The ballot laws were not the first election laws to be passed. Due to the apparent ineffectiveness of the anti-corruption
lex Baebia of 181 BC, the Cornelian-Fulvian law of 159 BC was passed, again targeting corruption. Extending the sumptuary law (
lex Orchia) of 182 BC, the
lex Didia of 143 BC restricted spending on banquets in all of Italy. In 145 BC, a bill by the tribune
Lucius Licinius Crassus proposed that priesthoods be elected instead of
co-opted. While advocating for his proposal, he pointedly turned his back on the senators in the
comitium and spoke directly to the people in the
Roman Forum. in a chariot, holding the cap (
pileus) and staff (vindicta) of freedom. This coin was struck by C Cassius around 126 BC and commemorates the Lex Cassia tabellaria of 137 BC, The ballot laws were highly controversial and strongly opposed by the
optimates. Pliny remarks:
lex Gabinia tabellaria The first ballot law (the
lex Gabinia tabellaria) was introduced in 139 BC for the election of
magistrates by the tribune
Aulus Gabinius, The law mandated a secret ballot for the election of magistrates in all assemblies. Gabinius, the first person of that name known to hold political office in Rome, was from a family that had low-status (possibly slave origins) in
Cales, and was able to enter politics due to the military success of his father. According to the
Cambridge Ancient History, the law was undoubtedly justified as giving freedom to the people, but may also have been intended to curb bribery of voters by candidates. Ursula Hall believes that the law "was undoubtedly largely supported by men of substance wanting to challenge aristocratic control of office. In purpose this law was not, in a modern sense, 'democratic', not designed to give more power to voters, much less candidates, from lower ranks in the Roman system." Hall and Harris both claim because literacy was uncommon in ancient Rome and the written ballot would have required literacy, the Gabinian law must have restricted voting to a small and prosperous minority, with Harris suggesting that this was intentional. However,
Alexander Yakobson argues that the Gabinian law was a genuine piece of popular legislation benefiting a broad section of the electorate. He points out that the law applied just as much to the Tribal Assembly, which had no property qualification, as it did to the Centuriate Assembly. He also claims that the level of literacy necessary for voting was low as voters only had to write the initials of the preferred candidate. The assumption that literacy was low is itself controversial. In fact, Edward Best flipped the argument around, using the ballot laws as evidence that literacy was widespread in Rome. Subsequent improvements or extensions to the law were the
lex Papiria(131 BC), the
lex Maria and
lex Caelia (107 BC), all aimed at limiting corruption. Together these laws are called
leges tabellariae.
lex Cassia tabellaria The second law was introduced by
Lucius Cassius Longinus Ravilla in 137 BC. It extended the
secret ballot for trials in the popular assembly. Briso was apparently dissuaded from actually applying the veto by
Scipio Aemilianus, perhaps displaying
populares sentiments. Cassius was a noble Plebeian who would become consul in 127 BC and censor in 125 BC. Cicero writes of the opposition to this law: In his speech
Pro Sestio, he further comments that "A ballot law was proposed by Lucius Cassius. The people thought that their liberty was at stake. The leaders of the State held a different opinion; in a matter that concerned the safety of the optimates, they dreaded the impetuosity of the masses and the licence afforded by the ballot." 133 BC was a turning point in Roman politics, marking the beginning of the
crisis of the Roman Republic. In that year,
Tiberius Gracchus was elected tribune and forced through a land redistribution law without consulting the Senate and against the veto of another tribune—both of which violated custom, if not the law. At the end of the year, he sought re-election, breaking another unwritten rule forbidding consecutive terms. While the assembly was voting, a group of senators beat Tiberius to death, along with more than 300 of his supporters. This act of violence marked the first instance of political bloodshed in Republican history, and was considered especially egregious because the person of a tribune was sacrosanct.
lex Papiria The third ballot law was introduced in 131 BC by
Gaius Papirius Carbo, and applied to the ratification and repeal of legislation—which, by this point, was mainly the duty of the Plebeian Council. Carbo, called a "rabble-rouser" by Cicero, was at the time on the land commission charged with implementing
Tiberius Gracchus' land redistribution law. Pointing to this association, Hall argues that unlike the earlier
lex Gabinia, the
lex Papiria was undoubtedly passed in the interests of popular reform. Serious political violence would erupt again with the rise of another
populares tribune--
Gaius Gracchus, the brother of
Tiberius Gracchus. In both 123 BC and 122 BC, Gaius was elected tribune of the people. He proposed a series of popular laws, far more wide-ranging than those of his brother. These included an extension to Tiberius' land redistribution bill; a grain subsidy for poorer citizens; reforms to the judicial system; the free issue of clothes and equipment to soldiers; the founding of overseas colonies to help the landless; a reduction in the length of military service; and citizenship for Italian allies. In 121 BC, after Gaius failed re-election, one of his supporters killed an attendant of the consul
Lucius Opimius. A confrontation ensued between the Gaius and the Senate, which quickly turned violent after the Senate urged the overthrow of Gaius. The consul rallied a militia, and together with Cretan archers who happened to be near the city, attacked Gaius and his supporters. Gaius committed suicide rather than be captured, and Opimius subsequently executed 3000 of his supporters. The first three ballot laws were apparently not perfectly effective, as they were followed by a series of further laws enforcing the secrecy of the ballot. In 119 BC, the tribune
Gaius Marius introduced a law that narrowed the causeway leading to the ballot box, in order to prevent non-voters from standing on the causeway and intimidating voters. The law was passed despite vigorous Senate opposition. The other secrecy-enforcing laws are not explicitly mentioned by ancient sources, In 107 BC, a Roman army under the consul
Lucius Cassius Longinus was dealt a crushing defeat by the Tigurini at the
Battle of Burdigala. His
legate Gaius Popilius Laenas negotiated a humiliating agreement to save the lives of the soldiers. The agreement was considered unacceptable at Rome, and Coelius planned to prosecute him in an assembly of the people. Before he did so, he introduced the final ballot law. The law was passed and the prosecution was successful, resulting in Popilius being sentenced to exile. Cicero, who wrote in relation to the Cassian law that the optimates dreaded the "impetuosity of the masses and the licence accorded by the ballot" on matters affecting their safety, wrote: "as long as he [Coelius] lived he repented of having injured the republic, for the purpose of oppressing Caius Popilius". ==Voting after the ballot laws==