudd Laborites pissed off with Gillard and many many Greens pissed off with ALL Laborites because of their position on Climate Change & Boaties.
It may well be back to a historic split by Greens at 65/35 and much runoff from Rudd Laborites.
She’s gonna be a very interesting Election.