1905 South Australian state election explained

Election Name:1905 South Australian state election
Country:South Australia
Type:parliamentary
Ongoing:no
Previous Election:1902 South Australian state election
Previous Year:1902
Next Election:1906 South Australian state election
Next Year:1906
Seats For Election:All 42 seats in the South Australian House of Assembly
22 seats needed for a majority
Leader1:Thomas Price
Leader Since1:1899
Party1:United Labor
Color1:DE3533
Leaders Seat1:Torrens
Percentage1:41.29%
Swing1: 22.21
Last Election1:5 seats
Seats1:15 seats
Seat Change1: 10
Leader2:Richard Butler
Leader Since2:1 March 1905
Party2:Ministerial
Color2:0C1BA8
Leaders Seat2:Barossa
Percentage2:3.24%
Seats2:2 seats
Premier
Before Election:Richard Butler
Before Party:Australasian National League
After Election:Thomas Price
After Party:United Labor

The 1905 South Australian state election was held on 27 May 1905. All 42 seats in the South Australian House of Assembly were up for election. The incumbent conservative government led by Premier of South Australia Richard Butler in an informal coalition with the liberals was defeated by the United Labor Party (ULP) led by Leader of the Opposition Thomas Price. Each of the 13 districts elected multiple members, with voters casting multiple votes.[1]

The first ministry formed after the 1902 election by John Jenkins, who resigned prior to the 1905 election. Richard Butler took the parliament into the 1905 election. Prior to the election, a new party formed. The rural stockowners and graziers were concerned at the concentration of the Australasian National League (ANL) on the metropolitan electorates and urban issues. In 1905, these interests formed the Farmers and Producers Political Union (FPPU), which had a conservative political agenda, and was absolutely opposed to franchise reform. It was essentially the rural wing of the ANL. There were four distinct blocs at the election, with the over-riding issue that of franchise reform for the Legislative Council: the ULP, a liberal group of franchise reformers led by Archibald Peake, the Butler moderateconservatives with some FPPU support, and an "extreme conservative" group led by John Darling at the core of the ANL. There was no "Liberal" party, but there was a relatively cohesive liberal group among both independent members and candidates. The Liberal and Democratic Union would not be formed until the 1906 election.

The ULP, on the fewest seats prior to the election, in just one election became the single largest party, increasing their primary vote to 41.3 (+22.2) percent and increasing their representation from five to 15 seats, winning 11 of the 12 city seats (four at the last election) from the three city multi-member electorates, Adelaide, Port Adelaide and Torrens, with a policy of development and progress, expansion of business and honest government: "they would not be frightened by the nonsense that had been talked about socialism". After the new lower house first met, the ULP forced the incumbent conservative Butler government to resign with the support of several disaffected non-ULP MPs, forming the Price-Peake administration minority government. Peake sought the alliance stating "the only difference between us is a difference of degree and of speed". It was the start of the first stable Labor government in the world. A year later at the 1906 election, the ULP would increase their primary vote to 44.8 (+3.5) percent and increase their representation from 15 to 20 seats, just two short of a parliamentary majority.

Results

Party! style="width:70px;"
Votes%SwingSeatsChange
 United Labor148,55041.29+22.2115 10
 Anti-Reform 118,57132.9610
 Franchise Reform 77,21121.4614
 Ministerial (Labor−Liberal)11,6553.242
 Independent3,7791.05−3.101
 Formal votes359,766
 Informal votes1,686
 Total 361,45242
 Registered voters / turnout187,24261.19

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Statistical Record of the Legislature 1836-2007. South Australian Parliament.