1999 Victorian state election explained

Election Name:1999 Victorian state election
Country:Victoria
Type:parliamentary
Ongoing:no
Previous Election:1996 Victorian state election
Previous Year:1996
Next Election:2002 Victorian state election
Next Year:2002
Seats For Election:All 88 seats in the Victorian Legislative Assembly
and 22 (of the 44) seats in the Victorian Legislative Council
Leader1:Steve Bracks
Leader Since1:22 March 1999
Party1:Australian Labor Party (Victorian Branch)
Leaders Seat1:Williamstown
Popular Vote1:1,289,696
Percentage1:45.57%
Swing1:2.44
Last Election1:29 seats
Seats1:42
Seat Change1:13
1Data1:50.20%
2Data1:3.66
Leader2:Jeff Kennett
Leader Since2:23 April 1991
Party2:Liberal/National coalition
Leaders Seat2:Burwood
Popular Vote2:1,330,928
Percentage2:47.02%
Swing2:3.46
Last Election2:58 seats
Seats2:43
Seat Change2:15
1Data2:49.80%
2Data2:3.66
1Blank:TPP
2Blank:TPP swing
Map Size:400px
Premier
Posttitle:Elected Premier
Before Election:Jeff Kennett
Before Party:Liberal/National coalition
After Election:Steve Bracks
After Party:Australian Labor Party (Victorian Branch)

The 1999 Victorian state election, held on Saturday, 18 September 1999, was for the 54th Parliament of Victoria. It was held in the Australian state of Victoria to elect the 88 members of the state's Legislative Assembly and 22 members of the 44-member Legislative Council. The LiberalNational Coalition led by Jeff Kennett and Pat McNamara, which had held majority government since the 1996 election, lost 15 seats and its majority due mainly to a swing against it in rural and regional Victoria.

The Labor Party, led by Steve Bracks, although also not having majority of the seats, took government due to support from three rural independents. They decided to back the Labor Party, which gave a working majority in the chamber to a Labor minority government. Bracks was sworn in as Premier of Victoria on 20 October 1999.[1]

Future Premier Jacinta Allan entered parliament at this election.

Results

See also: Post-election pendulum for the 1999 Victorian state election.

Legislative Assembly

See also: Results of the 1999 Victorian state election (Legislative Assembly).

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Legislative Council

See also: Results of the 1999 Victorian state election (Legislative Council).

The following voting statistics exclude the three mid-term by-elections held on the same day, at which two seats were retained by Labor and a third was gained by Labor from the Liberals.

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Seats changing hands

SeatPre-1999SwingPost-1999
PartyMemberMarginMarginMemberParty
Ballarat East LiberalBarry Traynor0.1-3.73.7Geoff HowardLabor 
Ballarat West LiberalPaul Jenkins1.4-2.41.0Karen OveringtonLabor 
Bendigo East LiberalMichael John5.0-8.13.1Jacinta AllanLabor 
Carrum LiberalDavid Lean0.8-1.00.2Jenny LindellLabor 
Frankston East IndependentPeter McLellan3.1-7.74.6Matt VineyLabor 
Geelong LiberalAnn Henderson3.5-3.50.03Ian TreziseLabor 
Gippsland East NationalDavid Treasure15.2-22.97.7Craig IngramIndependent 
Gisborne LiberalTom Reynolds7.8-9.41.6Jo DuncanLabor 
Narracan LiberalFlorian Andrighetto1.6-4.12.5Ian MaxfieldLabor 
Oakleigh LiberalDenise McGill0.8-4.13.3Ann BarkerLabor 
Ripon LiberalSteve Elder4.6-7.22.6Joe HelperLabor 
Seymour LiberalMarie Tehan4.2-4.90.7Ben HardmanLabor 
Tullamarine LiberalBernie Finn3.0-6.83.8Liz BeattieLabor 
Warrnambool NationalJohn McGrath13.8-22.78.9John VogelsLiberal 

Campaign

The Kennett government entered the campaign with a substantial lead in the polls and was widely expected to win, some commentators even tipped the government to increase their already large majority.[2]

The Liberals ran a campaign centred on Jeff Kennett and the unusual jeff.com.au website. The presidential nature of the campaign was emphasised when the Herald Sun ran a damaging front-page story revealing that most Liberal candidates were gagged from speaking to the media.[3] The Coalition stuck to a message of focusing on its economic record, and promising modest increases in spending in schools, hospitals and police.[2]

In contrast Labor sought to tap into perceptions in rural Victoria that the Kennett government had neglected them. Both John Brumby who led Labor until early 1999 and Steve Bracks campaigned extensively in rural and regional Victoria, attacking Coalition policies of privatisation highlighting poor service delivery. Labor also took the unusual step of launching their campaign in the regional centre of Ballarat where it announced it would spend $170 million to improve rural infrastructure. In addition Labor campaigned on issues of government transparency and service administration.[4] By election day few people believed that there would be a change of government. When The Australian published a poll which suggested the result would be a cliffhanger, Steve Bracks is said to have stated 'I hope it's right, but I think The Australian is on drugs.'[5] Kennett during the campaign was at the centre of controversy over a heated interview with ABC Radio presenter Jon Faine.[6]

Election day

On the afternoon of the election, while polling was being conducted, it was learned that Liberal-turned-Independent member for the marginal seat of Frankston East, Peter McLellan, had died of a heart attack. Polling was therefore aborted, with a supplementary election to be scheduled.

