The Senate after the 2013 election, once the new senators' terms started on 1 July 2014, was originally going to consist of the Coalition government on 33 seats with the Labor opposition on 25 seats and a record
crossbench of 18 – the
Greens on ten seats,
Palmer United on two seats, with other minor parties and independents on six seats – the
LDP's
David Leyonhjelm,
Family First's
Bob Day,
Motoring's
Ricky Muir,
Sports Party's Wayne Dropulich and incumbents
Nick Xenophon and the
DLP's
John Madigan. The Coalition government would originally have required the support of at least six non-coalition Senators to pass legislation. Most Senate votes cast in Western Australia were subject to a formal recount. During the recount it was determined that WA Senate ballot papers could not be located. After the final recount the result was duly declared which changed the last two predicted WA Senate spots from Palmer and Labor back to Sports Party and Greens.
Mick Keelty, a former
AFP Commissioner, was requested by the AEC to investigate the issue of the misplaced ballot papers. On 15 November, the AEC
petitioned the
High Court, acting as the
Court of Disputed Returns, to seek an order from the court that the WA Senate election of all six senators (3 Liberal, 1 Labor, 1 Green, 1 Sports Party) be declared void. A record number of candidates stood at the election.
Group voting tickets came under scrutiny because multiple candidates were provisionally elected with the vast majority of their 14.3 percent quotas coming from the preferences of other parties across the political spectrum. "Preference whisperer"
Glenn Druery organised tight cross-preferencing between many minor parties. The Sports Party's Wayne Dropulich won a Senate seat on a record-low primary vote of 0.2 percent in Western Australia, his party placing coming 21st out of 28 groups on primary votes. The result caused discussion across a range of organisations and parties about whether there should be changes to the GVT system. ==Notes==