Arthur Hewson Politician

Henry Arthur Hewson, OAM (31 December 1914 – 20 November 1999) was an Australian politician. Born in Korumburra, Victoria, he was a dairy farmer at Warragul before serving in the military 1941-45. He was active in local politics as a member of Warragul Shire Council, and was elected to Gippsland Province in the Victorian Legislative Council for a six-year term at the 1964 state election. In 1972, he was elected to the Australian House of Representatives as the Country Party member for McMillan, despite receiving only 16.6% of the primary vote. This was one of the lowest primary votes achieved by a successful candidate, elected in a single seat electorate, in the history of Australian elections. His election was made possible by a strong flow of preferences from the Democratic Labor Party and from former Liberal member Alexander Buchanan, who was running as an independent after losing his Liberal endorsement to Barrie Armitage. Despite the Coalition agreement at federal level, relations between the main non-Labor parties in Victoria were somewhat frosty at the time. The Victorian Liberal Party Executive created an unusual three-way campaign in 1974 by fielding Liberal candidate Dent against Hewson. Hewson's allegedly confusing how-to-vote card (in Liberal Party colours rather than Country Party colours and headed "Liberal-Country Party Senate Team") caused a minor controversy during the campaign. Hewson picked up enough preferences from the DLP and Buchanan to overtake Armitage on the third count. He then won the seat on the fourth count after Armitage's preferences flowed overwhelmingly to him.Hewson was in turn defeated by the next Liberal candidate, Barry Simon, in 1975. Hewson died in 1999.

Personal facts

Birth dateDecember 31, 1914
Birth place
Korumburra
Nationality
Australia
Date of deathNovember 20, 1999

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Member of parliament

region
Division of McMillan
successor

Politician

party
National Party of Australia

Arthur Hewson on Wikipedia