1968 Australian Labor Party leadership spill

A leadership spill in the Australian Labor Party, the party of opposition in the Parliament of Australia, was held on 30 April 1968. It followed leader Gough Whitlam's decision to resign the leadership following the party executives refusal to seat new Tasmanian delegate Brian Harradine, to which Whitlam demanded a vote of confidence from his caucus. Whitlam received 38 votes to left-winger Jim Cairns' 32 in an unexpectedly close poll.[1]

1968 Australian Labor Party
Leadership spill

30 April 1968
 
Candidate Gough Whitlam Jim Cairns
Caucus vote 38 32
Percentage 54.28 45.72

Leader before election

Gough Whitlam

Elected Leader

Gough Whitlam

Results

The following table gives the ballot results:

Name Votes Percentage
Gough Whitlam 38 54.28
Jim Cairns 32 45.72
gollark: They can be maintenence turtles.
gollark: n64c: No, ChorOS.
gollark: Sorry, crashiness.
gollark: Possibly there's other stuff to check.
gollark: This should maybe work sometimes.

References

  1. Gaul, Jonathan (1 May 1968). "Leadership Vote Fails to Heal A.L.P. Dispute: Whitlam faces new left-wing revolt". The Canberra Times. p. 1.
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