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Federal election 2022: Row over vote for virus-infected heats up

Staff WritersAAP
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VideoMore than 200,000 people may be unable to cast a ballot at the federal election.

The Australian Electoral Commission is seeking urgent talks with the federal government over concerns thousands of COVID-19 infected people will not be able to cast their vote in the election.

The issue surrounds AEC voting rules for people who tested positive to the virus since last Saturday.

Phone voting is available to people who tested positive after 6pm on Tuesday, but anyone who tested positive between Saturday and Tuesday must vote by post.

However, postal vote applications closed at 6pm on Wednesday, leaving many voters without an avenue to cast their ballot.

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A Melbourne independent candidate for the election is threatening to take the federal government to court in a bid to ensure people excluded by the postal deadline can instead vote by phone.

Teal contender Monique Ryan, who is running in Treasurer Josh Frydenberg’s seat of Kooyong, wants to pursue a case against Special Minister of State Ben Morton in the Federal Court on Friday.

Dr Ryan fears a “great many” people will not be able to vote under the AEC rules for the May 21 poll “because the government has not made phone voting available to them”.

Prime Minister Scott Morrison said on Friday it was a matter for the AEC commissioner to work within the legislation agreed to by the parliament.

“This morning he is looking at these issues very closely and we have certainly asked him to do that,” he told ABC television.

“Any recommendation that the electoral commission provides to us we will certainly act on, whether that means changing regulations or anything of that nature.

“We will take his advice. It is not something for politicians to interfere in.”

An AEC spokesman told Sydney radio 2GB the commissioner will “have discussions” about it on Friday morning.

“It’s up to the electoral commissioner to have a discussion with government,” he said.

“It’s actually up to government to change the regulations, we can’t do that.

“Ultimately, if it ends up in a change of regulation, that’s what we’ll deliver. We can only deliver on the regulation.”

It is believed more than 200,000 Australians tested positive for COVID-19 between Saturday and Tuesday.

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