TheCountry and Progressive National Party was a short-livedconservative political party in theAustralian state ofQueensland. Formed in 1925, it combined the state's conservative forces in a single party and held office between 1929 and 1932 under the leadership ofArthur Edward Moore. Following repeated election defeat it split into separate rural and urban wings in 1936.[1]
The party was formed on 12 May 1925 as the result of a merger between the state's two conservative parties, theUnited Party (the Queensland branch of theNationalist Party) and theCountry Party, in an attempt to end a decade ofLabor domination in the state.[2][3] Initially called theCountry Progressive Party it was formed by all of the Country MLAs and all but four United MLAs; the outstanding four joined in December when the party took the nameCountry and Progressive National Party.[4] The party was led throughout the entirety of its existence byArthur Edward Moore, previously the leader of the Country Party. In the1929 state election the party won power, defeating Labor in a landslide. The election was further notable for the surprise victory ofIrene Longman, a Country and Progressive National candidate and the first woman ever to be elected to the Queensland parliament. However, the government floundered amidst the difficulties of theGreat Depression, and was swept from power in 1932 by the Labor Party, led byWilliam Forgan Smith. It contested the 1935 state election, but was severely beaten, being reduced to sixteen seats, which left Labor with a massive majority. As a result, in 1936, the party again split, leaving two state-based parties - theCountry Party and theUnited Australia Party, each aligned with the federal parties of the same names.[5] The two parties continued in acoalition, with the Country Party as senior partner.
From 1941-1944 another merger was attempted via theCountry-National Organisation[6] but this failed within a few years.[7]
A later merger between the two parties' successors, the Liberal and National parties, gave birth to theLiberal National Party of Queensland in 2008.[8]
| Election | Leader | Votes | % | Seats | +/– | Position | Government |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1926 | Arthur Edward Moore | 192,043 | 48.48 | 28 / 72 | Opposition | ||
| 1929 | Arthur Edward Moore | 233,977 | 54.23 | 43 / 72 | Majority government | ||
| 1932 | Arthur Edward Moore | 204,158 | 45.21 | 28 / 62 | Opposition | ||
| 1935 | Arthur Edward Moore | 156,325 | 33.80 | 16 / 62 | Opposition |