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1925 Australian federal election

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

1925 Australian federal election

← 1922
14 November 1925 (1925-11-14)
1928 →

All 76[b] seats in theHouse of Representatives
38 seats were needed for a majority in the House
22 (of the 36) seats in theSenate
Registered3,302,016Increase10.79%
Turnout2,987,200(91.39%)[a]
(Increase32.03pp)
 First partySecond partyThird party
 
LeaderStanley BruceMatthew CharltonEarle Page
PartyNationalistLaborCountry
Leader since9 February 192316 May 19225 April 1921
Leader's seatFlinders (Vic.)Hunter (NSW)Cowper (NSW)
Last election26 seats29 seats14 seats
Seats won37 seats23 seats
+NT
13 seats
Seat changeIncrease11Decrease6Decrease1
Primary vote1,238,3971,313,627313,363
Percentage42.46%45.04%10.74%
SwingIncrease7.23%Increase2.74%Decrease1.82%

Results by division for the House of Representatives, shaded by winning party's margin of victory.

Prime Minister before election

Stanley Bruce
Nationalist/Country coalition

Subsequent Prime Minister

Stanley Bruce
Nationalist/Country coalition

The1925 Australian federal election was held in Australia on 14 November 1925. All 75 seats in theHouse of Representatives and 22 of the 36 seats in theSenate were up for election. The incumbentNationalist–Country coalition, led by Prime MinisterStanley Bruce, defeated the oppositionLabor Party led byMatthew Charlton in a landslide. This was the first time any party had won a fourth consecutive federal election.

Compulsory voting for federal elections was introduced in 1924 and first used in the 1925 elections, where 91.4% of the electorate cast a vote, compared to 59.4% at the 1922 elections.

Background

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Anti-Labor electoral pact

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In 1924, Bruce and Page formulated anelectoral pact between the Nationalist Party and Country Party, whereby each party agreed not to oppose incumbent candidates from the other party and to co-operate to choose the strongest candidate in seats held by the ALP. Both parties agreed to accept the pact, although only after both Bruce and Page made clear they would resign as party leaders if the pact was rejected. The pact proved particularly controversial within the Country Party, with cabinet ministerPercy Stewart resigning in protest and some members of the organisational wing seeing it as an attack on the party's independence.[1]

Introduction of compulsory voting

[edit]

The 1925 federal election was the first at whichcompulsory voting applied, following the passage of a private senator's bill introduced byHerbert Payne in 1924. Both the government and opposition supported Payne's bill, which had been introduced in response to a substantial decrease in voter turnout at the 1922 election.[2]

Campaign issues

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The government madeindustrial relations andlaw and order central issues in the election campaign, largely in response to industrial unrest in the maritime industry. In June 1925, theCommonwealth Court of Conciliation and Arbitration had deregistered theSeamen's Union of Australia, in response to what it viewed as illegal industrial action that had disrupted Australia's trade-reliant economy. The union subsequently called a seven-week strike. In response, the government rapidly passed theImmigration Act 1925 andNavigation Act 1925, allowing it to deport foreign-born union leaders and to use foreign seamen asstrikebreakers.[3]

Bruce and the Nationalists also madeRed Scare tactics a key part of their campaign for the first time, attributing the strikes to "militant union leaders intent on spreading revolutionary,Bolshevik or communist ideas" rather than merely workers intent on improving their employment campaigns. He presented the government as a bulwark against communism and appealed in campaign speeches to the "men and women of moderate sane views", promising a "moderate, sensible, middle way" in response to what he saw as the ALP's political extremism.[4]

Both Bruce and opposition leaderMatthew Charlton reaffirmed their support for theWhite Australia policy during the election campaign. Bruce stated that "we intend to keep this country white and not allow its people to be faced with the problems that at present are practically insoluble in many parts of the world".[5] Charlton called for "the development of our race in body, in mind and social status" and pledged "a continuance of the present embargo against the introduction of black grown sugar in Australia" to protect the status of Australia as "the only country in the world where cane sugar is produced by white labour".[6]

Results

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  Labor: 23 seats
  Nationalist: 37 seats
  Country : 13 seats
  Independent: 2 seats

For the first time sincethe inaugural federal election in 1901, no female candidates stood for either house of parliament.[7]

