1997 South Australian state election
State elections were held in South Australia on 11 October 1997. All 47 seats in the South Australian House of Assembly were up for election. The incumbent Liberal Party of Australia led by Premier of South Australia John Olsen defeated the [Australian Australian Labor Party (South Australian Branch)|Labor Party (South Australian Branch)|Australian Labor Party] led by Leader of the Opposition Mike Rann, forming a minority government with the [The Nationals SA|Nationals South Australia|SA Nationals] and independent MPs.
Background
Following the 1993 landslide to the Liberals, ending 11 years of Labor government, Labor now led by Mike Rann held just 11 seats in the House of Assembly. The Liberals held 36 seats and there were no independent or minor party members in the House of Assembly. They had held a record 37, but lost one at the 1994 Torrens by-election. However the Liberals were suffering from heightened internal tensions. Premier Dean Brown had been toppled by Industry Minister and factional rival John Olsen in a 1996 party-room coup. Olsen had been in office for just over 10 months on election day.Key dates
- Issue of writ: 13 September 1997
- Close of electoral rolls: 22 September 1997
- Close of nominations: Friday 26 September 1997, at noon
- Polling day: 11 October 1997
- Return of writ: On or before 14 November 1997
Results
Seats changing hands
- Members in italics did not recontest their seats.
- In addition, Labor retained the seat of Torrens, which it had gained from the Liberals at the 1994 by-election.
The Liberals briefly regained a majority when Mitch Williams rejoined the Liberal Party in 1999, but lost it again in 2000 when it expelled Peter Lewis from the party in 2000, and Bob Such resigned from the Liberal Party later in 2000. However they continued to govern with the support of the Nationals and independents until the 2002 election.
Legacy
The 1997 result put Labor within striking distance of winning government at the next election in 2002. John Olsen was left with internal disquiet over the leadership challenge and poor election result while his opponent, Mike Rann, was seen to have 'won' the campaign despite losing the election.On 6 February 2007, Mike Rann told parliament that some in the Liberal party had leaked information to him before and during the election campaign. The following quote by Rann is from Hansard on 6/2/2007 :