General elections were held in Fiji in July, August and September 1920.
The Legislative Council consisted of 12 official members (eleven civil servants and a British subject not holding public office),[1] seven elected Europeans and two appointed Fijians. The Governor served as President of the Council.
The Europeans were elected from six constituencies; Eastern, Northern, Southern, Suva, Vanua Levu & Taveuni and Western. Voting was restricted to men aged 21 or over who had been born to European parents (or a European father and was able to read, speak and write English) who were British subjects and had been continuously resident in Fiji for 12 months, either owning at least £20 of freehold or leasehold property or having an annual income of at least £120, and were not on the public payroll.[1]
Constituency | Geographical area | Election date | |
---|---|---|---|
Eastern | Lau Province, Lomaiviti Province | 30 July | |
Northern | Ba District, Colo North Province, Ra Province | ||
Southern | Colo East Province, Kadavu Province, Naitasiri Province, Namosi Province, Rewa Province (except Suva), Serua Province, Tailevu Province | 2 September | |
Suva | Suva Municipality | 21 August | |
Bua Province, Cakaudrove Province, Macuata Province | 2 September | ||
Western | Colo West Province, Lautoka District, Nadi District, Nadroga Province | 3 September |
Constituency | Candidate | Votes | % | Notes | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Eastern | John Maynard Hedstrom | Unopposed | Re-elected | ||
align=left rowspan=3 | Northern | Frederick Clapcott | 60 | 58.3 | Re-elected |
L. Davidson | 42 | 40.8 | |||
N.S. Chalmers | 1 | 1.0 | |||
align=left rowspan=3 | Southern | Francis Riemenschneider | 80 | 55.9 | Elected |
Robert Crompton | 63 | 44.1 | Unseated | ||
Informal votes | 1 | – | |||
align=left rowspan=4 | Suva | Henry Milne Scott | 242 | 36.3 | Re-elected |
Henry Marks | 194 | 29.1 | Re-elected | ||
S.H. Ellis | 123 | 18.5 | |||
James Burton Turner | 107 | 16.1 | |||
align=left rowspan=4 | Vanua Levu & Taveuni | Herbert Valentine Tarte | 62 | 45.9 | Elected |
W.C. Fisher | 38 | 28.1 | |||
E. Duncan | 35 | 25.9 | |||
Informal votes | 3 | – | |||
align=left rowspan=3 | Western | Charles Wimbledon Thomas | 63 | 56.3 | Elected |
John Percy Bayly | 49 | 43.8 | |||
Informal votes | 4 | – | |||
align=left colspan=5 | Source: Ali |
The nominated members were appointed on 15 October; one of the Fijian posts was left unfilled.
Position | Member | |
---|---|---|
Governor (President) | Cecil Hunter-Rodwell | |
Agent-General of Immigration | Percy Robert Backhouse | |
Attorney General | Alfred Karney Young | |
Chief Medical Officer | George Cecil Strathairn | |
Colonial Postmaster | Herbert Paul St. Julian | |
Colonial Secretary | Thomas Edward Fell | |
Commissioner of Lands | Dyson Blair | |
Commissioner of Works | Henry Berry Lees | |
District Commissioner, Rewa | Richard Rutledge Kane | |
Receiver General | William Henry Brabant | |
Secretary for Native Affairs | Douglas Ray Stewart | |
Superintendent of Agriculture | Charles Henry Knowles | |
Representing Indo-Fijians | Badri Maharaj | |
Fijian member | Joni Antonio Rabici | |
Source: Fiji Blue Book[2] |
A by-election was held for the Vanua Levu and Taveuni seat on 4 October 1922, which was won by William Edmund Willoughby-Tottenham.[3]