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1968 Tasmanian casino referendum

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1968 Tasmanian casino referendum

14 December 1968 (1968-12-14)

Are you in favour of the provisions of "Wrest Point Casino Licence and Development Act, 1968", the full text of which has been published in the newspapers?
OutcomeCarried.
Results
Choice
Votes %
Yes 96,839 53.00%
No 85,862 47.00%
Valid votes 182,701 88.63%
Invalid or blank votes 23,443 11.37%
Total votes 206,144 100.00%
Registered voters/turnout 206,144 100%

Results by electoral division

The Tasmanian casino referendum was a one-question referendum held on 14 December 1968, which concerned the granting of Australia's first casino licence to the Federal Group to operate the Wrest Point Hotel Casino in Sandy Bay.

Background

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The Wrest Point Riviera hotel was purchased by the Federal Group in the 1960s, and the new owners approached Premier Eric Reece about the prospect of the Tasmanian government granting a licence to create an entertainment complex and convention centre that would contain a small casino on the premises,[1] citing that it would attract tourists during Tasmania's traditional winter "tourist slump". Reece agreed that a casino would be a tourism attraction in Tasmania Reece and together with health minister Merv Everett began to promote the development. Despite a vigorous campaign there was considerable opposition to the casino bill when it was introduced to parliament on 4 October 1968 as no casino licence had been granted in Australia before. Two weeks later The Mercury newspaper reported the bill was likely to be lost by one or two votes. Reece and Everett then withdrew the bill and on 31 October 1968 announced a referendum would take place to decide the issue.[2]

The legislation to permit the referendum was itself highly contentious and did not pass parliament until 21 November 1968, after which the date of the referendum was set to be three weeks later on 14 December. With the vote on a knife's edge, it is alleged that the government deliberately proposed a question that was opaque. The question put to the people was:

Are you in favour of the provisions of "Wrest Point Casino Licence and Development Act, 1968", the full text of which has been published in the newspapers?"[2]

Vote on the bill

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Despite having a vote on the bill scheduled in December, and with the campaigning already underway, the state Labor government, realising they had the numbers on the floor of the parliament, brought the bill to a vote on 6 November 1968. After a non-stop thirty-hour debate and with the vocal opponent Mac Le Fevre overseas and not paired, the bill passed at 5am on 8 November 1968.[2]

In effect, the electorate was being asked to vote on a bill that had already been passed.

Results

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Result [3]
State Electoral roll Valid votes For Against
Vote % Vote %
Bass 40,472 34,989 16,622 47.51 18,367 52.49
Braddon 42,420 37,189 18,453 49.62 18,736 50.38
Denison 43,529 38,814 22,407 57.73 16,407 42.27
Franklin 38,248 34,838 20,856 59.85 13,982 40.13
Wilmot 41,475 36,871 18,501 50.18 18,370 49.82
Total 206,144 182,701 96,839 53.00 85,862 47.00

Summary

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  • Yes: 96,839 (53%); No: 85,862 (47%)
  • Turnout: 92.67%
  • Informal votes: 8,339

Aftermath

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The referendum passed by a margin of 6%, although the bill had already passed in October that year, granting the licence to the Federal Group. There was considerable opposition to the casino, and concern over the fact that a monopoly licence was awarded to Federal Hotels without any call for a tender.[4]

The Wrest Point Hotel Casino was completed and opened in 1973.

In 1985, the casino introduced poker machines, to much opposition. The pokies have since spread around the state.[1]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ a b "Tasmania got gamed". The Monthly. 1 March 2017. Retrieved 28 January 2018.
  2. ^ a b c Boyce, James (14 March 2017). Losing Streak: How Tasmania Was Gamed By The Gambling Industry. Black Inc. ISBN 9781863959100.
  3. ^ "Referendums in Tasmania". Parliament of Tasmania. 5 August 2002.
  4. ^ Hsu, Cathy (2005). Casino Industry in Asia Pacific: Development, Operation, and Impact. Philadelphia: Haworth Press. p. 162. ISBN 0-7890-2346-6.