1959 Fijian general election explained

General elections were held in Fiji in September 1959, the last in which women and ethnic Fijians were still barred from voting. Voting took place in the Eastern constituencies between 5 and 12 September, and in the Northern and Western and Southern constituencies on 12 September.[1]

Electoral system

The Legislative Council consisted of 32 members, including 16 'official' members who were civil servants, fifteen 'unofficial' members (five Europeans, five Fijians and five Indo-Fijians), and the Governor sitting as President of the Council.

For Europeans and Indo-Fijians, three of the five representatives were elected from single-member constituencies, with the other two appointed by the Governor. All five Fijian members were appointed from a list of ten candidates submitted by the Great Council of Chiefs.[2]

Voting for Europeans remained 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, and who either owned at least £20 of freehold or leasehold property or had an annual income of at least £120.[2] For Indo-Fijians, eligibility was also restricted to men aged 21 or over. They had to be a British subject or from British India, have lived continuously in the Fiji for at least two years, be able to read or write in English, Gujarati, Gurmukhi, Hindi, Tamil, Telugu or Urdu, and for the previous six months, have either owned property with an annual value of five years, had a net annual cash income of at least £75, or held a Government or municipal licence worth at least £5 annually.[2]

Results

ConstituencyCandidateVotes%Notes
European members
align=left rowspan=3EasternHarold Brockett Gibson24058.5Re-elected
Leslie Martin17041.5
Informal votes27
align=left rowspan=4Northern and WesternRonald Kermode29256.7Re-elected
James Sinclair White19738.3
Nathaniel Chalmers265.0
Informal votes20
align=left rowspan=3SouthernJohn Falvey46274.0Re-elected
Sergius Tetzner16226.0
Informal votes31
align=left colspan=2Total1,627100
align=left colspan=2Registered voters/turnout1,98582.0
Indo-Fijian members
align=left rowspan=4EasternVijay R. Singh86450.3Elected
Jamnadas Kanji49428.8
Muhammed Khan36021.0
Informal votes33
align=left rowspan=4Northern and WesternB. D. Lakshman2,63738.4Elected
James Madhavan2,15831.4Unseated
Ayodhya Prasad2,07530.2Unseated
Informal votes88
align=left rowspan=6SouthernAndrew Deoki1,87758.3Elected
K. B. Singh95029.5
Chambadan Manakadan Gopalan2216.9
Devendra Pathik892.8
Odin Ramrakha822.5
Informal votes76
align=left colspan=2Total12,004100
align=left colspan=2Registered voters/turnout14,06985.3
align=left colspan=5Source: Fiji Elections, Pacific Islands Monthly

Nominated members

Europeans
Charles Cayzer
John Moore
Fijians
Edward Cakobau
George Cakobau
Penaia Ganilau
Semesa Sikivou
Ravuama Vunivalu
Indo-Fijians
Sathi Narain
A. H. Sahu Khan
Source: Fiji Elections

Aftermath

A by-election was held in the Indian Eastern constituency in 1961, which was won by James Madhavan.[3]

Notes and References

  1. https://nla.gov.au/nla.obj-323562777/view?partId=nla.obj-323609630#page/n144/mode/1up/ Blood and Old Fiji LegCo
  2. http://www.oocities.org/girmitya/FijiElections/1940.htm 1940 Legislative Council Election
  3. http://fijielections.blogspot.com/2017/02/1959-fiji-legislative-council-elections.html 1959 Fiji Legislative Council elections