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All 124 seats of theAustralian House of Representatives 63 seats were needed for a majority | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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| Registered | 6,193,881 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Turnout | 5,892,327 (95.13%) ( | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Results by division for the House of Representatives, shaded by winning party's margin of victory. | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Afederal election was held in Australia on 26 November 1966. All 124 seats in theHouse of Representatives were up for election. There was no Senate election until the1967 Australian Senate election. The incumbentLiberal–Country coalition government, led by Prime MinisterHarold Holt, won an increased majority over the oppositionLabor Party, led byArthur Calwell, in alandslide.[1] The Liberal–Country coalitiontwo-party-preferred vote was 56.90%, its highest in its history.
This was the first and only time that a Federal Government won an eighth consecutive term in office.

Sir Robert Menzies had retired from politics in January; his successor, formertreasurerHarold Holt, was stylish, debonair and popular with the electorate, contrasting sharply with the much rougher figure of Opposition LeaderArthur Calwell, who had already lost two elections.
Calwell also came across poorly on television compared to Holt, looking and sounding older than his 70 years. It did not help that he also held to the beliefs that had been central to the previous Labor Government of 1941–1949, many of which were seen as being long outdated in 1966; for example, he still defended theWhite Australia policy andnationalisation, and also strongly supported socialism.
These factors, along with a strong economy and initial enthusiasm for Australia's involvement in theVietnam War, virtually guaranteed the Coalition another term. The Coalition campaigned with the slogan "Keep Australia secure and prosperous – play it safe".[2]
The election was a landslide win for the Coalition, which won twice as many seats as Labor. The Liberals arrived two seats short of a majority in their own right, the closest that the major non-Labor party had come to governing in its own right since adopting the Liberal banner. Holt's victory was also larger than any of Menzies' eight victories, and resulted in the largest majority government in Australian history at the time. It was later seen as the electoral high point of both Holt's prime ministership and the 23 years of continuous Coalition rule.
Calwell retired to the backbench a month after the crushing election loss, and was succeeded by his deputy,Gough Whitlam.
| Party | First preference votes | % | Swing | Seats | Change | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Liberal–Country coalition | 2,853,890 | 49.98 | +3.94 | 82 | +10 | ||
| Liberal | 2,291,964 | 40.14 | +3.05 | 61 | +9 | ||
| Country | 561,926 | 9.84 | +0.90 | 21 | +1 | ||
| Labor | 2,282,834 | 39.98 | –5.49 | 41 | –9 | ||
| Democratic Labor | 417,411 | 7.31 | –0.13 | 0 | 0 | ||
| Liberal Reform | 49,610 | 0.87 | +0.87 | 0 | 0 | ||
| Communist | 23,056 | 0.40 | –0.19 | 0 | 0 | ||
| Independents | 82,948 | 1.45 | +0.98 | 1 | +1 | ||
| Total | 5,709,749 | 124 | +2 | ||||
| Two-party-preferred(estimated) | |||||||
| Liberal–Country coalition | Win | 56.90 | +4.30 | 82 | +10 | ||
| Labor | 43.10 | −4.30 | 41 | −9 | |||
Independents:Sam Benson
| Liberal | 40.14% | |||
| Labor | 39.98% | |||
| Country | 9.84% | |||
| DLP | 7.31% | |||
| Independents | 1.45% | |||
| Other | 1.27% | |||
| Coalition | 56.90% | |||
| Labor | 43.10% | |||
| Coalition | 66.13% | |||
| Labor | 33.06% | |||
| Independents | 0.81% | |||
| Seat | Pre-1966 | Swing | Post-1966 | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Party | Member | Margin | Margin | Member | Party | ||||
| Adelaide, SA | Labor | Joe Sexton | 7.2 | 10.0 | 2.8 | Andrew Jones | Liberal | ||
| Barton, NSW | Labor | Len Reynolds | 0.7 | 2.9 | 2.2 | Bill Arthur | Liberal | ||
| Batman, Vic | Labor | Sam Benson | N/A | 8.7 | 7.8 | Sam Benson | Independent | ||
| Eden-Monaro, NSW | Labor | Allan Fraser | 2.7 | 3.4 | 0.7 | Dugald Munro | Liberal | ||
| Grey, SA | Labor | Jack Mortimer | 4.8 | 7.8 | 3.0 | Don Jessop | Liberal | ||
| Griffith, Qld | Labor | Wilfred Coutts | 5.8 | 6.9 | 1.1 | Don Cameron | Liberal | ||
| Herbert, Qld | Labor | Ted Harding | 3.2 | 4.3 | 1.1 | Robert Bonnett | Liberal | ||
| Hughes, NSW | Labor | Les Johnson | 2.7 | 4.7 | 2.0 | Don Dobie | Liberal | ||
| Kennedy, Qld | Labor | Bill Riordan | 13.5 | 15.0 | 1.5 | Bob Katter | Country | ||
| Kingston, SA | Labor | Pat Galvin | 4.5 | 12.7 | 8.2 | Kay Brownbill | Liberal | ||
| Lalor, Vic | Labor | Reg Pollard | 7.0 | 7.7 | 0.7 | Mervyn Lee | Liberal | ||
| Northern Territory, NT | Labor | Jock Nelson | 100.0 | 51.7 | 1.7 | Sam Calder | Country | ||