1962 Southern Rhodesian general election explained

Country:Southern Rhodesia
Type:parliamentary
Previous Election:1958 Southern Rhodesian general election
Previous Year:1958
Next Election:1965 Rhodesian general election
Next Year:1965
Seats For Election:All 65 seats in the Legislative Assembly
Majority Seats:33
Election Date:14 December 1962
Image1:Winston Field 1960.jpg
Leader1:Winston Field
Party1:Rhodesian Front
Last Election1:13
Seats1:35
Seat Change1: 22
Leader2:Edgar Whitehead
Party2:United Federal Party
Last Election2:17
Seats2:29
Seat Change2: 12
Prime Minister
Before Election:Edgar Whitehead
After Election:Winston Field
Before Party:United Federal Party
After Party:Rhodesian Front

General elections were held in Southern Rhodesia on 14 December 1962. Voters elected 65 members of the Legislative Assembly. The election was notable for bringing to power the Rhodesian Front, initially under Winston Field, which set the colony on the course for its eventual Unilateral Declaration of Independence.

Background

The election was the first held under the 1961 constitution which brought in a new electoral system. The chief issue in the elections was the future of the Federation of Rhodesia and Nyasaland, under which Southern Rhodesia formed a united country with Northern Rhodesia and Nyasaland, under the leadership of Sir Roy Welensky. The United Federal Party government of Sir Edgar Whitehead favoured continuation of the Federation in some form, together with moves towards multiracialism.

Opponents of the Federation had formed the Dominion Party but coming up to the election, the party had suffered division. The Rhodesia Reform Party had been formed by Ian Smith early in 1962 as a more moderate group. Dominion Party leader William Harper resigned in February 1962, stating that he intended this to be the catalyst towards the creation of a united opposition. By mid-March, the Dominion Party and the Rhodesia Reform Party had put together a broad plan for the new Rhodesian Front with Winston Field, from the Dominion Party, as its leader. Field had to call for unity at the first RF congress in September 1962.

Electoral system

The electorate was divided into the 'A roll' and the 'B roll'. The 'A roll' and consisted of people meeting certain income and property qualifications, which were lowered if the person had more extensive education. This in practice meant that 95.2% of those on the A roll were of European descent. The 'B roll' which consisted of those meeting a lesser income cap or a lesser property cap, both lowered for those with a longer education. 91.3% of those on the B roll were of African descent, although some Europeans only qualified for this roll. The figures were exaggerated by a largely successful campaign on behalf of black African nationalist leaders to persuade their supporters not to register to boycott the election. Most black Africans did not qualify for either roll anyway.

There were two different types of place returning members to the House of Assembly. The colony was divided into 50 constituencies each returning a single member, and in addition, there were 15 districts which also returned one member each. For the constituencies, voters from the 'A roll' and the 'B roll' could both vote, with their votes of equal value. Due to the fact that the 'A roll' was substantially larger than the 'B roll', these constituencies were almost entirely elected by Rhodesians of European descent. Theoretically, if the 'B roll' votes was more than a quarter of the total, they would be reduced in value to a quarter, but in practice this never happened due to the low enrollment and low turnout.

Both rolls also voted for the district seats. However, the total votes from the 'A roll' were reduced to equal a quarter of those of the 'B roll' voters. This meant that the district seats were largely elected by Africans.

Campaign

There was a robust campaign, which all understood as leading to a watershed election. Political meetings saw a great deal of heckling. The RF was keen to reassure nervous voters that it supported some continued links with Northern Rhodesia, and campaigned for tougher enforcement of law and order and security. Both the UFP and the RF supported moves to independence but the RF was more keen, and stated that independence could be either within or without the Commonwealth.

The principal division was on race relations. The UFP leader Sir Edgar Whitehead pledged to appoint Southern Rhodesia's first African Minister should he be re-elected. The RF insisted that the UFP's moves were reckless and endangered Rhodesian society. They saw the 1961 constitution as opening the door to African dominance of Europeans "before the former has acquired adequate knowledge and experience of democratic government" and pointed to Kenya, where Europeans had been forced out of the country, as an example of what might happen. The UFP regarded the RF as reactionaries and throwbacks, and a UFP poster depicted a white man identified as an RF supporter with his head literally in the sand.

