1986 Western Australian state election
Elections were held in the state of Western Australia on 8 February 1986 to elect all 57 members to the Legislative Assembly and 17 members to the 34-seat Legislative Council . The Labor government, led by Premier Brian Burke , won a second term in office against the Liberal Party , led by Opposition Leader Bill Hassell since 16 February 1984.
The election resulted in one of Labor's best state election results after World War II , and featured a united National Party for the first time since the 1977 election .
Results
Legislative Assembly
Western Australian state election, 8 February 1986Legislative Assembly
<< 1983 –1989 >>
Enrolled voters
883,239
Votes cast
807,634
Turnout
91.44%
+3.51%
Informal votes
21,240
Informal
2.63%
–0.20%
Summary of votes by party
Party
Primary votes
%
Swing
Seats
Change
Labor
416,805
53.00%
–0.16%
32
± 0
Liberal
324,961
41.32%
+1.46%
19
– 1
National [1]
29,156
3.71%
–1.40%
6
+ 1
Democrats
5,192
0.66%
–0.14%
0
± 0
Other parties
2,630
0.33%
–0.73%
0
± 0
Independent
7,650
0.98%
+0.48%
0
± 0
Total
786,394
57
Two-party-preferred
Labor
427,704
54.12%
+0.37%
Liberal
362,642
45.88%
–0.37%
Notes:
1 The National Country Party (NCP) and the National Party (NP), which had been two separate parties from 1978 onwards, united in 1985 to form the National Party . Three sitting members who had previously identified as National Country Party stood for the Liberal Party in 1986, with two losing their seats to the Nationals, and the other (Bert Crane in Moore ) retaining his seat. The Nationals also gained Avon from the Labor Party, and Mount Marshall from the Liberals, who had held it for a single term.
Legislative Council
Western Australian state election, 8 February 1986Legislative Council
Enrolled voters
883,239
Votes cast
807,496
Turnout
91.42%
+2.44%
Informal votes
26,530
Informal
3.29%
–0.43%
Summary of votes by party
Party
Primary votes
%
Swing
Seats won
Seats held
Labor
352,437
45.13%
–5.50%
9
15
Liberal
327,786
41.97%
+0.40%
6
15
National
37,194
4.76%
–1.59%
2
4
Democrats
63,483
8.13%
+6.68%
0
0
Independent
66
0.01%
+0.01%
0
0
Total
780,966
17
34
Two-party-preferred
Labor
418,124
53.54%
+0.57%
Liberal
361,160
46.25%
–0.57%
Seats changing parties
Members listed in italics did not contest their seat at this election.
* figure is vs. Liberal
** figure is vs. Labor
*** figure is vs. National (pre-merger)
Post-election pendulum
Opinion polling
Morgan Gallop opinion poll results[ 1]
Date
Primary vote
Leader's approval rating
Labor
Liberal-National
Labor
Liberal
19 February 1983 election
53.8
44.2
—
—
March–April 1983
58
37
70
44
May–June 1983
55
41
72
48
July–August 1983
51
43
68
47
September–October 1983
48
47
63
43
November–December 1983
56
40
63
45
January–February 1984
53
42
71
37
15 February 1984
Bill Hassell replaces Ray O'Connor as leader of the Liberal Party
March–April 1984
49
46
68
38
May–June 1984
54
41
66
38
July–August 1984
50
46
65
40
September–October 1984
57
38
69
39
November–December 1984
53
42
63
41
January–February 1985
45
49
58
39
March–April 1985
45
47
53
36
May–June 1985
45
48
61
37
July–August 1985
48
47
64
34
September–October 1985
49
45
61
32
November–December 1985
53
40
65
32
8 February 1986 election
53.2
44.9
—
—
See also
References
^ Hamilton, John (1988). Burkie: A biography of Brian Burke . St. George Books. pp. 217– 218. ISBN 0867780363 .