When the results started to come through, it appeared that there was only a modest swing in metropolitan Melbourne, even in the electorally volatile eastern suburbs, but there was a substantial swing to Labor in provincial and rural Victoria, traditionally a Liberal stronghold. Political analyst and ABC commentator Antony Green later wrote that "in the more than 35 elections I've been involved in, the 1999 Victorian election was the only one where I thought there was something wrong with the computer."[7]

When the Victorian Electoral Commission finished counting for the night, the result was still too close to call: Labor had made huge gains in the rural hinterland, but had failed to make much headway in the eastern suburbs of Melbourne where elections had historically been won or lost.

Frankston East and rural independents

See main article: 1999 Frankston East state supplementary election.

Initial counting had the Coalition on 43 seats in the 88-seat chamber, Labor on 41 (including winning the seat of Geelong by just 16 votes), and the independents on three. Frankston East remained vacant pending the results of the 16 October supplementary election. As McLellan died on the day of the general election, voters in Frankston East had already cast votes before learning of McLellan's death. As McLellan died while the campaign was underway, the Victorian constitution required a supplementary election in the seat.

Regardless of who won in Frankston East, neither the Coalition nor Labor could form a government without the support of the independents, leaving them in a position to effectively choose the next premier.

On 16 October, the supplementary election resulted in a 7.71% swing to Labor, with its candidate Matt Viney winning 54.60% of the two-party preferred vote, putting Labor on 42 seats. The votes that were cast in Frankston East on the day of the election and McLellan's death had been destroyed without being counted. It is therefore unknown whether Frankston East voters had voted differently in the supplementary election than the way they voted at the general election.

The next morning, Labor and the Independents signed an agreement which became public the following day. Although this allowed Labor to form government by one seat, Kennett's supporters urged the Coalition to force a last-ditch confidence vote on the floor of the Assembly. They believed that Savage, Davies and Ingram would be forced to publicly support Kennett. In truth, Savage and Davies felt that Kennett had given them short shrift during the previous term, and would not have even considered supporting any government led by Kennett. However, with the Liberals divided on Kennett's future role, Kennett resigned as premier and retired from politics.

Aftermath

Kennett's resignation became official on 20 October. Soon afterward, Bracks advised the Governor, Sir James Gobbo, that he could form a government, which was duly sworn in later that day. With Kennett retiring from politics, Dr Denis Napthine, a rural MP who was believed to bring a more consensus-style approach to leadership, succeeded him as Liberal leader.[1] [2] Nationals leader Pat McNamara retired from politics as well. His successor, Peter Ryan, tore up the Coalition agreement; the Liberals and Nationals would not resume their Coalition until 2008.

Labor won Kennett's old seat of Burwood in a by-election that December after he decided to retire from parliament. The following year they also won McNamara's hitherto safe seat of Benalla in another by-election, which brought them to 44 of the Assembly's 88 seats.

See also

Notes and References

  1. Economou . Nick . June 2000 . Australian Political Chronicle: July–December 1999 . Australian Journal of Politics and History . 46 . 2 . 226–237 . 0004-9522.
  2. Woodward . Dennis . Costar, Brian . The Victorian Election of 18 September 1999 . Australian Journal of Political Science . 35. 1. 125–133 . 10.1080/10361140050002881. 2000 . 153439196 .
  3. Bennett S. & Newman G., 'Victorian Election 1999', Australian Parliamentary Library Research Paper http://www.aph.gov.au/LIBRARY/Pubs/rp/1999-2000/2000rp19.htm
  4. Bennett S. & Newman G., 'Victorian Election 1999', Australian Parliamentary Library Research Paper
  5. Book: Megalogenis, George. The Longest Decade. Scribe. Melbourne. 2006. 54.
  6. Web site: 2019-10-10 . 'I'll just sit here and drink my tea': Jeff Kennett's tense interview on ABC . 2023-10-11 . www.abc.net.au . en-AU.
  7. Comment by Antony Green at pollbludger (http://blogs.crikey.com.au/pollbludger/?p=356#comments, 8 May 2006, accessed 2 February 2010.