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1972 Australian federal election

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1972 Australian federal election

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FieldValue
election_name1972 Australian federal election
countryAustralia
typeparliamentary
vote_typePrimary
ongoingno
previous_election1969 Australian federal election
previous_year1969
next_election1974 Australian federal election
next_year1974
outgoing_membersMembers of the Australian House of Representatives, 1969–1972
elected_membersMembers of the Australian House of Representatives, 1972–1974
registered7,073,930 7.08%
turnout6,747,244 (95.38%)
(0.41 pp)
seats_for_electionAll 125 seats of the House of Representatives
63 seats were needed for a majority
election_date2 December 1972
image1
leader1Gough Whitlam
leader_since1[8 February 1967](1967-australian-labor-party-leadership-election)
party1Australian Labor Party
leaders_seat1Werriwa (NSW)
last_election159 seats
seats1**67**
seat_change18
popular_vote1**3,273,549**
percentage1**49.59%**
swing12.64
1data1**52.7%**
2data12.50
image2
leader2William McMahon
leader_since2[10 March 1971](1971-liberal-party-of-australia-leadership-spill)
party2LiberalCountry Coalition
leaders_seat2Lowe (NSW)
last_election266 seats
seats258
seat_change28
popular_vote22,737,911
percentage241.48%
swing21.84
1data247.3%
2data22.50
1blankTPP
2blankTPP swing
map_image1972 Australian federal election.svg
map_size350px
map_captionResults by division for the House of Representatives, shaded by winning party's margin of victory.
titlePrime Minister
before_electionWilliam McMahon
before_partyLiberal/Country coalition
posttitleSubsequent Prime Minister
after_electionGough Whitlam
after_partyAustralian Labor Party

(0.41 pp) 63 seats were needed for a majority

A federal election was held in Australia on 2 December 1972. All 125 seats in the House of Representatives were up for election, as well as a single Senate seat in Queensland. The incumbent Liberal–Country coalition government, led by Prime Minister William McMahon, was defeated by the opposition Labor Party led by Gough Whitlam. Labor's victory ended 23 years of successive Coalition governments that began in 1949 and started the three-year Whitlam Labor Government.

Whitlam became the first Labor leader since World War II to lead the party to victory from opposition. The feat was repeated by Bob Hawke in 1983, Kevin Rudd in 2007 and Anthony Albanese in 2022.

Issues

The 1972 election campaign dealt with a combination of Vietnam and domestic policy issues, and the role of the federal government in resolving these issues. The Coalition of the Liberal and Country parties had been in government for 23 years. Successive Coalition governments promoted conservative economics, trade, and defence. However, Australian economic prosperity during the post-war period of the 1950s and 1960s led to the emergence of a range of "quality of life" issues regarding urban development, education, and healthcare. By 1972 these "quality of life" issues came to represent a major political problem for the coalition parties. Traditionally all of these areas had been handled by the state governments, and the Coalition had always asserted the importance of states rights, a view backed by Liberal state premiers like Robert Askin and Henry Bolte. Between 1966 and 1972, Labor leader Gough Whitlam developed policies designed to deal with the problems of urban and regional development using the financial powers granted to the federal government under the Australian Constitution. As Whitlam put it, Labor focused on "cities, schools and hospitals", and these issues were electorally appealing especially to the young and growing baby boomer generation living in the outer suburbs of the major cities.

By contrast, Coalition policies of conservative economic management, increasing trade, and Australian involvement in the Vietnam War disengaged a significant number of Australian voters. Australian involvement in the Vietnam War was initially popular. However, protests grew as the consequences of the war became apparent and the likelihood of a US-led victory diminished. A major part of the protests were directed at conscripting Australians to fight in the war. Liberal policies on Vietnam focused on the need to contain the spread of communism, but the gradual US and Australian troop withdrawal undermined this position. In 1971, Opposition Leader Gough Whitlam visited China. The Coalition heavily criticised the visit, but said criticism soon backfired and became an embarrassment when U.S. President Richard Nixon announced he would visit China the following year.

Whitlam giving Labor's policy speech at the Blacktown Civic Centre in Sydney

Finally, the incumbent Prime Minister William McMahon was no match for Whitlam, a witty and powerful orator. McMahon's position was precarious to begin with, for he had only emerged as Liberal Leader after a prolonged period of turmoil following the Coalition's unexpectedly poor showing at the 1970 half-Senate election and various state elections. In March 1971, Defence Minister Malcolm Fraser resigned from the ministry and declared that Prime Minister John Gorton was "unfit to hold the great office of Prime Minister". Gorton swiftly called for a vote of confidence in his leadership, which resulted in a 33-33 tie. Gorton could have continued with the result, but stated: "Well, that is not a vote of confidence, so the party will have to elect a new leader." McMahon won the ensuing leadership contest against Billy Snedden. This turmoil was only further compounded by Gorton immediately being elected as McMahon's deputy; he was ultimately sacked by McMahon for disloyalty in August 1971. These changes all made the Coalition appear weak and divided, and consumed in internal struggles.

McMahon was further weakened by concerns about inflation and negative press coverage. For example, Rupert Murdoch and his newspaper The Australian supported the ALP. The ALP ran a strong campaign under the famous slogan It's Time – a slogan which, coupled with its progressive policy programme, gave it great momentum within the electorate after 23 years of Conservative rule.

