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AAP
AAP
Politics
Abe Maddison

Review to examine 'deeply worrying' election failures

The South Australian election was beset with long queues, short-staffed booths and result delays. (Matt Turner/AAP PHOTOS)

An independent review will examine a troubled state election, with upper house results still in limbo days before parliament returns.

Former Australian electoral commissioner Tom Rogers will lead the review of South Australia's March 21 poll after it was plagued by mishaps including multiple lost and misplaced ballot boxes.

The review comes as SA Premier Peter Malinauskas revealed upper house election results may not be finalised until Monday - a day before the new parliament's first sitting week.

The re-elected premier on Tuesday said he had been advised in the past 24 hours that the Legislative Council ballot declaration would not occur "for some days yet".

SA Premier Peter Malinauskas voting with his family
Premier Peter Malinauskas was stuck in a long queue with his family on polling day in March. (Matt Turner/AAP PHOTOS)

"The fact that we're here, a week out, and it hasn't yet occurred is deeply worrying," he said without elaborating further on the declaration delay.

"We've got a job to do. We've got a state to run … I've got legislation that we need to get in the parliament and get debated and hopefully passed."

Despite a $37 million budget, the SA election was hit by controversy following lengthy queues despite record prepoll voting, short-staffed booths and result delays.

"There hasn't been a question of the integrity of the Electoral Commission, nor has there been any substantial questions around the integrity of the results," the premier said.

"But there have been practical failures."

Fomer Australian electoral commissioner Tom Rogers (file image)
Tom Rogers served as Australia's electoral commissioner for more than 10 years until 2024. (Mick Tsikas/AAP PHOTOS)

The $200,000 independent review will report to the parliament rather than the government and is due by year's end.

It is also tasked with consulting Aboriginal voters about their experiences voting in the 2026 Voice election, which was held simultaneously.

Mr Rogers said he had a record of seeing things go wrong in elections and then "fixing them up", backing his experience following his Australian electoral commissioner stint from 2014-24.

"I know what goes on," he said.

"I will conduct a careful, methodical review, and I look forward to providing recommendations to ensure future elections are delivered to the standard the public expects."

One Nation's Chantelle Thomas
One Nation's Chantelle Thomas was reaffirmed as winning her seat after missing votes were found. (Abe Maddison/AAP PHOTOS)

Earlier in April, the electoral commission announced a small number of newly located votes for the lower house seats of Enfield and Newland would not have affected the results.

This followed a new count triggered in the Narungga electorate after a different batch of lost ballots was located, with One Nation's Chantelle Thomas reaffirmed as winning the seat with a slightly increased margin of 74 votes.

State electoral commissioner NIck Sherry remained on leave and Mr Malinauskas said he had no timeframe on when he would return.

Acting Commissioner Leah McLay said earlier she shared the community's frustration with "unacceptable system failures" and that issues they had experienced "fall well short of our expectations".

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