1966 Queensland state election
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1966 Queensland state election
All 78 seats in the Legislative Assembly of Queensland
40 Assembly seats were needed for a majorityTurnout 93.27 (Decrease 0.02 pp)
All 78 seats in the Legislative Assembly of Queensland
40 Assembly seats were needed for a majority
First party | Second party | Third party | |
---|---|---|---|
QLP
| |||
Leader | Frank Nicklin | Jack Duggan | No leader |
Party | Country–Liberal Coalition | Labor | Queensland Labor |
Leader since | 21 May 1941 | 18 August 1958 (1958年08月18日) | |
Leader's seat | Landsborough | Toowoomba West | |
Last election | 46 seats, 44.07% | 26 seats, 43.83% | 1 seat, 7.23% |
Seats won | 47 | 26 | 1 |
Seat change | Increase 1 | Steady | Steady |
Popular vote | 357,729 | 350,254 | 49,948 |
Percentage | 44.77% | 43.84% | 6.25% |
Swing | Increase 0.70 | Increase 0.01 | Decrease 0.97 |
Elections were held in the Australian state of Queensland on 28 May 1966 to elect the 78 members of the Legislative Assembly of Queensland.[1]
The major parties contesting the election were the Country Party led by Premier Frank Nicklin in coalition the Liberal Party, the Labor Party led by Jack Duggan.
The Country-Liberal coalition won a fourth term in office at the election.
Key dates
[edit ]Date | Event |
---|---|
10 March 1966 | The Legislative Assembly was prorogued until 26 April.[2] |
19 April 1966 | The Legislative Assembly was dissolved.[3] |
19 April 1966 | Writs were issued by the Governor, Alan Mansfield, to proceed with an election.[4] |
28 April 1966 | Close of nominations. |
28 May 1966 | Polling day, between the hours of 8am and 6pm. |
10 June 1966 | The Nicklin Ministry was reconstituted.[5] |
25 June 1966 | The writ was returned and the results formally declared.[6] |
1 July 1966 | Deadline for return of the writs. |
2 August 1966 | Parliament resumed for business.[7] |
Results
[edit ]
Queensland state election, 28 May 1966 | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Enrolled voters | 870,869 | |||||
Votes cast | 812,235 | Turnout | 93.27 | -0.02 | ||
Informal votes | 13,262 | Informal | 1.63 | +0.07 | ||
Summary of votes by party | ||||||
Party | Primary votes | % | Swing | Seats | Change | |
Labor | 350,254 | 43.84 | +0.01 | 26 | ± 0 | |
Liberal | 203,648 | 25.49 | +1.73 | 20 | ± 0 | |
Country | 154,081 | 19.28 | -1.03 | 27 | + 1 | |
Queensland Labor | 49,948 | 6.25 | -0.97 | 1 | ± 0 | |
Independent | 38,001 | 4.76 | +0.20 | 4 | – 1 | |
Total | 798,973 | 78 |
|
|
Seats changing hands
[edit ]Seat | Pre-1966 | Swing | Post-1966 | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Party | Member | Margin | Margin | Member | Party | ||||
Fassifern | Independent Country | Alf Muller | 7.7 v CP | N/A | 20.1 v ALP | Alf Muller | Country | ||
Hawthorne | Independent Labor | Bill Baxter* | 3.0 | -5.5 | 2.5 | Bill Kaus | Liberal | ||
Toowoomba East | Liberal | Mervyn Anderson | 0.1 | -5.4 | 5.3 | Peter Wood | Labor |
- Members listed in italics did not recontest their seats.
- The sitting Labor MP for Hawthorne, Bill Baxter, lost preselection as the Labor candidate. He was expelled from the ALP for running against the selected candidate Thomas Burton. Previous election figures are Labor v Liberal.
