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This is a list of members
of the Australian
Senate from 1951
to 1953. The 28 April
1951 election was a double
dissolution called by Prime
Minister of Australia Robert
Menzies in an attempt
to gain control of the Senate and to pass a bill
to ban the Communist
Party of Australia, if necessary at a
joint sitting of both houses. All 121 seats in the House of
Representatives, and all 60 seats in the Senate were
up for election. The incumbent Liberal
Party of Australia led
by Menzies with coalition partner
the Country
Party led by Arthur
Fadden defeated the Australian
Labor Party led by Ben
Chifley and gained
control of the Senate with 32 seats to Labor's 28.
In accordance
with section
13 of the Constitution, terms
for Senators was taken to commence on 1 July 1950.
The first five Senators elected in each State were
allocated the full six-year terms ending on 30
June 1956 while the other half were allocated
three-year terms ending on 30 June 1953.
| Stan Amour |
|
Labor |
New South Wales |
1953 |
1938–1965 |
| Hon John Armstrong |
|
Labor |
New South Wales |
1956 |
1938–1962 |
| James Arnold |
|
Labor |
New South Wales |
1953 |
1941–1965 |
| Hon. Bill Ashley |
|
Labor |
New South Wales |
1956 |
1938–1962 |
| Bill Aylett |
|
Labor |
Tasmania |
1953 |
1938–1965 |
| Archie Benn |
|
Labor |
Queensland |
1956 |
1950–1968 |
| Hon. Gordon Brown [a] |
|
Labor |
Queensland |
1953 |
1932–1965 |
| Condon Byrne |
|
Labor |
Queensland |
1953 |
1951–1959, 1968–1974 |
| Hon. Don Cameron |
|
Labor |
Victoria |
1956 |
1938–1962 |
| Jack Chamberlain [b] |
|
Liberal |
Tasmania |
1956 |
1951–1953 |
| George Cole |
|
Labor |
Tasmania |
1953 |
1950–1965 |
| Joe Cooke [c] |
|
Labor |
Western Australia |
1953 |
1947–1951, 1952–1965 |
| Hon. Walter Cooper |
|
Country |
Queensland |
1956 |
1928–1932, 1935–1968 |
| Magnus Cormack |
|
Liberal |
Victoria |
1953 |
1951–1953, 1962–1978 |
| Hon. Ben Courtice |
|
Labor |
Queensland |
1956 |
1937–1962 |
| Jack Critchley |
|
Labor |
South Australia |
1953 |
1947–1959 |
| Jack Devlin |
|
Labor |
Victoria |
1953 |
1946–1957 |
| Alex Finlay |
|
Labor |
South Australia |
1953 |
1944–1953 |
| Hon. James Fraser |
|
Labor |
Western Australia |
1953 |
1938–1959 |
| John Gorton |
|
Liberal |
Victoria |
1953 |
1950–1968 |
| Donald Grant |
|
Labor |
New South Wales |
1953 |
1944–1959 |
| Allan Guy |
|
Liberal |
Tasmania |
1956 |
1950–1956 |
| Clive Hannaford |
|
Liberal |
South Australia |
1956 |
1950–1967 |
| Bert Hendrickson |
|
Labor |
Victoria |
1953 |
1947–1971 |
| Denham Henty |
|
Liberal |
Tasmania |
1956 |
1950–1968 |
| Roy Kendall |
|
Liberal |
Queensland |
1953 |
1950–1965 |
| Keith Laught |
|
Liberal |
South Australia |
1953 |
1951–1969 |
| John McCallum |
|
Liberal |
New South Wales |
1956 |
1950–1962 |
| Hon. Nick McKenna |
|
Labor |
Tasmania |
1956 |
1944–1968 |
| Hon. George McLeay |
|
Liberal |
South Australia |
1956 |
1935–1947, 1950–1955 |
| Hon. Alister McMullin |
|
Liberal |
New South Wales |
1953 |
1951–1971 |
| Ted Maher |
|
Country |
Queensland |
1953 |
1950–1965 |
| John Marriott [b] |
|
Liberal |
Tasmania |
1953,[d] 1959 |
