The referendum of the 13 April 1910 approved an amendment to the Australian constitution. Technically it was a vote on the Constitution Alteration (State Debts) Act, 1909, which after being approved in the referendum received the Royal Assent on the 6 August.
Upon the establishment of the Commonwealth of Australia, the federal government was given the power to assume any pre-existing debts held by the state governments at that time. The Act altered Section 105 of the constitution to extend this power so that the Commonwealth could take over any debts incurred by a state at any time. On the same day the referendum was held on the state debts amendment, a proposed surplus revenue amendment was also put to the electorate but was defeated.
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Ensuring the future financial good health of the states was a matter of great importance to the writers of the constitution, and they worked hard to produce a workable Finance and Trade chapter (Chapter IV). Two important provisions of the chapter were Section 87, which required the return of surplus tariff funds to the states, and Section 105, which provided for the Commonwealth to take over State debts that existed at the time of Federation. By the end of the Commonwealth's first decade it was clear that Chapter IV had serious flaws, and in 1910 attempts were made to amend Sections 87 and 105.
In mid-1909, Alfred Deakin succeeded Andrew Fisher as Prime Minister for what would be his third and final time. Impetus had built in recent years for changes to state-federal financial relations, and Deakin made several important administrative decisions on this matter. Negotiations between Deakin, Forrest and state premiers produced the financial agreement of 1909, which gave the states per capita grants of 25 shillings annually [1]. Deakin proposed two constitutional amendments at the 1910 ballot to ratify these administrative changes, though the second question was much more pressing than the first. It failed, but in practice the agreement determined Commonwealth-State financial arrangements until 1927. The first question on the state debts proposal dealt with a perceived need to expand the operation of Section 105 to allow the Commonwealth to take over state debts whenever they were incurred [2].
The state debts amendment was carried by a 'yes' vote of approximately 55 per cent, with only New South Wales in opposition. According to a historian of the Loan Council, this indicated that the nation had "decisively favoured a scheme on the basis of s. 105 to relieve the States of some of their financial burden" [3]. Despite the smooth passage of the amendment, it would be more than a decade before the specifically endowed powers would be used. However, the state debts amendment was important in giving greater potential flexibility to Chapter IV of the constitution, and became an important aspect of federal-state intergovernmental financial relations [4].
Question: Do you approve of the proposed law for the alteration of the Constitution entitled 'Constitution Alteration (State Debts) 1909?
State | Electoral Roll | Ballots Issued | For | Against | Informal | Result | |||
Vote | % | Vote | % | ||||||
New South Wales | 834,662 | 512,802 | 159,275 | 33.34% | 318,412 | 66.66% | 34,060 | No | |
Victoria | 703,699 | 468,535 | 279,392 | 64.59% | 153,148 | 35.41% | 33,824 | Yes | |
Queensland | 279,031 | 170,634 | 102,705 | 64.57% | 56,346 | 35.43% | 9,971 | Yes | |
South Australia | 207,655 | 110,053 | 72,985 | 73.18% | 26,742 | 26.82% | 10,252 | Yes | |
Western Australia | 134,979 | 83,893 | 57,367 | 72.80% | 21,437 | 27.20% | 4,324 | Yes | |
Tasmania | 98,456 | 57,609 | 43,329 | 80.97% | 10,186 | 19.03% | 3,778 | Yes | |
Total | 2,258,482 | 1,403,976 | 715,053 | 54.95% | 586,271 | 45.05% | 96,209 | Yes | |
Sources: Standing Committee on Legislative and Constitutional Affairs (1997) Constitutional Change: Select sources on Constitutional change in Australia 1901-1997. Government Printing Office. |
Deletion from Section 105 (removed text in bold):
Preceded by Senate Elections Amendment (1907) |
Amendments to the Constitution of Australia | Succeeded by 2nd State Debts Amendment (1929) |
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