Overseas Australians can get a 'trusted person' to vote for them on same-sex marriage: ABS

Australians living or travelling overseas have been encouraged to ask a 'trusted person' back home to open their same-sex marriage ballot letter from the ABS and mail a response on their behalf.

Ballots for the postal vote are due to be mailed out on September 12

Ballots for the postal vote are due to be mailed out on September 12 Source: AAP

The ABS originally promised to mail ballot papers to registered voters overseas, but its website now suggests people should communicate their opinion to a reliable confidant in Australia.

“Eligible Australians that are overseas for this entire period could ask a trusted person to receive their form on their behalf, open it, complete it based on their instruction and return it to the ABS,” the statistics bureau has .
Opening another person’s post is legal under the Telecommunications and Postal Services Act 1989, as long as the intended recipient gives you clear permission.

“A person cannot self-declare themselves to be a trusted person for someone else,” the ABS instructions state.

The bureau will also allow overseas Australians, along with Indigenous people living in remote areas, to access a ‘paperless’ voting option.

They would be given a special “access code” to unlock an automated phone service or an online form. 

One overseas voter took to Twitter to voice her frustrations. 

"How we can pretend this is a legit exercise is beyond me," she wrote.
SBS World News has contacted the ABS for comment.

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Published 23 August 2017 12:15pm
Updated 23 August 2017 12:27pm
By James Elton-Pym


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