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Leader of the Opposition (South Australia)

Australian political position


Summary

Australian political position

FieldValue
postLeader of the Opposition
incumbentAshton Hurn
incumbentsince8 December 2025
termlengthWhile leader of the largest political party not in government
inauguralJohn Colton
formation1884

The leader of the opposition in South Australia is the leader of the largest minority political party or coalition of parties, known as the opposition, in the House of Assembly of the Parliament of South Australia. By convention, the leader of the opposition is a member of the House of Assembly. The leader acts as the public face of the opposition, and acts as a chief critic of the government and ultimately attempt to portray the opposition as a feasible alternate government. They are also given certain additional rights under parliamentary standing orders, such as extended time limits for speeches. Should the opposition win an election, the leader of the opposition will be nominated to become the premier of South Australia.

Before the 1890s when there was no formal party system in South Australia, MPs tended to have historical liberal or conservative beliefs. The liberals dominated government from the 1893 election to 1905 election with Labor support, with the conservatives mostly in opposition. Labor took government with the support of eight dissident liberals in 1905 when Labor won the most seats for the first time. The rise of Labor saw non-Labor politics start to merge into various party incarnations. The two independent conservative parties, the Australasian National League (formerly National Defence League) and the Farmers and Producers Political Union merged with the Liberal and Democratic Union to become the Liberal Union in 1910. Labor formed South Australia's first majority government after winning the 1910 state election, triggering the merger. The 1910 election came two weeks after federal Labor formed Australia's first elected majority government at the 1910 federal election.

In an historical record, Steven Marshall was the fifth consecutive Liberal opposition leader during their 2002 to 2018 opposition period. In comparison, every former Labor opposition leader for over half a century would also proceed to serve as Premier.

List of leaders of the opposition in South Australia

The following is a list of leaders of the opposition in South Australia, from 1884 to present. According to the official parliament record, prior to the year 1884 "no definite evidence of the official holder of the office could be found".

NoLeaderPartyTook officeLeft office
1John Colton1884
2John Cox Bray1884
3John Downer1885
4Jenkin Coles1886
5Thomas Playford II1887
-John Downer (2nd time)1887
6John Cockburn1889
-Thomas Playford II (2nd time)1889
7Frederick Holderliberalism1890
-John Downer (3rd time)conservatism1892
8William CopleyconservatismMay 1896
-John Downer (4th time)conservatismMay 1897
9Vaiben Louis Solomonconservatism27 June 1989
-Frederick Holder (2nd time)liberalism1 December 1899
-Vaiben Louis Solomon (2nd time)conservatism8 December 1899
10Robert HomburgconservatismMay 1901
11John Darling Jr.conservatism3 May 1902
12Thomas PriceUnited Labor15 July 1904
13Richard Butlerconservatism26 July 1905
14John VerranUnited Labor5 June 1909
15Archibald PeakeLiberal Union3 June 1910
-John Verran (2nd time)United Labor17 February 1912
16Crawford VaughanUnited Labor26 July 1913
-Archibald Peake (2nd time)Liberal Union3 April 1915
-Crawford Vaughan (2nd time)National Labor14 July 1917
17Andrew KirkpatrickLabor (SA)1917
18John GunnLabor18 April 1918
19Henry BarwellLiberal Union16 April 1924
20Richard L. ButlerLiberal Federation17 December 1925
21Lionel HillLabor8 April 1927
-Richard L. Butler (2nd time)Liberal Federation/LCL17 April 1930
22Andrew LaceyLabor22 April 1933
23Robert RichardsLabor1 April 1938
24Mick O'HalloranLabor27 October 1949
25Frank WalshLabor5 October 1960
26Sir Thomas Playford IVLCL10 March 1965
27Steele HallLCL13 July 1966
28Don DunstanLabor16 April 1968
-Steele HallLCL2 June 1970
29Bruce EastickLCL/Liberal (SA)16 March 1972
30David TonkinLiberal24 July 1975
31Des CorcoranLabor18 September 1979
32John BannonLabor2 October 1979
33John OlsenLiberal10 November 1982
34Dale BakerLiberal12 January 1990
35Dean BrownLiberal11 May 1992
36Lynn ArnoldLabor14 December 1993
37Mike RannLabor20 September 1994
38Rob KerinLiberal5 March 2002
39Iain EvansLiberal30 March 2006
40Martin Hamilton-SmithLiberal12 April 2007
41Isobel RedmondLiberal8 July 2009
42Steven MarshallLiberal4 February 2013
43Peter MalinauskasLabor9 April 2018
-Steven MarshallLiberal21 March 2022
44David SpeirsLiberal19 April 2022
45Vincent TarziaLiberal12 August 2024
46Ashton HurnLiberal8 December 2025

References

References

  1. (13 October 1892). "THE PARLIAMENT". South Australian Register.
  2. (30 May 1896). "THE WEEK". Chronicle.
  3. (28 May 1897). "THE ELECTIONS". Southern Cross.
  4. (30 June 1899). "PARLIAMENT BEGINS". Southern Cross.
  5. The Evening Journal. (4 May 1901). "OUR ILLUSTRATIONS". The Evening Journal.
  6. (15 February 1918). "MR. KIRKPATRICK RESIGNS". The Mail.
  7. (18 May 1918). "JOHN GUNN, DRIVER". The Mail.
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