Tasmanian general election, 1972

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

House of Assembly election, 1972
Party Vote % Seats
Labor 52.9 ↑7.2 21 ↑4
Liberal 44.0 ↓5.6 14 ↓3
Labor win

A general election for the Tasmanian House of Assembly was held on 22 April 1972. The incumbent Liberal Party was headed by Angus Bethune. The opposition Labor Party was headed by Eric Reece.

Contents

[edit] Background

The 1969 election had resulted in a hung parliament, with the deadlock broken when Kevin Lyons of the Centre Party formed a coalition government with Angus Bethune's Liberal Party. On 15 March 1972, Lyons resigned as Deputy Premier and effectively dissolved the Liberal-Centre coalition.[1] The resulting instability triggered an election.

The 1972 election was also notable due to the emergence and candidacy of the United Tasmania Group, the world's first Green party, formed to campaign against the proposed damming of Lake Pedder.[2]

[edit] Results

Party Number of votes Percentage Seats won Percent Swing
Australian Labor Party 108,910 54.9% 21 +7.2%
Liberal Party of Australia 76,073 38.4% 14 -5.6%
United Tasmania Group 7,741 3.9% 0 +3.9%
Grouped Independents 385 0.2% 0 -0.2%
Other 5,161 2.6% 0 +0.7%
Percentage Change
Turn out 198,270 91.4% +1.4%
Informal 7,533 3.5% -0.8%

[edit] Distribution of Seats

Electorate Seats won
Bass              
Braddon              
Denison              
Franklin              
Wilmot              
  Australian Labor Party
  Liberal Party of Australia

[edit] Aftermath

The instability of Bethune's government after the Liberal-Centre coalition was dissolved hit the Liberals hard, and they lost three seats, giving Labor a clear majority. Eric Reece was sworn in as Premier of Tasmania for a second time on 3 May 1972.

Eric Reece also received the highest personal vote ever in Braddon, gaining 14,790 votes, or 35.4% of the vote.

The United Tasmania Group gained a respectable 3.9% of the vote, failing to gain a seat in the parliament and to stop the damming of Lake Pedder, but their efforts paved the way for the Tasmanian Greens to become a significant force in Tasmanian politics.

[edit] References

  1. ^ Tasmanian Political Almanac - On This Day, Parliament of Tasmania.
  2. ^ Eckersley, Robyn (1992). Environmentalism and Political Theory: Toward an Ecocentric Approach. New York: SUNY Press, 193. ISBN 0791410137. 

[edit] External links