1868 Victorian colonial election explained

Election Name:1868 Victorian colonial election
Country:Victoria
Flag Year:1868
Flag Image:Flag_of_the_United_Kingdom.svg
Type:parliamentary
Ongoing:no
Previous Election:1866 Victorian colonial election
Previous Year:1866
Next Election:1871 Victorian colonial election
Next Year:1871
Election Date:21 January−20 February 1868
Seats For Election:All 78 seats in the Victorian Legislative Assembly
Leader1:James McCulloch
Party1:Moderate Liberal
Colour1:CEF2CE
Leaders Seat1:Mornington
Seats1:60
Percentage1:63.15
Leader2:Edward Langton
Party2:Conservative (Free Trade)
Leaders Seat2:Melbourne West
Colour2:8EB5D1
Seats2:18
Percentage2:36.85
Premier
Before Election:James McCulloch
Before Party:Liberal
After Election:James McCulloch
After Party:Liberal

The 1868 Victorian colonial election was held from 21 January to 20 February 1868 to elect the 6th Parliament of Victoria. All 78 seats in 49 electorates in the Legislative Assembly were up for election, though seven seats were uncontested.[1]

There were 24 single-member, 21 two-member and 4 three-member electorates.[1]

Background

The circumstances leading to the 1868 general election in Victoria were linked to the controversial term of Sir Charles Darling, the colony's third Governor from September 1863 to May 1866. During his term of office Darling had supported James McCulloch's ministry in its efforts to pass protectionist customs tariff legislation which was rejected on several occasions by the Legislative Council, dominated by conservative free-trade pastoralists. Darling was recalled in 1866 as a result of a petition of complaint by Council members.

In April 1867, the Legislative Assembly voted a grant of £20,000 to Lady Darling, which was rejected by the council. Darling resigned from the colonial service to bypass colonial regulations and enable the grant to be accepted. In August 1867 the grant to Lady Darling was included in the supplementary estimates of expenditure in the annual Appropriation Bill, but in October the Legislative Council rejected the bill, claiming that such a grant ought to have been the subject of a separate measure.[2] [3] [4] The general election held in January and February 1868 was primarily fought on the question of the inclusion of the grant in the estimates of expenditure.[5]

Results

McCulloch's liberals won the election with a large majority.[6]

Party / Grouping! style="width:70px;"
Votes%SwingSeatsChange
 Ministerial63,22163.1560
 Opposition36,89036.8518
 Totals100,11178

Aftermath

Immediately after the election the Governor received a despatch from the Colonial Secretary in London, the Duke of Buckingham, which forbade the linking of the grant to Lady Darling with the Appropriation Bill, thereby enabling the Legislative Council "to exercise their discretion respecting it". When this was conveyed to the ministers of McCulloch's re-elected government, they expressed their displeasure on 6 March 1868 by tendering their collective resignation.[7]

When the parliament convened a week later, for the first time after the election, the assembly was paralysed while the Governor sought various ways to form a new ministry. Eventually, on 6 May 1868, a stop-gap ministry of conservatives from both houses of parliament was formed, under the premiership of the prominent Council member Charles Sladen.[8] [9] With little support in the Assembly, Sladen's government had no prospect of long-term survival. Despite the defeat of two ministers in the elections for the Upper House and a vote of no-confidence in the Assembly on June 9, his premiership lasted until July 7.[10] Sladen's ministry finally come its end when the Legislative Assembly voted to refuse supplies. On the day before Sladen resigned, a message reached the colony that served to dissipate the Darling controversy. The Colonial Office and the ex-Governor had reached an agreement: Darling withdrew his resignation and stated that neither he nor his wife "could accept the generous bounty of his Victorian admirers", in return for which the British government granted him a pension of one thousand pounds a year (backdated to the day of his recall).[11] In his two-month term of office, Sladen was the only member of the Legislative Council ever to serve as premier in Victoria. His term in the Council expired soon afterwards and he did not renominate.[10]

McCulloch returned to office in July 1868 with a more radical ministry, but a number of his supporters became discontented with his non-consultative style.[6] On various occasions during his tenure McCulloch "repeatedly insulted many of his most steadfast supporters by the singularity of the selections made for filling-up Cabinet vacancies". In early September 1869 McCulloch appointed George Rolfe to the vacant office of Commissioner of Customs. Rolfe was the president of the Loyal Liberal Association, but not a member of parliament of either House, and his appointment precipitated another ministerial crisis. A motion of no confidence over the issue was carried in the Legislative Assembly by 34 votes to 26, prompting McCulloch and his ministers to resign.[12] [13]

