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2002 South Australian state election

State elections were held in South Australia on 9 February 2002. All 47 seats in the South Australian House of Assembly were up for election, along with half of the 22 seats in the South Australian Legislative Council. The incumbent Liberal Party of Australia led by Premier of South Australia Rob Kerin was defeated by the Australian Labor Party led by Leader of the Opposition Mike Rann. The Labor Party won 23 out of 47 seats, and then secured the one more seat it needed for a majority by gaining the support of independent Peter Lewis.

2002 South Australian state election

← 1997 9 February 2002 (2002-02-09) 2006 →

All 47 seats in the South Australian House of Assembly
24 seats were needed for a majority
11 (of the 22) seats in the South Australian Legislative Council
  First party Second party Third party
 
LIB
NAT
Leader Mike Rann Rob Kerin Karlene Maywald
Party Labor Liberal National
Leader since 5 November 1994 22 October 2001 11 October 1997
Leader's seat Ramsay Frome Chaffey
Seats before 21 seats 22 seats 1 seat
Seats won 23 20 1
Seat change 2 2
Popular vote 344,559 378,929 13,748
Percentage 49.1% 50.9% 1.45%
Swing 0.6 0.6 0.29
TPP 49.07% 50.93%
TPP swing 0.58pp 0.58pp

Results by electorate

Premier before election

Rob Kerin
Liberal

Resulting Premier

Mike Rann
Labor

Background edit

This was the first election since Labor narrowly lost as opposition in the 1997 election, doing much better than most analysts predicted, forcing the Liberals to minority government after their comprehensive loss in the 1993 election where Labor were reduced to just ten seats. Coming into the 2002 election, the Liberal Government had faced a number of scandals including the Motorola affair, over which Premier John Olsen was forced to resign in October 2001. He was succeeded by Rob Kerin, who had less than three months to govern before the election was called.

Key dates edit

  • Issue of writ: 15 January 2002
  • Close of electoral rolls: 22 January 2002
  • Close of nominations: Friday 25 January 2002, at noon
  • Polling day: 9 February 2002
  • Return of writ: On or before 15 March 2002 (actually returned 26 February)

Results edit

House of Assembly edit

South Australian state election, 9 February 2002[1]
House of Assembly
<< 19972006 >>

Enrolled voters 1,045,563
Votes cast 978,569 Turnout 93.59 +1.84
Informal votes 30,537 Informal 3.12 -0.92
Summary of votes by party
Party Primary votes % Swing Seats Change
  Liberal 378,929 39.97 -0.43 20 - 2
  Labor 344,559 36.34 +1.18 23 + 2
  Democrats 71,026 7.49 -8.95 0 0
  Family First 25,025 2.64 +2.64 0 0
  One Nation 22,833 2.41 +2.41 0 0
  Greens 22,332 2.36 +2.21 0 0
  SA First 16,902 1.78 +1.78 0 0
  National 13,748 1.45 -0.29 1 0
  Independent 40,288 4.25 +1.12 3 0
  Other 12,390 1.31 * 0 0
Total 948,032     47  
Two-party-preferred
  Labor 465,227 49.07 +0.58
  Liberal 482,805 50.93 –0.58
Popular vote
Liberal
39.97%
Labor
36.34%
Democrats
7.49%
Independents
4.25%
Family First
2.64%
One Nation
2.41%
Greens
2.36%
SA First
1.78%
National
1.45%
Others
1.31%
Two-party-preferred vote
Liberal
50.93%
Labor
49.07%
Seats
Labor
48.94%
Liberal
42.55%
Independents
6.38%
National
2.13%

