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  1. Leader before election. John Howard. Elected Leader. Andrew Peacock. A spill of the leadership of the Liberal Party of Australia took place on 9 May 1989, following internal maneuverings by supporters of John Howard's long-time rival, Andrew Peacock. The spill was won by Andrew Peacock over John Howard by 44 votes to 27.

  2. LIBERAL PARTY 1989. See Annual Return 2002. 5. 1988-2006: additional papers of the Liberal Party from their re-launch onwards. London University: London School of Economics Library, Archives and Special Collections. LIBERAL PARTY 1989 (M3361) See Annual Return 2007. 6. 1962-66: General Election expenses ledger.

  3. Liberal Party (UK, 1989) Sign in to edit View history Talk (0) 1989–present [] V • T • ...

  4. The Liberal Party was a liberal political party. It was one of the two big political parties in the United Kingdom in the 19th and early 20th century. [2] The party came from an alliance of Whigs and free-trade Peelites and radicals in the 1850s. In the next 50 years it formed four governments under William Gladstone.

  5. On 13 May 1990, former Liberal Party leader Angus Innes resigned. At the by-election on 28 July 1990, David Dunworth retained the seat for the Liberal Party. On 22 Nov 1990, the Court of Disputed Returns declared the election in Nicklin void, and a recount was undertaken, which declared Neil Turner for the National Party elected. On 18 May 1991 ...

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  7. On March 3, 1988, the two parties formally merged as the Social and Liberal Democratic Party, and in 1989 the party adopted the present name. Paddy Ashdown, a former Liberal and a member of Parliament for Yeovil (Somerset), was elected the first leader of the new party in July 1988.