'Federal elections' were held in
Australia on
November 30,
1963. All 122 seats in the
House of Representatives, no
Senate seats were up for election. The incumbent
Liberal Party of Australia led by
Prime Minister of Australia Robert Menzies with
coalition partner the
Country Party led by
John McEwen defeated the
Australian Labor Party led by
Arthur Calwell.
'House of Reps (IRV) — 1963-66 — Turnout 95.73% (CV) — Informal 1.82%'| | 'Party' | 'Votes' | '%' | 'Swing' | 'Seats' | 'Change' |
| | Australian Labor Party | 2,489,184 | 45.47 | -2.43 | 50 | -10 |
| | Liberal Party of Australia | 2,030,823 | 37.09 | +3.51 | 52 | +7 |
| | Country Party | 489,498 | 8.94 | +0.43 | 20 | +3 |
| | Democratic Labor Party | 407,416 | 7.44 | -1.27 | 0 | 0 |
| | Independents | 22,757 | 0.42 | | 0 | 0 |
| | Other | 35,035 | 0.64 | | 0 | 0 |
| | Total | 5,474,713 | | | '122' | |
| | 'Liberal/Country coalition' | 'WIN' | '52.60' | +3.10 | '72' | +10 |
| | Australian Labor Party | | 47.40 | -3.10 | 50 | -10 |
See
Australian general election, 1961 and
Australian Senate election, 1964 for Senate compositions.
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Background
The election was held following the early dissolution of the House of Representatives. The
Prime Minister of Australia,
Robert Menzies, gave as his reason for calling an election within two years that there was an insufficient working majority in the House.
[1] The
1961 election had been won with a substantially reduced majority of only two seats. One of the consequences of an early House election was that there were separate Senate and House elections until
1974.
The Coalition government of the
Liberal Party led by Robert Menzies and the
Country Party led by
John McEwen was returned with a substantially increased majority over the
Australian Labor Party led by
Arthur Calwell.
Indigenous Australians could vote in federal elections on the same basis as other electors for the first time in this election following an amendment to the
Commonwealth Electoral Act becoming law on 1 November. The amendment enfranchised Indigenous people in Western Australia, Queensland and the Northern Territory. Indigenous voting rights in other states had been in place since 1949.
Issues
State aid for non-Government schools

The toilets of St Brigid's; the reason for the 1962 School Strike and the beginning of State Aid to non-Government schools. Health officials requested the installation of three extra toilets at a
Goulburn Catholic Primary School. The Catholic church declared they had no money to install the extra toilets. The local community closed down non-Government schools and sent the children to the Government schools. Nearly 1,000 children turned up to be enrolled locally and the state schools were unable to accommodate them.
The election was notable for the issue of State Aid to non-government schools being finally resolved. There was a School Strike in
Goulburn, New South Wales in
1962, where Catholic schools were closed and parents sent their children to Government schools. The strike received national attention. The Labor
Premier of New South Wales,
Robert Heffron, had promised money for science labs at non-Government schools. This promise is said to have been overthrown at the
federal level of the Labor Party executive, although policy is in fact made at the Labor Party's Conferences. Menzies called a snap election with State Aid for science blocks and Commonwealth scholarships for students at both Government and non-Government schools as part of his Party's platform. Menzies saw it as an attempt to woo Catholic voters away from the Labor Party which they traditionally supported; the wedge driven through the ALP, and its core constituency took nearly a decade to overcome. Most non-Government schools were Catholic. The Labor Party reduced its representation in the house by 10 seats and suffered a first preference vote swing of -2.43%. The Country Party vote was higher than the
Democratic Labor Party (DLP) vote for the first time since
1955; the DLP had evolved from the Catholic wing of the ALP. It is possible that the Liberal Party probably would have won regardless of the Liberals' decision on State Aid.
[2]
North-west Cape communications facility
Other key issues in the election included the building the
North-west Cape communications facility which would support the
US nuclear submarine capability. A special federal conference of the ALP was called in March 1963. Labor voted by a narrow margin to support the base. The
Left faction was opposed to a foreign base on Australian soil and which supported America's nuclear program.
[3]
Australian Labor Party National Executive

Naval Communication Station Harold E. Holt, the North-west Cape communications facility which was built in the 1960s
At the March ALP conference, Arthur Calwell and
Gough Whitlam were photographed outside the venue at
Kingston in Canberra. Although Calwell was the Leader of the Opposition in the House of Representatives and Whitlam was on the opposition front bench, neither man was a member of the
Party's federal executive. Menzies jibed that the ALP was ruled by "36 faceless men" - a jibe that is remembered more than 40 years later.
Assassination of US President Kennedy
The week before the election, on
22 November 1963,
John F. Kennedy, the President of the United States, was assassinated. It has been suggested that this tragedy helped to consolidate Menzies' position.
[4]
References
★
University of WA election results in Australia since 1890
★
AEC 2PP vote
★ Prior to 1984 the AEC did not undertake a full distribution of preferences for statistical purposes. The stored ballot papers for the 1983 election were put through this process prior to their destruction. Therefore the figures from 1983 onwards show the actual result based on full distribution of preferences.