Election result The
Whitlam government had been re-elected with their majority in the House of Representatives reduced from 9 to 5 seats, while they gained 5 seats in the Senate. The ALP and the coalition each won 29 seats in the 60 member Senate, with the balance of power held by
Steele Hall of the
Liberal Movement, and
Michael Townley, a conservative independent. The
Democratic Labor Party, which had been rendered obsolete by the election of the Whitlam government in 1972, lost all five of its Senate seats.
Al Grassby, who was
Minister for Immigration in the Labor Whitlam government, lost his seat. Grassby's actions as immigration minister attracted criticism from
anti-immigration groups, led by the Immigration Control Association, which targeted his electorate in a campaign at the May 1974 election. Partly as a result, Grassby was defeated by the
National Party candidate,
John Sullivan, by just 792 votes. Grassby and his supporters accused these groups of mounting a
smear campaign against him.
Joint sitting The re-elected Whitlam government's failure again to gain a majority in the Senate led to the
1974 joint sitting, Australia's only joint sitting, pursuant to section 57 of the Constitution. It was approved by the new governor-general Sir
John Kerr after the bills were presented to the new parliament and were rejected a third time. It was held three months after the election, on 6–7 August, and it enabled the six bills that had been thrice rejected by the Senate to be passed. The Health Insurance bills were both passed on party lines, 95–92, the Petroleum and Minerals Authority legislation also passed on party lines, though with one Liberal Party member absent.
Liberal Movement Senator
Steele Hall supported the three Electoral bills, citing his experience as Liberal
Premier of South Australia, where he had fought his own party in an effort to improve unequal electoral arrangements dubbed the
Playmander. Northern Territory Country Party MP
Sam Calder supported the Territory Senators legislation, though he opposed the ACT being given added representation.
Subsequent changes In February 1975, the independent senator
Michael Townley joined the Liberal party. This gave the Coalition 30 out of 60 Senators, with 29 Labor and 1
Liberal Movement (
Steele Hall). Later in 1975, two Coalition premiers would break longstanding convention in the replacement of two ALP senators.
Lionel Murphy, who had resigned to take up an appointment to the
High Court, was replaced by independent
Cleaver Bunton; and
Bertie Milliner, who had died, was replaced by
Albert Field, an ALP member who was opposed to Whitlam. Bunton (along with Hall) refused to vote against supply, but Field was prepared to. Field took his seat in the Senate as an Independent on 9 September. Due to a High Court challenge to his appointment, he was on leave from the Senate, unable to exercise a vote, from 1 October 1975, which reduced the number of sitting senators to 59. This gave the Coalition an effective majority, holding 30 of the 59, allowing them to block supply in the Senate to pave the way for the
1975 Australian constitutional crisis. ==See also==