Records of prime ministers of Australia

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This page details numerous records and characteristics of individuals who have held the office of Prime Minister of Australia.


Period of service[]

Time in office[]

Sir Robert Menzies was the longest serving prime minister of Australia, serving for 18 years and 163 days total. His first tenure (1939–1941) lasted 2 years and 125 days and his second tenure (1949–1966) 16 years and 38 days. Menzies’ second term of over 16 years was the longest single term. This term is also longer than the accumulated period of terms of any other prime minister. The shortest serving prime minister was Frank Forde, who served in the position in an interim capacity for one week in July 1945 after the death of John Curtin. The prime minister with the longest time between the beginning of their first and end of their last terms was also Menzies, with over 25 years between those dates.[1]

Number of terms[]

If a “term” is defined as a contiguous period served as Prime Minister, both Alfred Deakin and Andrew Fisher served the greatest number of terms, with three each. Robert Menzies and Kevin Rudd both served two separate terms as Prime Minister. If a “term” is defined as a period of office separated by an election, Robert Menzies served the most terms, winning eight terms.

Terms of prime ministers and reigns of monarchs of Australia[]

The office of Prime Minister of Australia has existed under the reigns of six monarchs since Federation in 1901.

Number of monarchs served under[]

Joseph Lyons is the only prime minister to have served under three monarchs during one term (Lyons died in 1939):

Through being in office at transitions between reigns, three prime ministers each served under two monarchs. These include:

Queen Elizabeth II has by far had the greatest number of prime ministers serve her during her reign, being 15. In descending numerical order, numbers of prime ministers in office during all monarch’s reigns are:

Prime ministers born during reigns in which they held office[]

Only six prime ministers came to serve office under sovereigns in whose own reigns they were born in. The present prime minister, Scott Morrison, is the fifth prime minister to have been born in the reign of the present sovereign Elizabeth II.

Queen Victoria (reigned 1837–1901)

Queen Elizabeth II (acceded 1952)

Morrison has the additional distinction of being younger than all of his monarch's children.

Prime ministers who lived under most reigns[]

Billy Hughes (1862–1952), Stanley Bruce (1883–1967), James Scullin (1876–1953), Earle Page (1880–1961), Robert Menzies (1894–1978), Arthur Fadden (1894–1973), Frank Forde (1890–1983), and John McEwen (1900–1980) all lived under the reigns of six sovereigns: Victoria, Edward VII, George V, Edward VIII, George VI and Elizabeth II.

Number of governors-general served under[]

Robert Menzies is the only prime minister to have served under six governors-general during his time in office (1939–1941, 1949–1966):

Two prime ministers each served under three governors-general. These include:

Lord Gowrie has the distinction of having the greatest number of prime ministers serve during his term, being 5:

Lord Casey follows with 4:

Six governors general each had three prime ministers serve during their term. These include:

Age[]

Age of appointment[]

The youngest prime minister upon their appointment by the Governor-General was Chris Watson, who was 37 years, and 18 days old when his term began on 27 April 1904.[2] The oldest prime minister upon their appointment was John McEwen, who was 67 years, and 265 days old when he took office in a temporary capacity on 17 December 1967.

Age on leaving office[]

The youngest prime minister to leave office was also Watson, who left office only four months after he was appointed at the age of 37 years, and 131 days. The oldest prime minister to leave office was Menzies, who was 71 years and 37 days old when he stepped down on 26 January 1966.

Age difference between incoming and outgoing prime ministers[]

The largest age gap between an incoming prime minister and outgoing one was 22 years and 44 days between Chris Watson and George Reid during 1904. In recent years, the largest age gap between an incoming prime minister and outgoing one was 18 years and 57 days between John Howard and Kevin Rudd during 2007. The smallest age gap between an incoming prime minister and outgoing one was 27 days between Andrew Fisher and Billy Hughes during 1915. In recent years, the smallest age gap between an incoming prime minister and outgoing one was 44 days between Kevin Rudd and Tony Abbott during 2013.

Longest lived[]

The longest-lived prime minister was Gough Whitlam, who lived for 98 years and 102 days (1916–2014)

Shortest lived[]

The shortest-lived prime minister (excluding incumbent Scott Morrison) was Harold Holt, born 1908, who died in office at age 59 years and 134 days in 1967.