Independents: Rory McEwen, Bob Such, Peter Lewis

Seats changing hands edit

Seat Pre-2002 Swing Post-2002
Party Member Margin Margin Member Party
Adelaide   Liberal Michael Harbison 2.2 3.2 1.0 Jane Lomax-Smith Labor  
Colton   Liberal Steve Condous 1.0 5.6 4.6 Paul Caica Labor  
Fisher   Liberal Bob Such 9.2 N/A 12.1 Bob Such Independent  
Hammond   Liberal Peter Lewis 14.6 N/A 2.1 Peter Lewis Independent  
MacKillop   Independent Mitch Williams N/A N/A 11.4 Mitch Williams Liberal  
  • Members in italics did not recontest their seats.
  • Bob Such and Peter Lewis were elected at the 1997 election as Liberals, but quit the party and recontested their seats as Independents and won. Pre-election margins are vs Labor, After margins are against Liberal.
  • Mitch Williams was elected at the 1997 election as an Independent, but joined the Liberal party and recontested his seat as a Liberal. Margin is against Independent candidate Bill Hender.

Formation of Government edit

Labor won two seats from the Liberals, the districts of Adelaide (Jane Lomax-Smith) and Colton (Paul Caica). This gave Labor 23 seats, Liberals 20 seats, SA Nationals one seat, and three seats to independents. To form majority government, a party needed 24 seats out of 47. Most analysts expected Kerin to form a minority government with the support of Nationals MP Karlene Maywald, and the three independents, who were all former Liberal party members.

On 13 February, one of those crossbenchers, former Liberal Peter Lewis, announced that he had signed an agreement with Labor leader Mike Rann to support a Labor Government in exchange for holding a constitutional convention, making him speaker of the House of Assembly, and concessions for his electorate including the phasing out of commercial fishing in the River Murray, prioritising the eradication of the branched broomrape weed, changing water rates for irrigation, fast-tracking a feasibility study for a weir and lock at Wellington, and improving rural roads. This agreement effectively made Rann premier-elect by one seat.

However, following parliamentary precedent established by Don Dunstan following the 1968 election, Kerin refused to resign until Rann and Labor demonstrated that they had majority support on the floor of the House of Assembly. Kerin claimed to be within this rights to take this course, as longstanding precedent in the Westminster system holds that the incumbent premier should have the first opportunity to form a government if no party has a majority.[citation needed]

After three weeks of stalemate, the House of Assembly was called into session several weeks earlier than usual. With Lewis in the speaker's chair, the Kerin Government was defeated on the floor of the House of Assembly on 5 March 2002, after Kerin moved a confidence motion in his own government and lost. Rann then advised Governor Marjorie Jackson-Nelson that he could form a government, which was duly sworn in the following day.

Rann later shored up his government's majority by reaching agreements with crossbenchers Maywald and McEwen, giving them cabinet posts in exchange for their support of the government.

Legislative Council edit

South Australian state election, 9 February 2002[2]
Legislative Council
<< 19972006 >>

Enrolled voters 1,045,563
Votes cast 983,567 Turnout 94.1 +1.4
Informal votes 53,105 Informal 5.4 +1.1
Summary of votes by party
Party Primary votes % Swing Seats
won
Seats
held
  Liberal 373,102 40.1 +2.3 5 9
  Labor 305,595 32.9 +2.3 4 7
  Democrats 68,317 7.3 –9.4 1 3
  Family First 47,443 4.0 +4.0 1 1
  Greens 25,725 2.8 +1.1 0 0
  One Nation 16,829 1.8 +1.8 0 0
  No Pokies 11,984 1.3 –1.5 0 1
  Voluntary Euthanasia 10,973 1.2 +0.7 0 0
  SA First 9,567 1.0 +1.0 0 1
  HEMP 8,241 0.9 –0.8 0 0
  Grey Power 7,918 0.9 –0.7 0 0
  National 4,412 0.5 –0.5 0 0
  Other 40,356 4.3 * 0 0
Total 930,462     11 22

In the Legislative Council, Liberal won 5 seats (Robert Lawson, Caroline Schaefer, Angus Redford, David Ridgway, Terry Stephens), Labor won 4 seats (Gail Gago, Paul Holloway, Terry Roberts, John Gazzola), Australian Democrats won 1 seat (Sandra Kanck), and the recently formed Family First party won their first ever seat in an Australian parliament (Andrew Evans).

