1952 Port Melbourne state by-election

A by-election for the seat of Port Melbourne in the Victorian Legislative Assembly was held on Saturday 15 March 1952. The by-election was triggered by the death of Labor member Tom Corrigan on 19 January 1952.

The candidates were Stan Corrigan (Tom Corrigan's son) for the Labor Party, William Bird (secretary of the Melbourne branch of the Seamen's Union) for the Communist Party, and Kenneth Cole for the Liberal and Country Party.[1] Labor retained the seat with Corrigan winning by a large majority.

Results

Port Melbourne state by-election, 1952[2]
Party Candidate Votes % ±
Labor Stan Corrigan 16,353 78.93 +2.78
Liberal and Country Kenneth Cole 2,730 13.18 −5.60
Communist William Bird 1,636 7.90 +2.82
Total formal votes 20,719 97.95 −0.03
Informal votes 433 2.05 +0.03
Turnout 21,152 84.0 −9.0
Labor hold Swing+2.78
gollark: Payments are hard and Bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies, despite being generally kind of terrible, at least have a solution which is *technologically* secured instead of just relying on goodwill or something, and which doesn't force you into one central provider.
gollark: That's a good thing. Having your payment provider *also* keep your money is a problem.
gollark: It's a bad solution. You should just use something else *where possible*.
gollark: Krist is the future of online payments. It has zero transaction fees!
gollark: Actually, use Krist, the more onlinerer currency.

References

  1. "L.C.P. man in by-election". The Argus. Melbourne. 21 February 1952. p. 9. Retrieved 18 April 2012 via National Library of Australia.
  2. "LABOR HOLDS PORT EASILY". The Argus. Melbourne. 17 March 1952. p. 5. Retrieved 18 April 2012 via National Library of Australia.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.