1934 Southern Rhodesian general election explained

Election Name:1934 Southern Rhodesian general election
Country:Southern Rhodesia
Type:parliamentary
Ongoing:no
Previous Election:1933 Southern Rhodesian general election
Previous Year:1933
Next Election:1939 Southern Rhodesian general election
Next Year:1939
Seats For Election:All 30 seats in the Legislative Assembly
Majority Seats:16
Turnout:64.6%
Image1:Huggins.jpg
Leader1:Godfrey Huggins
Party1:United Rhodesia Party
Leaders Seat1:Salisbury district
Last Election1:
Seats1:24
Seat Change1:New
Popular Vote1:14,813
Percentage1:64.01%
Leader2:Harry Davies
Party2:Rhodesia Labour Party
Last Election2:5 seats
Seats2:5
Popular Vote2:6,092
Percentage2:26.32%
Party3:Reform Party (Southern Rhodesia)
Seats3:1
Seat Change3:15
Popular Vote3:2,237
Percentage3:9.67%
Prime Minister
Before Election:Godfrey Huggins
Before Party:United Federal Party
After Election:Godfrey Huggins
After Party:United Federal Party

General elections were held in Southern Rhodesia on 7 November 1934, fourth elections since the colony of Southern Rhodesia was granted self-government. The elections were called only a year after the previous elections when the Prime Minister, Godfrey Huggins, formed the United Party as a merger of the conservative section of his Reform Party and the former governing Rhodesia Party. Huggins succeeded in winning a landslide, defeating all but one of his Reform Party opponents.

Electoral system

No changes were made to the franchise, the procedure of elections, or electoral boundaries since the previous election.

Political parties

The Reform Party was believed by many in Rhodesia to be a left-wing party but Huggins had presented a cautiously conservative Cabinet after winning power in 1933. In particular, Finance Minister Jacob Smit was a strong believer in conventional economics and opponent of Keynesianism. The course of government led eventually to a confrontration in August 1934 with the left-wing of the party over reform to the Rhodesian railways. Huggins decided to approach Sir Percy Fynn, leader of the Rhodesian Party, who pledged support for a National Government under Huggins.

However, the Acting Governor refused a dissolution on the grounds that the Assembly had many years left, and the government had not been defeated. Huggins persuaded the majority of the Executive of the Reform Party to suspend the party's constitution to allow a National Government on 17 September, and then formed the United Party with Fynn, asking a second time for a dissolution on the basis of a changed party alignment. This time the Acting Governor acceded.