This left the overall numbers in the Legislative Council at: Liberal 9, Labor 7, Democrats 3, Family First 1, No Pokies 1, and 1 independent (Terry Cameron).

Post-election pendulum edit

Labor seats (24)
Marginal
Norwood Vini Ciccarello ALP 0.5%
Adelaide Jane Lomax-Smith ALP 1.0%
Hammond Peter Lewis CLIC 2.1% v LIB
Wright Jennifer Rankine ALP 3.2%
Ashford Steph Key ALP 3.7%
Florey Frances Bedford ALP 3.7%
Elder Pat Conlon ALP 3.7%
Colton Paul Caica ALP 4.6%
Mitchell Kris Hanna ALP 4.7%
Fairly safe
Reynell Gay Thompson ALP 6.6%
Lee Michael Wright ALP 7.0%
Elizabeth Lea Stevens ALP 7.2%
Torrens Robyn Geraghty ALP 7.2%
West Torrens Tom Koutsantonis ALP 8.6%
Giles Lyn Breuer ALP 9.7%
Safe
Kaurna John Hill ALP 11.0%
Playford Jack Snelling ALP 13.1%
Napier Michael O'Brien ALP 14.3%
Enfield John Rau ALP 15.9%
Cheltenham Jay Weatherill ALP 16.7%
Taylor Trish White ALP 17.7%
Croydon Michael Atkinson ALP 19.1%
Ramsay Mike Rann ALP 20.2%
Port Adelaide Kevin Foley ALP 21.7%
Liberal seats (23)
Marginal
Hartley Joe Scalzi LIB 1.3%
Stuart Graham Gunn LIB 1.3%
Light Malcolm Buckby LIB 2.8%
Kavel Mark Goldsworthy LIB 2.9% v IND
Mawson Robert Brokenshire LIB 3.5%
Heysen Isobel Redmond LIB 4.0% v AD
Morialta Joan Hall LIB 4.1%
Bright Wayne Matthew LIB 5.0%
Newland Dorothy Kotz LIB 5.7%
Fairly safe
Unley Mark Brindal LIB 9.0%
Morphett Duncan McFetridge LIB 10.0%
Safe
MacKillop Mitch Williams LIB 11.4% v IND
Davenport Iain Evans LIB 11.5%
Frome Rob Kerin LIB 11.5%
Waite Martin Hamilton-Smith LIB 12.0%
Fisher Bob Such IND 12.1% v LIB
Schubert Ivan Venning LIB 13.1%
Chaffey Karlene Maywald NAT 14.0% v LIB
Finniss Dean Brown LIB 15.6%
Goyder John Meier LIB 16.2%
Bragg Vickie Chapman LIB 19.6%
Mt Gambier Rory McEwen IND 26.6% v LIB
Flinders Liz Penfold LIB 28.4%
 
Metro SA: ALP in red, Liberal in blue, Independents in white. These boundaries are based on the 2006 electoral redistribution.
 
Rural SA: ALP in red, Liberal in blue, Independents in white, Nationals in green. These boundaries are based on the 2006 electoral redistribution.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "Details of SA 2002 Election". Australian Politics and Elections Database.
  2. ^ . Electoral Commission SA. Archived from the original on 2 March 2014. Retrieved 13 March 2014.
  • . Crikey. Archived from the original on 22 August 2004.
  • . Crikey. Archived from the original on 22 August 2004.
  • . Crikey. Archived from the original on 22 August 2004.

