Skip to content
Surf Wiki
Save to docs
politics

From Surf Wiki (app.surf) — the open knowledge base

1968 New South Wales state election

State election for New South Wales, Australia in February 1968


State election for New South Wales, Australia in February 1968

FieldValue
election_name1968 New South Wales state election
countryNew South Wales
typeparliamentary
ongoingno
previous_election1965 New South Wales state election
previous_year1965
next_election1971 New South Wales state election
next_year1971
seats_for_electionAll 94 seats in the New South Wales Legislative Assembly
48 Assembly seats were needed for a majority
election_date
image1[[File:Robert_Askin_1966.jpg150x150px]]
leader1Robert Askin
leader_since117 July 1959
party1Liberal–Country Coalition
leaders_seat1Collaroy
percentage149.09%
swing10.73
last_election147 seats
seats153
seat_change16
image2[[File:Jack Renshaw.png150x150px]]
leader2Jack Renshaw
leader_since230 April 1964
party2Australian Labor Party (New South Wales Branch)
leaders_seat2Castlereagh
percentage243.10%
swing20.21
last_election245 seats
seats239
seat_change26
map_image1968 New South Wales state election.svg
map_size400px
map_captionTwo-candidate-preferred margin by electorate
titlePremier
before_electionBob Askin
before_partyLiberal–Country Coalition
after_electionBob Askin
after_partyLiberal–Country Coalition

48 Assembly seats were needed for a majority

The 1968 New South Wales state election was held on 24 February 1968. It was conducted in single member constituencies with compulsory preferential voting and was held on boundaries created at a 1966 redistribution. The election was for all of the 94 seats in the Legislative Assembly. The Liberal Party, led by Premier Robert Askin, in Coalition with the Country Party of Deputy Premier Charles Cutler, was elected for a second term—the first time that a non-Labor government had been reelected since before World War II.

Redistribution

An extensive redistribution of electoral boundaries was undertaken in 1966 by a commission consisting of Judge Amsberg of the District Court, the Surveyor-General, G Prince and the Electoral Commissioner J McDonald. Following instructions from the government of Robin Askin, the redistribution gave an increased weighting to the votes of electors in rural New South Wales . Of the 94 electorates, 48 were to be classified as "urban" with an average enrollment of 27,531 and 46 were "country" with an average enrollment of 20,882. However, a continuing movement of population from rural to urban NSW meant that many of the "country" seats were effectively situated in the outskirts of Sydney, where the Liberal Party traditionally had strong electoral support. Four seats (Casino, Cobar, Dulwich Hill and Redfern) were abolished and four new seats (Campbelltown, Corrimal, Merrylands and Northcott) were created . A further 9 seats, Ashfield-Croydon ( renamed Ashfield), Concord (Yaralla), Hartley (Blue Mountains), Illawarra (Kembla), Kurri Kurri (Wallsend), Mudgee (Burrendong), Ryde (Fuller), Sturt (Broken Hill) and Wollongong-Kembla (Wollongong), were extensively changed and renamed. The notional net result of the redistribution was to reduce the Labor Party's representation by at least 5 and possibly 9 seats and to reduce the Country Party by 1. The redistribution was unsuccessfully opposed by the Labor Party with parliamentary walkouts, legal appeals and public rallies.

Issues

At the beginning of 1968, the Liberal–Country Coalition was widely regarded as a competent, non-controversial first-term government. With the aid of a favourable redistribution, it seemed certain of electoral victory; and as a result the campaign failed to generate significant public interest. Since 1965 the government had resolved the problem of cost over-runs and building delays at the Sydney Opera House by forcing the resignation of the architect, Jørn Utzon. Although in retrospect this move was widely censured, at the time it occurred it was generally well received by the public. New government policies during the campaign included an increase in state aid for private schools, increased spending on hospitals and a consumer affairs agency to monitor prices.

In contrast to the coalition, Labor's leader and former Premier, Jack Renshaw, was unable to appeal much to urban voters and had a hard time adjusting to television. He possessed also the disadvantage of having led to defeat in 1965 an ALP administration widely seen as tired and unfocused. Labor's campaign promises included four weeks of annual leave for all employees on state controlled award wages, the restoration of the Sydney City Council, price controls for basic food items and state control of Credit Unions. Renshaw was unable to match the government's promises of aid for private schools, which was a difficult ideological question for Labor.{{cite book

Results

Prior to the election the Country Party had gained the seats of Bathurst from the Labor Party and Oxley from the Liberal Party at by-elections caused by the deaths of sitting members. There was a slight swing to the Labor Party in the two party preferred vote at the election. However, the effects of the redistribution resulted in a significant improvement in the position of the coalition government and changes in seats at the election reflected the effects of the re-distribution rather than a swing in voter sentiment. The government had a buffer of 6 seats in the new parliament:

  • Liberal 36 seats
  • Country Party 17 seats
  • Australian Labor Party 39 seats
  • Independent 2 seats

The DLP contested 42 seats but achieved less than 3% of the statewide vote while the Communist party was reduced to 6 candidates who received negligible support. The New State Movement, which had suffered a devastating defeat at a plebiscite on the formation of a new state in New England in 1967, contested 4 seats and gained 0.80% of the total vote but up to 35% in individual seats.

