1964 Victorian state election
Australian state election
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All 66 seats in the Victorian Legislative Assembly 34 seats needed for a majority and 17 (of the 34) seats in the Victorian Legislative Council | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Elections were held in the Australian state of Victoria on 27 June 1964 to elect the 66 members of the state's Legislative Assembly and 17 members of the 34-member Legislative Council. The Liberal and Country Party (LCP) government of Premier Henry Bolte won a fourth term in office.
Key dates
Date | Event |
---|---|
6 May 1964 | The Parliament was prorogued.[1] |
14 May 1964 | Writs were issued by the Administrator to proceed with an election.[2] |
5 June 1964 | Close of nominations. |
27 June 1964 | Polling day, between the hours of 8am and 6pm. |
8 July 1964 | The Bolte Ministry was reconstituted, with two new ministers sworn in.[3] |
14 July 1964 | The writ was returned and the results formally declared. |
14 July 1964 | Parliament resumed for business.[4] |
Results
Legislative Assembly
The election produced almost no change in the electoral balance.
Victorian state election, 27 June 1964[5] | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Enrolled voters | 1,635,311 | |||||
Votes cast | 1,543,778 | Turnout | 94.40 | –0.01 | ||
Informal votes | 35,631 | Informal | 2.31 | –0.14 | ||
Summary of votes by party | ||||||
Party | Primary votes | % | Swing | Seats | Change | |
Liberal and Country | 597,748 | 39.63 | +3.20 | 38 | – 1 | |
Labor | 546,279 | 36.22 | –2.33 | 18 | + 1 | |
Democratic Labor | 225,779 | 14.97 | –1.98 | 0 | ± 0 | |
Country | 132,067 | 8.76 | +1.62 | 10 | + 1 | |
Other | 3,741 | 0.25 | –0.01 | 0 | ± 0 | |
Independent | 2,533 | 0.17 | –0.49 | 0 | – 1 | |
Total | 1,508,147 | 66 | ||||
Two-party-preferred | ||||||
Liberal and Country | 890,164 | 59.0 | +1.1 | |||
Labor | 617,873 | 41.0 | –1.1 |
Legislative Council
Victorian state election, 27 June 1964[6] | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Enrolled voters | 1,635,311 | |||||
Votes cast | 1,543,586 | Turnout | 94.4 | –0.1 | ||
Informal votes | 45,627 | Informal | 3.0 | –0.2 | ||
Summary of votes by party | ||||||
Party | Primary votes | % | Swing | Seats won | Seats held | |
Liberal and Country | 600,600 | 40.1 | +2.1 | 9 | 18 | |
Labor | 531,510 | 35.5 | –3.4 | 4 | 8 | |
Democratic Labor | 232,445 | 15.5 | –1.2 | 0 | 0 | |
Country | 133,403 | 8.9 | +2.7 | 4 | 8 | |
Total | 1,497,958 | 17 | 34 |
Seats changing hands
Seat | Pre-1964 | Swing | Post-1964 | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Party | Member | Margin | Margin | Member | Party | ||||
Bendigo | Labor | Bill Galvin | 4.5 | -6.3 | 1.8 | Robert Trethewey | Liberal and Country | ||
Geelong West | Liberal and Country | Max Gillett | 0.2 | -0.3 | 0.1 | Neil Trezise | Labor | ||
Kara Kara | Liberal and Country | Keith Turnbull | 13.8 | -15.1 | 1.3 | Bill Phelan | Country | ||
Moorabbin | Independent Liberal | Bob Suggett | 8.7 | N/A | 11.0 | Bob Suggett | Liberal and Country |
- Members listed in italics did not recontest their seats.
- In addition, Labor retained the seat of Broadmeadows which it had won from the LCP at the 1962 by-election.
Post-election pendulum
LCP seats (38) | |||
Marginal | |||
Bendigo | Robert Trethewey | LCP | 1.8% |
Lowan | Jim McCabe | LCP | 1.8% v CP |
Mentone | Edward Meagher | LCP | 3.9% |
Ballarat South | Bill Stephen | LCP | 4.7% |
Dandenong | Len Reid | LCP | 5.6% |
Morwell | Jim Balfour | LCP | 5.6% |
Fairly safe | |||
Moonee Ponds | Jack Holden | LCP | 6.0% |
Hawthorn | Walter Jona | LCP | 6.4% |
Evelyn | Russell Stokes | LCP | 6.7% |
Essendon | Kenneth Wheeler | LCP | 7.0% |
Oakleigh | Alan Scanlan | LCP | 7.5% |
St Kilda | Brian Dixon | LCP | 8.4% |
Dundas | William McDonald | LCP | 8.9% |
Ripponlea | Edgar Tanner | LCP | 9.6% |
Safe | |||
Geelong | Hayden Birrell | LCP | 10.0% |
Moorabbin | Bob Suggett | LCP | 11.0% |
Ivanhoe | Vernon Christie | LCP | 11.4% |
Scoresby | Bill Borthwick | LCP | 11.6% |
Ormond | Joe Rafferty | LCP | 12.1% |
Ringwood | Jim Manson | LCP | 12.5% |
Sandringham | Murray Porter | LCP | 12.7% |
Mulgrave | Ray Wiltshire | LCP | 13.4% |
Portland | George Gibbs | LCP | 14.8% |
Prahran | Sam Loxton | LCP | 14.8% |
Ballarat North | Tom Evans | LCP | 15.6% |
Box Hill | George Reid | LCP | 17.8% |
Toorak | Philip Hudson | LCP | 18.3% |
Caulfield | Alexander Fraser | LCP | 18.4% |
Mornington | Roberts Dunstan | LCP | 19.5% |
Camberwell | Vernon Wilcox | LCP | 19.6% |
Hampden | Henry Bolte | LCP | 20.2% |
Elsternwick | Richard Gainey | LCP | 20.8% |
Brighton | John Rossiter | LCP | 22.0% |
Polwarth | Tom Darcy | LCP | 22.0% |
Balwyn | Alex Taylor | LCP | 22.6% |
Kew | Arthur Rylah | LCP | 22.6% |
Burwood | Jim MacDonald | LCP | 22.8% |
Malvern | John Bloomfield | LCP | 25.5% |
See also
- Candidates of the 1964 Victorian state election
- Members of the Victorian Legislative Assembly, 1961–1964
- Members of the Victorian Legislative Assembly, 1964–1967
- Bolte Ministry
References
- ^ "Discharging members of the Legislative Council from attendance and dissolving the Legislative Assembly". Victoria Government Gazette. Victorian Government Printer. 6 May 1964. p. 1964:1420.
- ^ Chief Electoral Officer, Victoria (1964). Statistics relating to the general election held on Saturday 27 June 1964 (6947/64). Accessed at Baillieu Library, Monash University, Clayton, Victoria.
- ^ "Ministers of the Crown". Victoria Government Gazette. Victorian Government Printer. 8 July 1964. p. 1964:2233.
- ^ "Fixing the time for holding the first session of the forty-third Parliament of Victoria". Victoria Government Gazette. Victorian Government Printer. 30 June 1964. p. 1964:2131.
- ^ Australian Government and Politics Database. "Parliament of Victoria, Assembly election, 27 June 1964". Retrieved 1 February 2010.
- ^ Carr, Adam. "Victoria Legislative Council Election 1964". Psephos Election Archive. Retrieved 29 September 2015.
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