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Australian House of Representatives

The House of Representatives is one of the two chambers of the parliament of Australia. The other is the Senate.

The 150 members of the house are elected from single-member geographic districts (popularly known as "seats" but officially known as "Commonwealth Electoral Divisions") which are intended to represent reasonably contiguous regions, with relatively equal population in each of about 80 000 people. Voting is by the preferential system.

According to Australia's Constitution, the powers of both houses are nearly equal with the consent of both houses needed to pass legislation. In practice, however, the "House" or "Lower House" as it is called, is far stronger in some ways, and far weaker in others.

By convention, the party or coalition in the lower house with a majority is invited by the Governor-General to form government, and thus the leader of the party in the lower house becomes the Prime Minister of Australia and his senior colleagues ministers responsible for various government departments. Bills appropriating money can also only be introduced or modified in the lower house. Thus, only parties in the lower house can govern. However, in the rigid Australian party system, this ensures that virtually all contentious votes are along party lines, and the government always has a majority in those votes. The Opposition's only real role in the House is to present arguments why the government's policies and legislation are wrong, and attempt to embarrass the government as much as possible by asking difficult questions at question time. The Senate, by contrast, has not had any single party or coalition holding a majority in many years, so votes in the senate are actually meaningful. The House's parliamentary committee system is also embryonic as compared to the well-established Senate committee system.

In a reflection of the color scheme of the House of Commons, the House of Representatives is decorated in green.

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2001 Australian legislative election | Archie Cameron | Arthur Calwell | Australia | Australia/Government | Australian | Australian Commonwealth | Australian Democrats | Australian Greens Party | Australian Parliament | Australian Prime Ministers | Australian Senate | Australian electoral system | Australian legislative election, 1996 | Australian legislative election, 1998 | Australian legislative election, 2001 | Australian legislative election, 2004 | Bicameral | Bicameral legislature | Bicameral parliament | Bicameralism | Billy Snedden | Bob Brown | Charles Blunt | Commonwealth of Australia | Division (vote) | Doug Anthony | Frank Crean | Frank Tudor | Full employment | Government of Australia | Governor-General of Australia | Governor General of Australia | House Of Commons | House of Representatives | ISO 3166-1:AU | Ian Sinclair | Jack Lang (Australia) | Jamaican House of Representatives | John Anderson (Australian politician) | John Baird | John Baird, 1st Baron Stonehaven | John Baird, 1st Viscount Stonehaven | John Duncan Anderson | John Hewson | John Howard | John Lawrence Baird | John Moore (Australian MP) | John Winston Howard | Kim Beazley, senior | Kim Beazley (elder) | Kim E Beazley | Kim Edward Beazley | List of Australia-related topics | List of Political Families | List of legislatures | List of longest-serving members of the Ausdtralian House of Representatives | List of longest-serving members of the Australian House of Representatives | List of members of the Australian House of Representatives | List of national legislatures | List of national parliaments | Mark Latham | Mark William Latham | Parliament | Parliament of Australia | Parliamentary government | Pauline Hanson | Peter Costello | Philip Ruddock | Phillip Ruddock | Political families | Political families of the world | Political family | Politics of Australia | Prime Minister of Australia | Prime Ministers of Australia | Richard Casey | Richard Casey, 1st Baron Casey of Berwick | Richard Casey, Baron Casey of Berwick | Richard Gardiner Casey | Robert James Brown | Ronald Munro-Ferguson | Ronald Munro-Ferguson, 1st Viscount Novar of Raith | Senate of Australia | Simon Crean | Simon Findlay Crean | Sir Ronald Munro-Ferguson | Table of voting systems by nation | Table of voting systems by nation/temp | The Australian electoral system | Werriwa

 

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This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Australian House of Representatives".

 

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