1983 Australian federal election















Australian federal election, 1983







← 1980
5 March 1983
1984 →


All 125 seats in the House of Representatives
63 seats were needed for a majority in the House
All 64 seats in the Senate






























































 
First party
Second party
 

Bob Hawke Portrait 1983.jpg

MalcolmFraser1982.JPEG
Leader

Bob Hawke

Malcolm Fraser
Party

Labor

Liberal/National coalition
Leader since
3 February 1983
21 March 1975
Leader's seat

Wills (Vic.)

Wannon (Vic.)
Last election
51 seats
74 seats
Seats won

75 seats
50 seats
Seat change

Increase24

Decrease24
Popular vote

4,297,392
3,783,595
Percentage

53.23%
46.77%
Swing

Increase3.6%

Decrease3.6%








Prime Minister before election

Malcolm Fraser
Liberal/National coalition



Subsequent Prime Minister

Bob Hawke
Labor




Federal elections were held in Australia on 5 March 1983. All 125 seats in the House of Representatives and all 64 seats in the Senate were up for election, following a double dissolution. The incumbent Coalition government in power since 1975, led by Malcolm Fraser (Liberal Party) and Doug Anthony (National Party), was defeated by the opposition Labor Party led by Bob Hawke.




Contents






  • 1 Background and issues


  • 2 Results


    • 2.1 House of Representatives


    • 2.2 Senate




  • 3 Seats changing hands


  • 4 See also


  • 5 Notes


  • 6 References


  • 7 External links





Background and issues


At the time of the election, the economy suffered from high inflation and high unemployment, alongside increases in industrial disputation and drought across much of the rural areas. The coalition government was led by Malcolm Fraser, Prime Minister since 1975. Fraser had fought off a leadership challenge from Andrew Peacock, who had resigned from the Cabinet citing Fraser's "manic determination to get his own way", a phrase Fraser had himself used when he resigned from John Gorton's Government in 1971. The Liberal government had to contend with the early 1980s recession. They unexpectedly won the December 1982 Flinders by-election, after having lost the March 1982 Lowe by-election with a large swing.




The Gallagher Index result: 10.54


Bob Hawke had entered Parliament at the 1980 federal election following a decade as leader of the Australian Council of Trade Unions (ACTU). Labor factions began to push for the deposition of Bill Hayden from the party leadership in favour of Hawke. Fraser was well aware of the ructions in Labor, and originally planned to call an election for 1982, more than a year before it was due. However, he was forced to scrap those plans after suffering a severe back injury.


On 3 February 1983 at a meeting in Brisbane, Hayden resigned on the advice of his closest supporters. Hawke was elected as interim leader unopposed. An election wasn't due for seven more months, however Fraser, emboldened by the unexpected retention of Flinders, had caught wind of the impending change and attempted to immediately call an election (for 5 March), which would have put Parliament into "caretaker mode" and essentially frozen Labor into contesting the election with Hayden as leader. However, Fraser was unable to have the Governor-General, Sir Ninian Stephen, officially accept his recommendation and dissolve Parliament before the announcement of the change in Labor leadership, and was now stuck opposing the more popular Hawke (future Captain of Qantas flight 32 which was crippled on a flight from Singapore to Sydney, Richard de Crespigny, was serving as aide de camp to Governor-General Stephen at the time and details this event in his book). The actual dissolution of the parliament occurred the following day, 4 February.[1] In response to his removal, Hayden claimed that a "drover's dog" could lead the ALP to victory. Five days later, the ALP formally elected Hawke as party leader. Fraser also hoped to gain control of the Senate, where the Australian Democrats had held the balance of power since 1 July 1981.


