Election Name: | 1977 Western Australian state election |
Country: | Western Australia |
Type: | parliamentary |
Ongoing: | no |
Previous Election: | 1974 Western Australian state election |
Previous Year: | 1974 |
Next Election: | 1980 Western Australian state election |
Next Year: | 1980 |
Seats For Election: | All 55 seats in the Western Australian Legislative Assembly and 17 (of the 32) seats to the Western Australian Legislative Council 28 Assembly seats were needed for a majority |
Leader1: | Charles Court |
Leader Since1: | 5 June 1972 |
Party1: | Liberal/NCP coalition |
Leaders Seat1: | Nedlands |
Popular Vote1: | 318,435 |
Percentage1: | 54.70% |
Swing1: | 3.50 |
Last Election1: | 29 seats |
Seats1: | 33 |
Seat Change1: | 4 |
Leader2: | Colin Jamieson |
Leader Since2: | 16 April 1976 |
Party2: | Australian Labor Party (Western Australian Branch) |
Popular Vote2: | 257,730 |
Percentage2: | 45.30% |
Swing2: | 3.88 |
Last Election2: | 22 seats |
Seats2: | 22 |
1Blank: | TPP |
2Blank: | TPP swing |
1Data1: | 54.70% |
1Data2: | 45.30% |
2Data1: | 4.53 |
2Data2: | 4.53 |
Premier | |
Before Party: | Liberal/NCP coalition |
After Election: | Charles Court |
After Party: | Liberal/NCP coalition |
Elections were held in the state of Western Australia on 19 February 1977 to elect all 55 members to the Legislative Assembly and 17 members to the 32-seat Legislative Council. The Liberal-National Country coalition government, led by Premier Sir Charles Court, won a second term in office against the Labor Party, led by Opposition Leader Colin Jamieson.
The election produced a decisive victory for the Coalition, attributed by some observers to its strong and organised campaign, the Premier's ability in dealing with the media and good economic times built on resource exports, as contrasted against the Labor Opposition's often unfocussed campaign dwelling on the government's perceived autocratic methods and those sections of the general population which were not benefitting from the good times.[1]
See also: Results of the Western Australian state election, 1977 (Legislative Assembly).
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Notes:
The National Country Party contested seven seats in the election. The previous high vote stemmed from its attempted merger with the Democratic Labor Party prior to the 1974 election, known as the "National Alliance", which contested 44 seats including many in the metropolitan area. The Alliance ceased to exist shortly after the 1974 election, and adopted a more traditional strategy in 1977.
See also: Results of the Western Australian state election, 1977 (Legislative Council).
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Seat | Pre-1977 | Swing | Post-1977 | ||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Party | Member | Margin | Margin | Member | Party | ||||||
Clontarf | Labor | Don May | 2.2 | -9.8 | 7.6 | Tony Williams | Liberal | ||||
Mundaring | Labor | James Moiler | 1.6 | -3.8 | 2.2 | Tom Herzfeld | Liberal | ||||
Murdoch | Labor | Notional - new seat | 8.6 | -11.0 | 2.4 | Barry MacKinnon | Liberal | ||||
Seat | 1974 election | 1976 redistribution | Swing | 1977 election | ||||||||||||
Party | Member | Margin | Party | Member | Margin | Margin | Member | Party | ||||||||
Murray | Liberal | Richard Shalders | 1.8 | Labor | Notional | 1.0 | +11.3 | 10.3 | Richard Shalders | Liberal | ||||||
Scarborough | Liberal | Ray Young | 0.5 | Labor | Notional | 0.8 | +7.4 | 6.6 | Ray Young | Liberal | ||||||
COLSPAN=4 align="center" | Labor seats (22) | ||
COLSPAN=4 align="center" bgcolor="red" | Marginal | ||
Gosnells | Bob Pearce | ALP | 0.9% |
Canning | Tom Bateman | ALP | 3.1% |
Avon | Ken McIver | ALP | 3.8% |
Rockingham | Mike Barnett | ALP | 4.0% |
Dianella | Keith Wilson | ALP | 4.3% |
Maylands | John Harman | ALP | 4.6% |
Geraldton | Jeff Carr | ALP | 5.6% |
Warren | Hywel Evans | ALP | 5.8% |
Swan | Jack Skidmore | ALP | 6.0% |
COLSPAN=4 align="center" bgcolor="red" | Fairly safe | ||
Welshpool | Colin Jamieson | ALP | 6.2% |
Mount Hawthorn | Ronald Bertram | ALP | 7.5% |
Morley | Arthur Tonkin | ALP | 8.3% |
Ascot | Mal Bryce | ALP | 9.0% |
Victoria Park | Ron Davies | ALP | 9.6% |
Perth | Terry Burke | ALP | 9.7% |
Melville | Barry Hodge | ALP | 9.8% |
COLSPAN=4 align="center" bgcolor="red" | Safe | ||
Collie | Tom Jones | ALP | 11.1% |
Balcatta | Brian Burke | ALP | 11.3% |
Yilgarn-Dundas | Julian Grill | ALP | 12.7% |
Kalgoorlie | Tom Evans | ALP | 13.6% |
Fremantle | John Troy | ALP | 14.3% |
Cockburn | Don Taylor | ALP | 17.5% |