Results

A win by the UFP was generally expected. The Examiner magazine said "Let no one doubt that the U.F.P. will win hands down; the Establishment always does in Southern Rhodesia." However, much to everyone's surprise (including their own), the RF found itself with a large majority of the Constituencies and an overall majority in the House of Assembly. The UFP took 14 out of 15 of the Districts, with one (Highfield) going to Dr Ahrn Palley as an Independent candidate. The UFP thus numbered 14 Africans out of a caucus of 29, but the party soon ceased to be a force in Rhodesian politics; from 1965 then until the end of minority rule in 1979 no opposition members were elected from the primarily European constituencies, Rhodesia thus would have a dominant party system.

PartyConstituencyDistrictTotal
seats
+/–
A rollB rollTotalA rollA roll devaluedB rollTotal
Votes%Votes%Votes%SeatsVotes%Votes%Votes%Votes%Seats
bgcolor=Rhodesian Front37,92056.3536215.1138,28254.943535,07054.0335457.1930611.8766020.65035+22
bgcolor=United Federal Party28,51742.381,94681.2230,46343.721528,05543.2324739.901,87072.562,11766.241429+12
Central Africa Party750.11291.211040.1501,7642.72101.6235913.9336911.5500New
bgcolor=Independents7761.15592.468351.200150.0281.29421.63501.5611+1
align=left colspan=2Total67,288100.002,396100.0069,684100.005064,904100.00619100.002,577100.003,196100.001565+35
align=left colspan=2Valid votes69,68497.7067,48196.13
align=left colspan=2Invalid votes1,6442.302,7143.87
align=left colspan=2Total votes71,328100.0070,195100.00
align=left colspan=2Registered voters/turnout90,78510,632101,41770.3390,78510,632101,41769.21
align=left colspan=20Source: Willson

