TASMANIAN HOUSE OF ASSEMBLY


The 'House of Assembly', or lower house, is one of the two chambers of the Parliament of Tasmania in Australia. The other is the Legislative Council. It sits in Parliament House in the state capital, Hobart.

Contents
Overview
History
Electorates
Current distribution of seats
See also
References

Overview


The Assembly has 25 members, five members each coming from one of the five electorates. These are intended to represent approximately the same population in each electorate. Voting is by a form of proportional representation using the single-transferable vote (STV), known as the Hare-Clark system.
Most legislation is initiated in the House of Assembly. The party or coalition with the most seats in the lower house is invited by the Governor to form government. The leader of that party subsequently becomes Premier of Tasmania, and their senior colleagues become ministers responsible for various portfolios. As Australian political parties traditionally vote along party lines, most legislation introduced by the governing party will pass through the House of Assembly.

History


The House of Assembly was first established in 1856, the Legislative Council had already existed since 1852. The first elections for the House of Assembly were held in October, 1856. The house first met on 2 December, 1856 in the area that is now the parliamentary members lounge. The first House was divided into 24 electorates; Hobart had five members, Launceston had three members and 22 other electorates each had one member.
In 1906 the old electoral system was abolished and instead the state would be divided into five equally represented multi member electorates. Each electorate would return six members using the Hare-Clark proportional representation system.
In 1959 the number of members per electorate was increased to seven. In 1998 it was reduced to five. Leading to the current 25 member parliament. The reduction has been criticised by minor parties, particularly the Greens, as an attempt to reduce their influence. However since the 2002 election the Green vote has increased and they now hold four seats.
A Hansard service began on 12 June 1979. [1]
'Year ' 'Members'
1856 30
1870 32
1885 36
1893 37
1900 35
1906 30
1959 35
1998 25

Electorates


Map of Tasmanian electorates


Bass

Braddon

Denison

Franklin

Lyons

Current distribution of seats


'Party' 'Seats held' 'Percentage of Assembly' 'Current House of Assembly'
Australian Labor Party 14 56%                            
Liberal Party of Australia 7 28%                          
Tasmanian Greens 4 16%                            

See also



Parliaments of the Australian states and territories

Members of the Tasmanian House of Assembly

References


1. Tasmanian Parliamentary Library - Backgrounders - Hansard


Tasmania Parliament Website

Tasmania Parliament History

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