State elections were held in South Australia on 11 October 1997. All 47 seats in the South Australian House of Assembly were up for election. The incumbent Liberal Party of Australia led by Premier of South Australia John Olsen defeated the Australian Labor Party led by Leader of the Opposition Mike Rann, forming a minority government with the SA Nationals and independent MPs.

Quick Facts First party, Second party ...
1997 South Australian state election

 1993 11 October 1997 (1997-10-11) 2002 

All 47 seats in the South Australian House of Assembly
24 seats were needed for a majority
11 (of the 22) seats in the South Australian Legislative Council
  First party Second party Third party
  Thumb Thumb
NAT
Leader John Olsen Mike Rann Karlene Maywald
Party Liberal Labor National
Leader since 28 November 1996 5 November 1994 11 October 1997
Leader's seat Kavel Ramsay Chaffey
(won seat)
Seats before 36 11 0
Seats won 23 21 1
Seat change Decrease 13 Increase 10 Increase 1
Popular vote 359,509 312,929 15,488
Percentage 40.40% 35.16% 1.74%
Swing Decrease 12.41 Increase 4.79 Increase 0.63
TPP 51.51% 48.49%
TPP swing Decrease 9.40 Increase 9.40

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Results by electorate

Premier before election

John Olsen
Liberal

Resulting Premier

John Olsen
Liberal

Close

Background

Following the 1993 landslide to the Liberals, ending 11 years of Labor government, Labor now led by Mike Rann held just 11 seats in the House of Assembly. The Liberals held 36 seats and there were no independent or minor party members in the House of Assembly. They had held a record 37, but lost one at the 1994 Torrens by-election. However the Liberals were suffering from heightened internal tensions. Premier Dean Brown had been toppled by Industry Minister and factional rival John Olsen in a 1996 party-room coup. Olsen had been in office for just over 10 months on election day.

Key dates

  • Issue of writ: 13 September 1997
  • Close of electoral rolls: 22 September 1997
  • Close of nominations: Friday 26 September 1997, at noon
  • Polling day: 11 October 1997
  • Return of writ: On or before 14 November 1997 (actually returned 7 November)

Results

House of Assembly

South Australian state election, 11 October 1997[1]
House of Assembly
<< 19932002 >>

Enrolled voters 1,010,753
Votes cast 927,344 Turnout 91.75 -1.82
Informal votes 37,430 Informal 4.04 +0.94
Summary of votes by party
Party Primary votes  % Swing Seats Change
  Liberal 359,509 40.40 -12.41 23 - 13
  Labor 312,929 35.16 +4.79 21 + 10
  Democrats 146,347 16.45 +7.35 0 0
  National 15,488 1.74 +0.63 1 + 1
  United Australia 13,569 1.52 +1.52 0 0
  Independent 27,870 3.13 +0.01 1 + 1
  Independent Liberal 6,970 0.78 +0.78 1 + 1
  Other 7,232 0.81 * 0 0
Total 889,914     47  
Two-party-preferred
  Liberal 458,399 51.51 –9.40
  Labor 431,515 48.49 +9.40
More information Popular vote ...
Popular vote
Liberal
40.40%
Labor
35.16%
Democrats
16.45%
Independents
3.91%
National
1.74%
United Australia
1.52%
Others
0.81%
Close
More information Two-party-preferred vote ...
Two-party-preferred vote
Liberal
51.51%
Labor
48.49%
Close
More information Seats ...
Seats
Liberal
48.94%
Labor
44.68%
Independents
4.26%
National
2.13%
Close

Seats changing hands

More information Seat, Pre-1997 ...
Seat Pre-1997 Swing Post-1997
Party Member Margin Margin Member Party
Chaffey   Liberal Kent Andrew 6.3 8.9 1.0 Karlene Maywald National SA  
Elder   Liberal David Wade 3.5 6.1 2.6 Patrick Conlon Labor  
Florey   Liberal Sam Bass 11.0 12.3 1.3 Frances Bedford Labor  
Gordon   Liberal Harold Allison 21.5 N/A 0.1 Rory McEwen Independent  
Hanson   Liberal Stewart Leggett 1.9 7.5 5.6 Steph Key Labor  
Kaurna   Liberal Lorraine Rosenberg 2.4 8.2 5.8 John Hill Labor  
Lee   Liberal Joe Rossi 1.0 8.1 7.1 Michael Wright Labor  
MacKillop   Liberal Dale Baker 29.4 N/A 7.9 Mitch Williams Independent  
Mitchell   Liberal Colin Caudell 9.4 10.3 0.9 Kris Hanna Labor  
Norwood   Liberal John Cummins 7.4 8.2 0.8 Vini Ciccarello Labor  
Peake   Liberal Heini Becker 5.0 12.0 7.0 Tom Koutsantonis Labor  
Reynell   Liberal Julie Greig 2.5 6.2 3.7 Gay Thompson Labor  
Wright   Liberal Scott Ashenden 3.3 6.4 3.1 Jennifer Rankine Labor  
Close
  • Members in italics did not recontest their seats.
  • In addition, Labor retained the seat of Torrens, which it had gained from the Liberals at the 1994 by-election.