Longest retirement[]

The longest period of retirement (retirement being the period between the end of their last term and their death) for a prime minister was Whitlam’s, which was 38 years, 344 days long (1975-2014).

Shortest retirement[]

The shortest period of retirement was Ben Chifley, who died in 1951, 1 year and 176 days after he left office.

Intervals between terms of office[]

Of the prime ministers who have served more than one term, the largest interval was that of Menzies, which lasted 10 years from 1939 to 1949.

Birthplace[]

Of the 30 prime ministers, 23 have been born in Australia. Of the ones that were not born in Australia, six were born in the United Kingdom:[3]

  • Reid and Fisher were born in Scotland
  • Cook, Hughes and Abbott were born in England
  • Gillard was born in Wales
  • Watson was born in Chile.

Of the 23 prime ministers born within Australia:

  • Nine have been born in modern-day Victoria in total. Six were born in colonial Victoria (Deakin, Bruce, Scullin, Menzies, Curtin and McEwen). Three have been born in Victoria in federated Australia (Gorton, Whitlam, and Fraser).
  • Nine have been born in modern-day New South Wales. Three were born in colonial New South Wales (Barton, Page, and Chifley) and six were born in modern New South Wales (Holt, McMahon, Keating, Howard, Turnbull, and Morrison).
  • Three have been born in modern-day Queensland. Two of those were born in colonial Queensland (Fadden and Forde) and one in Queensland as its own state (Rudd).
  • One (Hawke) was born in post-federation South Australia.
  • One (Lyons) was born in colonial Tasmania

Some prime ministers represented electorates in states other than they were born in.

Months and zodiacs[]

Order Prime Minister Date of birth Zodiac sign
1 John Curtin 8 January Capricorn Capricornus
2 Edmund Barton 18 January
3 Paul Keating 18 January
4 William McMahon 23 February Pisces Pisces
5 George Reid 25 February
6 John McEwen 29 March Aries Aries
7 Chris Watson 9 April
8 Arthur Fadden 13 April
9 Stanley Bruce 15 April
10 Scott Morrison 13 May Taurus Taurus
11 Malcolm Fraser 21 May Gemini Gemini
12 Gough Whitlam 11 July Cancer Cancer
13 Frank Forde 18 July
14 John Howard 26 July Leo Leo
15 Alfred Deakin 3 August
16 Harold Holt 5 August
17 Earle Page 8 August
18 Andrew Fisher 29 August Virgo Virgo
19 John Gorton 9 September
20 Joseph Lyons 15 September
21 James Scullin 18 September
22 Kevin Rudd 21 September
23 Ben Chifley 22 September Libra Libra
24 Billy Hughes 25 September
25 Julia Gillard 29 September
26 Malcolm Turnbull 24 October Scorpio Scorpio
27 Tony Abbott 4 November
28 Joseph Cook 7 December Sagittarius Sagittarius
29 Bob Hawke 9 December
30 Robert Menzies 20 December
  • Births by century
    • 19th century: 1st, George Reid; last, Robert Menzies
    • 20th century: 1st, John McEwen; most recent, Scott Morrison
  • Deaths by century
    • 20th century: 1st, George Reid; last, William McMahon
    • 21st century: 1st, John Gorton; most recent, Bob Hawke.
  • Between the births of George Reid in 1845 and Scott Morrison in 1968, a prime minister has been born in every decade.
  • Between the deaths of George Reid in 1918 and Bob Hawke in 2019, a prime minister has died in every decade except for the 1990s.
  • The decade with the most births – four – each in the 1860s and 1880s.
  • The decade with the most deaths – three – each in the 1940s, 1950s, 1960s, 1980s, and 2010s.
  • The month with the most births – seven – in September.
  • One prime minister each has been born in March, October, and November.
  • No prime minister as of yet, has been born in June.
  • The months with the most deaths – four – in October.
  • One prime minister each has died in June, August, and September.
  • No prime minister as of yet, has died in February.

Federal elections[]

Most prime ministers in office between federal elections[]

There have been three periods between elections in which three prime ministers were in office.

