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1945 Victorian state election

Australian state election


Australian state election

FieldValue
election_name1945 Victorian state election
countryVictoria
flag_year1901
typeparliamentary
vote_typePrimary
ongoingno
previous_election1943 Victorian state election
previous_year1943
next_election1947 Victorian state election
next_year1947
registered1,019,063
turnout87.98% ( 0.98)
seats_for_electionAll 65 seats in the Victorian Legislative Assembly
33 seats needed for a majority
election_date
<!-- Labor -->image1
leader1John Cain
leader_since118 October 1937
party1Australian Labor Party (Victorian Branch)
leaders_seat1Northcote
popular_vote1**360,079**
percentage1**41.02%**
swing14.89
last_election122 seats
seats1**31**
seat_change19
<!-- Country -->image2
leader2Albert Dunstan
leader_since214 March 1935
party2Country
colour2
leaders_seat2Korong
popular_vote2163,940
percentage218.67%
swing25.64
last_election218 seats
seats218
seat_change2
<!-- Liberal -->image4
leader4Thomas Hollway
leader_since43 December 1940
party4Liberal Party of Australia (Victorian Division)
leaders_seat4Ballarat
popular_vote4188,119
percentage420.51%
swing42.56
last_election413 seats
seats410
seat_change43
<!-- Ministerial -->image5
leader5Ian Macfarlan
leader_since52 October 1945
party5Ministerial
colour5
leaders_seat5Brighton
*(lost seat)*
popular_vote529,276
percentage53.33%
swing53.33
last_election5*Did not exist*
seats53
seat_change53
map_image1945 Victorian state election.svg
map_size345px
map_captionResults in each electorate
titlePremier
posttitlePremier after election
before_electionIan Macfarlan
before_partyMinisterial Liberal
after_electionJohn Cain
after_partyAustralian Labor Party (Victorian Branch)

33 seats needed for a majority

(lost seat)

The 1945 Victorian state election was held on 10 November 1945 to elect all 65 members of the Victorian Legislative Assembly.

The Labor Party, led by John Cain, won 31 seats and formed government with the support of two independents. Labor defeated the Country Party, led by former premier Albert Dunstan, and the Liberal Party, led by Thomas Hollway.

The incumbent premier at the election was Ian Macfarlan, the deputy leader of the Liberal Party, who became premier on 2 October 1945 after the Dunstan government was defeated on the floor of parliament. Macfarlan contested the election as a Ministerial Liberal, but lost his seat of Brighton to an endorsed Liberal candidate. This marks the only time in Victorian history where the sitting premier did not lead any of the three largest parties at an election.

Background

The Country Party was returned to power at the 1943 state election, with Albert Dunstan serving as premier. The ministry was composed entirely of Country MPs, with the United Australia Party (UAP) giving supply in parliament.

On 10 September 1943, the Dunstan government was defeated on the floor of parliament after Labor Party MPs voted for a motion of no confidence brought forward by UAP leader Thomas Hollway on the issue of electoral redistribution. Dunstan resigned as premier on 14 September, and Labor leader John Cain was sworn in.

Four days later on 18 September 1943, Dunstan was again sworn in as premier after the Country Party formed a coalition government with the UAP.

A Victorian division of the Liberal Party of Australia, which had been formed on 13 October 1944, was established between December 1944 and January 1945. The Victorian UAP branch and its parliamentary members joined the Liberal Party on 5 March 1945, with the state parliamentary UAP becoming the state parliamentary Liberal Party, prior to the national UAP being absorbed into the Liberal Party of Australia in October 1945.

On 25 September 1945, the second Dunstan ministry was defeated on the floor of the Legislative Assembly amid dissatisfaction with the premier's leadership. Five dissident Liberals, two expelled Country MPs (Albert Allnutt and Edwin Mackrell), two independents and one Independent Labor MP voted with Labor to block supply to the government.

Instead of resigning, Dunstan persuaded governor Winston Dugan to grant him a dissolution of parliament, on the condition that the budget was passed. When it became clear that the Assembly would not grant supply, Dugan commissioned deputy Liberal leader Ian Macfarlan to serve as premier with written assurances from Labor and other non-Country MPs. Macfarlan formed a government on 2 October 1945 and parliament was dissolved, with Macfarlan serving as premier until 21 November 1945, eleven days after the state election.

Candidates

Main article: Candidates of the 1945 Victorian state election

The Labor Party endorsed 56 candidates, the Country Party endorsed 33, the Liberal Party endorsed 31 and the Communist Party of Australia endorsed six.

Ministerial Liberals

Five Liberal MPs who voted against the Dunstan government and joined the Macfarlan ministry (William Cumming, William Everard, William Haworth, Thomas Maltby and Archie Michaelis) − as well as Macfarlan himself − had their preselection vetoed by the Liberal Party's State Council. The Liberals endorsed candidates against all so-called "breakaways", although the party still recommended preferencing the breakaways over Labor candidates.

The breakaways − along with ministers Edwin Mackrell (Independent Country) and Leslie Hollins (independent), as well as Macfarlan supporter Henry Zwar (Independent Liberal) − contested the election as "Ministerial Liberal" candidates. They were also referred to as "Marfarlan Liberals" or "Government Liberals".