House of Representatives

[edit]
See also:Results of the Australian federal election, 1925 (House of Representatives)
House of Reps (IRV) – 1925–28 – Turnout 91.39% (CV) – Informal 2.36%
PartyFirst preference Votes%SwingSeatsChange
 Nationalist–Country coalition1,551,76053.20+5.4151+11
 Nationalist 1,238,39742.46+7.2337+11
 Country 313,36310.74–1.8213–1
 Labor1,313,62745.04+2.7424[c]–6
 Independents51,2511.76–2.802+1
 Total2,916,638  76
Two-party-preferred(estimated)
 Nationalist–Country coalitionWin53.80+2.6051+11
 Labor46.20−2.6023–6

Notes

First preference vote
Labor
45.04%
Nationalist
42.46%
Country
10.74%
Others
1.76%
Two-party-preferred vote
Coalition
53.80%
Labor
46.20%
Parliament seats
Coalition
68.00%
Labor
30.67%
Others
2.67%

Senate

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See also:Results of the 1925 Australian federal election (Senate)
Senate (PBV) – 1925–28 – Turnout 91.31% (CV) – Informal 6.96%
PartyFirst preference votes%SwingSeats wonSeats heldChange
 Nationalist–Country coalition1,537,28254.81N/A2228N/A
 Nationalist 1,272,12745.35+9.1218240
 Country 265,1559.45–3.5344+4
 Labor1,262,91245.02–0.6708–4
 Independents4,8080.17–1.87000
 Total2,805,002  2236

Seats changing hands

[edit]
SeatPre-1925SwingPost-1925
PartyMemberMarginMarginMemberParty
Angas, SA LaborMoses Gabb8.08.30.3Walter ParsonsNationalist 
Barton, NSW LaborFrederick McDonald7.68.61.0Thomas LeyNationalist 
Darwin, Tas CountryJoshua Whitsitt0.410.910.5*George BellNationalist 
Denison, Tas LaborDavid O'Keefe0.42.62.2John GellibrandNationalist 
Gwydir, NSW LaborLou Cunningham0.13.23.1Aubrey AbbottCountry 
Kennedy, Qld LaborCharles McDonaldN/A100.0100.0Grosvenor FrancisNationalist 
Wannon, Vic LaborJohn McNeill0.84.84.0Arthur RodgersNationalist 
Wimmera, Vic CountryPercy Stewart21.277.827.8Percy StewartIndependent 
  • Members listed in italics did not contest their seat at this election.
  • *Figure is Nationalist versus Labor.

