Premier of South Australia

The premier of South Australia is the head of the South Australian government. They are the leaders of the political party which has a majority of the seats in the Legislative Assembly. Before the 1890s when there was no formal party system in South Australia, politicians usually held liberal or conservative beliefs. The liberals dominated government from 1893 to 1905 with Labor support, with the conservatives mostly in opposition. Labor took government with the support of eight liberals in 1905 when Labor gained more seats than the liberals. The rise of Labor meant the other groups began to become anti-labor parties. The conservatives merged with the Liberal and Democratic Union (formed in 1906) to become the Liberal Union in 1910. No "country" or rural conservative parties have lasted in South Australian state politics.

Premier of South Australia
South Australian Coat of Arms
Flag of South Australia
Incumbent
Peter Malinauskas

since 21 March 2022
StyleThe Honourable
(Formal)
Premier
(Spoken)
Member of
Reports toParliament of South Australia Governor of South Australia
SeatAdelaide, South Australia
AppointerGovernor of South Australia
Term lengthAt the Governor's pleasure
Inaugural holderBoyle Finniss
Formation24 October 1856
Salary$374,648 (AUD)[1]
Websitehttp://premier.sa.gov.au/

Labor formed South Australia's first majority government after winning the 1910 state election. This was two weeks after federal Labor formed Australia's first majority government after winning the 1910 federal election.

List of Premiers of South Australia

The first six Governors of South Australia ran the government from 1836 until responsible government was began in 1856.

