30 of the 60 seats in the Senate 30 seats needed for a majority
First party
Second party
Third party
Leader
John Gorton
Lionel Murphy
Vince Gair
Party
Coalition
Labor
Democratic Labor Party (Australia, 1955)
Seats before
30
27
2
Seats won
14
13
2
Seats after
28
27
4
Seat change
2
2
Popular vote
2,365,373
2,489,990
540,006
Percentage
42.77%
45.03%
9.77%
Swing
2.93pp
0.36pp
1.38pp
Elections were held on 25 November 1967 to elect half of the 60 seats in the Australian Senate. There was no accompanying election to the House of Representatives as the two election cycles had been out of synchronisation since 1963. The results were a setback for the government of Harold Holt. Having won a landslide victory at the House-only election the previous year, the Coalition instead lost two seats in the Senate. The Labor Party failed to make any gains in Gough Whitlam's first election as leader; the Democratic Labor Party gained two seats and held the balance of power until 1974.
In New South Wales, Queensland, and Victoria, the coalition parties ran a joint ticket. Of the six senators elected on a joint ticket, three were members of the Liberal Party and three were members of the Country Party. In Western Australia, the coalition parties ran on separate tickets. In South Australia and Tasmania, only the Liberal Party ran a ticket.
The sole independent elected was Reg Turnbull of Tasmania.