1972 Queensland state election
Elections were held in the Australian state of Queensland on 27 May 1972 to elect the 82 members of the Legislative Assembly of Queensland.[1]
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All 82 seats in the Legislative Assembly of Queensland 42 Assembly seats were needed for a majority | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Turnout | 92.41 (![]() | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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The Country-Liberal Coalition won its sixth consecutive victory since it won government in 1957 and also its second victory under Joh Bjelke-Petersen.
Results
Queensland state election, 27 May 1972 | ||||||
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Enrolled voters | 997,489 | |||||
Votes cast | 921,763 | Turnout | 92.41% | +0.64% | ||
Informal votes | 15,566 | Informal | 1.61% | -0.18% | ||
Summary of votes by party | ||||||
Party | Primary votes | % | Swing | Seats | Change | |
Labor | 424,002 | 46.75% | +1.76% | 33 | + 2 | |
Liberal | 201,596 | 22.23% | -1.45% | 21 | + 2 | |
Country | 181,404 | 20.00% | -1.02% | 26 | ± 0 | |
Democratic Labor | 69,757 | 7.69% | +0.46% | 0 | - 1 | |
Independent | 30,187 | 3.33% | +0.48% | 2 | + 1 | |
Total | 906,946 | 82 | ||||
Seats changing hands
Seat | Pre-1972 | Swing | Post-1972 | ||||||
Party | Member | Margin | Margin | Member | Party | ||||
Albert ¶ | Liberal | Bill Heatley* | 0.5 | -4.6 | 4.1 | Bill D'Arcy | Labor | ||
Ipswich | Labor | notional - new seat | 4.5 | -5.7 | 1.2 | Llewellyn Edwards | Liberal | ||
Mackay | Labor | Ed Casey | 6.7 | -20.1 | 13.4 | Ed Casey | Independent | ||
- ¶ Results for Albert based on 1970 by-election
- Bill Heatley died in October 1971, but no by-election was called due to the proximity of the 1972 election.
- In addition, the Liberal Party retained Maryborough, which was won from Labor at the 1971 by-election.
- Aubigny, which was the last seat held by the Democratic Labor Party, was abolished at this election and its outgoing member, Les Diplock, retired.
Post-election pendulum
gollark: Technology is too complicated for it to work now.
gollark: It won't go well *at all*.
gollark: The grid here noticeably breaks for a few hours every year or so, presumably because there's a lot of redundancy due to lots of components in it. If we had a smaller-scale one, it would either have to be really overbuilt or fail when it was cloudy for too many weeks or something like that, but it would be free of cascading-failure-y problems.
gollark: Less area/stuff to spread problems over.
gollark: Dunbar's number is an incredibly handwavey estimate, but I think the concept is sound.
See also
- Members of the Queensland Legislative Assembly, 1969–1972
- Members of the Queensland Legislative Assembly, 1972–1974
- Candidates of the Queensland state election, 1972
- Bjelke-Petersen Ministry
References
- "Parliament of Queensland, Legislative Assembly election results for 27 May 1972". Australian Politics and Elections Archive 1856-2018. University of Western Australia. Archived from the original on 10 April 2020. Retrieved 10 April 2020.
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