Results

By constituency

Constituency
Electorate and turnout
CandidatePartyVotes
BULAWAYO CENTRAL
Two members
2,018 (61.4%)
James CowdenUP683
Donald MacintyreLab654
Arthur James ButlerUP604
Edward Jonathan DaviesLab536
BULAWAYO NORTH
Two members
1,989 (65.1%)
John Banks BradyUP967
Allan Ross WelshUP910
David BennieLab421
Frederick MartinLab291
BULAWAYO SOUTH
1,257 (70.6%)
Harry Herbert DaviesLab458
Hugh BeadleUP430
CHARTER
623
Ernest Lucas GuestUPunopposed
EASTERN
886
John Louis MartinUPunopposed
GATOOMA
842 (77.3%)
William Sydney SeniorUP366
Thomas Alfred KimbleLab285
GWANDA
677 (70.2%)
Sir Hugh Grenville WilliamsRef257
Herbert Hildeyard PhillipsUP218
GWELO
1,048 (63.2%)
Frank Delano ThompsonUP377
Albert HillLab285
HARTLEY
571 (79.5%)
James Joseph ConwayUP256
Arthur Bertram Shepherd-CrossRef117
Christopher HoldernessLab81
INSIZA
644 (69.9%)
Robert Clarkson TredgoldUP273
Leo George RobinsonLab110
Joseph HusseyRef67
INYATI
756 (67.7%)
Frank Ernest HarrisUP334
John BazeleyLab178
LOMAGUNDI
818 (68.7%)
Lewis Aloys MacDonald HastingsUP365
Frank SmithRef197
MARANDELLAS
812 (58.6%)
Alfred William Vincent CrawleyUP251
Reginald Herbert Bruce DicksonRef225
MATOPO
966 (66.9%)
Robert Alexander FletcherUP412
Jonah William WhiteLab234
MAZOE
891 (64.8%)
Edward Walter Lionel NoaksUP467
Alexander Macintyre HutchinsonRef110
QUE QUE
793 (71.6%)
Charles Walter LeppingtonUP290
Edward Empson WebbLab243
John William WatkinsonRef35
RAYLTON
1,243 (70.7%)
Lawrence John Walter KellerLab440
William Hives EastwoodUP439
SALISBURY CENTRAL
Two members
2,257 (66.6%)
Jacob Hendrik SmitUP1,125
Robert Thomson AndersonUP848
James Kerr TaylorLab335
Roger Edward DownesLab315
Charles OlleyRef245
Neil Housman WilsonRef204
SALISBURY DISTRICT
966 (76.4%)
Godfrey HugginsUP519
Thomas NangleRef219
SALISBURY NORTH
Two members
2,016 (69.7%)
Vernon Arthur LewisUP1,208
Percival Donald Leslie FynnUP1,198
William Lane MitchellRef233
William MartinLab172
SALISBURY SOUTH
1,240 (71.5%)
George Henry WalkerLab435
Alexander Daniel KirsteinUP350
Mrs. Otilia LiebermannRef101
SELUKWE
818 (68.7%)
Robert Dunipace GilchristUP416
Ernest Edward Fitzroy BlackwellRef146
UMTALI NORTH
864 (66.9%)
Donald Murray SomervilleUP429
Albert HolmanLab149
UMTALI SOUTH
761 (75.7%)
Jonathan Hunter MalcolmLab329
Edgar Cuthbert Fremantle WhiteheadUP247
VICTORIA
943 (76.6%)
William Alexander Eustace WintertonUP641
John DavidsonRef81
WANKIE
689 (57.9%)
Alexander Robert ThomsonUP258
William McDonaldLab141

Byelections

Hartley

James Joseph Conway died on 10 May 1935, leading to a byelection on 4 July 1935.

ConstituencyCandidatePartyVotes
HARTLEYRoger Edward DownesRef202
Charles Malcolm DavenportUP146
Thomas Alfred KimbleLab79

Selukwe

Robert Dunipace Gilchrist resigned on 30 June 1935, leading to a byelection on 28 August 1935.

ConstituencyCandidatePartyVotes
SELUKWEMax DanzigerUP353
Henry Frederick EdensorRef182
Ernest MillingtonInd UP117

Umtali South

Following his death, there was a byelection to replace Jonathan Hunter Malcolm on 15 September 1936.

Constituency
Electorate and turnout
CandidatePartyVotes
UMTALI SOUTH
800 (62.0%)
James Brown ListerLab244
Edgar Cuthbert Fremantle WhiteheadUP153
William Arthur RailRef99

Salisbury North

Following his resignation on 31 July 1936, there was a byelection to replace Vernon Arthur Lewis on 21 September 1936.

Constituency
Electorate and turnout
CandidatePartyVotes
SALISBURY NORTH
2,035 (54.9%)
Harry BertinUP595
John Richard Dendy YoungRef522

Eastern

John Louis Martin died on 28 May 1938 and a byelection to replace him was held on 15 August 1938.

Constituency
Electorate and turnout
CandidatePartyVotes
EASTERN
751 (81.4%)
Jacobus Petrus De KockUP222
Douglas AbrahamsonUNP160
Reginald Herbert Bruce DicksonRef150
Roelof Hendrik VenterLab79

Hartley

Following his death, there was a byelection to replace Roger Edward Downes on 30 August 1938.

Constituency
Electorate and turnout
CandidatePartyVotes
HARTLEY
584 (76.7%)
Henry Hamilton BeamishInd144
Thomas James GoldingRP125
Leslie Manfred Noel HodsonUP118
Thomas George GibsonRef61

References