1983 Australian federal election

1983 Australian federal election

← 1980 5 March 1983 1984 →

All 125 seats in the House of Representatives
63 seats were needed for a majority in the House
All 64 seats in the Senate
Registered9,372,064 Increase 3.86%
Turnout8,870,175 (94.64%)
(Increase0.29 pp)
  First party Second party
 
Leader Bob Hawke Malcolm Fraser
Party Labor Liberal/National coalition
Leader since 8 February 1983 21 March 1975
Leader's seat Wills (Vic.) Wannon (Vic.)
Last election 51 seats 74 seats
Seats won 75 seats 50 seats
Seat change Increase 24 Decrease 24
First preference vote 4,297,392 3,787,151
Percentage 49.48% 43.61%
Swing Increase 4.34% Decrease 2.79%
TPP 53.23% 46.77%
TPP swing Increase 3.60% Decrease 3.60%

Results by division for the House of Representatives, shaded by winning party's margin of victory.

Prime Minister before election

Malcolm Fraser
Liberal/National coalition

Subsequent Prime Minister

Bob Hawke
Labor

The 1983 Australian federal election was held in Australia on 5 March 1983. All 125 seats in the House of Representatives and all 64 seats in the Senate were up for election, following a double dissolution. The incumbent Coalition government which had been in power since 1975, led by Malcolm Fraser (Liberal Party) and Doug Anthony (National Party), was defeated in a landslide by the opposition Labor Party led by Bob Hawke.

This election marked the end of the seven year Liberal–National Coalition Fraser government and the start of the 13 year Hawke-Keating Labor government. The Coalition would spend its longest ever period in opposition and the Labor party would spend its longest ever period of government at a federal level. The Coalition would not return to government until the 1996 election.

Hawke became the second Labor leader after World War II to lead the party to victory from opposition, after Gough Whitlam in 1972 and before Kevin Rudd in 2007 and Anthony Albanese in 2022.