All 95 seats in theVictorian Legislative Assembly 48 seats needed for a majority | |||||||||||||||||||||||||
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The1894 Victorian colonial election was held on 20 September 1894 to elect the 16thParliament of Victoria. All 95 seats in theLegislative Assembly were up for election, though 16 were uncontested.[1]
TheElectoral Act Amendment Act of 1888 had increased the number seats in the Legislative Assembly from 86 to 95, and the number of electoral districts from 55 to 84 (73 single-member electorates, 11 two-member electorates).[1]Plural voting was permitted for people who had property in more than one electorate.[1]
TheLiberals were split between Oppositionists, led byGeorge Turner, and Ministerialists, led byConservative PremierJames Patterson.[1]
Enrolments in most seats was lower than at the1892 election, as a result of thePurification of the Rolls Act of 1891.[2] It had the effect of disenfranchising large numbers of voters, mostly theworking class, who had changed their residence in the year before the election.[2]
| Party | Votes | % | Swing | Seats | Change | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Liberal Oppositionists | 75,404 | 46.03 | 47 | ||||
| Conservative Ministerialists | 44,479 | 27.15 | 27 | ||||
| United Labour and Liberal | 32,474 | 19.82 | 18 | ||||
| Liberal Ministerialists | 11,448 | 6.99 | 3 | ||||
| Formal votes | 163,805 | ||||||
| Informal votes | 754 | ||||||
| Total | 164,559 | 95 | |||||
| Registered voters / turnout | 234,552 | 70.85 | |||||