Constitutional Implications in Australia
355
also done so only after debate and deliberation over the reasonableness or
justifiability of limitations of this kind.
The Court in recent years has also extended and expanded this understand-
ing of the requirements of representative government in sections 7 and 24
of the Constitution to imply protections around access to the franchise. In
Roach v. Electoral Commissioner, in the context of federal legislation disqual-
ifying all prisoners from voting in federal elections, a majority of the Court
held that legislation of this kind amounted to an arbitrary or disproportionate
limitation on a principle of universal access to the franchise protected by the
Constitution.
55
Chief Justice Gleeson held that changed historical circum-
stances over the course of the twentieth century were such that the language
of ‘directly chosen by the people’ in sections 7 and 24 of the Constitution had
‘come to be a constitutional protection of the right to vote’, on the basis of
universal adult suffrage.
56
Justices Gummow, Kirby and Crennan, in a joint
judgment, likewise held that ‘voting in elections for the parliament lies at the
very heart of the system of government which the Constitution provides’, and
that the Constitution thus supported at least some ‘minimum bedrock’ of vot-
ing rights, where what was ‘at stake [was] legislative disqualification of some
citizens from exercise of the franchise’.
57
In the implied freedom of political communication and franchise cases,
the relevant implied limitations have thus operated both to promote a robust
form of judicial review of the constitutionality of Commonwealth and state
legislation and, in some cases, the protection of the political rights of individ-
uals involved. However, even in this context, with the notable exception of
Gleeson CJ’s statement in Roach, the Court has repeatedly stressed that the
relevant implications are to be seen as limitations on power, rather than as the
source of individual rights;
58
thus, as we saw with the structural protections
implied from Chapter III, rights protection through implication in Australia
remains indirect, and closely tied to the structural features of the Constitution.
12.1.4. Federalism, Responsible Government and Executive Power
In one of the most recent extra-textual judicial developments, in the 2012 deci-
sion of Williams v. Commonwealth (No. 1),
59
the High Court relied on textual
55
(2007) 233 CLR 162.
56
Ibid.
, 174, [7].
57
Ibid.
, 198, [81]–[82].
58
In the recent decision of Gaynor, the Full Federal Court emphasised the importance of this
distinction:
Chief of Defence Force v.
Gaynor [2017] FCAFC 41.
59
Williams v.
Commonwealth (
No. 1) (2012) 248 CLR 156.
356
Rosalind Dixon and Gabrielle Appleby
and structural implications, and more specifically, the combined effect of
the federal structure of the Commonwealth Parliament and the role of the
Senate, and the doctrines of responsible government, to identify extra-textual
limits on the exercise of federal executive power to spend and contract.
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