Country: | South Africa |
Flag Year: | 1910 |
Type: | parliamentary |
Election Date: | 15 September 1910 |
Next Election: | 1915 South African general election |
Next Year: | 1915 |
Seats For Election: | All 121 seats in the House of Assembly |
Majority Seats: | 61 |
Image1: | Louisbotha.jpg |
Colour1: | 87CEEB |
Leader1: | Louis Botha |
Party1: | South African, Orangia Unie, and Het Volk |
Seats1: | 66 |
Popular Vote1: | 30,052 |
Percentage1: | 28.45% |
Leader2: | Leander Starr Jameson |
Party2: | Unionist Party (South Africa) |
Seats2: | 36 |
Popular Vote2: | 39,766 |
Percentage2: | 37.65% |
Image3: | Kolonel Cresswell (cropped).jpg |
Leader3: | Frederic Creswell |
Party3: | Labour Party (South Africa) |
Seats3: | 3 |
Popular Vote3: | 11,549 |
Percentage3: | 10.93% |
Prime Minister | |
After Election: | Louis Botha |
After Party: | South African Party |
General elections were held in South Africa on 15 September 1910 to elect the 121 members of the House of Assembly. They were the first general election after the Union of South Africa was created on 31 May 1910.
The elections were held alongside the first election to the provincial councils of Cape Province and Transvaal. Those councils used the same electoral districts as those for the House of Assembly seats in the province. The first election for the provincial councils of Natal and Orange Free State, which did not use the same constituency boundaries as the House of Assembly, took place at a later date.[1]
Although the Unionist Party received the most votes, the alliance of parties led by General Louis Botha won a slim majority. The Unionist Party became the official opposition. Botha's alliance would later unite as the South African Party.
The South Africa Act 1909 provided that the franchise in each province should be the same as that in the corresponding colony before the Union, until altered by the Union Parliament. The Act included entrenching clauses, providing that black and coloured voters could only be removed from the common voters roll in the Cape of Good Hope, by legislation passed by a two-thirds majority by both houses of Parliament in joint session.[2]
The franchise, in all parts of the Union, was limited to men over the age of 21. There were some additional qualifications and disqualifications which varied between provinces.
The franchise in the Orange Free State and Transvaal was limited to white men.The traditional "Cape Qualified Franchise" system of the Cape of Good Hope was based on property and wage qualifications, equally open to people of all races. At the time of the National Convention in 1908, which drafted the terms of what became the South Africa Act, "22,784 Native and Coloured persons out of a total of 152,221 electors" were entitled to vote in Cape elections.
Natal had a theoretically non-racial franchise, but in practice few non-white electors ever qualified. It was estimated, in 1908, that "200 non-Europeans out of a total of 22,786 electors had secured franchise rights".[3]
The South Africa Act 1909 provided for single member electoral divisions, with members of the House of Assembly being elected using the relative majority (also known as first past the post) electoral system. The act also provided for a delimitation commission to define the boundaries for each electoral division.[4]
The first Union Prime Minister (and former Transvaal Prime Minister), General Botha, assembled an electoral alliance before the first Union election. This grouping was composed of the governing parties of three of the colonies being united and some individual politicians from Natal (which did not have a pre-Union party system).
The colonial parties involved were:
The 'Unionist Party of South Africa was formed, in May 1910, under the leadership of Leander Starr Jameson (a former Prime Minister of Cape Colony), by the merger of the three colonial opposition parties joined by some individual politicians from Natal.
The parties merged into the Unionist Party were the:
The party was a pro-British conservative party. It favoured the maintenance of a pro-British political culture in South Africa similar to that present in the other 'white dominions'.
The South African Labour Party, formed in March 1910 following discussions between trade unions, the Transvaal Independent Labour Party and the Natal Labour Party, was a professedly socialist party representing the interests of the white working class. The party leader was Colonel F. H. P. Creswell.[5]
Two Independent Unionists were elected unopposed.[7]