Currently, Australian voters simply state their name and address to receive a ballot. Proponents of Voter ID argue that this loose system is vulnerable to fraud and that tightening it aligns Australia with many other democracies that require identification. Opponents argue that in-person fraud is statistically non-existent in Australia and that adding bureaucratic hurdles will discourage voting among remote Indigenous communities, the homeless, and the elderly, effectively skewing election results in favor of conservatives.
Response rates from 138 Australia voters.
Trend of support over time for each answer from 138 Australia voters.
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Trend of how important this issue is for 138 Australia voters.
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Based on 138 responses to this question.
These results come from iSideWith's ongoing political issues survey. We collect over a million responses per day, filter out duplicate and multiple submissions, and break the results down by political party, ideology, age, state, and census demographics (income, race, education, household).
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