Everything about Australian Federal Election 1901 totally explained
| Federal election major party leaders |
| 1901 1903 1906 |
Protectionist Party
Edmund Barton
Prime Minister
Parliament: 0 years
Leader since: 1901
Division: Hunter
WIN
|
Free Trade Party
George Reid
Opposition leader
Parliament: 0 years
Leader since: 1901
Division: East Sydney
|
Federal elections for the inaugural
Parliament of Australia were held in
Australia on
29 March and
30 March 1901 following
Federation and the establishment of the
Commonwealth of Australia. The election resulted in a win for
Edmund Barton's
Protectionist Party with 31 of 75 seats in a
minority government with
Labour's 14 seats against
George Reid's
Free Trade Party on 28 seats. The event would be important for setting the template for future federal elections and the fact that those elected determined much of the character of Australian parliamentary democracy and protocol from then to the present day.
House of Reps 1901-03 (FPTP) — Turnout 56.68% (Non-CV) — Informal 1.65%>
| |
Party |
Votes |
% |
Swing |
Seats |
Change |
| |
Protectionist Party |
185,943 |
36.75 |
* |
31 |
* |
(6 elected unopposed) |
| |
Free Trade Party |
151,960 |
30.03 |
* |
28 |
* |
| |
State Labour Parties |
79,736 |
15.76 |
* |
14 |
* |
| |
Independents |
8,384 |
1.66 |
* |
2 |
* |
| |
Other |
79,949 |
15.80 |
* |
0 |
* |
| |
Total |
505,972 |
|
|
75 |
|
| |
Protectionist/Labour |
WIN |
|
|
45 |
|
| |
Free Trade Party |
|
|
|
28 |
|
Background
Following the
federation of:
on
1 January 1901 to form the
Commonwealth of Australia, an election was announced for
29 March (in Western Australia, Victoria, New South Wales and Tasmania) and
30 March 1901 (in South Australia and Queensland) to elect the inaugural members of federal
parliament.
New Zealand self-excluded from the federation of Australia, resulting in
Richard Seddon being the first
Prime Minister of New Zealand.
Edmund Barton had been called upon to form the first Commonwealth Cabinet in December 1900 and his cabinet would be contesting the poll as the incumbent government.
Voting and Enrolment
Voting franchise was according to each state's specific electoral laws. South Australian and Western Australian women were enfranchised while in the other states they couldn't vote. Tasmania retained a small property qualification for voting, but in the other states all males over 21 could vote. Only in South Australia and Tasmania, however, were
indigneous Australians even theoretically entitled to vote. A few may have done so in South Australia.
Voting was voluntary throughout Australia and candidates were elected by a first past the post voting system. In South Australia, voters were required to mark the box opposite their preferred candidates while in other states voters were required to cross out the names of non-preferred candidates.
Parties Contesting the Election
The parties contesting the election were the
Protectionist Party, led by Prime Minister Edmund Barton, and the
Free Trade Party, unofficially led by former
New South Wales Premier George Reid. There was no national Labour party, but in five of the six states local Labour parties contested the elections - in Tasmania, where there was no Labour party,
King O'Malley was elected as an independent labour candidate. There were also a number of independents of various political leanings and a New South Wales Senate ticket called the "Socialist Six", comprising Labour members in conflict with the official party.
The Protectionists advocated the protection of local industries through the imposition of
tariffs on imported goods, the construction of a transcontinental railway, a uniform railway gauge, uniform suffrage, aged pensions and defending the Australian constitution from radicals. The party used the colour red throughout the campaign. In addition to Barton, Protectionist candidates included many of the leading political figures from colonial Australia, including future Prime Minister
Alfred Deakin,
Charles Kingston and Sir
John Forrest. Originally
William Lyne was chosen over
Edmund Barton as interim
Prime Minister by the
Governor-General,
John Hope, 1st Marquess of Linlithgow, in what would later be known as the
Hopetoun Blunder.
The Free Traders (to give their official title "Australian Free Trade and Liberal Association") advocated the dismantling of the tariff system, a transcontinental railway, and believed that aged pensions should be left to the states. As many of the policies of the Protectionists and Free Traders were similar, the Free Traders campaigned heavily on tariffs, with Reid stating that he wanted the election to be a plebiscite on tariffs. The party used the colour blue throughout the campaign. In addition to Reid, who believed he should have been appointed Prime Minister instead of Barton as he considered himself the bigger political figure, Free Trade candidates included Reid's unofficial deputy
Patrick Glynn, future Prime Minister
Joseph Cook and
William Irvine.