By constituency

Constituency
Electorate and turnout
CandidatePartyA RollB RollTotal
VotesVotesVotes%
ARUNDEL
A 1,885 (81.6%)
B 13 (38.5%)
Blair Vincent EwingUFP926493060.3
Olive Hope RobertsonRF612161339.7
AVONDALE
A 1,873 (77.0%)
B 10 (40.0%)
Albert Rubidge Washington StumblesRF813281556.3
Ian Radcliffe SelmerUFP630263243.7
BELLEVUE
A 1,899 (81.0%)
B 7 (28.6%)
Robert PattersonRF865186656.2
John Gustav Haycraft GassonUFP674167543.8
BELVEDERE
A 1,800 (77.4%)
B 13 (69.2%)
Gordon Foster ThomasUFP736874453.0
Dennis DivarisRF658165947.0
BORROWDALE
A 1,914 (78.7%)
B 25 (48.0%)
Peter Heaton GreyUFP977998664.9
Thomas Ian Fraser SandemanRF530353335.1
BRAESIDE
A 1,859 (78.5%)
B 27 (44.4%)
Herbert Douglas TannerRF931493563.6
Michael Eddington CurrieUFP528853636.4
BULAWAYO CENTRAL
A 1,841 (68.1%)
B 41 (63.4%)
Benny GoldsteinUFP6282265050.8
Norman Munro CampbellRF626463049.2
BULAWAYO DISTRICT
A 1,765 (70.4%)
B 708 (19.6%)
Arthur Gale LangfordRF6921070250.8
Bryan Roy ThompsonUFP47510057541.6
Benjamin BaronCAP75291047.5
BULAWAYO EAST
A 1,932 (77.8%)
B 17 (52.9%)
Abraham Eliezer AbrahamsonUFP1,05771,06470.4
Arthur McCarterRF446244829.6
BULAWAYO NORTH
A 1,810 (76.1%)
B 30 (60.0%)
John WrathallRF724773152.4
Cyril James HattyUFP6531166447.6
BULAWAYO SOUTH
A 1,895 (65.8%)
B 45 (57.8%)
John William PhillipsRF6981170955.7
Robert Godlonton HooleUFP5491556444.3
CENTRAL
A 1,669 (73.2%)
B 442 (18.8%)
William Joseph John CaryRF8741388768.0
Anthony John Arthur PeckUFP3477041732.0
CHARTER
A 1,611 (71.1%)
B 847 (17.1%)
Clifford Walter DupontRF8082483264.4
Francis Seymour Brian WilloughbyUFP33812145935.6
EASTERN
A 1,884 (71.3%)
B 508 (20.3%)
Alan James Wroughton MacLeodRF7681878654.3
Charles Fitzwilliam Clifford Verry CadizUFP5768566145.7
GATOOMA
A 1,561 (72.3%)
B 215 (25.6%)
William John HarperRF784578966.6
Robert Norman WellsUFP3455039533.4
GREENDALE
A 1,814 (76.8%)
B 195 (7.7%)
Mark PartridgeRF779378255.5
Herbert Jack QuintonUFP6151262744.5
GREENWOOD
A 1,869 (71.7%)
B 9 (33.3%)
William Vernon BrelsfordUFP716171753.4
William Johnstone JarvisRF532align="right"-53239.6
Ivor PitchInd922947.0
GWEBI
A 1,823 (82.3%)
B 254 (25.6%)
Lord James Angus GrahamRF995131,00864.4
John Derek CrozierUFP5055255735.6
GWELO
A 1,697 (70.5%)
B 26 (61.5%)
Desmond Lardner-BurkeRF768677463.8
Eileen DoyleUFP4291043936.2
GWELO RURAL
A 1,822 (73.2%)
B 143 (18.2%)
Charles Falcon Scott ClarkRF938494269.3
John Douglas DownsUFP3952241730.7
HARTLEY
A 1,551 (78.4%)
B 338 (24.0%)
P. K. van der BylRF814782163.3
Geoffrey Stanhope CourtneyUFP4027447636.7
HATFIELD
A 1,894 (77.7%)
B 20 (20.0%)
John GauntRF991499567.4
Stewart Edward Aitken-CadeUFP481align="right"-48132.6
HIGHLANDS NORTH
A 1,760 (81.0%)
B 10 (70.0%)
Geoffrey Ellman BrownUFP850685659.7
William Robert RumboldRF576157740.3
HIGHLANDS SOUTH
A 1,749 (75.2%)
B 17 (58.8%)
Alan David ButlerUFP668967751.1
Guy Openshaw ListerRF647164848.9
HILLCREST
A 1,906 (79.9%)
B 9 (55.6%)
John Arthur NewingtonRF877388057.6
Michael Leib AylUFP646264842.4
HILLSIDE