Labor needed a 13-seat swing to make Rann premier, a deficit thought insurmountable before the election. However, to the surprise of most observers, Olsen lost the massive majority he'd inherited from Brown. Labor polled exceptionally well, regaining much of what it had lost in its severe defeat of four years earlier. Indeed, on election night many Liberal observers feared that Labor had managed the swing it needed to regain government. Ultimately, Labor picked up 10 seats, three seats short of victory. The Liberals lost a massive 13 seats: 10 to Labor, 1 to the Nationals, and 2 to conservative independents. Labor received a record two-party swing of 9.4 percent, as opposed to the previous record of 8.9 percent to the Liberals at the last election. Olsen was forced to seek the support of the Nationals and the independents to stay in office at the helm of a minority government.

The Liberals briefly regained a majority when Mitch Williams rejoined the Liberal Party in 1999, but lost it again in 2000 when it expelled Peter Lewis from the party in 2000, and Bob Such resigned from the Liberal Party later in 2000. However they continued to govern with the support of the Nationals and independents until the 2002 election.

Legislative Council

South Australian state election, 11 October 1997[2]
Legislative Council
<< 19932002 >>

Enrolled voters 1,010,753
Votes cast 937,026 Turnout 92.71 –0.91
Informal votes 40,523 Informal 4.32 +0.78
Summary of votes by party
Party Primary votes  % Swing Seats
won
Seats
held
  Liberal 339,064 37.82 –13.99 4 10
  Labor 274,098 30.57 +3.17 4 8
  Democrats 149,660 16.69 +8.65 2 3
  No Pokies 25,630 2.86 +2.86 1 1
  HEMP 15,432 1.72 –0.08 0 0
  Greens 15,377 1.72 –0.02 0 0
  Grey Power 14,261 1.59 –0.01 0 0
  United Australia 11,920 1.33 +1.33 0 0
  National 9,233 1.03 +0.31 0 0
  Australia First 9,150 1.02 +1.02 0 0
  Recreation and Fishing 7,048 0.79 +0.79 0 0
  Overtaxed Motorists 6,024 0.67 +0.67 0 0
  Other 19,606 2.18 * 0 0
Total 896,503     11 22

In the Legislative Council, the Australian Democrats won two seats for the first time. Elected were 4 Liberal, 4 Labor, 2 Australian Democrats, and No Pokies candidate Nick Xenophon. Carrying over from the 1993 election were 6 Liberal, 4 Labor, 1 Democrat, leaving total numbers at 10 Liberal, 8 Labor, 3 Democrats, 1 No Pokies.

The election was notable for the Australian Democrats' strongest performance in South Australia, winning two Legislative Council seats at an election for the only time in their history (though their predecessors, the Liberal Movement (LM), had won two Legislative Council seats on a higher primary vote in the 1975 election). The Democrats also finished second after preferences in seven House of Assembly seats (compared to three for the LM in 1975). However, it marked the peak for Democrats' influence in South Australia. From here on they would slowly lose numbers and influence, winning only one more seat (in 2002), and losing their remaining parliamentary representation as of the 2010 election.

Labor Upper House members Terry Cameron and Trevor Crothers would resign from the party in 1998 and 1999 respectively, to support the Liberals over the privatisation of ETSA. This also meant the Democrats lost sole balance of power for the first time since 1985.