Post-election pendulum
[edit ] Government seats (47)
Marginal
South Coast
Russ Hinze
CP
2.5 v LIB
Mirani
Tom Newbery
CP
3.2
Murrumba
David Nicholson
CP
4.0
Bowen
Peter Delamothe
LIB
5.6
Whitsunday
Ron Camm
CP
5.7
Fairly safe
Ithaca
Col Miller
LIB
6.2
Chatsworth
Bill Hewitt
LIB
6.5
Rockhampton South
Rex Pilbeam
LIB
6.7
Wavell
Alex Dewar
LIB
6.9
Merthyr
Sam Ramsden
LIB
7.5
Kurilpa
Clive Hughes
LIB
8.1
Mulgrave
Roy Armstrong
CP
8.2
Nundah
William Knox
LIB
8.6
Redcliffe
Jim Houghton
CP
8.7
Aspley
Fred Campbell
LIB
9.5
Safe
Ashgrove
Douglas Tooth
LIB
11.2
Greenslopes
Keith Hooper
LIB
12.6
Balonne
Eddie Beardmore
CP
12.7
Isis
Jack Pizzey
CP
12.8
Gympie
Max Hodges
CP
12.9
Mount Gravatt
Geoff Chinchen
LIB
13.3
Balonne
Claude Wharton
CP
13.6
Roma
William Ewan
CP
13.7
Callide
Vince Jones
CP
14.4
Flinders
Bill Longeran
CP
14.5
Somerset
Harold Richter
CP
14.9
Clayfield
John Murray
LIB
14.9
Warwick
David Cory
CP
15.5
Sherwood
John Herbert
LIB
16.6
Lockyer
Gordon Chalk
LIB
16.9
Mount Coot-tha
Bill Lickiss
LIB
17.0
Carnarvon
Henry McKechnie
CP
17.6
Hinchinbrook
John Row
CP
19.1
Very Safe
Fassifern
Alf Müller
CP
20.1
Landsborough
Frank Nicklin
CP
21.3
Toowong
Charles Porter
LIB
23.1
Barambah
Joh Bjelke-Petersen
CP
24.2
Condamine
Vic Sullivan
CP
27.3
Cunningham
Alan Fletcher
CP
30.5
Mackenzie
Nev Hewitt
CP
Unopp
Opposition seats (26)
Marginal
Ipswich West
Vi Jordan
ALP
0.9 v IND
Townsville North
Perc Tucker
ALP
2.7
Toowoomba East
Peter Wood
ALP
5.3
Fairly safe
Tablelands
Edwin Wallis-Smith
ALP
6.0
Wynnum
Ted Harris
ALP
7.0 v LIB
Brisbane
Johnno Mann
ALP
8.0 v LIB
Mourilyan
Peter Byrne
ALP
8.5
Norman
Fred Bromley
ALP
8.7 v LIB
Safe
Barcoo
Eugene O'Donnell
ALP
10.1
Belmont
Fred Newton
ALP
10.1 v LIB
Mackay
Fred Graham
ALP
11.1
South Brisbane
Col Bennett
ALP
11.9 v LIB
Kedron
Eric Lloyd
ALP
11.9 v LIB
Baroona
Pat Hanlon
ALP
12.3 v LIB
Toowoomba West
Jack Duggan
ALP
13.5 v LIB
Sandgate
Harry Dean
ALP
14.0 v LIB
Maryborough
Horace Davies
ALP
14.4
Bulimba
Jack Houston
ALP
14.8 v LIB
Nudgee
Jack Melloy
ALP
14.9 v LIB
Rockhampton North
Merv Thackeray
ALP
16.7 v LIB
Salisbury
Doug Sherrington
ALP
19.3 v LIB
Very Safe
Port Curtis
Martin Hanson
ALP
21.5
Ipswich East
Jim Donald
ALP
22.8 v LIB
Warrego
John Dufficy
ALP
Unopp
Crossbench seats (5)
Burdekin
Bunny Adair
IND
8.5 v LIB
Aubigny
Les Diplock
DLP
12.6 v CP
Townsville South
Tom Aikens
NQL
13.9 v ALP
See also
[edit ]- Members of the Queensland Legislative Assembly, 1963–1966
- Members of the Queensland Legislative Assembly, 1966–1969
- Candidates of the Queensland state election, 1966
- Nicklin Ministry
References
[edit ]- ^ "Parliament of Queensland, Legislative Assembly election results for 28 May 1966". Australian Politics and Elections Archive 1856-2018. University of Western Australia. Archived from the original on 31 March 2017. Retrieved 10 April 2020.
- ^ "A Proclamation". Queensland Government Gazette . 10 March 1966. p. 221:1469.
- ^ "A Proclamation". Queensland Government Gazette . 19 April 1966. p. 221:1997.
- ^ "Extraordinary". Queensland Government Gazette . 19 April 1966. p. 221:1999–2000.
- ^ "Extraordinary". Queensland Government Gazette . 10 June 1966. p. 222:807–809.
- ^ "Notices of Results of General Election". Queensland Government Gazette . 25 June 1966. p. 222:1061–1074.
- ^ "A Proclamation". Queensland Government Gazette . 23 June 1966. p. 222:1045.