The
New South Wales Act 1823, passed by the
British Parliament, separated
Van Diemen's Land from
New South Wales, making it a penal colony under the
British Crown and
Privy Council. The Van Diemen's Land Legislative Council was created in 1825 as an advisory body to the
Lieutenant-Governor of Van Diemen's Land. The Legislative Council consisted of six members chosen by the Lieutenant-Governor, who continued to report to the
Governor of New South Wales. An Imperial Act in 1828 enabled its expansion to 15 members, with the Lieutenant-Governor as Presiding Officer. The Council remained fully nominative until the
Australian Colonies Government Act came into effect in Van Diemen's Land on 21 October 1851, when the Council was expanded to 24 members, with 16 elected by the voters and eight nominated by the Governor, who ceased to be a member. The
franchise for these elections was extremely limited, with only men over 30 and who owned a certain amount of property eligible to vote. Former convicts, who made up a significant proportion of the colony's population, were not able to vote. The 1851 arrangements were a compromise struck by the Governor between the colonists' demands for representative government and the
Colonial Office's wish to control the colony through the Governor. The first Speaker of the new Council was Sir
Richard Dry. On 24 October 1856, an Act was proclaimed permitting the introduction of a
bicameral, representative Parliament with the creation of the
Tasmanian House of Assembly, where the power of the executive government resided, and the abolition of nominee positions on the Council. The Speaker's position was renamed President. A distinctive feature of the Act is that it did not enable the Governor to dissolve the Legislative Council. Like other democratic upper houses of that period, it was established using single-member electorates elected using the
first-past-the-post system, with
Hobart and
Launceston being multi-member electorates. Voters would simply cross off the names of those whom they did not wish to vote for. Members were elected for a six-year term, and terms were staggered in such a way that two or three members' terms expired each year and elections were held in the first week of May. In the event of resignation or death of a member during their term, a
by-election would be held to complete their term. Reforms in 1907 saw the House of Assembly switch to using the
Hare-Clark system with multi-member seats, and introduced
preferential voting to the Council. A redistribution in 1946 broke up Hobart and Launceston into single-member electorates. Suffrage was gradually expanded from the late 19th century onwards, with the property franchise being first eased and then abolished; ex-convicts, ex-servicemen and then women being granted the vote; the age of majority being reduced; and finally, full adult suffrage in 1968. The first woman to sit on the Legislative Council was
Margaret McIntyre in 1948; the first woman to chair the upper house was
Phyllis Benjamin in 1956. In the 1990s, various Tasmanian governments attempted to cut the size of parliament. Various reports proposed reducing the Tasmanian Legislative Council from 19 seats to 15. Others including the Morling Report proposed abolishing the Council and merging some of the electorates into the
Tasmanian House of Assembly. However the council would not agree to any of these proposals. During
Tony Rundle's government the Legislative Council finally allowed passage of the
Parliamentary Reform Bill 1998, reducing the number of seats in the chamber from 19 to 15, and redistributing all seats through an independent Distribution Tribunal, abolishing a previous rural bias which had led to unequal seats. However, the seats were not named after their geographic location, often using
land district or county names unfamiliar to most residents, so considerable confusion for voters ensued in determining which seat they were located in. At the
2024 Tasmanian Legislative Council periodic election,
Cassy O'Connor became the first
Tasmanian Greens member of the Tasmanian Legislative Council. ==Electorates==