A 1,840 (79.9%)
B 8 (50.0%)
Maureen Thelma WatsonUFP819382255.7
William Redpath KinleysideRF652165344.3
JAMESON
A 1,805 (77.2%)
B 18 (22.2%)
Jack HowmanRF864286662.0
Josiah Douglas CarterUFP493149435.3
William Alfred PorterInd371382.7
LOMAGUNDI
A 2,041 (75.1%)
B 327 (28.4%)
Lance Bales SmithRF990131,00361.7
Robert Gordon Hoskins-DaviesUFP5428062238.3
MABELREIGN
A 1,866 (78.8%)
B 11 (72.7%)
Patrick Palmer-OwenRF882388559.8
William Daniel GaleUFP589559440.2
MARANDELLAS
A 1,676 (75.9%)
B 354 (25.7%)
Winston FieldRF746975555.4
John Peacey DankwertsUFP5268260844.6
MARLBOROUGH
A 1,786 (82.0%)
B 14 (64.3%)
Harry ReedmanRF938align="right"-93863.6
John Desmond BurrowsUFP527953636.4
MATOBO
A 1,777 (70.2%)
B 361 (16.3%)
Harry RobertsRF662867051.3
Edward William KirbyUFP5855163648.7
MAZOE
A 2,048 (79.0%)
B 467 (27.0%)
George Rollo HaymanRF9561697255.8
Neil Patrick HammondUFP66111077144.2
MILTON PARK
A 1,851 (78.9%)
B 14 (35.7%)
William Alexander Eustace WintertonUFP868587359.6
Dorothy Patricia CooperRF592align="right"-59240.4
MTOKO
A 1,526 (76.3%)
B 488 (24.0%)
George Roger John HackwillUFP5648965351.0
Ronald William RankineRF6002862849.0
QUEEN'S PARK
A 2,054 (73.7%)
B 18 (61.1%)
Ian Finlay McLeanRF1,147101,15775.9
Laurence AyersUFP366136724.1
QUE QUE
A 1,751 (73.6%)
B 114 (35.1%)
Andrew DunlopRF718572354.4
Morris Isaac HirschUFP5713560645.6
RAYLTON
A 1,917 (74.1%)
B 38 (47.4%)
Thomas Alexander PinchenRF851185259.2
Patrick LennonUFP5691758640.8
RUSAPE
A 1,729 (73.0%)
B 580 (26.9%)
Philip van HeerdenRF9621998169.2
Patrick Joseph Beary PowerUFP30013743730.8
SALISBURY CENTRAL
A 1,780 (67.2%)
B 22 (63.6%)
Jeremiah Robert RyanRF621462551.6
Ernest Jackson WhitakerUFP5761058648.4
SALISBURY CITY
A 1,837 (60.7%)
B 38 (44.7%)
John Roger NicholsonUFP6191263155.7
John PlagisRF496550144.3
SALISBURY NORTH
A 1,935 (76.6%)
B 43 (79.1%)
Sir Edgar WhiteheadUFP8713190259.5
Nicholas CambitzisRF611361440.5
SHABANI
A 1,621 (66.7%)
B 435 (14.7%)
Ian Birt Harper DillonRF7561176766.0
George Edward MoorcroftUFP3173935631.0
Ronald John Hayes AuretInd914232.0
UMTALI EAST
A 1,852 (71.8%)
B 11 (100%)
Bernard Horace MussetRF805681160.5
Leslie Herbert MorrisUFP525553039.5
UMTALI WEST
A 1,920 (65.1%)
B 164 (25.0%)
John ChristieRF744875258.2
Harold Owen TrouncerUFP5063353941.8
UMZINGWANE
A 1,827 (70.1%)
B 442 (15.6%)
Ian SmithRF797680359.5
Reginald Ephraim SagarUFP4836354640.5
VICTORIA
A 1,593 (69.4%)
B 808 (30.1%)
George Holland HartleyRF7222374555.3
Andrea ZographosUFP38322060344.7
WANKIE
A 1,846 (68.5%)
B 550 (20.4%)
George Wilburn RudlandRF7541476855.8
Basil Henry George SparrowUFP5119860944.2
WATERFALLS
A 1,946 (76.7%)
B 59 (49.2%)
Arthur Philip SmithRF1,04061,04668.7
Eric Peter GardnerUFP4212044129.0
Andrew John LawsonInd323352.3
WILLOWVALE
A 1,878 (56.1%)
B 1,279 (11.0%)
Gerald Joseph RaftopoulosUFP4778956647.4
Victor Patrick OdendaalRF4511346438.9
Gaston Thomas ThornicroftInd1253916413.7
Second Count
Gerald Joseph RaftopoulosUFP4829157355.1
Victor Patrick OdendaalRF4521446644.9

