What's the difference between the lower house and upper house (well, other than the green and red)?
►► How do your views compare to the parties’ policies? Find out with Vote Compass: [ Ссылка ]
In Australia we have a bicameral system — the Senate and the House of Representatives. Members of the House represent a geographic area — known as electorates — which match up with population spread.
The Senate, however, represents states or territories. The number of Senators is spread equally across the country, giving less populated states an edge. There are also a lot of crossbench and minor party senators (such as the Greens and One Nation) because of the Senate's voting system, known as proportional representation, which means people who receive very few primary votes can still be elected based on preferences.
Get more politics from triple j Hack: [ Ссылка ]
For more from ABC News, click here: [ Ссылка ]
Subscribe to us on YouTube: [ Ссылка ]
You can also like us on Facebook: [ Ссылка ]
Or follow us on Instagram: [ Ссылка ]
Or even on Twitter: [ Ссылка ]
The House of Reps vs The Senate | Politics Explained
Теги
Australiapoliticssenatehouse of representativescrossbencherspolitics australiaparliament housewhat's the differencevoting in australiaelectionsenatorgovernmentparliamentliberal partylabor partyunrepresentative swillelectoratemembervoting systemexplainerknowledgeelection 2019politics explainedabc newstriple j hackauspolaustralian electionbicameral systemproportional representationfraser anningone nation