External links edit

General information
    Political parties
    • Australian Labor Party
    • SA Greens
    • The Nationals

    2002, south, australian, state, election, state, elections, were, held, south, australia, february, 2002, seats, south, australian, house, assembly, were, election, along, with, half, seats, south, australian, legislative, council, incumbent, liberal, party, a. State elections were held in South Australia on 9 February 2002 All 47 seats in the South Australian House of Assembly were up for election along with half of the 22 seats in the South Australian Legislative Council The incumbent Liberal Party of Australia led by Premier of South Australia Rob Kerin was defeated by the Australian Labor Party led by Leader of the Opposition Mike Rann The Labor Party won 23 out of 47 seats and then secured the one more seat it needed for a majority by gaining the support of independent Peter Lewis 2002 South Australian state election 1997 9 February 2002 2002 02 09 2006 All 47 seats in the South Australian House of Assembly24 seats were needed for a majority11 of the 22 seats in the South Australian Legislative Council First party Second party Third party LIB NATLeader Mike Rann Rob Kerin Karlene MaywaldParty Labor Liberal NationalLeader since 5 November 1994 22 October 2001 11 October 1997Leader s seat Ramsay Frome ChaffeySeats before 21 seats 22 seats 1 seatSeats won 23 20 1Seat change 2 2Popular vote 344 559 378 929 13 748Percentage 49 1 50 9 1 45 Swing 0 6 0 6 0 29TPP 49 07 50 93 TPP swing 0 58pp 0 58ppResults by electoratePremier before electionRob KerinLiberal Resulting Premier Mike RannLabor Contents 1 Background 2 Key dates 3 Results 3 1 House of Assembly 3 2 Seats changing hands 3 3 Formation of Government 3 4 Legislative Council 4 Post election pendulum 5 See also 6 References 7 External linksBackground editThis was the first election since Labor narrowly lost as opposition in the 1997 election doing much better than most analysts predicted forcing the Liberals to minority government after their comprehensive loss in the 1993 election where Labor were reduced to just ten seats Coming into the 2002 election the Liberal Government had faced a number of scandals including the Motorola affair over which Premier John Olsen was forced to resign in October 2001 He was succeeded by Rob Kerin who had less than three months to govern before the election was called Key dates editIssue of writ 15 January 2002 Close of electoral rolls 22 January 2002 Close of nominations Friday 25 January 2002 at noon Polling day 9 February 2002 Return of writ On or before 15 March 2002 actually returned 26 February Results editHouse of Assembly edit See also Results of the South Australian state election 2002 House of Assembly Members of the South Australian House of Assembly 2002 2006 and Candidates of the South Australian state election 2002 South Australian state election 9 February 2002 1 House of Assembly lt lt 1997 2006 gt gt Enrolled voters 1 045 563Votes cast 978 569 Turnout 93 59 1 84Informal votes 30 537 Informal 3 12 0 92Summary of votes by partyParty Primary votes Swing Seats Change Liberal 378 929 39 97 0 43 20 2 Labor 344 559 36 34 1 18 23 2 Democrats 71 026 7 49 8 95 0 0 Family First 25 025 2 64 2 64 0 0 One Nation 22 833 2 41 2 41 0 0 Greens 22 332 2 36 2 21 0 0 SA First 16 902 1 78 1 78 0 0 National 13 748 1 45 0 29 1 0 Independent 40 288 4 25 1 12 3 0 Other 12 390 1 31 0 0Total 948 032 47 Two party preferred Labor 465 227 49 07 0 58 Liberal 482 805 50 93 0 58Popular voteLiberal 39 97 Labor 36 34 Democrats 7 49 Independents 4 25 Family First 2 64 One Nation 2 41 Greens 2 36 SA First 1 78 National 1 45 Others 1 31 Two party preferred voteLiberal 