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1983 Australian federal election

The 1983 Australian federal election was 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 which had been in power since 1975, led by Malcolm Fraser (Liberal Party) and Doug Anthony (National Party), was defeated in a landslide by the opposition Labor Party led by Bob Hawke.

1983 Australian federal election

← 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
 
Leader Bob Hawke Malcolm Fraser
Party Labor Liberal/National coalition
Last election 51 seats 74 seats
Seats won 75 seats 50 seats
Seat change 24 24
First preference vote 4,297,392 3,787,151
Percentage 49.48% 43.61%
Swing 4.34% 2.79%
TPP 53.23% 46.77%
TPP swing 3.60% 3.60%

Popular vote by state and territory with graphs indicating the number of seats won. Seat totals are not determined by popular vote by state or territory but instead via results in each electorate.

This election marked the end of the seven year Liberal-National Coalition Fraser Government and the start of the 13 year Hawke-Keating Labor Government. The Coalition would spend its longest ever period in opposition and the Labor party would spend its longest ever period of government at a federal level. The Coalition would not return to government until the 1996 election.

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 Prime Minister Malcolm Fraser 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

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 held in conjunction with the state funeral of former Labor Prime Minister Frank Forde, Hayden resigned on the advice of his closest supporters such as Senator John Button. 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 could not secure a swift dissolution of parliament as paperwork for the double dissolution had to be prepared, delaying the official proclamation by Governor-General, Sir Ninian Stephen by a few hours. Fraser had hoped to do this before the announcement of the change in Labor leadership, and was now stuck with the prospect of a party now led by the more popular Hawke.

Richard de Crespigny (future Captain of Qantas flight 32 which was crippled on a flight from Singapore to Sydney), who was serving at this time as aide de camp to Governor-General Stephen, details this event in his book. The actual double dissolution of the parliament occurred the following day on 4 February.[1] Fraser also hoped to gain control of the Senate, where the Australian Democrats had held the balance of power since 1 July 1981.

Five days later on 8 February, the ALP formally elected Hawke as party leader. Fraser was intensely unpopular at the time, and in response to his abrupt removal, Hayden made his famous claim that a "drover's dog" could lead the ALP to victory. Fraser's campaign used the slogan "We're Not Waiting for the World", while 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.

Fraser tried to brand Hawke as a union organiser as being friendly towards Communism. On the security of the banking system to protect people's savings, he asserted that ordinary people's money was safer under their beds than in a bank under Labor. In response to an attack, 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 with a massive swing. Hawke with wife Hazel claimed victory and a tearful Fraser conceded defeat. Ultimately, Labor achieved 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 his long-term foe Andrew Peacock, who would later have a fierce leadership battle himself with the future Liberal Prime Minister John Howard.

The Labor Party would spend 13 years in government, with both Hawke and Paul Keating as leaders -- the longest period of continuous federal government in the party's history.

Voting intention

[3]

Date Brand Firm Interview mode Primary vote
L/NP ALP DEM OTH
5 March 1983 election 43.61% 49.48% 5.03% 1.88%
3 March 1983 Gallup Morgan Telephone 43% 50% 6% 1%
2 March 1983 Spectrum Australian Telephone 42% 52% 5% 1%
27 – 28 February 1983 ANOP National Times Telephone 42% 51.5% 5% 1.5%
19 – 20 February 1983 Gallup Morgan Telephone 42% 52% 4% 2%
12 – 13 February 1983 Gallup Morgan Telephone 41% 52% 5% 2%
5 – 6 February 1983 Gallup Morgan Telephone 41% 52% 5% 2%
22 – 29 January 1983 Gallup Morgan Telephone 43% 48% 7% 2%
18 October 1980 election 46.40% 45.15% 6.57% 1.88%

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
Others 162,925 1.87
Total 8,684,862 125
Two-party-preferred (estimated)
  Labor 53.23 +3.6 75   24
  Coalition 46.77 −3.6 50   24
Invalid/blank votes 185,312 2.1
Turnout 8,870,175 94.6
Registered voters 9,372,064
Source: Federal Election Results 1949-1993
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
  Call to Australia 96,065 0
  Progress Party 1,905 0
  White Australia 1,025 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

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 listed in italics did not contest their seat at this election.

See also

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. ^ , TIME, 14 March 1983
  3. ^ "105 volumes : illustrations (chiefly coloured), portraits (chiefly coloured) ; 30-40 cm.", The bulletin., John Ryan Comic Collection (Specific issues)., Sydney, N.S.W: John Haynes and J.F. Archibald, 1880, ISSN 0007-4039, nla.obj-1248743470, retrieved 5 March 2021 – via Trove

External links

  • University of WA 18 January 2015 at the Wayback Machine election results in Australia since 1890
  • AustralianPolitics.com election details
  • AEC 2PP vote

