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All 46 seats in the South Australian House of Assembly 24 seats were needed for a majority | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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State elections were held in South Australia on 8 April 1933. All 46 seats in the South Australian House of Assembly were up for election. The incumbent Parliamentary Labor Party government led by Premier Robert Richards was defeated by the opposition Liberal and Country League led by Leader of the Opposition Richard L. Butler. Each district elected multiple members.
Background
After the ALP government of Premier Lionel Hill endorsed the controversial Premiers' Plan following the start of the Great Depression in Australia and the subsequent Australian Labor Party split of 1931, the ALP state executive expelled 23 of the 30 members of the ALP caucus, including the entire cabinet. The expelled MPs formed the Parliamentary Labor Party (also known as Premiers Plan Labor), with Hill as leader and Premier, and continued in office with the support of the Butler-led Liberal Federation.
Amid increasing riots and protests, as well as skyrocketing unemployment, Hill left politics to become Australian Agent-General to the United Kingdom. He was succeeded by Robert Richards, who had the impossible task of leading the government into the election.
In contrast to the ructions in Labor, the conservative forces in the state presented a united front at the 1931 federal election, when all anti-Labor major party candidates in the state ran under the banner of the Emergency Committee of South Australia. This grouping took an additional two seats to hold six of the state's seven seats in the federal House of Representatives and all three available seats in the bloc-voting winner-take-all Senate. In 1932, buoyed by this success, the Liberal Federation and the Country Party merged as the Liberal and Country League under Butler's leadership.
With three Labor factions—the official ALP, Premiers Plan Labor and Lang Labor—splitting the combined 47.8% total Labor vote, the result was a landslide victory for the LCL. The LCL won 29 seats versus only 13 for the three Labor factions combined. Though the Labor split in South Australia would only last until 1934, this would be the start of 32 years of LCL government in South Australia—one of the longest unbroken runs for a governing party in the Commonwealth. The LCL would stay in office until the 1965 state election with the assistance of a pro-LCL electoral malapportionment known as the Playmander, which would be introduced in 1936.
Results
South Australian state election, 8 April 1933 | ||||||
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Enrolled voters | 338,576 | |||||
Votes cast | 182,693 | Turnout | 59.45% | –11.91% | ||
Informal votes | 8,904 | Informal | 4.87% | -0.84% | ||
Summary of votes by party | ||||||
Party | Primary votes | % | Swing | Seats | Change | |
Liberal and Country | 60,159 | 34.62% | * | 29 | * | |
Labor | 48,273 | 27.78% | –20.86% | 6 | – 24 | |
Parliamentary Labor | 28,319 | 16.30% | * | 4 | * | |
Lang Labor | 6,398 | 3.68% | * | 3 | * | |
Single Tax League | 5,429 | 3.12% | +1.80% | 1 | ± 0 | |
Communist | 1,908 | 1.10% | +0.77% | 0 | ± 0 | |
Independent | 23,303 | 13.41% | +11.09% | 3 | + 3 | |
Total | 173,789 | 46 |
See also
- Results of the South Australian state election, 1933 (House of Assembly)
- Candidates of the South Australian state election, 1933
- Members of the South Australian House of Assembly, 1933-1938
- Members of the South Australian Legislative Council, 1933–1938
References
- History of South Australian elections 1857-2006, volume 1: ECSA
- State and federal election results Archived 18 January 2015 at the Wayback Machine in Australia since 1890
- Specific
- "Summary of 1938 Election". University of Western Australia. Retrieved 7 July 2015.
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