Английская Википедия:1982 South Australian state election

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Шаблон:Short description Шаблон:Use dmy dates Шаблон:Use Australian English Шаблон:Infobox election State elections were held in South Australia on 6 November 1982. All 47 seats in the South Australian House of Assembly were up for election. The incumbent Liberal Party of Australia led by Premier of South Australia David Tonkin was defeated by the Australian Labor Party led by Leader of the Opposition John Bannon.

A referendum on daylight saving was held on the same day, and was passed.[1]

Background

Parliamentary elections for both houses of the Parliament of South Australia were held in South Australia in 1982, which saw John Bannon and the Australian Labor Party defeat the incumbent Liberal Party of Australia led by David Tonkin, after one term in power.

As Premier, Tonkin combined fiscal conservatism with socially progressive reforms. In the former, Tonkin made significant cuts to the public service, earning him the enmity of the unions, while an example of the latter was the passage of the land rights bill and the return to the Pitjantjatjara people of 10 per cent of South Australia's area.

Prior to the election, Tonkin removed Robin Millhouse (a former Liberal member who had defected to the Liberal Movement and then the Australian Democrats, and whose popularity enabled him to hold his seat of Mitcham) with an offer of a vacant seat in the Supreme Court.Шаблон:Citation needed However the subsequent by-election saw the seat retained by Democrats candidate Heather Southcott.

One potential election factor was the copper and uranium mine at Olympic Dam, near Roxby Downs. Enabling legislation had been passed earlier in 1982, despite the opposition of the Labor Party, only when Norm Foster quit the Labor party to support it. Considered a controversial move in Labor circles, Bannon defused this as an election issue by promising that development would go ahead under a Labor government (a commitment which was honoured), despite having previously opposed it.

The Liberals also had to contend with the early 1980s recession.

Summary

Labor achieved a 5.9% swing, and won 4 seats from the Liberals (Brighton, Henley Beach, Mawson and Newland). The Liberals won the seat of Mitcham from the Democrats, so overall lost 3 seats. The House of Assembly numbers were Labor 24, Liberal 21, National Party 1 and Independent Labor 1, giving Labor a narrow majority.

In the Legislative Council, Liberal and Labor won 5 seats each, and the Democrats 1; giving a chamber of 11 Liberal, 9 Labor and 2 Democrats. Labor lost one seat to the Democrats, but regained the seat they had lost when Norm Foster resigned from the Labor party earlier that year. Foster stood as an Independent Labor member in the Legislative Council, but was not re-elected.

Aftermath

After the election loss, Tonkin resigned as Liberal leader and was succeeded by John Olsen, who won a leadership ballot against Dean Brown. A heart complaint caused Tonkin to leave parliament soon after at which a 1983 Bragg by-election was triggered, with the Liberals easily retaining the seat.

A 1984 Elizabeth by-election saw Independent Labor candidate Martyn Evans win the seat from Labor. This gave Labor a minority government (23 out of 47 seats), though it continued to govern with the support of Independent Labor members Evans and Norm Peterson.[2]

Key dates

  • Issue of writ: 18 October 1982
  • Close of nominations: 26 October 1982
  • Polling day: 6 November 1982
  • Return of writ: On or before 4 December 1982

Results

House of Assembly

Шаблон:Australian elections/Title row Шаблон:Australian elections/Party summary Шаблон:Australian elections/Party summary Шаблон:Australian elections/Party summary Шаблон:Australian elections/Party summary Шаблон:Australian elections/Party summary Шаблон:Australian elections/Total row Шаблон:Australian elections/2PP summary |}

Seats changing hands

Seat Pre-1982 Swing Post-1982
Party Member Margin Margin Member Party
Brighton Шаблон:Australian party style Liberal Dick Glazbrook 4.7 5.5 0.8 June Appleby Labor Шаблон:Australian party style
Henley Beach Шаблон:Australian party style Liberal Bob Randall 1.0 5.0 4.0 Don Ferguson Labor Шаблон:Australian party style
Mawson Шаблон:Australian party style Liberal Ivar Schmidt 3.0 9.6 6.6 Susan Lenehan Labor Шаблон:Australian party style
Mitcham Шаблон:Australian party style Democrats Heather Southcott 4.7 15.1 10.4 Stephen Baker Liberal Шаблон:Australian party style
Newland Шаблон:Australian party style Liberal Brian Billard 6.2 9.8 3.6 John Klunder Labor Шаблон:Australian party style

Legislative Council

Шаблон:Australian elections/Title row Шаблон:Australian elections/Party summary Шаблон:Australian elections/Party summary Шаблон:Australian elections/Party summary Шаблон:Australian elections/Party summary Шаблон:Australian elections/Party summary Шаблон:Australian elections/Party summary Шаблон:Australian elections/Total row |}

Post-election pendulum

Шаблон:For

Labor seats (24)
Marginal
Brighton June Appleby ALP 0.8%
Newland John Klunder ALP 3.6%
Henley Beach Don Ferguson ALP 4.0%
Whyalla Max Brown ALP 4.1% v IND
Fairly safe
Mawson Susan Lenehan ALP 6.6%
Unley Kym Mayes ALP 6.6%
Norwood Greg Crafter ALP 9.1%
Ascot Park John Trainer ALP 9.3%
Hartley Terry Groom ALP 10.0%
Safe
Mitchell Ron Payne ALP 10.7%
Gilles Jack Slater ALP 10.7%
Albert Park Kevin Hamilton ALP 11.1%
Florey Bob Gregory ALP 13.2%
Playford Terry McRae ALP 14.7%
Adelaide Jack Wright ALP 15.6%
Price George Whitten ALP 16.1%
Baudin Don Hopgood ALP 16.2%
Napier Terry Hemmings ALP 19.2%
Peake Keith Plunkett ALP 19.5%
Elizabeth Peter Duncan ALP 20.0%
Stuart Gavin Keneally ALP 20.0%
Salisbury Lynn Arnold ALP 22.5%
Ross Smith John Bannon ALP 25.7%
Spence Roy Abbott ALP 27.9%
Liberal seats (21)
Marginal
Coles Jennifer Adamson LIB 1.3%
Todd Scott Ashenden LIB 1.4%
Morphett John Oswald LIB 1.5%
Mount Gambier Harold Allison LIB 2.2%
Torrens Michael Wilson LIB 4.5%
Fairly safe
Hanson Heini Becker LIB 8.2%
Fisher Stan Evans LIB 9.8%
Safe
Rocky River John Olsen LIB 10.3%
Mitcham Stephen Baker LIB 10.4% v AD
Murray David Wotton LIB 10.6%
Eyre Graham Gunn LIB 12.1%
Glenelg John Mathwin LIB 12.4%
Light Bruce Eastick LIB 15.2%
Chaffey Peter Arnold LIB 15.4%
Victoria Allan Rodda LIB 16.6%
Kavel Roger Goldsworthy LIB 16.7%
Bragg David Tonkin LIB 18.1%
Alexandra Ted Chapman LIB 19.0%
Goyder John Meier LIB 25.1%
Davenport Dean Brown LIB 26.5%
Mallee Peter Lewis LIB 30.0%
Crossbench seats (2)
Semaphore Norm Peterson IND 10.3% v ALP
Flinders Peter Blacker NAT 23.7% v ALP

See also

References

Шаблон:Reflist

External links

Шаблон:South Australian elections