Tasmanian state election, 1959

Tasmanian state election, 1959
Tasmania
2 May 1959

All 35 seats to the House of Assembly
  First party Second party
 
Leader Eric Reece Tim Jackson
Party Labor Liberal
Leader since 26 August 1958 26 June 1956
Leader's seat Braddon Franklin
Last election 15 seats 15 seats
Seats won 17 seats 16 seats
Seat change Increase2 Increase1
Percentage 44.5% 41.05%
Swing Decrease5.77 Decrease2.54

Premier before election

Eric Reece
Labor

Resulting Premier

Eric Reece
Labor

A general election for the House of Assembly was held in the Australian state of Tasmania on 2 May 1959.

The two previous elections had resulted in a parliamentary deadlock due to an even number of seats (30) in the House of Assembly. Prior to the 1959 election, the number of seats was increased to 35.[1]

Robert Cosgrove had retired as Premier of Tasmania, and had been replaced by Eric Reece on 26 August 1958.

Results

The Australian Labor Party won the most seats in the newly expanded House of Assembly, but not enough to govern in a majority as two seats were won by Independents. The 1959 election was the last occasion in which an ungrouped independent (Bill Wedd) won a seat in Tasmania.[2]

Former Labor Treasurer Dr Reg Turnbull won two quotas in his own right as an independent in Bass, representing 5.64% of the statewide result.

Tasmanian state election, 2 May 1959
House of Assembly
<< 1956 1964 >>

Enrolled voters 180,344
Votes cast 170,559 Turnout 94.57 –0.65
Informal votes 9,816 Informal 5.76 +1.57
Summary of votes by party
Party Primary votes % Swing Seats Change
  Labor 71,535 44.50 –5.77 17 + 2
  Liberal 66,005 41.05 –2.54 16 + 1
  Democratic Labor 8,510 5.29 +1.82 0 ± 0
  Independent 14,549 9.05 +6.45 2 + 2
  Communist 144 0.09 +0.03 0 ± 0
Total 160,743     35  

Distribution of Seats

Electorate Seats won
Bass              
Braddon              
Denison              
Franklin              
Wilmot              

  Labor
  Liberal
  Independent

See also

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 11/27/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.