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1965 Western Australian state election

Australian state election


Summary

Australian state election

FieldValue
election_name1965 Western Australian state election
countryWestern Australia
typeparliamentary
ongoingno
previous_election1962 Western Australian state election
previous_year1962
next_election1968 Western Australian state election
next_year1968
seats_for_electionAll 50 seats in the Western Australian Legislative Assembly
and 15 (of the 30) seats to the Western Australian Legislative Council
26 Assembly seats were needed for a majority
election_date
image1[[File:DavidBrand1963.jpg150x150px]]
leader1David Brand
leader_since11 March 1957
party1Liberal/Country coalition
leaders_seat1Greenough
percentage152.89%
swing15.78
last_election126 seats
seats129 seats
seat_change13
image2[[File:Albert_Hawke_1965.jpg150x150px]]
leader2Albert Hawke
leader_since23 July 1951
party2Australian Labor Party (Western Australian Branch)
leaders_seat2Northam
percentage242.64%
swing21.77
last_election224 seats
seats221 seats
seat_change23
titlePremier
before_electionDavid Brand
before_partyLiberal/Country coalition
after_electionDavid Brand
after_partyLiberal/Country coalition

and 15 (of the 30) seats to the Western Australian Legislative Council 26 Assembly seats were needed for a majority

Electoral changes

The Legislative Council election held on the same day was the first since significant changes to the Council's structure and manner of voting under the Constitution Acts Amendment Act (No.2) 1963 (No.72 of 1963). The Act abolished the 10 three-member provinces which had existed almost unaltered since 1900, and created 15 new two-member provinces. Voting became compulsory and the property franchise was abolished, and the practice of having separate Legislative Council elections in May of every even-numbered year was abolished—the Council's members would now go to the voters at the same elections as members of the Legislative Assembly, although the rotational system where one member per province would retire at each election remained in effect, and unlike the Assembly, the Council's term expired on 22 May every three years, rather than at the election itself.

A number of transitional arrangements were necessary to put these changes into effect. Those who had terms expiring on 21 May 1964, and five of the ten whose terms were to expire on 21 May 1966 (those who had the lowest winning margins at the 1960 election) would retire on 21 May 1965. The remaining 15 members were eligible to be appointed to new provinces for terms expiring on 21 May 1968.

Results

Legislative Assembly

| turnout % = 92.33% | informal % = 3.11% |votes % = 48.02% |votes % = 42.64% |votes % = 4.87% |votes % = 0.94% |votes % = 0.09% |votes % = 1.54% |votes % = 1.89% |}

: 408,462 electors were enrolled to vote at the election, but 11 seats (22% of the total) were uncontested—3 Labor seats (one less than 1962) representing 23,717 enrolled voters, 3 LCL seats (one less than 1962) representing 22,175 enrolled voters, and 5 Country seats (two more than 1962) representing 26,937 enrolled voters.

Legislative Council

| turnout % = 92.2 | informal % = 4.3 |votes % = 50.8 |votes % = 38.9 |votes % = 5.8 |votes % = 2.4 |votes % = 1.0 |votes % = 0.5 |votes % = 0.5 |}

Post-election pendulum

References

Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

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