1979 South Australian state election

State elections were held in South Australia on 15 September 1979. All 47 seats in the South Australian House of Assembly were up for election. The incumbent Australian Labor Party led by Premier of South Australia Des Corcoran was defeated by the Liberal Party of Australia led by Leader of the Opposition David Tonkin.

1979 South Australian state election

← 1977 15 September 1979 (1979-09-15) 1982 →

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
 
Leader David Tonkin Des Corcoran
Party Liberal Labor
Leader since 24 July 1975 15 February 1979
Leader's seat Bragg Hartley
Seats before 18 27
Seats won 24 20
Seat change Increase6 Decrease7
Popular vote 352,343 300,277
Percentage 47.94% 40.86%
Swing Increase6.73pp Decrease10.78pp
TPP 55.0% 45.0%
TPP swing Increase8.40pp Decrease8.40pp

  Third party Fourth party
 
DEM
NAT
Leader Robin Millhouse Peter Blacker
Party Democrats National
Leader's seat Mitcham Flinders
Seats before 1 1
Seats won 1 1
Seat change Steady Steady
Popular vote 60,797 14,013
Percentage 8.30% 1.91%
Swing Increase4.82pp Increase0.31pp

Premier before election

Des Corcoran
Labor

Elected Premier

David Tonkin
Liberal

The Liberals originally won 25 seats, but a court decision overturned their win in Norwood. Labor won the Norwood by-election, which meant the Liberals held 24 seats, with Labor on 20 seats, and 1 each to the Australian Democrats, National Country Party, and an Independent Labor.

Background

edit

Premier Don Dunstan abruptly resigned as premier on 15 February 1979, due to ill health, and was succeeded by Deputy Premier Des Corcoran. Dunstan also resigned from parliament, and his seat was retained for Labor by Greg Crafter at the by-election in March 1979.

Spurred by positive opinion polls, and seeking to escape the shadow of Dunstan by gaining a mandate of his own, Corcoran called a snap election, without informing the party apparatus. The election campaign was plagued by problems, which allowed an opening for the Liberals under Tonkin. It did not help matters that The Advertiser was biased toward the Liberal campaign.[citation needed]

Summary of results

edit

Labor suffered a large swing, losing seven seats (six to the Liberals, one to Independent Labor Norm Peterson). The Liberals also won 55 percent of the two-party vote to Labor's 45 percent. In most of Australia, this would have been enough for a landslide Liberal victory. However, the Liberals only won 13 seats in Adelaide, netting them a total of 25 seats, a bare majority of two. Narrow as it was, it was the first time the main non-Labor party in South Australia had won the most seats while also winning a majority of the vote since the Liberal and Country League won 50.3 percent of the two-party vote in 1959.

The Liberal majority was pared back even further after the Court of Disputed Returns struck down the result in Norwood. The court found that a Liberal Party advertisement in an Italian language newspaper, which described Liberal candidate Frank Webster as "your representative" ("il vostro deputato"), gave the false impression that Webster was the sitting member.[1] Labor regained Norwood at the 1980 Norwood state by-election, reducing the Liberals to 24 seats, just enough to govern.

In the South Australian Legislative Council, the Liberals won 6 seats, Labor won 4, and Australian Democrats won 1; giving numbers of 11 Liberal, 10 Labor and 1 Democrat, leaving the Liberal government one seat short of a majority.

Aftermath

edit

Corcoran was bitter in defeat, believing sections of the ALP had undermined him during the campaign. He resigned as leader soon after the election, and retired from politics in 1982.

In 1982, when legislation to enable the Roxby Downs uranium mine was opposed by both Labor and the Democrats, Norm Foster resigned from the Labor Party to support the legislation, and sat as an independent in the Legislative Council.

Key dates

edit
  • House of Assembly dissolved: 22 August 1979, 2:00pm[2]
  • Issue of writ: 27 August 1979[3]
  • Close of nominations: 5 September 1979
  • Polling day: 15 September 1979
  • Return of writ: On or before 5 October 1979

Results

edit

House of Assembly

edit

These numbers include the result of the 1980 Norwood state by-election.

South Australian state election, 15 September 1979[4]
House of Assembly
<< 19771982 >>

Enrolled voters 826,586
Votes cast 769,080 Turnout 93.04 -0.33
Informal votes 34,104 Informal 4.43 +1.72
Summary of votes by party
Party Primary votes % Swing Seats Change
  Liberal 352,343 47.94 +6.73 24 + 6
  Labor 300,277 40.86 –10.78 20 – 7
  Democrats 60,979 8.30 +4.82 1 ± 0
  National Country 14,013 1.91 +0.31 1 ± 0
  Independent 7,364 1.00 +0.61 1 + 1
Total 734,976     47  
Two-party-preferred
  Liberal 404,232 55.00 +8.40
  Labor 330,734 45.00 –8.40