The election marked the first time that a non-Labor government in New South Wales had been reelected since the Coalition won three consecutive elections from 1932 to 1938.

Seats changing party representation

This table lists changes in party representation since the 1965 election

SeatIncumbent memberPartyNew memberParty
AshfieldNew seatDavid Hunter
Ashfield-CroydonDavid HunterLiberalAbolished Seat
BathurstLaborClive Osborne
Blue MountainsNew seatHarold Coates
Broken HillNew seatLew Johnstone
BurrendongNew seatRoger Wotton
CampbelltownNew seatMax Dunbier
CasinoRichmond ManyweathersCountryAbolished Seat
CobarLew JohnstoneLaborAbolished Seat
ConcordThomas MurphyLaborAbolished seat
CorrimalNew seatLaurie Kelly
Dulwich HillCliff MallamLaborAbolished seat
FullerNew seatPeter Coleman
HartleyHarold CoatesIndependentAbolished seat
IllawarraHoward FowlesLaborAbolished Seat
KemblaNew seatGeorge Petersen
Kurri KurriKen BoothLaborAbolished seat
ManlyDouglas DarbyIndependent LiberalDouglas Darby
MerrylandsNew seatJack Ferguson
MudgeeLeo NottLaborAbolished seat
MurrayJoe LawsonCountryJoe Lawson
NorthcottNew seatJim Cameron
OxleyLiberalBruce Cowan
RedfernFred GreenLaborAbolished seat
RydeFrank DowningLaborAbolished seat
SturtWilliam WattisonLaborAbolished seat
SutherlandTom DaltonLaborTim Walker
WallsendNew seatKen Booth
WollongongNew seatJack Hough
Wollongong-KemblaJack HoughLiberalAbolished seat
YarallaNew seatLerryn Mutton

† Bathurst was won by the Country Party at a 1967 by-election caused by the death of Labor's Gus Kelly

‡Oxley was won by the Country Party at a 1965 by-election caused by the death of the Liberal Party's Les Jordan

Key dates

DateEvent
23 January 1968The Legislative Assembly was dissolved, and writs were issued by the Governor to proceed with an election.
31 January 1968Nominations for candidates for the election closed at noon.
24 February 1968Polling day.
22 March 1968Last day for the writs to be returned and the results formally declared.
26 March 1968Opening of 42nd Parliament.

Results

| turnout % = 94.19 | informal % = 2.63 |votes % = 38.47 |votes % = 10.62 |votes % = 43.10 |votes % = 4.29 |votes % = 2.29 |votes % = 0.80 |votes % = 0.27 |votes % = 0.16 |votes % = 0 |}

Aftermath

Robert Askin and Charles Cutler remained Premier and Deputy Premier throughout the term of the parliament. Renshaw was replaced as the Leader of the Labor Party by Pat Hills in December 1968. During the parliament there were 5 by-elections. These produced no change in party representation with the exception of the Liberal Party losing Georges River to Labor's Frank Walker.

References

References

  1. (16 April 1966). "How the electorate changes will operate". The Sydney Morning Herald.
  2. (18 April 1966). "Rally to protest electorate proposal". The Sydney Morning Herald.
  3. (24 February 1968). "2 Million vote today". The Sydney Morning Herald.
  4. (24 February 1968). "Mr Hughes and Mr Utzon". The Sydney Morning Herald.
  5. (24 February 1968). "2 Million vote today". The Sydney Morning Herald.
  6. Evan Whitton. (19 February 1968). "Renshaw: Jack with Beanstalk and Giant". The Sydney Morning Herald.
  7. (19 February 1968). "Renshaw: lists his priorities". The Sydney Morning Herald.
  8. Green, Antony. "1968 election totals". [[Parliament of New South Wales]].
Info: 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.

Want to explore this topic further?

Ask Mako anything about 1968 New South Wales state election — get instant answers, deeper analysis, and related topics.

Research with Mako

Free with your Surf account

Content sourced from Wikipedia, available under CC BY-SA 4.0.

This content may have been generated or modified by AI. CloudSurf Software LLC is not responsible for the accuracy, completeness, or reliability of AI-generated content. Always verify important information from primary sources.

Report