1996 Lindsay by-election

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1996 Lindsay by-election

19 October 1996
  First party Second party
 
Candidate Jackie Kelly Ross Free
Party Liberal Labor
Popular vote 34,840 23,758
Percentage 49.21% 33.56%
Swing Increase 6.69pp Decrease 3.76pp
TPP 56.55% 43.45%
TPP swing Increase 4.97pp Decrease 4.97pp

MP before election

Jackie Kelly
Liberal

Elected MP

Jackie Kelly
Liberal

The 1996 Lindsay by-election was held in the Australian electorate of Lindsay in New South Wales on 19 October 1996. The by-election was triggered by a ruling of the Court of Disputed Returns that the election of the Liberal Party candidate Jackie Kelly was invalid, due to her citizenship status and employment by the Royal Australian Air Force. The writ for the by-election was issued on 16 September 1996.

Background[edit]

Jackie Kelly won the seat of Lindsay from Labor's Ross Free at the 1996 federal election – a surprise win as Lindsay was considered a safe Labor seat.[1] However, Kelly's election was challenged on two counts: that she had not renounced her New Zealand citizenship (Section 44 of the Australian Constitution states that "a subject or citizen of a foreign power" is ineligible to stand for federal parliament),[2] and that at the time of her nomination as a candidate she was employed as a legal officer for the Royal Australian Air Force (s. 44 also prohibits any person who "holds any office of profit under the Crown" from election to parliament).[3] The Court of Disputed Returns ruled on 11 September 1996 that Kelly's election was indeed constitutionally invalid, and a by-election was called several days later. Kelly, by this time, had resigned from the RAAF and renounced her New Zealand citizenship, and was eligible to stand as a candidate in the by-election.

Results[edit]

Lindsay by-election, 1996
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Liberal Jackie Kelly 34,840 49.21 +6.69
Labor Ross Free 23,758 33.56 −6.76
Against Further Immigration Vince Townsend 4,224 5.97 +3.24
Shooters Rodney Franich 2,042 2.88 +2.88
Greens Lesley Edwards 1,502 2.12 −2.29
Call to Australia Brian Grigg 1,254 1.77 −0.39
Democrats Stephen Lear 1,182 1.67 −4.92
Independent Kay Anne Vella 933 1.32 +1.32
Independent Vicki Aird 488 0.69 +0.69
Independent Steve Grim-Reaper 270 0.38 +0.38
Independent Robert Frank Peacey 156 0.22 +0.22
Family Law Reform David Archibald 150 0.21 +0.21
Total formal votes 70,799 96.36 −0.06
Informal votes 2,678 3.64 +0.06
Turnout 73,477 89.98 −6.14
Two-party-preferred result
Liberal Jackie Kelly 40,037 56.55 +4.97
Labor Ross Free 30,762 43.45 −4.97
Liberal hold Swing +4.97

Aftermath[edit]

Jackie Kelly won the by-election with an even larger majority – a swing of 4.97% in her favour.

See also[edit]

References[edit]

External links[edit]