1983, australian, federal, election, held, australia, march, 1983, seats, house, representatives, seats, senate, were, election, following, double, dissolution, incumbent, coalition, government, which, been, power, since, 1975, malcolm, fraser, liberal, party,. The 1983 Australian federal election was 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 which had been in power since 1975 led by Malcolm Fraser Liberal Party and Doug Anthony National Party was defeated in a landslide by the opposition Labor Party led by Bob Hawke 1983 Australian federal election 1980 5 March 1983 1984 All 125 seats in the House of Representatives63 seats were needed for a majority in the HouseAll 64 seats in the Senate First party Second party Leader Bob Hawke Malcolm FraserParty Labor Liberal National coalitionLast election 51 seats 74 seatsSeats won 75 seats 50 seatsSeat change 24 24First preference vote 4 297 392 3 787 151Percentage 49 48 43 61 Swing 4 34 2 79 TPP 53 23 46 77 TPP swing 3 60 3 60 Popular vote by state and territory with graphs indicating the number of seats won Seat totals are not determined by popular vote by state or territory but instead via results in each electorate Prime Minister before electionMalcolm FraserLiberal National coalition Subsequent Prime Minister Bob HawkeLaborThis election marked the end of the seven year Liberal National Coalition Fraser Government and the start of the 13 year Hawke Keating Labor Government The Coalition would spend its longest ever period in opposition and the Labor party would spend its longest ever period of government at a federal level The Coalition would not return to government until the 1996 election Contents 1 Background and issues 2 Voting intention 3 Results 3 1 House of Representatives 3 2 Senate 4 Seats changing hands 5 See also 6 Notes 7 References 8 External linksBackground and issues EditAt 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 Prime Minister Malcolm Fraser 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 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 held in conjunction with the state funeral of former Labor Prime Minister Frank Forde Hayden resigned on the advice of his closest supporters such as Senator John Button 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 could not secure a swift dissolution of parliament as paperwork for the double dissolution had to be prepared delaying the official proclamation by Governor General Sir Ninian Stephen by a few hours Fraser had hoped to do this before the announcement of the change in Labor leadership and was now stuck with the prospect of a party now led by the more popular Hawke Richard de Crespigny future Captain of Qantas flight 32 which was crippled on a flight from Singapore to Sydney who was serving at this time as aide de camp to Governor General Stephen details this event in his book The actual double dissolution of the parliament occurred the following day on 4 February 1 Fraser also hoped to gain control of the Senate where the Australian Democrats had held the balance of power since 1 July 1981 Five days later on 8 February the ALP formally elected Hawke as party leader Fraser was intensely unpopular at the time and in response to his abrupt removal Hayden made his famous claim that a drover s dog could lead the ALP to victory Fraser s campaign used the slogan We re Not Waiting for the World while 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 Fraser tried to brand Hawke as a union organiser as being friendly towards Communism On the security of the banking system to protect people s savings he asserted that ordinary people s money was safer under their beds than in a bank under Labor In response to an attack 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 with a massive swing Hawke with wife Hazel claimed victory and a tearful Fraser conceded defeat Ultimately Labor achieved 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 his long term foe Andrew Peacock who would later have a fierce leadership battle himself with the future Liberal Prime Minister John Howard The Labor Party would spend 13 years in government with both Hawke and Paul Keating as leaders the longest period of continuous federal government in the party s history Voting intention Edit 3 Date Brand Firm Interview mode Primary voteL NP ALP DEM OTH5 March 1983 election 43 61 49 48 5 03 1 88 3 March 1983 Gallup Morgan Telephone 43 50 6 1 2 March 1983 Spectrum Australian Telephone 42 52 5 1 27 28 February 1983 ANOP National Times Telephone 42 51 5 5 1 5 19 20 February 1983 Gallup Morgan Telephone 42 52 4 2 12 13 February 1983 Gallup Morgan Telephone 41 52 5 2 5 6 February 1983 Gallup Morgan Telephone 41 52 5 2 22 29 January 1983 Gallup Morgan Telephone 43 48 7 2 18 October 1980 election 46 40 45 15 6 57 1 88 Results EditHouse of Representatives Edit This section is an excerpt from Results of the 1983 Australian federal election House of Representatives Overall edit 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 54Others 162 925 1 87Total 8 684 862 125Two party preferred estimated Labor 53 23 3 6 75 24 Coalition 46 77 3 6 50 24Invalid blank votes 185 312 2 1Turnout 8 870 175 94 6Registered voters 9 372 064Source Federal Election Results 1949 1993 Popular voteLabor 49 48 Liberal 34 36 National 9 25 Democrats 5 03 Other 1 88 Two party preferred voteLabor 53 23 Coalition 46 77 Parliament seatsLabor 60 00 Coalition 40 00 Senate Edit See also Results of the 1983 Australian federal election 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 Call to Australia 96 065 0 Progress Party 1 905 0 White Australia 1 025 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 64NotesIn 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 EditSeat Pre 1983 Swing Post 1983Party Member Margin Margin Member PartyBarton 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 listed in italics did not contest their seat at this election See also EditCandidates of the Australian federal election 1983 Members of the Australian House of Representatives 1983 1984 Members of the Australian Senate 1983 1985Notes EditPrior 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 Edit House of Representatives Practice 6th Ed Appendix 12 GENERAL ELECTIONS SIGNIFICANT DATES FROM 19TH TO 44TH PARLIAMENTS Hawke Swoops into Power TIME 14 March 1983 105 volumes illustrations chiefly coloured portraits chiefly coloured 30 40 cm The bulletin John Ryan Comic Collection Specific issues Sydney N S W John Haynes and J F Archibald 1880 ISSN 0007 4039 nla obj 1248743470 retrieved 5 March 2021 via TroveExternal links EditUniversity of WA Archived 18 January 2015 at the Wayback Machine election results in Australia since 1890 AustralianPolitics com election details AEC 2PP vote Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title 1983 Australian federal election amp oldid 1133920197, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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