Division of Bass
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This article is about the Australian federal electorate of Bass, for the state electorate see Division of Bass (state).
The Division of Bass is an Australian Electoral Division in Tasmania. The division was created in 1903 and is named for the explorer George Bass. It has always been based on the city of Launceston and surrounding rural areas, and its boundaries have changed very little in the century since its creation. For most of its history it has been a marginal seat, changing hands between the Australian Labor Party and the conservative parties - since 1949 the Liberal Party. Its most notable member has been Lance Barnard, who was Deputy Prime Minister in the Whitlam Labor government. His resignation in 1975 was followed by Labor's heavy defeat in the Bass by-election, which is seen as the beginning of the end of the Whitlam government.
[edit] Members
Member | Party affiliation | Period |
---|---|---|
David Storrer | Protectionist, Independent | 1903-10 |
Hon Jens Jensen | ALP, Nationalist | 1910-19 |
David Jackson | Nationalist | 1919-29 |
Allan Guy | ALP, UAP | 1929-34 |
Hon Claude Barnard | ALP | 1934-49 |
Bruce Kekwick | Liberal | 1949-54 |
Hon Lance Barnard | ALP | 1954-75 |
Hon Kevin Newman | Liberal | 1975-84 |
Warwick Smith | Liberal | 1984-93 |
Silvia Smith | ALP | 1993-96 |
Hon Warwick Smith | Liberal | 1996-98 |
Michelle O'Byrne | ALP | 1998-2004 |
Michael Ferguson | Liberal | 2004- |
Electoral divisions of Tasmania | |
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Federal: Bass | Braddon | Denison | Franklin | Lyons |