Category Archives: Quickie

Election 2010: Be Informed – know how preferences work

August 20, 2010

I am so sick and tired of hearing stuff like “If you vote for <insert party here> they are giving their preferences to <insert major party here>. So that’s a vote for <prime ministerial candidate here>!” I’m not sure if I can make this any clearer, but:

NO IT’S NOT

Let’s cover voting basics. In the House of Representatives, you number each box from 1 to n, where n is the number of candidates on the ballot.

House of Representatives Ballot Paper example

So whoever you number 1 is your first preference, number 2 is your second preference and so on. The person who you voted as preference 1 does not decide what happens to your preferences. You do!

In the Senate, you have two options. Option one is that you can put a number 1 above the line.

Senate Ballot Paper example - above the line voting

This means that you will vote for their senate ticket(s). Before every election, each party which has a box above the line tells the Australian Electoral Commission how to distribute their votes. So if you vote above the line, you vote will be determined by the party you voted for. This is the only way in which a party or group can do what they want with your votes.

Option two is to vote below the line. This is where you number each box from 1 to n, where n is the number of senate candidates in your state.

Senate Ballot Paper example - below the line voting

In works much the same way as in the House of Representatives. You decide who gets your first preference, second preference and so on. The person you put as number 1 does not decide what happens with your preferences.

I believe that it’s important to be informed, not scared by faceless people telling you that a vote for someone is a vote for someone else. Decide for yourself who will receive your preferences and number below the line. Or at least research the senate group tickets first. I recommend Antony Green’s guide over on ABC Elections. He also has good information on all this preference stuff and how it works.

Be informed. Don’t be fooled.

ETA: Viv pointed me to this brilliant site called Vote Below The Line! It can help you with deciding how to direct your preferences when voting below the line. It asks who you want to vote for, shows you the preferences that they have and then helps you to change them to suit the way you want to vote. Thanks Viv!


The only way is oAuth!

August 19, 2010

A reminder for all those who deal with the Twitter API that the cut off has now passed for the end of Basic Auth access to Twitter. For the non-technical out there, this is where you give an application, or a website, your username and password and it logs into Twitter and does something for you.

From now on, all applications will need to use oAuth. I think this is much more secure as the application or website will direct you to Twitter, who would verify who you are and whether you give approval or not. Twitter will also tell the user who is seeking the authorisation, so as an end user I have a better idea of who gets to know what. Developers of Twitter applications have been moving towards this model for a while now and it was pretty much the de facto standard anyway.

An application which is registered with Twitter identifies itself with a security token and key. I run Twitter Tools on my blog and they have had to come with a work around. Since PHP is coded in plain text and not compiled, they couldn’t register it as an application and use their own tokens and keys or other people would use them to imitate their application. Instead I had to register my website as its own application, and every user of Twitter Tools is going to have to do the same.

Screenshot of this site's registration with Twitter

I had to register my site as an application.

It might seem a drawback, but it does mean that any tweets from my site now come up as coming from the “Nicholosophy” application, which links back to my site. Pretty cool.

So if you aren’t a developer but you run Twitter Tools (or something similar) check out to see if you need to do something. Otherwise I believe it’s another great change by Twitter to improve security and I can’t complain about that!


Who will be Deputy PM if Tony Abbott wins?

August 18, 2010

Sometimes all you need is a quick shot of adrenaline to get you through the day. In the same way, sometimes you just need a quick shot of information to inform you. This is the first of probably many quick shot posts.

I have seen some friends questioning who will be the Deputy Prime Minister should Tony Abbott become prime minister after this weekend’s Federal election. This tweet got the conversation rolling.

Is it true that if Abbott is elected Barnaby Joyce will be the Deputy PM? - tweet from @TheDiscourse

No, it is not. It’s easy with the Labor Party as we know that Julia Gillard would be Prime Minister and Wayne Swan the Deputy Prime Minister. Because the Liberals and Nationals are on coalition, it works a bit differently.

The Liberal Party and the National Party each have a leader and a deputy. For the Liberals, Tony Abbott is leader and therefore if also the Leader of the Opposition. Julie Bishop is the deputy Liberal leader and Deputy Leader of the Opposition. They get the honour of getting those titles because they are the largest opposition party. Warren Truss is the Leader of the Nationals and Senator Nigel Scullion is his deputy.

Now if the coalition come into power on Saturday, it all changes a bit. Tony Abbot becomes Prime Minister, but Warren Truss becomes Deputy Prime Minister. This is because as part of the coalition agreement it is agreed that the leader of the party with the most seats (always the Liberals) will be Prime Minister and the other leader will be Deputy Prime Minister. Julie Bishop will remain the deputy leader of the Liberal Party and Senator Scullion will remain the deputy leader of the National Party. Now if both Abbott and Truss were unavailable, Julie Bishop would be acting Prime Minister and if all three were unavailable, Senator Scullion would become acting Prime Minster. But that is rare (but did happen to Peter Costello at one stage I believe).

That was clear and concise, wasn’t it?


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