The Coalition government strongly opposed the opening of full diplomatic relationship with Beijing during Mao Zedong's regime.

Results

House of Representatives

Main article: Results of the 1972 Australian federal election (House of Representatives)

PartyVotes%SwingSeatsChangeTwo-party-preferred (estimated)
Labor3,273,54949.59+2.6467+8
Liberal–Country Coalition2,737,91141.48–1.8458–8
Liberal*2,115,085**32.04**–2.73**38**–8*
Country*622,826**9.44**+0.88**20**0*
Democratic Labor346,4155.25–0.7700
Australia159,9162.42+1.5400
Defence of Government Schools9,7030.15+0.1500
Communist8,1050.12+0.0400
National Socialist1,1610.02+0.0200
Socialist1,0620.02+0.0200
Independents63,2280.96–1.5700
Total6,601,050**125**
**Labor****Win****52.70**+2.50**67**+8
Liberal–Country coalition47.30−2.5058−8

Senate

A special Senate election was held in Queensland to replace Liberal senator Annabelle Rankin, who resigned in 1971. Neville Bonner, who had been appointed to fill the casual vacancy by the Queensland Parliament, won the Senate position – the first Indigenous Australian elected to parliament. The election was held at the time of the House of Representatives election as per Section 15 of the Constitution.

Otherwise, no Senate election was held. An amendment to the constitution passed in 1977 ensured that senators appointed to fill casual vacancies now serve the entire term of the replaced senator; this meant that only half- or full Senate elections would occur from then onward.

Seats changing hands

SeatPre-1972SwingPost-1972PartyMemberMarginMarginMemberParty
Bendigo, VicLaborDavid Kennedy3.03.20.2John BourchierLiberal
Casey, VicLiberalPeter Howson5.07.22.2Race MathewsLabor
Cook, NSWLiberalDon Dobie2.83.50.7Ray ThorburnLabor
Darling Downs, QldLiberalReginald SwartzN/A3.411.3Tom McVeighCountry
Denison, TasLiberalRobert Solomon2.67.24.6John CoatesLabor
Diamond Valley, VicLiberalNeil Brown6.17.71.6David McKenzieLabor
Evans, NSWLiberalMalcolm Mackay1.23.92.7Allan MulderLabor
Forrest, WALaborFrank Kirwan1.14.73.6Peter DrummondLiberal
Holt, VicLiberalLen Reid3.57.94.4Max OldmeadowLabor
Hume, NSWCountryIan Pettitt1.02.91.9Frank OlleyLabor
La Trobe, VicLiberalJohn Jess5.210.25.0Tony LambLabor
Lilley, QldLiberalKevin Cairns1.71.70.0Frank DoyleLabor
Macarthur, NSWLiberalJeff Bate†3.86.02.2John KerinLabor
McMillan, VicLiberalAlex Buchanan†N/A2.92.4Arthur HewsonCountry
McPherson, QldCountryCharles BarnesN/A6.54.7Eric RobinsonLiberal
Mitchell, NSWLiberalLes Irwin2.53.71.2Alfred Ashley-BrownLabor
Phillip, NSWLiberalWilliam Aston0.44.13.7Joe RiordanLabor
Stirling, WALaborHarry Webb5.58.42.9Ian VinerLiberal
Sturt, SALaborNorm Foster0.52.22.7Ian WilsonLiberal
  • †Jeff Bate and Alex Buchanan contested their seats as independent candidates.

Significance

Supporters of McMahon hold up his placards at a rally during the election.

The 1972 election ended 23 years of Liberal–Country rule, the longest unbroken run in government in Australian history. It is also unusual in that Whitlam only scraped into office with a thin majority of four seats; historically, elections that produce a change of government in Australia have taken the form of landslides (as in the elections of 1949, 1975, 1983, 1996, 2007 or 2013, for example). The comparatively small size of Whitlam's win is partly explained by his strong performance at the previous election in 1969, where he achieved a 7.1% swing and gained 18 seats after Labor had been reduced to 41 of 124 seats and a 43.1% two-party vote in its landslide defeat in 1966.

Prime Minister Gough Whitlam quickly switched the diplomatic recognition from Republic of China (Taiwan) to People's Republic of China a few days before Christmas Day under the one-China policy. The new ruling Labor Party sought to ease the complicated tension between Australia and China.

The new Labor Government of Gough Whitlam was eager to make long-planned reforms, although it struggled against a lack of experience in its cabinet and the onset of the 1973 oil crisis and 1973–75 recession. In addition, the Senate was hostile to Whitlam. Between them, the Coalition and DLP held more seats than the ALP, as the term of the Senate at the time was 1971 to 1974. This in particular would make governing difficult, and led to the early double dissolution election of 1974.

References

References

  1. Brown, Neil. (1993). "On the Other Hand ... Sketches and Reflections from Political Life". [[The Popular Press]].
  2. [[Wendy Lewis]], Simon Balderstone and John Bowan. (2006). "Events That Shaped Australia". New Holland.
  3. Thomas, Nicholas. (2004). "Re-Orienting Australia-China Relations: 1972 to the Present".
  4. "Glossary of Election Terms – Federal Election 2007". ABC.
  5. Trumbull, Robert. (23 December 1972). "AUSTRALIA GRANTS CHINA RECOGNITION".
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