- Members of the Western Australian Legislative Council, 1916–1918
-
This is a list of members of the Western Australian Legislative Council from 22 May 1916 to 21 May 1918. The chamber had 30 seats made up of ten provinces each electing three members, on a system of rotation whereby one-third of the members would retire at each biennial election.
In March 1917, the Labor Party split over the matter of military conscription, with a number of Labor members of Parliament either resigning from the Party or being expelled. By May 1917, they had formed a new National Labor Party with a base in the Goldfields region, historically the heart of the Labor vote in Western Australia. In June 1917, they formed a coalition with the new Nationalist Party (which replaced the former Liberal Party) and the Country Party to form a governing coalition in the Legislative Assembly. With these arrangements, another Ministry was formed under new Premier Henry Lefroy.
Name Party Province Term
expiresYears in office Joseph Allen Lib. / Nat. West 1920 1914–1920 Richard Ardagh Labor / Nat. Lab. North-East 1918 1912–1924 Charles Baxter Country East 1920 1914–1950 Harry Boan[6] Lib. / Nat. Metropolitan 1920 1917–1918; 1922–1924 Henry Briggs Lib. / Nat. West 1922 1896–1919 Henry Carson Country Central 1920 1914–1920 Ephraim Clarke Lib. / Nat. South-West 1920 1901–1921 Hal Colebatch[3] Lib. / Nat. East 1918 1912–1923 Francis Connor[5] Independent North 1918 1906–1916 James Cornell Labor / Nat. Lab. South 1918 1912–1946 Joseph Cullen[7] Lib. South-East 1918 1909–1917 James Cunningham[2] Labor North-East 1922 1916–1922 Jabez Dodd Labor / Nat. Lab. South 1922 1910–1928 John Drew Labor Central 1918 1900–1918; 1924–1947 Joseph Duffell Lib. / Nat. Metropolitan-Suburban 1920 1914–1926 John Ewing[1] Lib. / Nat. South-West 1918 1916–1933 James Greig Country South-East 1920 1916–1925 James Griffiths[2] Labor North-East 1922 1916 Vernon Hamersley[4] Lib. / Nat. East 1922 1904–1946 James Hickey Labor Central 1922 1916–1928 Joseph Holmes Lib. / Ind. North 1920 1914–1942 Arthur Jenkins[6] Lib. Metropolitan 1920 1898–1904; 1908–1917 Walter Kingsmill Lib. / Nat. Metropolitan 1922 1903–1922 John Kirwan Independent South 1920 1908–1946 Robert Lynn Lib. / Nat. West 1918 1912–1924 Cuthbert McKenzie Country South-East 1922 1910–1922 George Miles[5] Independent North 1918 1916–1950 Harry Millington Labor North-East 1920 1914–1920 John Nicholson[6] Nationalist Metropolitan 1920 1918–1941 Edwin Rose Lib. / Nat. South-West 1922 1916–1934 Archibald Sanderson Lib. / Nat. Metropolitan-Suburban 1918 1912–1922 Athelstan Saw Lib. / Nat. Metropolitan-Suburban 1922 1915–1929 Charles Sommers Lib. / Nat. Metropolitan 1918 1900–1918 Hector Stewart[7] Lib. / Nat. South-East 1918 1917–1931 Sir Edward Wittenoom Lib. / Nat. North 1922 1883–1884; 1885–1886;
1894–1898; 1902–1906;
1910–1934Notes
- 1 On 19 February 1916, South-West Province Liberal MLC John Winthrop Hackett died. Liberal candidate John Ewing won the resulting by-election, which was called to coincide with the 1916 Council elections.
- 2 At the 13 May 1916 election, Labor candidate James Griffiths was elected to the North-East Province seat, but died on 21 June 1916 before he could be sworn in. Labor candidate James Cunningham was returned unopposed on 7 July 1916.
- 3 On 27 July 1916, East Province Liberal MLC Hal Colebatch was appointed Colonial Secretary and Minister for Education in the new Ministry led by Frank Wilson. He was therefore required to resign and contest a ministerial by-election, at which he was returned unopposed on 9 August 1916.
- 4 At the 13 May 1916 elections, the East Province election had resulted in a tie between Vernon Hamersley, the sitting member, and the Country Party candidate Michael McCabe, and Hamersley was declared elected on the casting vote of the returning officer. On 1 August 1916, the Court of Disputed Returns declared the election null and void, and a by-election was held on 2 September 1916 which resulted in Hamersley's return with a 324-vote majority on a significantly higher turnout.
- 5 On 25 July 1916, North Province Independent MLC Francis Connor died. Independent candidate George Miles was elected unopposed on 18 September 1916.
- 6 On 27 March 1917, Metropolitan Province Liberal MLC Arthur Jenkins died. Liberal candidate Harry Boan was elected unopposed on 14 April 1917.
- 7 On 31 March 1917, South-East Province Liberal MLC Joseph Cullen died. Country Party candidate Hector Stewart won the resulting by-election on 19 May 1917.
- 8 On 21 February 1918, Metropolitan Province Nationalist MLC Harry Boan resigned after ten months in office. Nationalist candidate John Nicholson won the resulting by-election on 23 March 1918.
Sources
- Black, David (1991). Legislative Council of Western Australia : membership register, electoral law and statistics, 1890-1989. Perth: Parliamentary History Project. ISBN 0-7309-3641-4.
- Hughes, Colin A.; Aitkin, Don (1986). Voting for the Australian State Upper Houses, 1890-1984. Canberra: Australian National University. ISBN 0-909779-18-X.
- Black, David and Bolton, Geoffrey (2001). Biographical Register of Members of the Parliament of Western Australia, Volume One, 1870–1930 (Revised Edition ed.). Parliament House: Parliament of Western Australia. ISBN 0730738140.
Members of the Parliament of Western Australia Legislative Council
Legislative Assembly
Categories:- Members of Western Australian parliaments by term
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.