When
South Australia turned the Northern Territory over to Commonwealth hands in 1911, the federal government ran the Territory directly through the relevant minister, and the only elective body in the Territory was the Darwin town council. The territory was split in 1927 into the territories of
North Australia and
Central Australia, both of which had a four-member Advisory Council that was half-elected and half-appointed; in addition, development of North Australia was left to the locally-based North Australia Commission. These changes were reversed in 1931, with the Northern Territory reformed and the federal government resuming control until the 1947 formation of the
Northern Territory Legislative Council, which was half-elected and half-appointed. The Legislative Assembly was created in 1974 by the
Northern Territory (Administration) Act 1974 (Cth), an act of the Australian federal parliament, which was a fully-elected body in contrast to the Legislative Council. The Legislative Assembly consisted of 19 fully elected members, but initially lacked significant powers, until limited self-government was granted in 1978. For the
1983 election, the number of members was increased to 25. From its inception prior to the
1974 election until the
2001 election, the Legislative Assembly was controlled by the conservative
Country Liberal Party, which since 1979 has been affiliated with the federal
Liberal–
National coalition. In 2001, the
Labor Party won a one-seat majority, and
Clare Martin became the Territory's first Labor and first female chief minister. At the
2005 election, the Martin-led ALP won 19 seats to the CLP's 4; however, Martin resigned in 2007 and was succeeded by
Paul Henderson as ALP leader, and retained government with another one-seat majority at the
2008 election. Labor lost its majority when
Marion Scrymgour went to the cross-benches as an independent. She re-joined the party after
Alison Anderson left the party to sit as an independent. Anderson joined the CLP in September 2011. The
2012 election resulted in the return of the CLP under
Terry Mills with 16 seats to the ALP's 8. Mills resigned in 2013 and
Adam Giles became CLP leader. The CLP was reduced to a one-seat majority in 2014 when three CLP members defected to join the
Palmer United Party. One defector later rejoined the CLP. After further defections, CLP numbers fell to
minority government status in July 2015. The
2016 election saw a landslide CLP defeat which brought Labor to power led by Chief Minister
Michael Gunner. The position of
Speaker of the Northern Territory Legislative Assembly was held by CLP-turned-independent MP
Kezia Purick from 23 October 2012. Despite Labor's massive majority following the 2016 election, the incoming Labor government re-appointed Purick as Speaker. Following an ICAC investigation into allegations
Kezia Purick had engaged in corrupt conduct, she resigned, and the role was filled by
Chansey Paech on 23 June 2020. Following the 2020 election, Paech resigned in September 2020 to serve as a minister in Gunner's cabinet, and
Ngaree Ah Kit was acting speaker for a month until her substantive election on 20 October 2020. The
2024 election saw a landslide ALP defeat which brought Labor to power led by Chief Minister
Lia Finocchiaro. The position of
Speaker of the Northern Territory Legislative Assembly was held by CLP-turned-independent MP
Robyn Lambley became Speaker of the Assembly after the CLP won power in 2024. ==See also==