Fraser's campaign used the slogan "We're Not Waiting for the World". Hawke's campaign theme was based around his favoured leadership philosophy of consensus, using the slogan "Bringing Australia Together". The Ash Wednesday bushfires that devastated areas of Victoria and South Australia on 16 February disrupted the Prime Minister's re-election campaign which was unofficially put on hold while he toured the affected areas. In response to an attack from Fraser on the security of the banking system to protect people's savings in which he asserted that ordinary people's money was safer under their beds than in a bank under Labor, Hawke laughed and said "you can't keep your money under the bed because that's where the Commies are!"[2]


As counting progressed on election night, it was obvious early on that the ALP had won on a massive swing. Hawke with wife Hazel claimed victory and a tearful Fraser conceded defeat. Ultimately, Labor won power on a 24-seat swing—the largest defeat of a sitting government since 1949, and the worst defeat a sitting non-Labor government has ever suffered. Fraser soon resigned from Parliament, leaving the Liberal leadership to one-time foe Andrew Peacock, who would later form a fierce leadership rivalry himself with future Prime Minister John Howard.



Results



House of Representatives





Government (75)
     Labor (75)

Opposition (50)
Coalition
     Liberal (33)
     National (17)


























































































































































































































































House of Reps (IRV) — 1983–84—Turnout 94.64% (CV) — Informal 2.09%
Party
Votes
%
Swing
Seats
Change
 

Labor
4,297,392
49.48
+4.34
75
+24
 

Liberal–National coalition
3,787,151
43.61
–2.79
50
–24
 

Liberal

2,983,986

34.36

−3.07

33

−21
 

National

782,824

9.01

+0.27

17

−2
 

Country Liberal 

20,471

0.24

+0.01

0

−1
 

Democrats
437,265
5.03
−1.54
0
0
 

Socialist Workers
46,080
0.53
+0.33
0
0
 

Democratic Labor
17,318
0.20
–0.11
0
0
 

Green
8,641
0.10
+0.10
0
0
 

Progress
6,652
0.08
–0.13
0
0
 

Communist
6,398
0.07
–0.07
0
0
 

Socialist Labour
6,327
0.07
–0.05
0
0
 

Socialist
4,165
0.05
+0.05
0
0
 

Deadly Serious
3,810
0.04
+0.04
0
0
 

NPWA
3,686
0.04
–0.07
0
0
 

Christian
3,016
0.03
+0.01
0
0
 

Imperial British Conservative
1,786
0.02
+0.00
0
0
 

National Humanitarian
1,687
0.02
+0.02
0
0
 

Australia
844
0.01
+0.00
0
0
 

Libertarian
732
0.01
+0.01
0
0
 

Conservative Nationalist
600
0.01
+0.01
0
0
 

Engineered Australia Plan
292
0.00
+0.00
0
0
 

Independent
50,891
0.59
–0.11
0
0
 
Total
8,684,862
 
 

125
 

Two-party-preferred .mw-parser-output .nobold{font-weight:normal}
(estimated)
 

Labor

WIN

53.23
+3.6

75
+24
 

Coalition
 
46.77
−3.6
50
−24





































Popular Vote
Labor
49.48%
Liberal
34.36%
National
9.25%
Democrats
5.03%
Other
1.88%
























Two Party Preferred Vote
Labor
53.23%
Coalition
46.77%
























Parliament Seats
Labor
60.00%
Coalition
40.00%




Senate






Government (30)
     Labor (30)

Opposition (28)
Coalition
     Liberal (23)
     National (4)
     CLP (1)

Crossbench (6)
     Democrats (5)
     Independent (1)




















































































































Senate (STV) — 1983–84—Turnout 94.64% (CV) — Informal 9.87%
Party
Votes
%
Swing
Seats Won
Total Seats
Change
 

Labor
3,637,316
45.49
+3.24
30
30
+3
 

Liberal–National coalition
3,195,397
39.97
–3.51
28
28
–3
 
Liberal–National joint ticket

1,861,618

23.28

−2.35

8

*

*
 

Liberal (separate ticket)

923,571

11.55

−1.59

16

23

–4
 

National (separate ticket)

388,802

4.86

+0.41

3

4

+1
 

Country Liberal

21,406

0.27

+0.02

1

1

0
 

Democrats
764,911
9.57
+0.31
5
5
0
 

Independents
193,454
2.42
+1.29
1
1
0
 
Other
203,967
2.55
−1.34
0
0
0
 
Total
7,995,045
 
 
64
64


Notes


  • In New South Wales and Victoria, the coalition parties ran a joint ticket. Of the eight senators elected on a joint ticket, seven were members of the Liberal Party and one was a member of the National Party. In Queensland, South Australia, and Western Australia, the coalition parties ran on separate tickets. In the ACT and Tasmania, only the Liberal Party ran a ticket. In the Northern Territory, only the Country Liberal Party ran a ticket.