On September 20 a new ministry was announced under the premiership of John MacPherson, "a comparatively young squatter with conservative instincts".[14] Writs were then issued for by-elections in the constituencies represented by the new ministers, at which two of MacPherson's ministers were defeated.[12] [15] MacPherson's support base was substantially made up of disaffected McCulloch supporters and many of the ministers were inexperienced, but it managed to survive until April 1870 with support from the conservative opposition. Its most significant achievement was the passing of the Land Act in December 1869, which consolidated and amended all previous legislation on the sale and occupation of Crown Lands and remained in force until 1878.[16] Under the Act, land on pastoral runs was opened to selection, initially under a lease arrangement, but with an option to purchase after improvement and enclosure conditions were met.[17]

In January 1870 the protectionist liberal Graham Berry was asked to take on the role of treasurer in the MacPherson ministry. MacPherson's first choice for treasurer, Robert Byrne, had been defeated in an October 1869 by-election and Berry's appointment came from the necessity of finding a minister with financial experience in a safe seat. Berry introduced a budget in early March 1870, a complex document which attempted to placate free-trade supporters of the government.[18] [16] After a month-long budgetry debate amidst shifting alliances in the parliament, a no confidence motion was carried in April 1870, after which MacPherson tendered the resignaton of his ministry to the Governor. James McCulloch was once again called upon to form a cabinet.[19]

The ministry formed by McCulloch in April 1870 was moderate and with a depth of experience, though one surprise inclusion was the appointment of the defeated ex-premier MacPherson as Minister of Lands.[6] [19] An early success for the new government was a bill for the abolition of state aid to religion which passed both Houses in July 1870.[20] McCulloch's government remained in place until the general election in early 1871, at which the central issue put forward to electors was a proposal to introduce a secular education bill.[6] [21]

See also

References

Sources

Notes and References

  1. Web site: The Sixth Parliament Elected 21 January to 20 February 1868 . Psephos: Adam Carr's Electoral Archive.
  2. F. K. Crowley (1972), Sir Charles Henry Darling (1809–1870), Australian Dictionary of Biography website, National Centre of Biography, Australian National University; accessed 25 December 2023.
  3. https://trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/article/189328004 Sir Charles Darling
  4. J. B. Cooper (1934), Our Early Governors: No. 4. – Sir Charles Henry Darling, G.C.H., The Argus (Melbourne), 5 May 1934, page 4.
  5. https://trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/article/244957928 Editorial
  6. Geoffrey Bartlett (1974), Sir James McCulloch (1819–1893), Australian Dictionary of Biography website, National Centre of Biography, Australian National University; accessed 10 December 2023.
  7. Henry Gyles Turner (1904), pages 144-145.
  8. Henry Gyles Turner (1904), page 145.
  9. https://trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/article/5817147 Summary for Europe
  10. James Grant (1976), Sir Charles Sladen (1816–1884), Australian Dictionary of Biography website, National Centre of Biography, Australian National University; accessed 26 December 2023.
  11. Henry Gyles Turner (1904), page 146.
  12. https://trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/article/196420220 Summary for Home Friends
  13. Henry Gyles Turner (1904), pages 151-152.
  14. Henry Gyles Turner (1904), page 152.
  15. Dorothy Fitzpatrick (1974), John Alexander MacPherson (1833–1894), Australian Dictionary of Biography website, National Centre of Biography, Australian National University; accessed 29 December 2023.
  16. Henry Gyles Turner (1904), pages 152-154.
  17. http://www.yarraglenhistory.com.au/a-z/L/land-legislation Land Legislation
  18. Geoffrey Bartlett (1969), Sir Graham Berry (1822–1904), Australian Dictionary of Biography website, National Centre of Biography, Australian National University; accessed 10 December 2023.
  19. https://trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/article/196420077 Summary for Home Friends
  20. https://trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/article/196417070 Summary for Home Readers
  21. https://trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/article/196415242 The Dissolution of Parliament