  • Between the 1903 election and 1906 election, Deakin, Watson and Reid all took the office before Deakin regained it for the 1906 election after several parliamentary confidence shuffles between parties.[4]
  • Between the 1940 election and 1943 election, Menzies, Fadden and Curtin held the office after the House of Representatives lost confidence in the United Australia Party coalition.
  • Between the 1943 election and 1946 election, Curtin held the office until his death, when Forde temporarily took the office and Chifley was elected as the leader of the Labor Party.
  • Between the 1966 election and 1969 election, Holt held the office before McEwen took it over after his death and Gorton ultimately succeeded him.

Most elections contested[]

The largest number of elections contested by a prime minister is nine. Menzies contested the 1940, 1946, 1949, 1951, 1954, 1955, 1958, 1961, and 1963 elections. The greatest number of elections won by a prime minister is eight, a record also held by Menzies, who won 8 of the 9 elections he contested. The greatest number of elections lost by an individual is three, George Reid, H. V. Evatt, Arthur Calwell, and Gough Whitlam all lost three federal elections.

Age at losing an election[]

The oldest prime minister to lose a federal election was John Howard, who lost his own seat and the election of 2007 at 68 years and 121 days old. The oldest person to lose a federal election was Arthur Calwell, who lost the election of 1966 at 70 years and 90 days old. The youngest prime minister to lose a federal election was Stanley Bruce, who was 46 years, and 180 days old when he lost the 1929 election. In recent years, the youngest prime minister to lose a federal election was Paul Keating, who was 52 years and 44 days old when he lost the 1996 election. The youngest person to lose a federal election was Chris Watson who was 36 years and 251 days old when he lost the 1903 election. The youngest person to lose a federal election without ever becoming Prime Minister was Mark Latham who was 43 years and 223 days old when he lost the 2004 election.

Age at winning an election[]

The oldest prime minister to lead their party to victory at a federal election was Robert Menzies, who won the 1963 election aged 68 years and 347 days. The oldest prime minister to lead their party to victory at a federal election for the first time was Malcolm Turnbull, who won the 2016 election aged 61 years and 251 days. The youngest prime minister to win an election was Stanley Bruce, who was 42 years, and 213 days old when he won the 1925 election. In recent years, the youngest prime minister to win an election was Julia Gillard, who was 48 years, and 326 days old when she won the 2010 election.

Prime ministers in office without an election[]

Nearly all (24) prime ministers of Australia have held the office at some point during their tenure without the mandate from an election. This is a common occurrence due to the parliamentary and party systems in Australia, when the position is often made vacant by a spill or leader who is resigning or retiring. In the early days of the office, the unstable non-majority party system also caused many changes in power. Prime ministers who have taken office due to inter-party confidence prior to the development of the stable two-party system:

  • Chris Watson
  • George Reid
  • Alfred Deakin (second and third tenures)
  • Andrew Fisher (first tenure)

Prime ministers who took office after their predecessor resigned:

  • Alfred Deakin (first tenure)
  • Stanley Bruce
  • Robert Menzies (first tenure)
  • Arthur Fadden
  • Ben Chifley
  • John Gorton

Prime ministers who took office after their predecessor retired:

  • Billy Hughes
  • Harold Holt

Prime ministers who took office after their predecessor died:

  • Earle Page
  • Frank Forde
  • John McEwen

Prime ministers who took office after defeating the government in a vote of no confidence:

  • John Curtin

Prime ministers who took office after defeating their predecessor in a party spill:

  • William McMahon
  • Paul Keating
  • Julia Gillard
  • Kevin Rudd
  • Malcolm Turnbull
  • Scott Morrison

Prime ministers who took office after the incumbent government was dismissed by the Governor-General:

  • Malcolm Fraser

Service to Parliament[]

Service in the Senate[]

Only John Gorton has come from the Senate. He served as a senator for Victoria for 17 years before he contested and won Harold Holt’s seat of Higgins in the House of Representatives.[5]

Service in the House of Representatives[]

