October 1911 Liverpool Plains state by-election explained

A by-election was held for the New South Wales Legislative Assembly electorate of Liverpool Plains on 28 October 1911 because the Elections and Qualifications Committee declared that the election of John Perry at the by-election on 16 August 1911 was void. Perry had been declared as winning the seat, with a margin of 3 votes and 91 informal votes, and William Ashford challenged the result before the Elections and Qualifications Committee.[1]

The Committee recounted the votes and held that Perry and Ashford had tied on 2,915 votes each.[2] The provision for a tie only referred to the returning officer as having a casting vote, and he had already concluded his task in returning the writ.[3] The Committee declared that the election was void.[4]

Dates

Date Event
3 October 1911Election declared void.
6 October 1911Writ of election issued by the Speaker of the Legislative Assembly.[5]
16 October 1911Nominations
28 October 1911Polling day
14 November 1911Return of writ

Results

The Elections and Qualifications Committee declared the August by-election void.

See also

Notes and References

  1. News: Petition of William George Ashford . . 127 . 19 September 1911 . 2 December 2019 . 5065 . Trove.
  2. News: Liverpool Plains . . 27 September 1911 . 3 December 2019 . 16 . Trove.
  3. News: A dead heat . . 27 September 1911 . 3 December 2019 . 9 . Trove.
  4. News: Unseated: Liberals lose a member . . 4 October 1911 . 2 December 2019 . 17 . Trove.
  5. News: Writ of election: Liverpool Plains . . 138 . 6 October 1911 . 3 December 2019 . 5423 . Trove.