50 93 Labor 49 07 SeatsLabor 48 94 Liberal 42 55 Independents 6 38 National 2 13 Independents Rory McEwen Bob Such Peter Lewis Seats changing hands edit Seat Pre 2002 Swing Post 2002Party Member Margin Margin Member PartyAdelaide Liberal Michael Harbison 2 2 3 2 1 0 Jane Lomax Smith Labor Colton Liberal Steve Condous 1 0 5 6 4 6 Paul Caica Labor Fisher Liberal Bob Such 9 2 N A 12 1 Bob Such Independent Hammond Liberal Peter Lewis 14 6 N A 2 1 Peter Lewis Independent MacKillop Independent Mitch Williams N A N A 11 4 Mitch Williams Liberal Members in italics did not recontest their seats Bob Such and Peter Lewis were elected at the 1997 election as Liberals but quit the party and recontested their seats as Independents and won Pre election margins are vs Labor After margins are against Liberal Mitch Williams was elected at the 1997 election as an Independent but joined the Liberal party and recontested his seat as a Liberal Margin is against Independent candidate Bill Hender Formation of Government edit Labor won two seats from the Liberals the districts of Adelaide Jane Lomax Smith and Colton Paul Caica This gave Labor 23 seats Liberals 20 seats SA Nationals one seat and three seats to independents To form majority government a party needed 24 seats out of 47 Most analysts expected Kerin to form a minority government with the support of Nationals MP Karlene Maywald and the three independents who were all former Liberal party members On 13 February one of those crossbenchers former Liberal Peter Lewis announced that he had signed an agreement with Labor leader Mike Rann to support a Labor Government in exchange for holding a constitutional convention making him speaker of the House of Assembly and concessions for his electorate including the phasing out of commercial fishing in the River Murray prioritising the eradication of the branched broomrape weed changing water rates for irrigation fast tracking a feasibility study for a weir and lock at Wellington and improving rural roads This agreement effectively made Rann premier elect by one seat However following parliamentary precedent established by Don Dunstan following the 1968 election Kerin refused to resign until Rann and Labor demonstrated that they had majority support on the floor of the House of Assembly Kerin claimed to be within this rights to take this course as longstanding precedent in the Westminster system holds that the incumbent premier should have the first opportunity to form a government if no party has a majority citation needed After three weeks of stalemate the House of Assembly was called into session several weeks earlier than usual With Lewis in the speaker s chair the Kerin Government was defeated on the floor of the House of Assembly on 5 March 2002 after Kerin moved a confidence motion in his own government and lost Rann then advised Governor Marjorie Jackson Nelson that he could form a government which was duly sworn in the following day Rann later shored up his government s majority by reaching agreements with crossbenchers Maywald and McEwen giving them cabinet posts in exchange for their support of the government Legislative Council edit See also Results of the 2002 South Australian state election Legislative Council Members of the South Australian Legislative Council 2002 2006 and Candidates of the South Australian state election 2002 South Australian state election 9 February 2002 2 Legislative Council lt lt 1997 2006 gt gt Enrolled voters 1 045 563Votes cast 983 567 Turnout 94 1 1 4Informal votes 53 105 Informal 5 4 1 1Summary of votes by partyParty Primary votes Swing Seatswon Seatsheld Liberal 373 102 40 1 2 3 5 9 Labor 305 595 32 9 2 3 4 7 Democrats 68 317 7 3 9 4 1 3 