1947 New South Wales state election explained

Election Name:1947 New South Wales state election
Country:New South Wales
Type:parliamentary
Ongoing:no
Previous Election:1944 New South Wales state election
Previous Year:1944
Next Election:1950 New South Wales state election
Next Year:1950
Seats For Election:All 90 seats in the New South Wales Legislative Assembly
46 Assembly seats were needed for a majority
Leader1:James McGirr
Party1:Australian Labor Party (New South Wales Branch)
Leaders Seat1:Bankstown
Percentage1:45.95%
Swing1:0.75
Last Election1:56 seats
Seats1:52
Seat Change1:4
Leader2:Vernon Treatt
Leader Since2:20 March 1946
Party2:Liberal/Country coalition
Leaders Seat2:Woollahra
Percentage2:40.75%
Swing2:11.43
Last Election2:22 seats
Seats2:34
Seat Change2:12
Map Size:400px
Premier
Before Election:James McGirr
Before Party:Australian Labor Party (New South Wales Branch)
After Election:James McGirr
After Party:Australian Labor Party (New South Wales Branch)

The 1947 New South Wales state election was held on 3 May 1947. It was conducted in single member constituencies with compulsory preferential voting and was held on boundaries created at a 1940 redistribution. The election was for all of the 90 seats in the Legislative Assembly.

Issues

At the beginning of 1947, Labor had been in power for 6 years under the premiership of William McKell. The urban conservative parties, which had been in a state of disarray at the previous election in 1944 had been unified as the Liberal Party of Australia under the federal leadership of Robert Menzies. However, in New South Wales the state Liberals had lost their two most experienced and capable leaders, Reginald Weaver who had died in November 1945 and Alexander Mair who had resigned from parliament to unsuccessfully contest a NSW senate seat at the 1946 federal election. They had been led by Vernon Treatt since March 1946. In February 1947, 3 months before the election was due, McKell stunned most people in the Labor Party and general community by announcing that he would resign to take up the position of Governor-General. McKell's preference as a successor was his ally in the struggle against Jack Lang, Bob Heffron. However, revealing the residual influence of Lang, the caucus chose his preferred candidate, the Housing Minister, James McGirr. Both parties went to the election with untried leaders. However, residual respect for McKell, continuing economic growth, the popularity of the federal Labor government and the memory of the factional fights among the state's conservative politicians gave Labor a significant advantage in the campaign.[1]

Key dates

Date Event
6 February 1947First McGirr ministry sworn in.
29 March 1947The Legislative Assembly was dissolved, and writs were issued by the Governor to proceed with an election.
3 April 1947Nominations for candidates for the election closed at noon.
3 May 1947Polling day.
19 May 1947Second McGirr ministry sworn in.
27 May 1947Last day for the writs to be returned and the results formally declared.
28 May 1947Opening of 35th Parliament.

Results

See main article: Results of the 1947 New South Wales state election. While Labor lost some of the traditionally conservative seats it had picked up at the 1944 election to the Liberal Party, the result of the election was a landslide victory for Labor. Many of the gains of the Liberal and Country parties were conservative members who had been elected as independents at the previous election. They had rejoined the parties when some degree of order had been restored:

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Seats changing party representation

Seat19441947
PartyMemberMemberParty
Albury  
Corowa  
Drummoyne  
Hornsby 
Lachlan  
Lane Cove  
Manly 
Mosman
Nepean
Orange  
Oxley 
Ryde 
Tamworth 

Aftermath

McGirr, Treatt and Country Party Leader Michael Bruxner retained their leadership roles throughout the parliament.

There were 11 by-elections during the parliament with a net loss of 3 seats for Labor.

See also

Notes and References

  1. Book: McMullin , Ross . The Light on the Hill: The Australian Labor Party 1891-1991 . . 1991 . 0-19-554966-X . 244–5.