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Research Note 36 1996-97

Push Polling in Australia: Options for Regulation

George Williams
Consultant
Law and Bills Digest Group


Push polling is an election technique that has gained considerable notoriety. The practice involves the deliberate spreading of baseless and malicious allegations about a candidate standing for election. A poll is taken not to discover voter attitudes, but to shape voter preferences by disseminating false information. A United States organisation, the National Council on Public Polls, has described the practice as a 'thoroughly unethical political campaign technique'.

The technique first came to public attention in Australia in the 1994 Northern Territory election. The Labor Party alleged that push polling cost it a significant number of votes and possibly even a seat in that election. Since then, there have been allegations of push polling in the 1995 Queensland and New South Wales State elections and, at the federal level, in the 1995 Canberra by-election. Push polling has been said to have cost votes for the Labor Party and the Coalition, as well as New South Wales State independent Peter Macdonald.

The taking of a push poll

Push polling may occur as follows. A political party arranges for a poll of the intentions of voters in a marginal electorate. Under the guise of what appears to be an authentic poll, but undertaken perhaps by a polling company set up for the purpose, voters are asked whether they would be prepared to vote for the candidate of the opposing party if they knew that, for example, that candidate had rorted his or her travel fund. The implication, which is utterly false, is that the candidate has acted corruptly. For even greater effect, the poll might disseminate false information relating to critical local issues, such as aircraft noise, or divisive issues, such as abortion or euthanasia. When undertaken at the close of a campaign, perhaps within 48 hours of voting, push polling can have a devastating effect. The planting of a seed of doubt about the integrity of a candidate, particularly when the information is given a veneer of authenticity by its inclusion in a supposedly independent poll, can be highly effective in swinging a person's vote from one candidate to another.

To take an example, it was alleged by the Northern Territory Opposition that a poll was taken two days before the 1995 Territory election in which voters were asked whether they would change their vote if they knew certain 'facts'. These 'facts' included that the Opposition would, if elected, 'introduce two sets of laws - one for blacks and another for whites'.

Allegations of push polling in the 1995 Canberra by-election led to an inquiry by the Federal Parliament's Joint Standing Committee on Electoral Matters. The Committee received submissions and took evidence in 1995. The Committee was unable to hand down a report before the calling of the 1996 Federal election and the inquiry has not been revived.

Push polling is prevalent in the United States and has apparently been used in contests across the nation. There the practice is not regarded as a legitimate poll but as a 'telemarketing technique'. A proposal before the United States Congress is that the Federal Compaign Act 1971 (US) be amended to require the takers of a push poll to reveal in the taking of the poll that it has been paid for by a candidate for office or a political party.

Regulating push polling

The main problems associated with any regulation of push polling are difficulties of enforcement and that of precisely defining the practice. A law that banned push polling would also impinge upon the implied constitutional freedom of political discussion recognised by the High Court. However, a law that sought to regulate push polling would likely be valid if challenged in the High Court so long as it was closely tailored to its aim and only affected political discussion to the minimum extent necessary to achieve this aim.(1) Like other electoral offences, the law could be drafted so as to ensure free and fair elections, or, in the words of Justice Gaudron in Muldowney v South Australia (1996) 136 ALR 18 at 31, to achieve the 'furthering or enhancing [of] democratic processes'.

Push polling is currently almost totally unregulated. No law specifically targets push polling, nor is there any other provision that is likely to be effective in stopping the practice. At best, an affected candidate might be able to sue the takers of the poll for defamation. The closest that the Commonwealth Electoral Act 1918 (Cth) comes to regulating push polling is section 350. Section 350 states that it is an offence to 'make or publish any false and defamatory statement in relation to the personal character or conduct of a candidate'. The penalty is imprisonment for six months, a $1,000 fine or both. A person can escape conviction if it can be shown that he or she 'had reasonable ground for believing and did in fact believe the statement to be true'.

Not only does section 350 not target push polling, but the section may be inconsistent with the implied freedom of political discussion. Section 350 gives too little weight to freedom of political discussion. A person can be convicted if he or she does not believe a statement to be true or false but nevertheless has reasonable grounds for making it. Requiring that a person actually believe that a statement is correct is arguably too high a standard as it would include a journalist who publishes a story not knowing whether it is in fact true but having a reasonable and non-malicious basis for it.

The decision of the High Court in Theophanous v Herald & Weekly Times Ltd (1994) 182 CLR 104 shows the type of criteria, or safety valve, that could be built into any law seeking to proscribe or control push polling. The critical feature is the need to avoid a blanket ban which would punish a person where he or she is reasonably unaware of the harm caused. A law would thus not be likely to infringe the implied freedom if it made it an offence for a person to engage in polling where the person has the intent to disseminate false or misleading information about a candidate or party through the taking of a poll.

Endnotes

  1. See G. Williams 'The State of Play in the Constitutionally Implied Freedom of Political Discussion and Bans on Electoral Canvassing in Australia', ISR Research Paper , No. 10 199697
 

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