PRIVATE ELECTION PROVIDERS TO BE BANNED UNDER NEW LEGISLATION

04 June 2025

The Minns Labor Government has introduced legislation to the New South Wales Parliament today that will ban the use of private election providers in local government elections.

The reforms come in direct response to widespread concern and controversy surrounding the conduct of last year’s local government elections, in councils that opted to contract private providers rather than the independent NSW Electoral Commission.

Those councils were marred with allegations of three-hour delays, ballot paper shortages, vote tabulation errors, and the closure of polling booths at short notice.

Private election providers were engaged by Liverpool City Council and Fairfield City Council in 2024.

Under the proposed amendments to the Local Government Act 1993—introduced today by Minister for Local Government Ron Hoenig—the option for councils to engage alternative providers will be removed entirely, making the NSW Electoral Commission the sole body authorised to conduct council elections.

The Member for Liverpool, Charishma Kaliyanda, and the Member for Leppington, Nathan Hagarty, have strongly welcomed the reforms as a necessary step to restore integrity, consistency, and public confidence in how local elections are run across New South Wales.

Member for Liverpool Charishma Kaliyanda said:

“After last year’s Council elections, I was contacted by numerous residents who experienced unacceptable waiting times just to exercise their democratic rights.

“Cecil Hills High School is one of our largest polling centres, so when it was closed with little notice, thousands of voters were redirected to the much smaller Cecil Hills Public School—causing confusion, long queues, and chaos on the day.

“Elections should be run by trusted professionals—not outsourced to the lowest bidder. These reforms will restore faith in the way our councils are elected and prevent a repeat of the chaos endured in 2024.”

Member for Leppington Nathan Hagarty said:

“This legislation will put an end to the privatisation of democracy. The use of private election providers in last year’s local elections failed to meet the standards our community expects.

I was contacted by many residents who were frustrated by the issues they faced — from problems with postal vote applications to errors in how polling places were run and even the sudden closures of polling booths. These issues left people feeling like their votes were undervalued and undermined trust in the system.

The new legislation makes sure that only the independent NSW Electoral Commission can run our council elections. That’s the right way to guarantee that everyone can vote easily, that their vote will count, and that elections are fair and transparent.”

DATE: 4 JUNE 2025

MEDIA CONTACT: MEMBER FOR LIVERPOOL | LIAM THORNE | 0468 302 419

MEDIA CONTACT: MEMBER FOR LEPPINGTON | ZELI MUNJIZA | 0404 414 159