South Metropolitan Province

The South Metropolitan Province was a two-member electoral province of the Western Australian Legislative Council, located in metropolitan Perth. It was one of several metropolitan seats created following the enactment of the Constitution Acts Amendment Act (No.2) 1963, and became effective on 22 May 1965. The province was very safe for the Labor Party, which held most or all of the component Assembly seats.

In 1989, the province was abolished by the Acts Amendment (Electoral Reform) Act 1987, and with two others became part of the South Metropolitan Region under the new proportional voting system.

Geography

The province was made up of several complete Legislative Assembly districts, which changed at each distribution.

RedistributionPeriodElectoral districtsElectors% of State
1963–64 22 May 1965 – 22 May 1968

Cockburn, East Melville, Fremantle, Melville

41,082 11.09
1966 22 May 1968 – 22 May 1974 46,073 11.14
1972 22 May 1974 – 22 May 1977 63,251 11.48
1976 22 May 1977 – 22 May 1983 63,455 10.02
1982 22 May 1983 – 22 May 1989

Cockburn, Fremantle, Melville, Rockingham

65,508 9.22

Representation

Members

Member 1PartyTermMember 2PartyTerm
Ron Thompson   Labor 1965–1980   Frederick Lavery   Labor 1965–1971
  Des Dans   Labor 1971–1989
Howard Olney[1]   Labor 1980–1981  
Garry Kelly   Labor 1982–1989  
1 On 16 December 1981, Labor member Howard Olney resigned in order to be appointed to the Supreme Court of Western Australia. At the resulting by-election on 13 March 1982, Labor candidate Garry Kelly was elected.
gollark: Python's arbitrarily large integers probably do *not* have constant time bitshifting, so I don't think this is actually the complexity you said.
gollark: Wait, is your estimate of the complexity assuming the bitshifts will take the same time regardless of how big the numbers are?
gollark: What's n meant to be?
gollark: Being Python, which uses bignums by default, an optimized C implementation which did multiplication too might be faster.
gollark: ... okay.

References

  • Black, David (1991). Legislative Council of Western Australia : membership register, electoral law and statistics, 1890-1989. Perth: Parliamentary History Project. ISBN 0-7309-3641-4.


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