Australian Capital Territory House of Assembly

Australian Capital Territory House of Assembly

The Australian Capital Territory House of Assembly was the main elected representative body of the Australian Capital Territory between 1975 and 1986, when preparations began to be made for the granting of self-government to the Territory. It served a largely advisory role, with most powers over the Territory still lying in the hands of the relevant federal minister through the life of the Assembly.

The assembly was first created in 1975 by the Whitlam government, as a response to frequent criticism about the lack of representation for the citizens of the territory. The territory had been represented for decades by the then increasingly criticised Advisory Council, a purely advisory body. Whitlam had appointed the local federal MP, Kep Enderby, as Minister for the ACT, and Enderby sought to create a new representative body along the lines of the Northern Territory Legislative Assembly, which had been created in 1974 and at the time was not self-governing. Elections were held for the first Legislative Assembly that year, with representatives of the Australian Labor Party, Liberal Party of Australia, Australia Party, and several independents taking seats in the Assembly. Unlike its Northern Territory counterpart, it was not made self-governing in 1977.

The new Assembly began sitting in the then-Civic Offices, later renovated to become the current Legislative Assembly Building. An independent MLA, Jim Pead, took office as the first President (the equivalent of the Speaker) of the new body. Gordon Walsh became the first leader of the Labor caucus, with Dr Peter Hughes leading the Liberal caucus. Both were replaced in 1977; Walsh joined the nascent Australian Democrats, and was replaced as leader by Peter Vallee, Hughes quit the Liberal Party and was replaced as leader by Jim Leedman. Ivor Vivian became the leader of the Australia Party, before being replaced by Walsh in 1977. The first Assembly saw two prominent members on its benches: future federal ministers Ros Kelly and Susan Ryan. Ryan resigned during the first term, successfully seeking a seat in the Senate.

The second election for the Assembly was held in 1979, and saw a change in name from the Legislative Assembly to the House of Assembly. The election saw the addition of a fourth party, with the conservative Family Team led by Bev Cains winning a seat. It also saw the election of future self-government ministers Greg Cornwell and Paul Whalan. A third election was held in 1982, which saw the introduction of a more partisan system. The Liberals held a majority in the Assembly, with Leedman becoming Leader of the House, and new Labor leader Ken Doyle becoming the minority leader. He was to be short-lived as leader, with Maurene Horder succeeding him after only two years.

The last Assembly also saw the creation of an office of Speaker, filled by independent MHA Harold Hird. The final election also saw the election of future Liberal Chief Minister Trevor Kaine. It was allowed to expire in 1986 due to plans to introduce full self-government for the territory. After some years of discussions, the House of Assembly was replaced with the current Legislative Assembly in 1989, with new Labor leader Rosemary Follett becoming the first Chief Minister of the Australian Capital Territory.

Voting was not compulsory for the House of Assembly, and its influence was limited. Many of its prominent figures retired rather than contest the elections for the new Legislative Assembly in 1989; several others, including outgoing Speaker Harold Hird and Family Team leader Bev Cains were soundly defeated. Three MHAs, however—Greg Cornwell, Trevor Kaine, and Paul Whalan—went on to be elected to the new parliament, and later served in major roles.


Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Нужен реферат?

Look at other dictionaries:

  • Members of the Australian Capital Territory House of Assembly, 1979–1982 — This is a list of members of the Australian Capital Territory House of Assembly from 1979 to 1982. The ACT was not self governing at this time. Name Party Electorate Term in office Bev Cains Family Team Canberra 1979–1986 Peter Christie Labor… …   Wikipedia

  • Members of the Australian Capital Territory House of Assembly, 1982–1986 — This is a list of members of the Australian Capital Territory House of Assembly from 1982 to 1986. The ACT was not self governing at this time. Name Party Electorate Term in office David Adams Liberal Canberra 1982–1986 Bev Cains Family Team… …   Wikipedia

  • Australian Capital Territory (Self-Government) Act 1988 — is an Act of the Parliament of Australia enacted on 6 December 1988, that establishes ‘a body politic under the Crown by the name of the Australian Capital Territory’ and is the Territory’s constitutional foundation.From 1930 the ACT was… …   Wikipedia

  • Australian Capital Territory — Flagge Wappen (Detail …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Australian Capital Territory — a federal territory on the continent of Australia in the SE part: includes Canberra, capital of the Commonwealth of Australia. 221,609; 939 sq. mi. (2430 sq. km). Formerly, Federal Capital Territory. * * * Political entity (pop., 2001: 321,680),… …   Universalium

  • Australian Capital Territory — Australia state or territory Name = Australian Capital Territory Fullname = Australian Capital Territory the = the Motto = For the Queen, the Law and the People Nickname = The Nations Heart or The Capital Emblems = The floral emblem of the ACT is …   Wikipedia

  • Australian Capital Territory Legislative Assembly — Infobox Legislature name = Australian Capital Territory Legislative Assembly coa pic = coa res = coa pic = coa res = session room = ACT Legislative Assembly.jpg house type = Unicameral houses = Legislative Assembly leader1 type = Speaker leader1 …   Wikipedia

  • History of the Australian Capital Territory — The history of the Australian Capital Territory as a Territory of Australia began after the Federation of Australia in 1901, when it was created in law as the site for Australia s capital city Canberra. The region has a long prior history of… …   Wikipedia

  • Portal:Australian Capital Territory — Wikipedia portals: Culture Geography Health History Mathematics Natural sciences People Philosophy Religion Society Technology …   Wikipedia

  • Red Hill, Australian Capital Territory — Infobox Australian Place | type = suburb name = Red Hill state = Australian Capital Territory city = Canberra caption = lga = South Canberra postcode = 2603 est = 1928 propval = [http://allhomes.com.au/c/ah?a=uisu i=652 $707,000] (2005) pop =… …   Wikipedia

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”