Chief Minister of the Northern Territory

Chief Minister of the Northern Territory
Incumbent
Michael Gunner

since 31 August 2016
Style The Honourable
Appointer Administrator of the Northern Territory
Term length At the Administrator's pleasure
Formation 1974

The Chief Minister of the Northern Territory is the head of government of the Northern Territory. The office is the equivalent of a State Premier. When the Northern Territory Legislative Assembly was created in 1974, the head of government was officially known as Majority Leader. This title was used in the first parliament (1974–1977) and the first eighteen months of the second. When self-government was granted the Northern Territory in 1978, the title of the head of government became Chief Minister.

The Chief Minister is formally appointed by the Administrator, who in normal circumstances will appoint the head of whichever party holds the majority of seats in the unicameral Legislative Assembly. In times of constitutional crisis, the Administrator can appoint someone else as Chief Minister, however, this has never occurred.

Since 31 August, following the 2016 election, the Chief Minister is Michael Gunner of the Australian Labor Party. He is the first Chief Minister to have been born in the Northern Territory.[1]

History

The Country Liberal Party won the first Northern Territory election on 19 October 1974 and elected Goff Letts Majority Leader. He headed an Executive that carried out most of the functions of a ministry at the state level. At the 1977 election Letts lost his seat and party leadership. He was succeeded on 13 August 1977 by Paul Everingham (CLP) as Majority Leader. When the Territory attained self-government on 1 July 1978, Everingham became Chief Minister with greatly expanded powers.

In 2001, Clare Martin became the first Labor and female Chief Minister of the Northern Territory. Until 2004 the conduct of elections and drawing of electoral boundaries was performed by the Northern Territory Electoral Office, a unit of the Department of the Chief Minister. In March 2004 the independent Northern Territory Electoral Commission was established.

In 2013, Mills was replaced as Chief Minister and CLP leader by Adam Giles at the 2013 CLP leadership ballot on 13 March to become the first indigenous Australian to lead a state or territory government in Australia.[2]

Following the 2016 election landslide outcome, Labor's Michael Gunner became Chief Minister.

List of Chief Ministers of the Northern Territory

Chief Minister Party Term start Term end Term in office Ministry
Paul Everingham   Country Liberal 1 July 1978 15 October 1984 6 years, 106 days Everingham Ministry
Ian Tuxworth   Country Liberal 16 October 1984 13 May 1986 1 year, 209 days Tuxworth Ministry
Stephen Hatton   Country Liberal 14 May 1986 12 July 1988 2 years, 59 days Hatton Ministry
Marshall Perron   Country Liberal 13 July 1988 24 May 1995 6 years, 315 days Perron Ministry
Shane Stone   Country Liberal 25 May 1995 7 February 1999 3 years, 258 days Stone Ministry
Denis Burke   Country Liberal 8 February 1999 17 August 2001 2 years, 190 days Burke Ministry
Clare Martin   Labor 18 August 2001 24 November 2007 6 years, 98 days Martin Ministry
Paul Henderson   Labor 26 November 2007 28 August 2012 4 years, 276 days Henderson Ministry
Terry Mills   Country Liberal 29 August 2012 13 March 2013 196 days Mills Ministry
Adam Giles   Country Liberal 14 March 2013 30 August 2016 3 years, 169 days Giles Ministry
Michael Gunner   Labor 31 August 2016 Incumbent 98 days Gunner Ministry

From the foundation of the Northern Territory Legislative Assembly in 1974 until the granting of self-government in 1978, the head of government was known as the Majority Leader:

Majority Leader Party Term start Term end Term in office Executive
Goff Letts   Country Liberal 19 October 1974 12 August 1977 2 years, 297 days Letts Executive
Paul Everingham   Country Liberal 13 August 1977 30 June 1978 321 days Everingham Executive

See also

References

External links

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