1943 Victorian state election|
|
|
|
|
The 1943 Victorian state election was held in the Australian state of Victoria on Saturday 12 June 1943 to elect 65 members of the state's Legislative Assembly.
Background
Country Party unity
At the time of the election, the Country Party was in the process of repairing a split which had taken place in December 1937 after federal MP John McEwen was expelled from the state branch of the party. The splinter group which supported McEwen had formed the Liberal Country Party on 30 March 1938, which contested the 1940 state election as a separate party. By April 1943, the United Country Party and the Liberal Country Party had formed a joint executive, which had unanimously agreed to reunite the parties. Members of the LCP at the time of the election were endorsed and counted as Victorian Country Party candidates separately from the United Country Party, but the unity agreements meant that their seats were counted for Dunstan's UCP.
Results
Legislative Assembly
Victorian state election, 12 June 1943[1][2] Legislative Assembly
<< 1940–1945 >>
|
Enrolled voters
|
1,015,750
|
|
|
Votes cast
|
883,679
|
|
Turnout
|
87.00
|
−6.41
|
Informal votes
|
22,876
|
|
Informal
|
2.59
|
+1.03
|
Summary of votes by party
|
Party
|
Primary votes
|
%
|
Swing
|
Seats
|
Change
|
|
Labor
|
311,051
|
36.13
|
+2.96
|
22
|
±0
|
|
United Australia
|
198,582
|
23.07
|
−12.34
|
13
|
−3
|
|
United Country
|
112,164
|
13.03
|
−1.13
|
18
|
−4
|
|
Communist
|
38,802
|
4.51
|
+4.13
|
0
|
±0
|
|
Victorian Country
|
11,738
|
1.36
|
−0.98
|
7
|
+6
|
|
Independent
|
188,466
|
21.89
|
+7.36
|
5
|
+1
|
Total
|
860,803
|
|
|
65
|
|
Notes:
- Fourteen seats were uncontested at this election, and were retained by the incumbent parties:
- Labor (7): Bendigo, Brunswick, Dundas, Flemington, Geelong, Northcote, Wonthaggi.
- Victorian Country (6): Gippsland East, Goulburn Valley, Gunbower, Lowan, Mornington, Upper Goulburn
- UAP (1): Kew
See also
References
- ^ Election held on 12 June 1943, Australian Politics and Elections Database (University of Western Australia).
- ^ Colin A Hughes, A Handbook of Australian Government and Politics 1890-1964, Canberra: Australian National University Press, 1968 (ISBN 0708102700).