Post-election pendulum

Liberal seats (26)
Marginal
Gordon Rory McEwen IND 0.1% v LIB
Hartley Joe Scalzi LIB 0.7%
Stuart Graham Gunn LIB 1.5%
Heysen David Wotton LIB 1.9% v AD
Chaffey Karlene Maywald NAT 2.6% v LIB
Frome Rob Kerin LIB 2.9%
Colton Steve Condous LIB 4.0%
Davenport Iain Evans LIB 4.3% v AD
Unley Mark Brindal LIB 4.5%
Mawson Robert Brokenshire LIB 4.7%
Adelaide Michael Armitage LIB 5.4%
Waite Martin Hamilton-Smith LIB 5.9% v AD
Fairly safe
Bright Wayne Matthew LIB 6.2%
Light Malcolm Buckby LIB 6.3%
Kavel John Olsen LIB 6.3% v AD
Finniss Dean Brown LIB 7.3% v AD
Coles Joan Hall LIB 7.8%
MacKillop Mitch Williams IND 7.9% v LIB
Newland Dorothy Kotz LIB 8.0%
Schubert Ivan Venning LIB 8.7% v AD
Fisher Bob Such LIB 9.8%
Flinders Liz Penfold LIB 10.0% v NAT
Safe
Morphett John Oswald LIB 13.0%
Hammond Peter Lewis LIB 14.7%
Goyder John Meier LIB 17.2%
Bragg Graham Ingerson LIB 18.8%
Labor seats (21)
Marginal
Norwood Vini Ciccarello ALP 0.8%
Mitchell Kris Hanna ALP 0.9%
Florey Frances Bedford ALP 1.3%
Elder Pat Conlon ALP 2.6%
Wright Jennifer Rankine ALP 3.1%
Reynell Gay Thompson ALP 3.7%
Hanson Steph Key ALP 5.6%
Kaurna John Hill ALP 5.8%
Fairly safe
Peake Tom Koutsantonis ALP 7.0%
Lee Michael Wright ALP 7.1%
Napier Annette Hurley ALP 9.5% v AD
Safe
Torrens Robyn Geraghty ALP 10.1%
Giles Lyn Breuer ALP 11.4%
Playford Jack Snelling ALP 12.9%
Elizabeth Lea Stevens ALP 14.3%
Ross Smith Ralph Clarke ALP 14.8%
Ramsay Mike Rann ALP 18.2%
Taylor Trish White ALP 22.2%
Hart Kevin Foley ALP 22.7%
Spence Michael Atkinson ALP 23.3%
Price Murray De Laine ALP 24.4%
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Metro SA: ALP in red, Liberal in blue. These boundaries are based on the 2006 electoral redistribution.
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Rural SA: ALP in red, Liberal in blue, Independents in white, Nationals in green. These boundaries are based on the 2006 electoral redistribution.

Legacy

The 1997 result put Labor within striking distance of winning government at the next election in 2002. John Olsen was left with internal disquiet over the leadership challenge and poor election result while his opponent, Mike Rann, was seen to have 'won' the campaign despite losing the election.

On 6 February 2007, Mike Rann told parliament that some in the Liberal party had leaked information to him before and during the election campaign. The following quote by Rann is from Hansard on 6/2/2007 :

"You asked me a question and I will give you a 55-minute answer, because you will remember one day when I came into this place and I had, I think, 880 pages of cabinet and other documents... I remember being telephoned and told to go to a certain cafe, not in a white car but in a taxi, and then to walk in a zigzag fashion through the streets of a suburb, where I was to be handed cabinet documents. So much for their cabinet solidarity and cabinet confidentiality! There was a queue on the telephone telling us what had happened the day before. It was the same during the 1997 election campaign. People thought, 'How does this guy (the leader of the opposition at the time) know intuitively exactly what John Olsen is doing the next day?' It was because I was being phoned and told! So, do not talk to me about cabinet solidarity lest I come in here and start naming names, which will set off another generation of disputation on the other side of the house. Anyway, cabinet approved, among other things, on 20 December 2006 minister Lomax-Smith's proposed statement and approved her to announce publicly that she opposed the proposal in cabinet. She did so because we agreed that she should be able to do so. Somehow I do not think that John Olsen agreed to what happened when I was getting the phone call at 6 o'clock in the morning and at midnight, and walking in a zigzag pattern through suburbs to be handed a cabinet bag and cabinet documents. We have a different approach. We agreed to it. It was a cabinet decision to agree to it. So, please, ask me some more questions, because there were two different camps involved in this leaking to the then poor unpopular leader of the opposition, and I am more than happy to name names."

See also

References

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