1943 Australian federal election

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File:A Government You Can Trust (cropped).jpg
Advertisement used by the UAP during the 1943 Australian federal election, its final campaign before the party was wound up

The 1943 Australian federal election was held in Australia on 21 August 1943. All 74 seats in the House of Representatives and 19 of the 36 seats in the Senate were up for election. The incumbent Labor Party, led by Prime Minister John Curtin, defeated the opposition Country–UAP coalition led by Arthur Fadden in a landslide. The Labor party TPP result of 58.2% is its highest, in its history.

Fadden, the leader of the Country Party, was serving as Leader of the Opposition despite the Country Party holding fewer seats in parliament than the United Australia Party (UAP). He was previously the Prime Minister in August 1941, after he was chosen by the coalition parties to lead the government after the forced resignation of Prime Minister Robert Menzies, the UAP leader. However, he stayed in office for only six weeks before the two independents who held the balance of power joined Labor in voting down his budget. Governor-General Lord Gowrie was reluctant to call an election for a parliament barely a year old, especially considering the international situation. At his urging, the independents threw their support to Labor for the remainder of the parliamentary term.

Over the next two years, Curtin proved to be a very popular and effective leader, and the Coalition was unable to get the better of him. A number of groups also split away from the UAP prior to the election, the most prominent of which was the Liberal Democratic Party (LDP). Labor thus went into the election in a commanding position, and flipped 13 seats on a 7.9% swing, winning 50.2% of the primary vote and 58.2% of the two-party preferred vote.

The Coalition was reduced to 23 seats, including only nine for the Country Party. Notably, Labor won every seat in Western Australia and all but one in South Australia: Archie Cameron, the member for Barker in South Australia, was left as the only Coalition MP outside the eastern states. The LDP did not win any seats.

This election was significant in the fact that it resulted in the election of the first female member of the House of Representatives, the UAP's Enid Lyons for Darwin, Tasmania, and the first female Senator, Labor's Dorothy Tangney, in Western Australia. The election also remains Labor's greatest federal victory in terms of proportion of seats and two-party votes in the lower house, and primary vote in the Senate as of 2022.

The lack of effective opposition to the Labor party in the lead up to and following the election became the catalyst for the creation of the Liberal Party of Australia from the ashes of the UAP, and for George Cole, Keith Murdoch and other big business magnates to form the conservative think tank the Institute of Public Affairs.

This was the last major election that did not involve the current Liberal and Labor Party competition.

Results

House of Representatives

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File:Svgfiles 2022-08-14-07-18-30-316533-9465770242413096886 (1).svg
1943 Australian Federal Election (House of Representatives)

Australian federal election, 21 August 1943[1]
House of Representatives

File:Australia Federal House of Representatives 1943.svg

<< 19401946 >>

Enrolled voters 4,466,749
Votes cast 4,249,369 Turnout 95.13 +1.27
Informal votes 148,785 Informal 3.50 +0.95
Summary of votes by party
Party Primary votes % Swing Seats Change
Template:Australian party style Template:Australian politics/name 2,058,582 49.93% +9.77% 49 +13
Template:Australian party style Template:Australian politics/name 898,128 21.90% –8.34% 14 –9
Template:Australian party style Template:Australian politics/name 350,378 8.54% –4.97% 9 –4
Template:Australian party style Template:Australian politics/name 87,112 2.11% +2.11% 0 ±0
Template:Australian party style Template:Australian politics/name 81,816 1.98% +1.98% 0 ±0
Template:Australian party style Template:Australian politics/name 42,149 1.48% +1.48% 0 ±0
Template:Australian party style Template:Australian politics/name 29,752 0.72% –1.89% 0 ±0
Template:Australian party style Template:Australian politics/name 501,054 12.15% +4.69% 3Template:Efn ±0
Total 4,100,584     75  

Popular vote
Labor
49.93%
United Australia
21.90%
Independent
12.15%
Country
8.54%
One Parliament
2.11%
Communist
1.98%
Liberal Democratic
1.48%
State Labor
0.72%
Two-party-preferred vote (estimated)
Labor
58.20%
Coalition
41.80%
Parliament seats
Labor
66.22%
United Australia
18.92%
Country
12.16%
Independent
2.70%