1953, 1953–1975 |
| Hon. Ted Mattner |
|
Liberal |
South Australia |
1956 |
1944–1946, 1950–1968 |
| Bill Morrow |
|
Labor |
Tasmania |
1953 |
1947–1953 |
| Richard Nash [c] |
|
Labor |
Western Australia |
1953 |
1943–1951 |
| Theo Nicholls |
|
Labor |
South Australia |
1956 |
1944–1968 |
| Justin O'Byrne |
|
Labor |
Tasmania |
1953 |
1947–1981 |
| Sid O'Flaherty |
|
Labor |
South Australia |
1956 |
1944–1962 |
| Hon. Neil O'Sullivan |
|
Liberal |
Queensland |
1956 |
1947–1962 |
| Hon Shane Paltridge |
|
Liberal |
Western Australia |
1953 |
1951–1966 |
| Rex Pearson |
|
Liberal |
South Australia |
1953 |
1951–1961 |
| Edmund Piesse [e] |
|
Country |
Western Australia |
1956 |
1950–1952 |
| Dame Annabelle
Rankin |
|
Liberal |
Queensland |
1956 |
1947–1971 |
| George Rankin |
|
Country |
Victoria |
1956 |
1950–1956 |
| Albert Reid |
|
Country |
New South Wales |
1956 |
1950–1962 |
| Agnes Robertson |
|
Liberal |
Western Australia |
1956 |
1950–1962 |
| Bill Robinson [e] |
|
Country |
Western Australia |
1953 [d] |
1952–1953 |
| John Ryan |
|
Labor |
South Australia |
1953 |
1950–1959 |
| Charles Sandford |
|
Labor |
Victoria |
1956 |
1947–1956, 1957–1966 |
| Malcolm Scott |
|
Liberal |
Western Australia |
1953 |
1950–1971 |
| Harrie Seward |
|
Country |
Western Australia |
1953 |
1951–1958 |
| Jim Sheehan |
|
Labor |
Victoria |
1956 |
1938–1940, 1944–1962 |
| Hon. John Spicer |
|
Liberal |
Victoria |
1956 |
1940–1944, 1950–1956 |
| Hon. Bill Spooner |
|
Liberal |
New South Wales |
1956 |
1950–1965 |
| Dame Dorothy
Tangney |
|
Labor |
Western Australia |
1956 |
1943–1968 |
| John Tate |
|
Liberal |
New South Wales |
1953 |
1950–1953 |
| Seddon Vincent |
|
Liberal |
Western Australia |
1956 |
1950–1964 |
| Robert Wardlaw [b] |
|
Liberal |
Tasmania |
1956 |
1953–1962 |
| Dame Ivy
Wedgwood |
|
Liberal |
Victoria |
1953 |
1950–1971 |
| Don Willesee |
|
Labor |
Western Australia |
1956 |
1950–1975 |
| Ian Wood |
|
Liberal |
Queensland |
1953 |
1950–1978 |
| Robert
Wordsworth |
|
Liberal |
Tasmania |
1953 |
1950–1959 |
| Reg Wright |
|
Liberal |
Tasmania |
1956 |
1950–1978 |
- Father
of the Senate
- ^ Jump up to:a b c Liberal Senator Jack
Chamberlain died on
16 January 1953; Liberal member John
Marriott was
appointed to fill the ensuing vacancy on 3
March, expiring at the May
1953 Senate election, when he was
elected to a six year term expiring on 30 June
1959. Robert
Wardlaw was elected
to the vacancy expiring on 30 June 1956.
- ^ Jump up to:a b Labor Senator Richard
Nash died on 12
December 1951; former Labor Senator Joe
Cooke was appointed
to fill the ensuing vacancy on 7 February
1952.
- ^ Jump up to:a b Appointed to a casual
vacancy and only held office until the earlier
of the next election for the House of
Representatives or the Senate.[4]
- ^ Jump up to:a b Country Party Senator Edmund
Piesse died on 25
August 1952; Country Party member Bill
Robinson was
appointed to fill the ensuing vacancy on 30
September, but was fourth on the Coalition
ticket at the 9 May
1953 election and
was defeated for the seat by Liberal Senator Shane
Paltridge.
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