New South Wales general election, 1999

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Legislative Assembly election, 1999 [1]
Party Vote % Seats
Labor 42.2 ↑0.9 55 ↑5
Liberal 24.8 ↓8.0 20 ↓9
National 8.9 ↓2.2 13 ↓4
Independents 5 ↑2
Labor win

Elections to to the 52nd Parliament of New South Wales were held on Saturday, March 27, 1999. All seats in the Legislative Assembly and half the seats in the Legislative Council were up for election. The Australian Labor Party, led by premier Bob Carr won a second term with a 7% swing against the Liberal Party of Australia and National Party of Australia, led by Kerry Chikarovski.

The poll was the first to be held after two key changes to the electoral system. In 1997, the number of electoral districts was reduced from 99 to 93. In 1995, fixed four-year terms were introduced.

Contents

[edit] Coalition

Chikarovski had deposed her predecessor, Peter Collins, three months before the election, and so bore much of the criticism of her party's performance at the 1999 election. The conservative vote collapsed to 33.7% - down 10 percentage points, or one in every four conservative voters.

[edit] Results

[edit] Overview

In the New South Wales Legislative Assembly:

Elections were held for half the seats in the New South Wales Legislative Council:

[edit] Changing hands

  • Burrinjuck. Liberal seat won by National with a swing of 6.0%
  • Dubbo. National seat won by an independent with a swing of 19.4%
  • Georges River. Liberal seat won by Labor with a swing of 8.3%
  • Menai. Liberal seat won by Labor with a swing of 6.1%
  • Murray Darling. National seat won by Labor with a swing of 7.7%
  • Northern Tablelands. National seat won by an independent with a swing of 24.0%
  • South Coast. Liberal seat won by Labor with a swing of 5.0%
  • Strathfield. Liberal seat won by Labor with a swing of 11.1%
  • Tweed. National seat won by Labor with a swing of 4.7%

[edit] References