
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


Compulsory voting is as Australian as the ‘democracy sausage’, but how did its introduction reshape the way our elections are fought?
On Afternoon Light #151 Georgina Downer meets with Dr Chris Monnox to explore how different polling day was a century ago. Back when our political parties used to focus on getting people out to vote - often quite literally in providing them with transportation - rather than persuading them who to vote for.
Chris is the author of ‘Letterboxes and Loudspeakers: Compulsory Voting and the Transformation of Grassroots Electioneering in Australia, 1910–51’, which appeared in the Australian Journal of Politics and History.
By Robert Menzies InstituteCompulsory voting is as Australian as the ‘democracy sausage’, but how did its introduction reshape the way our elections are fought?
On Afternoon Light #151 Georgina Downer meets with Dr Chris Monnox to explore how different polling day was a century ago. Back when our political parties used to focus on getting people out to vote - often quite literally in providing them with transportation - rather than persuading them who to vote for.
Chris is the author of ‘Letterboxes and Loudspeakers: Compulsory Voting and the Transformation of Grassroots Electioneering in Australia, 1910–51’, which appeared in the Australian Journal of Politics and History.

153,989 Listeners

3,196 Listeners

89 Listeners

91 Listeners

124 Listeners

53 Listeners

4,025 Listeners

302 Listeners

2,275 Listeners

7,244 Listeners

65 Listeners

15,506 Listeners

350 Listeners

22 Listeners