Post-election pendulum

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Government seats
Nationalist/Country coalition
Marginal
Angas (SA)Walter ParsonsNAT0.3
Herbert (Qld)Lewis NottNAT0.3
Barton (NSW)Thomas LeyNAT1.0
Macquarie (NSW)Arthur ManningNAT1.3
Denison (Tas)John GellibrandNAT2.2
Maranoa (Qld)James HunterCP2.6
Gwydir (NSW)Aubrey AbbottCP3.1
Bendigo (Vic)Geoffry HurryNAT3.5
Wannon (Vic)Arthur RodgersNAT4.0
Riverina (NSW)William KillenCP4.3
Brisbane (Qld)Donald CameronNAT5.5
Corangamite (Vic)William GibsonCP5.5
Franklin (Tas)Alfred SeabrookNAT5.6
Oxley (Qld)James BayleyNAT5.7
Lang (NSW)Elliot JohnsonNAT5.9
Fairly safe
Corio (Vic)John ListerNAT6.7
Indi (Vic)Robert CookCP6.7
Wilmot (Tas)Llewellyn AtkinsonCP7.0
Boothby (SA)Jack Duncan-HughesNAT7.6
Bass (Tas)Syd JacksonNAT8.3
New England (NSW)Victor ThompsonCP8.5
Fawkner (Vic)George MaxwellNAT9.4
Calare (NSW)Neville HowseNAT9.8
Safe
Darwin (Tas)George BellNAT10.5
Forrest (WA)John ProwseCP10.9
Henty (Vic)Henry GullettNAT10.9
Barker (SA)Malcolm CameronNAT11.6
Robertson (NSW)Sydney GardnerNAT12.6
Flinders (Vic)Stanley BruceNAT12.7
Parkes (NSW)Charles MarrNAT12.8
Perth (WA)Edward MannNAT12.8
Darling Downs (Qld)Littleton GroomNAT13.1
Gippsland (Vic)Thomas PatersonCP13.1
Moreton (Qld)Josiah FrancisNAT13.2
Wentworth (NSW)Walter MarksNAT14.4
Wide Bay (Qld)Edward CorserNAT14.5
Eden-Monaro (NSW)Austin ChapmanNAT14.6
Lilley (Qld)George MackayNAT14.7
Martin (NSW)Herbert PrattenNAT14.8
Wakefield (SA)Richard FosterNAT14.8
Echuca (Vic)William HillCP15.3
Parramatta (NSW)Eric BowdenNAT15.7
Swan (WA)Henry GregoryCP16.2
Kooyong (Vic)John LathamNAT17.7
Richmond (NSW)Roland GreenCP17.7
Balaclava (Vic)William WattNAT19.7
Very safe
Cowper (NSW)Earle PageCP20.0
North Sydney (NSW)Billy HughesNAT21.5
Warringah (NSW)Granville RyrieNAT30.1
Kennedy (Qld)Grosvenor FrancisNATUnopposed
Non-government seats
Australian Labor Party
Marginal
Adelaide (SA)George Edwin YatesALP0.9
South Sydney (NSW)Edward RileyALP1.1
Ballaarat (Vic)Charles McGrathALP1.3
Capricornia (Qld)Frank FordeALP1.9
Hume (NSW)Parker MoloneyALP2.0
Grey (SA)Andrew LaceyALP2.6
Werriwa (NSW)Bert LazzariniALP3.7
East Sydney (NSW)John WestALP3.8
Reid (NSW)Percy ColemanALP4.7
Fairly safe
Kalgoorlie (WA)Albert GreenALP7.6
Batman (Vic)Frank BrennanALP9.0
Maribyrnong (Vic)James FentonALP9.5
Safe
Northern Territory (NT)Harold NelsonALP12.4
Bourke (Vic)Frank AnsteyALP12.5
Newcastle (NSW)David WatkinsALP12.5
Dalley (NSW)William MahonyALP14.1
Hindmarsh (SA)Norman MakinALP15.2
Darling (NSW)Arthur BlakeleyALP15.5
Melbourne (Vic)William MaloneyALP17.0
Melbourne Ports (Vic)James MathewsALP17.7
Cook (NSW)Edward Charles RileyALP17.8
Very safe
Hunter (NSW)Matthew CharltonALP21.3
West Sydney (NSW)William LambertALP24.0
Yarra (Vic)James ScullinALP24.8
Independents
Fremantle (WA)William WatsonIND8.1 v ALP
Wimmera (Vic)Percy StewartIND27.8 v IND

See also

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Notes

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  1. ^Turnout in contested seats
  2. ^TheNorthern Territory had one seat, but members for the territories did not have full voting rights until 1966 and did not count toward government formation.
  3. ^IncludingNorthern Territory

References

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  1. ^Wilks, Stephen (2020).'Now is the Psychological Moment': Earle Page and the Imagining of Australia(PDF). ANU Press. p. 145.ISBN 9781760463687.
  2. ^Brett, Judith (2021). "How Australia Got Compulsory Voting". In Bonotti, Mario; Strangio, Paul (eds.).A Century of Compulsory Voting in Australia: Genesis, Impact and Future. Palgrave Macmillan. pp. 26–27.ISBN 978-981-33-4025-1.
  3. ^Souter, Gavin (1988).Acts of Parliament : A Narrative History of the Senate and House of Representatives. Carlton, Vic.: Melbourne University Press. pp. 203–204.ISBN 0522843670.
  4. ^Brett, Judith (2003).Australian Liberals and the Moral Middle Class: From Alfred Deakin to John Howard. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. pp. 81–82.ISBN 0521536340.
  5. ^Bowen, James; Bowen, Margarita (2002).The Great Barrier Reef: History, Science, Heritage.Cambridge University Press. p. 301.ISBN 0-521-82430-3. Retrieved24 January 2008.
  6. ^"1925: Matthew Charlton".Australian Federal Election Speeches. Museum of Australian Democracy. Retrieved14 June 2025.
  7. ^Sherrard, Kathleen (1943). "The Political History of Women in Australia".Australian Quarterly.15 (4): 39.doi:10.2307/20631140.JSTOR 20631140.
  8. ^"Kennedy Seat".Brisbane Courier. 14 November 1925. p. 7. Retrieved19 July 2010.

External links

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Australia Federalelections andreferendums in Australia
Federal elections
Constitutional Convention
Referendums
See also:By-elections
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