No.NamePartyAssumed officeLeft officePeriodPicture
1B.T. Finniss 24 October 185621 August 1857 301 days
2John Baker 21 August 18571 September 1857 11 days
3Robert Torrens 1 September 185730 September 1857 29 days
4Richard Hanson 30 September 18579 May 1860 2 years, 222 days
5Thomas Reynolds 9 May 18608 October 1861 1 year, 152 days
6George Waterhouse 8 October 18614 July 1863 1 year, 269 days
7Francis Dutton 4 July 186315 July 1863 11 days
8Henry Ayers 15 July 18634 August 1864 1 year, 20 days
9Arthur Blyth 4 August 186422 March 1865 230 days
-Francis Dutton
(2nd time)
22 March 186520 September 1865 182 days
Total - 193 days
-Henry Ayers
(2nd time)
20 September 186523 October 1865 33 days
Total - 1 year, 53 days
10John Hart 23 October 186528 March 1866 156 days
11James Boucaut 28 March 18663 May 1867 1 year, 36 days
-Henry Ayers
(3rd time)
3 May 186724 September 1868 1 year, 144 days
Total - 2 years, 197 days
-John Hart
(2nd time)
24 September 186813 October 1868 19 days
Total - 175 days
-Henry Ayers
(4th time)
13 October 18683 November 1868 21 days
Total - 2 years, 218 days
12Henry Strangways 3 November 186830 May 1870 1 year, 208 days
-John Hart
(3rd time)
30 May 187010 November 1871 1 year, 164 days
Total - 1 year, 339 days
-Arthur Blyth
(2nd time)
10 November 187122 January 1872 73 days
Total - 303 days
-Henry Ayers
(5th time)
22 January 187222 July 1873 1 year, 181 days
Total - 4 years, 34 days
-Arthur Blyth
(3rd time)
22 July 18733 June 1875 1 year, 316 days
Total - 2 years, 254 days
-James Boucaut
(2nd time)
3 June 18756 June 1876 1 year, 3 days
Total - 2 years, 39 days
13John Colton 6 June 187626 October 1877 1 year, 142 days
-James Boucaut
(3rd time)
26 October 187727 September 1878 336 days
Total - 3 years, 10 days
14William Morgan 27 September 187824 June 1881 2 years, 270 days
15John Cox Bray 24 June 188116 June 1884 2 years, 358 days
-John Colton
(2nd time)
16 June 188416 June 1885 1 year, 0 days
Total - 2 years, 142 days
16John Downer 16 June 188511 June 1887 1 year, 360 days
17Thomas Playford II 11 June 188727 June 1889 2 years, 16 days
18John Cockburn 27 June 188919 August 1890 1 year, 53 days
-Thomas Playford II
(2nd time)
19 August 189021 June 1892 1 year, 307 days
Total - 3 years, 323 days
19Frederick Holder 21 June 189215 October 1892 116 days
-John Downer
(2nd time)
conservatism[2] 15 October 189216 June 1893 244 days
Total - 2 year, 239 days
20Charles Kingstonliberalism 16 June 18931 December 1899 6 years, 168 days
21Vaiben Solomonconservatism 1 December 18998 December 1899 7 days
-Frederick Holder
(2nd time)
liberalism 8 December 189915 May 1901 1 year, 158 days
Total - 1 year, 274 days
22John Jenkinsliberalism 15 May 19011 March 1905 3 years, 290 days
23Richard Butlerconservatism 1 March 190526 July 1905 147 days
24Thomas PriceAustralian Labor Party (Labor) 26 July 19055 June 1909 3 years, 314 days
25Archibald PeakeLiberal and Democratic Union 5 June 19093 June 1910 363 days
26John VerranLabor 3 June 191017 February 1912 1 year, 259 days
-Archibald Peake
(2nd time)
Liberal Union 17 February 19123 April 1915 3 years, 45 days
Total - 4 years, 43 days
27Crawford VaughanLabor 3 April 191514 July 1917 2 years, 102 days
-Archibald Peake
(3rd time)
Liberal Union 14 July 19178 April 1920 2 years, 269 days
Total - 6 years, 312 days
28Henry BarwellLiberal Union/
Liberal Federation
8 April 192016 April 1924 4 years, 8 days
29John GunnLabor 16 April 192428 August 1926 2 years, 134 days
30Lionel HillLabor 28 August 19268 April 1927 223 days
31 Richard Layton Butler Liberal Federation 8 April 1927 17 April 1930 3 years, 9 days
- Lionel Hill
(2nd time)
Labor 17 April 1930 13 February 1933 2 years, 302 days
Total - 3 years, 160 days
32 Robert Richards Labor 13 February 1933 18 April 1933 64 days
- Richard Layton Butler
(2nd time)
Liberal and Country League (LCL) 18 April 1933 5 November 1938 5 years, 201 days
Total - 8 years, 210 days
33 Thomas Playford IV LCL 5 November 1938 10 March 1965 26 years, 125 days
34 Frank Walsh Labor 10 March 1965 1 June 1967 2 years, 83 days
35 Don Dunstan Labor 1 June 1967 17 April 1968 321 days
36 Steele Hall LCL 17 April 1968 2 June 1970 2 years, 46 days
- Don Dunstan
(2nd time)
Labor 2 June 1970 15 February 1979 8 years, 258 days
Total - 9 years, 214 days
37 Des Corcoran Labor 15 February 1979 18 September 1979 215 days
38 David Tonkin Liberal Party of Australia (Liberal) 18 September 1979 10 November 1982 3 years, 53 days
39 John Bannon Labor 10 November 1982 4 September 1992 9 years, 299 days
40 Lynn Arnold Labor 4 September 1992 14 December 1993 1 year, 101 days
41 Dean Brown Liberal 14 December 1993 28 November 1996 2 years, 350 days
42 John Olsen Liberal 28 November 1996 22 October 2001 4 years, 328 days
43 Rob Kerin Liberal 22 October 2001 5 March 2002 134 days
44 Mike Rann Labor 5 March 2002 21 October 2011 9 years, 230 days
45 Jay Weatherill Labor 21 October 2011 19 March 2018 6 years, 149 days
46 Steven Marshall Liberal 19 March 2018 21 March 2022 6 years, 61 days[3]
47 Peter Malinauskas Labor 21 March 2022 Incumbent 2 years, 59 days[4]

References

  1. "'Extraordinary' $30,000 MP pay rise under fire from South Australian welfare groups". ABC News. 18 December 2015. Retrieved 9 February 2016.
  2. 1893 SA election Archived 2015-01-18 at the Wayback Machine - Playford replaced Cockburn as premier of a ministerialist minority government on 19 August 1890, and Holder replaced Playford as premier of a ministerialist minority government on 21 June 1892. The Downer Conservative minority government replaced the Holder ministerialist minority government on 15 October 1892. The Kingston Liberal minority government formed following the 1893 election, but non not take office until 16 June 1893 after the Assembly met for the first time.
  3. As at 19 May 2024
  4. As at 19 May 2024
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