  • The sole independent elected was Brian Harradine of Tasmania.



Seats changing hands





































































































































































































































































































Seat
Pre-1983
Swing
Post-1983
Party
Member
Margin
Margin
Member
Party

Barton, NSW
 
Liberal

Jim Bradfield
0.4
4.4
4.0

Gary Punch
Labor
 

Bendigo, Vic
 
Liberal

John Bourchier
1.3
4.1
2.8

John Brumby
Labor
 

Bowman, Qld
 
Liberal

David Jull
1.2
3.4
2.2

Len Keogh
Labor
 

Calare, NSW
 
National

Sandy Mackenzie
1.5
4.4
2.9

David Simmons
Labor
 

Canning, WA
 
Liberal

Mel Bungey
1.8
9.2
7.4

Wendy Fatin
Labor
 

Casey, Vic
 
Liberal

Peter Falconer
1.9
2.6
0.7

Peter Steedman
Labor
 

Chisholm, Vic
 
Liberal

Graham Harris
2.2
4.4
2.2

Helen Mayer
Labor
 

Deakin, Vic
 
Liberal

Alan Jarman
2.3
4.4
2.1

John Saunderson
Labor
 

Diamond Valley, Vic
 
Liberal

Neil Brown
3.7
4.1
0.4

Peter Staples
Labor
 

Eden-Monaro, NSW
 
Liberal

Murray Sainsbury
2.8
4.6
1.8

Jim Snow
Labor
 

Fadden, Qld
 
Liberal

Don Cameron
1.5
3.1
1.7

David Beddall
Labor
 

Flinders, Vic
 
Liberal

Peter Reith
2.3
5.6
1.0

Bob Chynoweth
Labor
 

Herbert, Qld
 
Liberal

Gordon Dean
0.9
3.7
2.8

Ted Lindsay
Labor
 

Kingston, SA
 
Liberal

Grant Chapman
0.2
3.3
3.1

Gordon Bilney
Labor
 

Leichhardt, Qld
 
National

David Thomson
1.1
3.2
2.1

John Gayler
Labor
 

Macarthur, NSW
 
Liberal

Michael Baume
3.2
5.3
2.1

Colin Hollis
Labor
 

Moore, WA
 
Liberal

John Hyde
2.8
10.0
7.2

Allen Blanchard
Labor
 

Northern Territory, NT
 
Country Liberal

Grant Tambling
1.2
3.1
1.9

John Reeves
Labor
 

Perth, WA
 
Liberal

Ross McLean
1.0
7.4
6.4

Ric Charlesworth
Labor
 

Petrie, Qld
 
Liberal

John Hodges
3.4
3.9
0.5

Dean Wells
Labor
 

Phillip, NSW
 
Liberal

Jack Birney
0.6
2.5
1.9

Jeannette McHugh
Labor
 

Stirling, WA
 
Liberal

Ian Viner
2.0
9.0
7.0

Ron Edwards
Labor
 

Tangney, WA
 
Liberal

Peter Shack
4.6
7.8
3.2

George Gear
Labor
 

  • Members in italics did not contest their seat at this election.


See also



  • Candidates of the Australian federal election, 1983

  • Members of the Australian House of Representatives, 1983–1984

  • Members of the Australian Senate, 1983–1985



Notes


  • Prior to 1984 the AEC did not undertake a full distribution of preferences for statistical purposes. The stored ballot papers for the 1983 election were put through this process prior to their destruction. Therefore, the figures from 1983 onwards show the actual result based on full distribution of preferences. The 1983 swing of approximately 3.6 points is based on a pure deduction of one result from the other.


References





  1. ^ House of Representatives Practice, 6th Ed, Appendix 12: GENERAL ELECTIONS—SIGNIFICANT DATES FROM 19TH TO 44TH PARLIAMENTS


  2. ^ Hawke Swoops into Power, TIME, 14 March 1983




External links




  • University of WA election results in Australia since 1890

  • AustralianPolitics.com election details

  • AEC 2PP vote









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