District results

Constituency
Electorate and turnout
CandidatePartyA RollB RollTotal
VotesDevaluedVotesVotes%
BELINGWE
A 2,221 (62.9%)
B 649 (22.0%)
Jotham Siyapela HoveUFP4451110211363.8
Samson John MazibisoCAP862313318.6
Gijima MsindoRF86621103117.5
BINDURA
A 18,664 (76.6%)
B 644 (33.2%)
Paul Harbinett Joseph ChanetsaUFP7,6332816619473.2
Aloys Tayengwa ChinyaniRF6,13222173914.7
John William HornCAP5291313212.1
GOKWE
A 7,901 (70.3%)
B 726 (27.1%)
Philip Elijah ChigogoUFP1,8511613815462.9
Job Mahambi KumaloRF3,56831265723.3
Herbert Joseph ThompsonCAP1331333413.9
HIGHFIELD
A 195 (19.0%)
B 651 (13.2%)
Ahrn PalleyInd158425047.6
Gahadzikwa Albert ChazaUFP1910364643.8
Ralph Drew PalmerCAP21787.6
Patrick Joseph GeoffreyRF1align="right"-111.0
Second count
Ahrn PalleyInd158425047.6
Gahadzikwa Albert ChazaUFP1911364744.8
Ralph Drew PalmerCAP21787.6
Third count
Ahrn PalleyInd158425052.1
Gahadzikwa Albert ChazaUFP1910364647.9
HUNYANI
A 8,559 (74.5%)
B 619 (23.4%)
Luke Mangarazi KandengwaUFP2,13812879955.0
Mathew KwendaRF3,95022254726.1
Anthony Whitehead HodgesCAP2881333418.9
INYAZURA
A 2,002 (72.0%)
B 757 (28.0%)
Ambrose Charles MajongweUFP4451617218871.2
Titus NdoroRF98036205621.2
James Caleb MatsikaCAP17align="right"-20207.6
MAGONDI
A 3,619 (75.7%)
B 808 (26.2%)
William KawaraUFP8631615817466.2
Elijah MamboRF1,83235134818.2
Eric GwanzuraCAP44align="right"-414115.6
MAKABUSI
A 12,116 (66.7%)
B 652 (23.0%)
Patrick John Daniel RubatikaUFP3,6591610011662.3
Martin Geoffrey EdwardsRF3,94218213921.0
Miles Anthony PedderCAP4762293116.7
MANGWENDI
A 2,929 (73.4%)
B 665 (23.9%)
Titus John HlazoUFP94717829950.3
Stephen Zachious BwanyaRF1,16821476834.5
Richard ChikosiCAP36align="right"-303015.2
MANICALAND
A 5,656 (69.8%)
B 683 (26.6%)
Percy Hudson M'kuduUFP1,6261811813660.2
Walter Dumisani ChawhetaRF2,22425244921.7
Ratilal Damodar DevchandCAP1001404118.1
MATABELELAND NORTH
A 19,483 (71.4%)
B 743 (30.4%)
Joel Msindo BehaneUFP6,3942517720271.9
Aaron MapisaRF7,51930497928.1
MATABELELAND SOUTH
A 3,604 (67.6%)
B 803 (16.2%)
Julius MasolaUFP1,0511312013382.6
Paul ZekareRF1,38618102817.4
MPOPOMA
A 1,231 (64.9%)
B 707 (20.7%)
Cephas HlabanganaUFP3941711713474.4
Phibian Percy John KadzutuRF401222312.8
Dick Albert MasundaCAP3651672312.8
NARIRA
A 1,012 (65.3%)
B 717 (16.0%)
Ranches Chereni MakayaUFP1536838962.7
Isaac Hanzi SamuriwoRF50021153625.3
Daniel Jollow Renasu MasawiCAP8align="right"-171712.0
NDANGA
A 1,593 (67.7%)
B 808 (32.2%)
Josiah GondoUFP4372621424074.1
Lazarus DembetembeRF63738215918.2
David Alphabet TinagoCAP5align="right"-25257.7

Byelections

Matobo

Harry Roberts died on 13 March 1963, which led to a byelection in Matobo on 23 May 1963.

Constituency
Electorate and turnout
CandidatePartyA RollB RollTotal
VotesVotesVotes%
MATOBOSherwood Alexander WilmotRF825282759.8
Edward William KirbyUFP36219455640.2

Arundel

Blair Ewing resigned from Parliament on 4 August 1964 for business reasons, leading to a byelection in the Arundel constituency on 1 October 1964. Sir Roy Welensky, former Prime Minister of the Federation of Rhodesia and Nyasaland, returned to politics in an attempt to regain the seat; prompted by this, the Rhodesian Front decided that a leading party member newly appointed as Deputy Prime Minister, Clifford Dupont, should give up his seat at Charter to oppose him. Sir Roy was unsuccessful, polling only 633 votes to 1,079 for Dupont.

Avondale

The appointment of A.R.W. Stumbles as Speaker of the Southern Rhodesian Parliament on 28 July 1964 led to his resignation on 1 August 1964. A byelection in his Avondale constituency was held on the same day as that at Arundel. Jack William Pithey, for the Rhodesian Front, won with 1,042 votes to 416 for Sidney Sawyer.

Charter

Following Clifford Dupont's resignation on 15 September 1964 to contest Arundel, Roger Tancred Robert Hawkins was elected unopposed on 6 November 1964, to follow him in his previous constituency.

Matabeleland South

Julius Masola died on 8 September 1964, leading to a byelection in the district of Matabeleland South on 26 November 1964. The result was:

Constituency
Electorate and turnout
CandidatePartyA RollB RollTotal
VotesDevaluedVotesVotes%
MATABELELAND SOUTH
A 3,834 (10.3%)
B 871 (16.9%)
Ephraim Jiho MhlangaRP317297110054.9
Daniel Hilson DubeInd766768245.1

References