Seats changing hands

edit
Seat Pre-1979 Swing Post-1979
Party Member Margin Margin Member Party
Brighton   Labor Hugh Hudson 7.8 12.5 4.7 Dick Glazbrook Liberal  
Goyder   Independent Keith Russack* 7.9 N/A 27.1 Keith Russack Liberal  
Henley Beach   Labor Glen Broomhill 9.3 10.3 1.0 Bob Randall Liberal  
Mawson   Labor Leslie Drury 6.5 9.5 3.0 Ivar Schmidt Liberal  
Morphett   Labor Terry Groom 0.4 5.7 5.3 John Oswald Liberal  
Newland   Labor John Klunder 9.5 15.7 5.9 Brian Billard Liberal  
Semaphore   Labor Jack Olson 22.2 N/A 12.2 Norm Peterson Independent  
Todd   Labor Molly Byrne 6.5 11.1 4.6 Scott Ashenden Liberal  
  • Members in italics did not recontest their seats.
  • Keith Russack was elected in 1977 as an Independent, but joined the Liberal party soon after.

Legislative Council

edit

South Australian state election, 15 September 1979[5]
Legislative Council
<< 19751982 >>

Enrolled voters 826,586
Votes cast 765,032 Turnout 92.6 –0.7
Informal votes 33,637 Informal 4.4 –0.8
Summary of votes by party
Party Primary votes % Swing Seats
won
Seats
held
  Liberal 370,398 50.6 +22.8 6 11
  Labor 290,552 39.7 –7.6 4 10
  Democrats 47,527 6.5 +6.5 1 1
  National Country 7,716 1.1 –1.0 0 0
  Marijuana 6,132 0.8 +0.8 0 0
  Other 9,070 1.3 * 0 0
Total 731,395     11 22

Post-election pendulum

edit

These numbers include the result of the 1980 Norwood state by-election.

Subsequently, the 1982 Mitcham by-election and 1982 Florey by-election were held. The Democrats retained Mitcham by 45 votes, while Labor increased their margin in Florey.

Liberal seats (24)
Marginal
Henley Beach Bob Randall LIB 1.0%
Mawson Ivar Schmidt LIB 3.0%
Todd Scott Ashenden LIB 4.6%
Brighton Dick Glazbrook LIB 4.7%
Morphett John Oswald LIB 5.3%
Mount Gambier Harold Allison LIB 5.6%
Newland Brian Billard LIB 5.9%
Fairly safe
Mallee Peter Lewis LIB 7.3% v NAT
Eyre Graham Gunn LIB 9.9%
Safe
Torrens Michael Wilson LIB 10.1%
Coles Jennifer Adamson LIB 12.0%
Rocky River John Olsen LIB 13.1%
Chaffey Peter Arnold LIB 13.8%
Hanson Heini Becker LIB 14.5%
Murray David Wotton LIB 15.9%
Glenelg John Mathwin LIB 17.2%
Light Bruce Eastick LIB 17.2%
Victoria Allan Rodda LIB 18.0%
Fisher Stan Evans LIB 18.7%
Bragg David Tonkin LIB 21.5%
Alexandra Ted Chapman LIB 24.0%
Kavel Roger Goldsworthy LIB 24.3%
Goyder Keith Russack LIB 27.1%
Davenport Dean Brown LIB 29.7%
Labor seats (20)
Marginal
Ascot Park John Trainer ALP 1.7%
Unley Gil Langley ALP 2.3%
Norwood* Greg Crafter ALP 3.1%
Florey Harold O'Neill ALP 3.7%
Albert Park Kevin Hamilton ALP 3.9%
Mitchell Ron Payne ALP 4.3%
Hartley Des Corcoran ALP 5.1%
Playford Terry McRae ALP 5.1%
Gilles Jack Slater ALP 5.4%
Baudin Don Hopgood ALP 5.7%
Fairly safe
Peake Keith Plunkett ALP 7.8%
Napier Terry Hemmings ALP 9.5%
Safe
Price George Whitten ALP 10.5%
Adelaide Jack Wright ALP 10.7%
Salisbury Lynn Arnold ALP 10.8%
Elizabeth Peter Duncan ALP 10.9%
Whyalla Max Brown ALP 16.7%
Stuart Gavin Keneally ALP 17.0%
Ross Smith John Bannon ALP 18.4%
Spence Roy Abbott ALP 20.2%
Crossbench seats (3)
Mitcham Robin Millhouse DEM 4.7% v LIB
Semaphore Norm Peterson IND 12.2% v ALP
Flinders Peter Blacker NCP 20.1% v LIB

See also

edit

References

edit
Specific
  1. ^ Red Silk: The Life of Elliott Johnston, QC, Penelope Debelle, Wakefield Press, 2011
  2. ^ Kelton, Greg (23 August 1979). "Corcoran calls snap poll". The Advertiser. p. 1.
  3. ^ "Appendix A. State of South Australia: The Electoral Act 1929-1976". The Advertiser. 28 August 1979. p. 32.
  4. ^ "Details of SA 1979 Election". Australian Politics and Elections Database.
  5. ^ "History of South Australian elections 1857-2006, volume 2 Legislative Council". ECSA. Archived from the original on 8 March 2016. Retrieved 22 May 2016.