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Harkness, Alistair
- PublicationField, Francis (Frank) (1904-1985)Francis (Frank) Field (1904-1985), solicitor, politician and deputy-premier, was born on 23 December 1904 at North Carlton, Melbourne, son of Victorian-born William John Field, telegraphist, and his London-born wife Kate Emily, née Honeybone. Frank was educated at St Mary's Primary School, Dandenong, and won scholarships to St Kevin's Christian Brothers' College, Toorak, and the University of Melbourne (BA Hons, 1926; LL B, MA, 1928), also winning the Donovan Bursary to Newman College and gaining a tennis Blue. Admitted to practice on 1 May 1929, Field set up as a solicitor at Dandenong and then moved to the city in 1934. At St James' Catholic Church, Elsternwick, on 23 June 1934 he married Aileen Mary O'Brien.
- PublicationVictoria’s constitutional time bomb
One of our attentive readers has pointed out (for which we thank him) that Section 40 (2) of Victoria's Constitution Act states that "all questions arising in the Assembly shall be decided by a majority of members present other than the Speaker and when the votes are equal the Speaker shall have a casting vote." The problem this creates for the current eighty-eight member Assembly is that, in the event of a precisely split parliament, it effectively denies the Speaker any sort of vote. If there are eighty-seven "voting members" there can be no tie unless a member is absent and not paired. We know of no Westminster-derived parliament in which a presiding officer cannot vote and Victoria has had this problem only since 2003. In the 1960s and 1970s the Assembly had seventy-three members until this was increased to eighty-nine in 1982. An electoral redistribution is likely to be completed by the end of 2013 and if this issue is not addressed now the problem will be locked in for another decade. The article below has been amended to reflect this point.