- Protectionist Party
Infobox Australian Political Party
party_name = Protectionist Party
party_
party_wikicolourid = Protectionist
leader =Alfred Deakin
deputy =
foundation = 1889
predecessor =
disbanded = 1909
successor =Commonwealth Liberal Party
ideology =Protectionism ,Liberalism ,Conservatism
position =
international =The Protectionist Party was an
Australian political party, formally organised from 1889 until 1909, with policies centred onprotectionism . It argued that Australia needed protectivetariff s to allow Australian industry to grow and provide employment. It had its greatest strength in Victoria and in the rural areas ofNew South Wales . Its most prominent leaders were Sir Edmund Barton andAlfred Deakin , who were the first and second Prime Ministers of Australia.In the main, the Protectionists formed government with the support of the Labor Party, on the understanding that they would implement social reforms desired by Labor. Labor's program, however, was frequently too radical for the Protectionists, and compromises had to be made. Several changes of minority governments occurred.
The Protectionist vote had declined considerably by the 1906 federal election, and with Labor already having formed a minority government in 1904 under
Chris Watson , Labor had formed another in 1908 underAndrew Fisher . A scandalised establishment pressured the two non-Labor parties to form an anti-socialist alliance, which saw Deakin and Free Trade leaderJoseph Cook believe a merger was needed to counter Labor's increasing electoral dominance. The Protectionist Party ended up splitting, with the more liberal Protectionists, such asIsaac Isaacs andH. B. Higgins , supporting Labor while Deakin and his supporters merged with the Free Trade Party to become theCommonwealth Liberal Party , who would form another minority government, before Fisher and Labor reigned in the first majority government, and the first Senate majority, at the 1910 federal election.References
* [http://www.adb.online.anu.edu.au/biogs/A070202b.htm Australian Dictionary of Biography - Edmund Barton]
* [http://www.adb.online.anu.edu.au/biogs/A080275b.htm Australian Dictionary of Biography - Alfred Deakin]
* [http://www.protectionist.net/?page_id=5 History - Australian Protectionist Party (modern)]
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