Family First 47 443 4 0 4 0 1 1 Greens 25 725 2 8 1 1 0 0 One Nation 16 829 1 8 1 8 0 0 No Pokies 11 984 1 3 1 5 0 1 Voluntary Euthanasia 10 973 1 2 0 7 0 0 SA First 9 567 1 0 1 0 0 1 HEMP 8 241 0 9 0 8 0 0 Grey Power 7 918 0 9 0 7 0 0 National 4 412 0 5 0 5 0 0 Other 40 356 4 3 0 0Total 930 462 11 22In the Legislative Council Liberal won 5 seats Robert Lawson Caroline Schaefer Angus Redford David Ridgway Terry Stephens Labor won 4 seats Gail Gago Paul Holloway Terry Roberts John Gazzola Australian Democrats won 1 seat Sandra Kanck and the recently formed Family First party won their first ever seat in an Australian parliament Andrew Evans 1 This left the overall numbers in the Legislative Council at Liberal 9 Labor 7 Democrats 3 Family First 1 No Pokies 1 and 1 independent Terry Cameron Post election pendulum editFor previous pendulums and maps see List of elections in South Australia Labor seats 24 MarginalNorwood Vini Ciccarello ALP 0 5 Adelaide Jane Lomax Smith ALP 1 0 Hammond Peter Lewis CLIC 2 1 v LIBWright Jennifer Rankine ALP 3 2 Ashford Steph Key ALP 3 7 Florey Frances Bedford ALP 3 7 Elder Pat Conlon ALP 3 7 Colton Paul Caica ALP 4 6 Mitchell Kris Hanna ALP 4 7 Fairly safeReynell Gay Thompson ALP 6 6 Lee Michael Wright ALP 7 0 Elizabeth Lea Stevens ALP 7 2 Torrens Robyn Geraghty ALP 7 2 West Torrens Tom Koutsantonis ALP 8 6 Giles Lyn Breuer ALP 9 7 SafeKaurna John Hill ALP 11 0 Playford Jack Snelling ALP 13 1 Napier Michael O Brien ALP 14 3 Enfield John Rau ALP 15 9 Cheltenham Jay Weatherill ALP 16 7 Taylor Trish White ALP 17 7 Croydon Michael Atkinson ALP 19 1 Ramsay Mike Rann ALP 20 2 Port Adelaide Kevin Foley ALP 21 7 Liberal seats 23 MarginalHartley Joe Scalzi LIB 1 3 Stuart Graham Gunn LIB 1 3 Light Malcolm Buckby LIB 2 8 Kavel Mark Goldsworthy LIB 2 9 v INDMawson Robert Brokenshire LIB 3 5 Heysen Isobel Redmond LIB 4 0 v ADMorialta Joan Hall LIB 4 1 Bright Wayne Matthew LIB 5 0 Newland Dorothy Kotz LIB 5 7 Fairly safeUnley Mark Brindal LIB 9 0 Morphett Duncan McFetridge LIB 10 0 SafeMacKillop Mitch Williams LIB 11 4 v INDDavenport Iain Evans LIB 11 5 Frome Rob Kerin LIB 11 5 Waite Martin Hamilton Smith LIB 12 0 Fisher Bob Such IND 12 1 v LIBSchubert Ivan Venning LIB 13 1 Chaffey Karlene Maywald NAT 14 0 v LIBFinniss Dean Brown LIB 15 6 Goyder John Meier LIB 16 2 Bragg Vickie Chapman LIB 19 6 Mt Gambier Rory McEwen IND 26 6 v LIBFlinders Liz Penfold LIB 28 4 nbsp Metro SA ALP in red Liberal in blue Independents in white These boundaries are based on the 2006 electoral redistribution nbsp Rural SA ALP in red Liberal in blue Independents in white Nationals in green These boundaries are based on the 2006 electoral redistribution See also editRann governmentReferences edit Details of SA 2002 Election Australian Politics and Elections Database History of South Australian Elections 1857 2006 Electoral Commission SA Archived from the original on 2 March 2014 Retrieved 13 March 2014 Background leading up to the election Liberals in power Crikey Archived from the original on 22 August 2004 SA Election The last domino Crikey Archived from the original on 22 August 2004 Labor still a chance to take the final state Crikey Archived from the original on 22 August 2004 History of South Australian elections 1857 2006 volume 1 ECSAExternal links editGeneral informationABC Election Guide South Australia 2002 ElectionPolitical partiesAustralian Labor Party Liberal Party of Australia SA Greens Australian Democrats Family First Party The Nationals Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title 2002 South Australian state election amp oldid 1182725925, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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