1917_Australian_federal_election

1917 Australian federal election

1917 Australian federal election

Election for the 7th Parliament of Australia


The 1917 Australian federal election was held in Australia on 5 May 1917. All 75 seats in the House of Representatives and 18 of the 36 seats in the Senate were up for election. The incumbent Nationalist Party, led by Prime Minister Billy Hughes, defeated the opposition Labor Party led by Frank Tudor in a landslide.

Quick Facts All 75 seats in the House of Representatives 38 seats were needed for a majority in the House 18 (of the 36) seats in the Senate, Registered ...

Hughes, at the time a member of the ALP, had become prime minister when Andrew Fisher retired in 1915. The Australian Labor Party split of 1916 over the conscription issue had led Hughes and 24 other pro-conscription Labor MPs to split off as the National Labor Party, which was able to form a minority government supported by the Commonwealth Liberal Party under Joseph Cook. Later that year, National Labor and the Liberals merged to form the Nationalist Party, with Hughes as leader and Cook as deputy leader. The election was fought in the aftermath of the 1916 plebiscite on conscription, which had been narrowly defeated. The Nationalists won a decisive victory, securing the largest majority government since Federation. The ALP suffered a large electoral swing against it, losing almost seven percentage points of its vote share compared with 1914. The swing was magnified by the large number of former Labor MPs who followed Hughes out of the party. This election would be the last federal election using the first past the post election system as Australia switched to the preferential voting system in 1919.

This is the first of two elections (the other in 1922 also with Hughes as the incumbent Prime Minister), in which the incumbent Prime Minister, Hughes, had successfully transferred to another seat.

At this election, Hughes had abandoned West Sydney, which he won with 75.3% of the vote as the Labor candidate at the previous election in 1914, and moved to Bendigo instead, winning it as the Nationalist candidate: unlike 1922, Hughes made his seat transfer in 1917 by defeating that seat’s incumbent member, Alfred Hampson, for re-election, the only time that an incumbent Prime Minister has defeated another MP for his seat.

Except for the 1917 and 1922 elections, all other elections have seen the incumbent Prime Minister recontest the seat that they held prior to the election.

Results

House of Representatives

More information Party, Votes ...
Notes
  • Ten members were elected unopposed – seven Nationalist and three Labor.
  • The changes recorded for the Nationalist Party are with regard to the Commonwealth Liberal Party's performance in 1914.
More information Popular vote ...
More information Parliament seats ...

Senate

More information Party, Votes ...

Notes

Seats changing hands

More information Seat, Pre-1917 ...
  • Members listed in italics did not contest their seat at this election.

Post-election pendulum

Government seats
Nationalist Party
Marginal
Moreton (Qld) Hugh Sinclair NAT 00.1
Angas (SA) Paddy Glynn NAT 00.8
Kalgoorlie (WA) Edward Heitmann NAT 01.3
Herbert (Qld) Fred Bamford NAT 01.3
Fawkner (Vic) George Maxwell NAT 01.4
Calare (NSW) Henry Pigott NAT 01.8
Hume (NSW) Franc Falkiner NAT 01.9
Werriwa (NSW) John Lynch NAT 02.8
Oxley (Qld) James Bayley NAT 02.8
Wide Bay (Qld) Edward Corser NAT 02.9
Illawarra (NSW) Hector Lamond NAT 04.3
Wannon (Vic) Arthur Rodgers NAT 04.8
Hindmarsh (SA) William Archibald NAT 05.8
Fairly safe
Darling Downs (Qld) Littleton Groom NAT 06.1
Robertson (NSW) William Fleming NAT 06.2
Wakefield (SA) Richard Foster NAT 06.2
Indi (Vic) John Leckie NAT 06.2
Denison (Tas) William Laird Smith NAT 06.3
Gwydir (NSW) William Webster NAT 06.5
Grampians (Vic) Carty Salmon NAT 07.0
Eden-Monaro (NSW) Austin Chapman NAT 07.2
Corio (Vic) John Lister NAT 07.3
Bendigo (Vic) Billy Hughes NAT 07.4
Grey (SA) Alexander Poynton NAT 07.7
Darwin (Tas) Charles Howroyd NAT 08.8
Riverina (NSW) John Chanter NAT 09.2 vs IND
Bass (Tas) Alexander Poynton NAT 09.9
Safe
Corangamite (Vic) Chester Manifold NAT 10.4
Lang (NSW) Elliot Johnson NAT 10.4
Nepean (NSW) Richard Orchard NAT 10.5
Echuca (Vic) Albert Palmer NAT 10.7
Flinders (Vic) William Irvine NAT 11.2
Lilley (Qld) George Mackay NAT 12.7
Barker (SA) John Livingston NAT 13.9
Wilmot (Tas) Llewellyn Atkinson NAT 14.2
Boothby (SA) William Story NAT 14.5
Parkes (NSW) Bruce Smith NAT 15.4
Balaclava (Vic) William Watt NAT 16.6
Wentworth (NSW) Willie Kelly NAT 18.5
Fremantle (WA) Reginald Burchell NAT 18.9
Perth (WA) James Fowler NAT 19.5
Very safe
Henty (Vic) James Boyd NAT 20.6
Dampier (WA) Henry Gregory NAT 21.4
Gippsland (Vic) George Wise NAT 22.7
Parramatta (NSW) Joseph Cook NAT 23.8 vs IND
Richmond (NSW) Walter Massy-Greene NAT 25.2
Cowper (NSW) John Thomson NAT unopposed
Franklin (Tas) William McWilliams NAT unopposed
Kooyong (Vic) Robert Best NAT unopposed
New England (NSW) Percy Abbott NAT unopposed
North Sydney (NSW) Granville Ryrie NAT unopposed
Swan (WA) John Forrest NAT unopposed
Wimmera (Vic) Sydney Sampson NAT unopposed
Non-government seats
Australian Labor Party
Marginal
Macquarie (NSW) Samuel Nicholls ALP 00.0
Brisbane (Qld) William Finlayson ALP 00.0
Maribyrnong (Vic) James Fenton ALP 02.2
Capricornia (Qld) William Higgs ALP 02.3
Barrier (NSW) Michael Considine ALP 02.5 vs IND
Darling (NSW) Arthur Blakeley ALP 03.3
Hunter (NSW) Matthew Charlton ALP 03.4
Dalley (NSW) William Mahony ALP 04.0
Bourke (Vic) Frank Anstey ALP 04.5
Maranoa (Qld) Jim Page ALP 04.8
Fairly safe
Newcastle (NSW) David Watkins ALP 08.0
Safe
Melbourne (Vic) William Maloney ALP 10.3
Batman (Vic) Frank Brennan ALP 10.9
Kennedy (Qld) Charles McDonald ALP 12.8
South Sydney (NSW) Edward Riley ALP 13.3
Cook (NSW) James Catts ALP 14.4
Melbourne Ports (Vic) James Mathews ALP 16.3
West Sydney (NSW) Con Wallace ALP 16.5
Very safe
Yarra (Vic) Frank Tudor ALP 21.3
Adelaide (SA) George Edwin Yates ALP unopposed
Ballaarat (Vic) Charles McGrath ALP unopposed
East Sydney (NSW) John West ALP unopposed

See also

Notes

  1. Turnout in contested seats

References


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