Members of the South Australian Legislative Council, 1975–1979
Appearance
(Redirected from Members of the South Australian Legislative Council, 1975-1977)
This is a list of members of the South Australian Legislative Council from 1975 to 1979.
Party | Seats held | 1975–1979 Council | ||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Australian Labor Party | 10 | |||||||||||
Liberal Party of Australia | 9 | |||||||||||
Liberal Movement | 2 |
This period operated under transitional arrangements following the rearrangement of the Council from a restricted-franchise house with ten provinces each electing two members, to a 22-member house elected to staggered terms on an open franchise, proportional representation model. Due in part to a constitutional requirement that those elected at the 1973 election serve six-year terms, the next Council election was in 1979 even though the next Assembly election was held in 1977.
Name | Party | Term expiry | Term of office |
---|---|---|---|
Don Banfield | Labor | 1979 | 1965–1979 |
Frank Blevins | Labor | 1982 | 1975–1985 |
John Burdett | Liberal | 1979 | 1973–1993 |
Martin Cameron | LM/Liberal | 1982 | 1971–1990 |
John Carnie | LM/Liberal | 1982 | 1975–1982 |
Tom Casey | Labor | 1979 | 1970–1979 |
Brian Chatterton | Labor | 1979 | 1973–1987 |
Jessie Cooper | Liberal | 1979 | 1959–1979 |
Dr John Cornwall | Labor | 1982 | 1975–1989 |
Cecil Creedon | Labor | 1979 | 1973–1985 |
Boyd Dawkins | Liberal | 1982 | 1962–1982 |
Ren DeGaris | Liberal | 1979 | 1962–1985 |
Jim Dunford | Labor | 1982 | 1975–1982 |
Norm Foster | Labor | 1982 | 1975–1982 |
Richard Geddes | Liberal | 1979 | 1965–1979 |
Trevor Griffin [1] | Liberal | 1979 | 1978–2002 |
Murray Hill | Liberal | 1982 | 1965–1988 |
Don Laidlaw | Liberal | 1982 | 1975–1982 |
Anne Levy | Labor | 1982 | 1975–1997 |
Frank Potter [1] | Liberal | 1979 | 1959–1978 |
Chris Sumner | Labor | 1982 | 1975–1994 |
Arthur Whyte | Liberal | 1979 | 1966–1985 |
- 1 Liberal MLC Frank Potter died on 26 February 1978. Trevor Griffin was appointed to the resulting casual vacancy on 7 March 1978.
References
[edit]- "Statistical Record of the Legislature, 1837–2007", Parliament of South Australia, 2007.
- "History of South Australian Elections, 1857–2006", Dean Jaensch, 2006.