June 1991 Australian Labor Party leadership spill

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June 1991 Australian Labor Party
Leadership spill

← 1983 3 June 1991 December 1991 →
 
Candidate Bob Hawke Paul Keating
Caucus vote 66 (60.0%) 44 (40.0%)

Leader before election

Bob Hawke

Elected Leader

Bob Hawke

A leadership spill in the Australian Labor Party, the party of government in the Parliament of Australia, was held on 3 June 1991. It was the first of two ballots that year with Prime Minister Bob Hawke surviving the ballot against Treasurer Paul Keating, who then went to the backbench.

Background[edit]

Bob Hawke had been leader of the Labor Party since 3 February 1983, and Prime Minister since the 1983 election, with Labor winning a record four elections under his leadership. However, the unexpectedly close win at the 1990 election, coupled with the deepening economic recession, fuelled tensions within the government over economic policy.[citation needed]

Furthermore, a re-energised Liberal opposition led by John Hewson, a qualified economist, gained ground in the opinion polls.[citation needed] Hawke had alienated key NSW Right faction powerbroker, Senator Graham Richardson by late 1990, with the latter bluntly telling Hawke he no longer had the support of the Right.[citation needed]

Deputy Prime Minister and Treasurer Paul Keating launched his first June challenge against Hawke after the latter apparently reneged on a Kirribilli agreement that he would hand over the leadership in 1990.[1]

Candidates[edit]

Results[edit]

Australian Labor Party
Deputy Leadership spill, 1991

← 1990
1995 →
 
Candidate Brian Howe Graeme Campbell
Caucus vote 81 (73.6%) 18 (16.4%)

Deputy Leader before election

Paul Keating

Deputy Leader
after election

Brian Howe

The following tables gives the ballot results:

Leadership ballot[edit]

Name Votes Percentage
Bob Hawke 66 60.0
Paul Keating 44 40.0

Deputy leadership ballot[edit]

Candidate Final ballot %
Brian Howe 81 73.6
Graeme Campbell 18 16.4
Abstentions 11 10.0

Aftermath[edit]

Hawke's public support continued to decline before in December 1991, he called on another spill which Keating won 56–51.

See also[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ "Playing politics is playing for keeps". The Advertiser. 24 February 2012. Retrieved 27 February 2012.