The shortest interval between entering Parliament and being appointed Prime Minister was achieved by Bob Hawke, who entered Parliament in October 1980 and was appointed Prime Minister only 29 months later in March 1983. The longest period of service prior to becoming Prime Minister was that of John McEwen, who had served 33 years in the House of Representatives before he became Prime Minister in December 1967. For a non-interim prime minister, the longest period of prior service was 30 years by Harold Holt, who was elected in a by-election in August 1935 and became Prime Minister in January 1966. The longest service as an MP of a prime minister was Billy Hughes, who served from March 1901 until his death in October 1952, a total of 51 years. This is to date the longest period of service in the Australian Parliament and Hughes was father of the House from 1938 until 1952. The prime minister with the longest service in a single seat is 42 years by Earle Page, who served the seat of Cowper from December 1919 until December 1961. In recent years, the prime minister with the longest service in a single seat is 33 years by John Howard, who served the seat of Bennelong from May 1974 until December 2007.

Prime ministers who were Father of the House[]

Only one prime minister has held both that office and been Father of the House: John McEwen, from December 1967 until January 1968. Five prime ministers have served a long enough period in the House of Representatives to become Father of the House:[6][7][8][9][10] Italics indicate that a former or incumbent prime minister was a joint Father of the House.

Name Entered House Prime Minister Became Father Left House Party Constituency
Billy Hughes 1901 1915–1923 1938 1952 (died) Liberal
Sir Earle Page 1919 1939 1952 1961 (lost seat) National Cowper
Sir Robert Menzies 1934 1939–1941,
1949–1966
1965 1966 (resigned) Liberal Kooyong
Sir John McEwen 1967–1968 1965 1971 (resigned) National
Sir William McMahon 1949 1971–1972 1981 1982 (resigned) Liberal Lowe
Malcolm Fraser 1955 1975–1983 1982 1983 (resigned) Liberal Wannon

Military service[]

Eight of the thirty prime ministers of Australia have served in the military. As of 2020, the last prime minister who had any military service was Gough Whitlam, who served as a pilot in the Air Force from 1941 to 1945, during World War II. Only Harold Holt has served in the military during his parliamentary career. He served in the Armed Forces from 1939–1940, when he was asked to return by Menzies due to low parliamentary numbers and difficulties.

Living prime ministers[]

Number of living prime ministers[]

See List of prime ministers of Australia by age

Currently living former prime ministers[]

As of September 2021, there are six living former Australian prime ministers.[11]

Paul Keating
In office: 19911996
Age: 77
John Howard
In office: 19962007
Age: 82
Kevin Rudd
In office: 20072010; 2013
Age: 63
Julia Gillard
In office: 20102013
Age: 59
Tony Abbott,
In office: 20132015
Age: 63
Malcolm Turnbull,
In office: 20152018
Age: 66

Died in office[]

Three prime ministers have died in office:

  • Joseph Lyons, who died on 7 April 1939, aged 59
  • John Curtin, who died on 5 July 1945, aged 60
  • Harold Holt, who disappeared on 17 December 1967 and was declared dead on 19 December, aged 59

Died while immediate successor was in office[]

Earle Page and Ben Chifley’s successor, Robert Menzies, was in office when Chifley and Page died in 1951 and 1961 respectively.

Miscellaneous records[]

The prime minister who had the most children is Joseph Lyons, who fathered 12 children.

The tallest prime minister is believed to be Gough Whitlam, who stood at around 6 feet 4 inches (194 cm) in height.[citation needed]

The longest personal name held by an Australian prime minister was that of Earle Page whose four names – Earle Christmas Grafton Page – total 25 letters. The shortest baptismal names, each 10 letters long, were held by John Curtin and John McEwen.

By-elections[]

References[]

  1. ^ National Museum of Australia – Prime Ministers
  2. ^ Australian Parliamentary Publications - Traits and Trends of prime ministers of Australia
  3. ^ Individual Records of Prime Ministers (MOADOPH)
  4. ^ National Archives of Australia – Prime Ministers
  5. ^ Fathers of the House (MOADOPH)
  6. ^ 1 Trove Archive
  7. ^ 2 Trove Archive]
  8. ^ 3 Untold Story of Canberra’s First Coup
  9. ^ 8 (page 48) Hansard, 1981
  10. ^ 9/10/11 (page 14) Hansard, 1983
  11. ^ Cox, Lisa. "The 'special moment' seven surviving Prime Ministers were photographed together".
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