There have been 44 referendums to amend the Australian Constitution since Federation in 1901.
To pass, the referendum must obtain a double majority i.e a majority of voting Australian (voting being mandatory) and a majority of the six states. It’s a difficult needle to thread, which is a good thing, and only works when there is bipartisan support. If there is a coherent opposition, then the referendum rarely succeeds. There have been only eight successful referendums, most of which are federal procedural issues and the financial relationships between the commonwealth and the states.
To enable elections for both Houses to be held concurrently 1906
To give the Commonwealth unrestricted power to take over State debts 1910
End the system of per capita payments which have been made by the Commonwealth to the States since the 1910 referendum 1928
To give the Commonwealth power to legislate on a wide range of social services 1946
to enable the Commonwealth to enact laws for Aboriginal people. To remove the prohibition against counting Aboriginal people in population counts in the Commonwealth or a State. 1967
To ensure, as far as practicable, that a casual vacancy in the Senate is filled by a person of the same political party 1977
To allow electors in Territories, as well as in the States, to vote in constitutional referendums 1977
To provide for retiring ages for judges of Federal courts 1977
Yes, that one is real: other countries that are not Australia do not treat Australian marriages the same way that Australia does.
And yes, the other point in that article is true: registration is the easiest and simplest way to establish proof of marriage (although of course it is not definitive: it merely reverses the onus of proof)
But the rest of the article is just a longer exploration of the fact that if you don’t register your marriage, proof of marriage takes longer and is more difficult: your rights and responsibility in a marriage are the same, gay or straight.
Aussies don’t divorce, then? Marriage is for life, after all. Or maybe that little fillip is not entirely the whole of the thing? Quite a dumb statement.
(I’m kinda waiting for some Aussies to scream that Australia isn’t a democracy and therefore votes aren’t the be-all end-all. That would be amusing.)