Labour advocated old age pensions, electoral reform, a national army, compulsory arbitration of industrial disputes and a national referendum to decide issues that would otherwise lead to a double dissolution of parliament. Senior Labour candidates included future Prime Ministers
Andrew Fisher,
Billy Hughes and
Chris Watson. Labour candidates were elected as individual state-based candidates - they met before the first sitting of Parliament on 8 May 1901 and agreed to form a federal Labour Party.
Chris Watson, a Sydney printer and former member of the
New South Wales Parliament, was elected the first leader of the Party.
All parties were in support of a
White Australia as was the norm at the time, with only
Bruce Smith, a Free Trader, fully opposing the legislation.
Electorates
The candidates were contesting 75
House of Representatives and 36
Senate seats. The 75 House of Representative seats were determined by population of each state, so that New South Wales was allocated 26, Victoria 23, Queensland nine, South Australia seven, Western Australia five and Tasmania five. The South Australian and Tasmanian colonial parliaments hadn't legislated for single member electorates and so their House of Representative members were elected from a single state wide electorate. Each state elected six Senators regardless of population. The Senate was elected on a "winner take all" basis rather than the current
proportional representation system.
Campaign
The campaign period officially commenced on
17 January 1901, although some candidates, particularly Reid, had been unofficially campaigning since December the previous year. The campaign was delayed when the death of
Queen Victoria on
19 January caused a cessation of campaigning, but soon got into full swing as candidates travelled widely to address lively public meetings. Reid drew the biggest crowds, including 8000 to a rally in
Newcastle and he campaigned widely, travelling to Victoria, Queensland and Tasmania, while
Patrick Glynn organised the Free Trade campaign in South Australia
These complaints aside, the administering of the first federal election was seen as a great success and a credit to the polling officials who, in some cases, were responsible for electorates larger than some European countries.
Results
The results showed the strong regional basis that has always characterised Australian politics. The Free Traders won most of the seats in New South Wales, apart from the border areas where the Protectionists were strong. The Protectionists won most of the seats in their stronghold, Victoria. Labour won some inner urban seats but most of their members represented pastoral and mining areas. In the smaller states many members had no fixed party loyalty and saw themselves as representing the interests of their states. Seven Prime Ministers of Australia (Barton,
Deakin, Watson, Reid, Fisher,
Joseph Cook and Hughes) were elected at this election, as were a number of influential former state Premiers (Sir
John Forrest, Lyne,
George Turner,
Anderson Dawson,
Philip Fysh and
Charles Kingston among them).
With no past to live down, Barton's Protectionist ministry had all the advantages of incumbency with none of the problems, which meant that a Protectionist victory was almost a certainty. Barton and his ministry were returned, although they'd to rely on Labour support to pass legislation. Although the Protectionists remained in government, however, many observers saw the result as a moral victory for Free Trade (who won more seats than the Protectionists in the three smallest states of South Australia, Tasmania and Western Australia). Labour also performed better than expected, particularly after the post-election recruitment of O'Malley. In the federal Parliament, where Labor was the smallest of the three parties, but held the balance of power, Chris Watson pursued the same policy as Labor had done in the colonial parliaments. He kept the
Protectionist governments of
Edmund Barton and
Alfred Deakin in office, in exchange for legislative concessions including the immensely popular
White Australia policy. Such was the overwhelming support for a White Australia by the electorate and the three political parties that the
Immigration Restriction Act 1901 was the first piece of legislation passed by the nascent parliament.
The average national voting turnout was 60% of enrolled voters, with the
Division of Newcastle gaining the best result of 97% while the
Division of Fremantle recorded the lowest turnout (30%).
Of the two elected independents, both were from
Queensland.
James Wilkinson, elected to the seat of
Moreton, was a former member of the
Labour Party, and rejoined the party in 1903.
Alexander Paterson, representing
Capricornia, had no political affiliation, but retired in 1903.
Further Information
Get more info on 'Australian Federal Election 1901'.
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