Senate

Senate (PBV) — 1943–46 — Turnout 96.31% (CV) — Informal 9.73%
File:1943 Australian Senate.svg
Party Votes[2] % Swing Seats won Seats held Change
Template:Australian party style | Labor 2,139,164 55.10 +17.57 19 22 +5
Country–UAP Coalition 1,481,563 38.15 –12.26 0 14 –5
CountryUAP joint ticket (NSW & Vic)Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". 995,910 25.65 colspan=3 Template:Sdash ±0
Template:Australian party style | Country–National (Qld)Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". 184,181 4.74 colspan=3 Template:Sdash ±0
Template:Australian party style | Liberal & Country League (SA)Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". 148,419 3.82 colspan=3 Template:Sdash ±0
Template:Australian party style | Nationalist–Country joint ticket (WA)Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". 101,738 2.62 colspan=3 Template:Sdash ±0
Template:Australian party style | United Australia (Tas)Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". 51,315 1.32 colspan=3 Template:Sdash ±0
Christian New Order 101,247 2.61 colspan=3 Template:Sdash ±0
Queensland Country 37,350 0.96 colspan=3 Template:Sdash ±0
Template:Australian party style | One Parliament 29,700 0.77 colspan=3 Template:Sdash ±0
Template:Australian party style | Monetary Reform 19,401 0.48 colspan=3 Template:Sdash ±0
Template:Australian party style | Independent 75,105 1.93 –0.39 0 0 ±0
Total 3,882,120 100 19 36

Seats changing hands

Seat Pre-1943 Swing Post-1943
Party Member Margin Margin Member Party
Adelaide, SA Template:Australian party style |   United Australia Fred Stacey 4.7 20.3 15.6 Cyril Chambers Labor Template:Australian party style
Barker, SA Template:Australian party style |   Country Archie CameronTemplate:Efn N/A 14.2 1.7 Archie Cameron United Australia Template:Australian party style
Boothby, SA Template:Australian party style |   United Australia Grenfell Price 6.6 16.1 0.9 Thomas Sheehy Labor Template:Australian party style
Denison, Tas Template:Australian party style |   United Australia Arthur Beck 1.1 10.1 9.0 Frank Gaha Labor Template:Australian party style
Eden-Monaro, NSW Template:Australian party style |   United Australia John Perkins 4.8 10.8 5.4 Allan Fraser Labor Template:Australian party style
Grey, SA Template:Australian party style |   Country Oliver Badman 7.7 10.2 2.5 Edgar Russell Labor Template:Australian party style
Hume, NSW Template:Australian party style |   Country Thomas Collins 0.9 7.2 6.3 Arthur Fuller Labor Template:Australian party style
Lilley, Qld Template:Australian party style |   United Australia William Jolly 9.6 9.9 0.4 Jim Hadley Labor Template:Australian party style
Maranoa, Qld Template:Australian party style Labor Frank Baker 1.6 2.6 1.0 Charles Adermann Country Template:Australian party style
Martin, NSW Template:Australian party style |   United Australia William McCall 2.6 8.3 5.7 Fred Daly Labor Template:Australian party style
Parkes, NSW Template:Australian party style |   United Australia Charles Marr 7.4 10.3 2.9 Les Haylen Labor Template:Australian party style
Perth, WA Template:Australian party style |   United Australia Walter Nairn 14.5 20.5 6.0 Tom Burke Labor Template:Australian party style
Robertson, NSW Template:Australian party style |   United Australia Eric Spooner 0.3 9.2 8.9 Thomas Williams Labor Template:Australian party style
Swan, WA Template:Australian party style |   Country Thomas Marwick 7.5 10.5 3.0 Don Mountjoy Labor Template:Australian party style
Wakefield, SA Template:Australian party style |   United Australia Jack Duncan-Hughes 3.4 4.6 1.2 Albert Smith Labor Template:Australian party style

See also

Notes

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References

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External links

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