In Toorak, four different Liberal candidates stood without official party endorsement, in what The Argus described as "probably the most complicated and bewildering [contest] in the history of the electorate". Incumbent Liberal MP Harold Thonemann was endorsed by the local Liberal selection committee, but a number of branch members supported Robert Hamilton as the candidate. Neither candidate was officially endorsed by the Liberals, leaving both to stand as "Unendorsed Liberal" candidates, while Charles Kennett stood as an Independent Liberal and Robert Bruce stood as a Ministerial Liberal (also using the "Liberal and Country League" label). Additionally, Albert Nicholls stood as an Independent Labor candidate and John Smith ran under the "Moderate Labor" label.

Campaign

Labor announced it would establish a Minister for Employment if elected, with Cain promising a "sane and stable government for the grave years ahead". Dunstan said a Country Party government would support the "full utilisation of our vast coal resources" and oppose further electoral redistributions that would "further deprive country people of their parliamentary representation".

The Liberals focused its campaign around education, including making education free from pre-school to university, raising the school-leaving age to 16 and extending free bus services to cover primary and secondary schools. Although the Ministerial Liberals did not have enough candidates to lead the next government, Macfarlan still campaigned, saying his government had "restored harmony" and "shown its capacity to deal promptly with matters that have long been neglected".

The Communist Party called for the immediate improvement in the wages and working conditions of the public service and the police, proportional representation in the Legislative Assembly, the abolition of the Legislative Council, universal suffrage at the age of 18 in state and local elections, and the nationalisation of the Metropolitan Gas Company.

Results

Main article: Results of the 1945 Victorian state election (Legislative Assembly)

[[File:1945 Victorian Legislative Assembly.svg]]PartyVotes%SwingSeatsChangeFormal votesInformal votesTotalRegistered voters / turnout
Labor360,07941.02+4.89319
Liberal180,04620.51−2.56103
Country163,94018.67+5.6418
Independents67,4147.68−7.2523
Ministerial29,2763.33+3.3333
Communist25,0832.86−1.650
Independent Labor67,4142.31−1.001
Independent Liberal19,2782.20+2.200
Independent Country4,4040.50−0.370
877,87297.92+0.51
18,6892.08−0.51
896,561100.065
1,019,06387.98+0.98

Notes

References

References

  1. (30 October 1930). "UNITED COUNTRY PARTY". Sunraysia Daily.
  2. (7 November 1945). "COUNTRY PARTY". The Herald.
  3. (26 March 1947). "LIBERAL−CP POLL TALKS". The Herald.
  4. (9 November 1945). "SCHOOLBOYS VOTE IN "STATE ELECTION"". The Herald.
  5. (12 November 1945). "VICTORIAN STATE ELECTIONS". Gippsland Times.
  6. (19 November 1945). "CAIN ACCEPTS COMMISSION". Daily Mirror.
  7. (19 December 1945). "MR. JOHN CAIN Labor Premier of Victoria". The Australian Worker.
  8. (5 June 2014). "Geoff Shaw crisis evokes tumultuous events in Victoria's past". Sydney Morning Herald.
  9. "Ian Macfarlan, Honest Politician".
  10. (12 December 2024). "Heads of government in Australasia who sat in the upper house of parliament". Dr André Brett.
  11. (14 June 1943). "DUNSTAN'S MAJORITY ASSURED". Daily Mirror.
  12. (17 June 1943). "DUNSTAN GOVERNMENT RETURNED". Corryong Courier.
  13. "Sir Albert Arthur Dunstan (1882–1950)". Australian Dictionary of Biography.
  14. (26 August 1943). "JOINT STATE CABINET MOVE TODAY". The Herald.
  15. (9 September 1943). "Dunstan Government May Be Replaced By U.A.P. Ministry". Daily Examiner.
  16. (10 September 1943). "UAP And Labour Oust Dunstan Government". The Daily News.
  17. (13 September 1943). "DEFEAT OF THE DUNSTAN GOVERNMENT". Advocate.
  18. (14 September 1943). "LABOUR MINISTRY FOR VICTORIA". The Argus.
  19. (15 September 1943). "DUNSTAN TO BE PREMIER AGAIN". The Newcastle Sun.
  20. (17 September 1943). "Dunstan Again Premier of Victoria". Daily Examiner.
  21. (30 December 1944). "THE LIBERAL PARTY'S EXECUTIVE". The Age.
  22. (5 January 1945). "First Executive Meeting". The Age.
  23. (5 March 1945). "STATE UAP AND LIBERAL PARTY". The Argus.
  24. (6 March 1945). "STATE UAP NOW LIBERAL PARTY". The Argus.
  25. "Ian Macfarlan (1881–1964)". Australian Dictionary of Biography.
  26. (26 September 1945). "DUNSTAN MINISTRY DEFEATED". The Age.
  27. (3 October 1945). "WHY MR. MACFARLAN FORMED CABINET". Weekly Times.
  28. (22 October 1945). "NOMINATIONS TODAY IN STATE ELECTION". The Herald.
  29. (23 October 1945). "Three Last-minute Endorsements". The Argus.
  30. (23 October 1945). "STATE ELECTION NOMINATIONS". The Sun News-Pictorial.
  31. (4 October 1945). "SIX LIBERALS VETOED FOR SELECTION". The Argus.
  32. (6 October 1945). "Liberal Unity Talk With Breakaways". The Herald.
  33. (23 October 1945). "LIBERAL PREFERENCES TO SIX BREAKAWAYS". The Herald.
  34. (29 October 1945). "ALBERT PARK WILL BE HARD FIGHT". The Argus.
  35. (22 October 1945). "Attempts to Reunite Liberal Sections". The Age.
  36. (24 October 1945). "164 Candidates Contest 54 Seats". Ovens and Murray Advertiser.
  37. (12 November 1945). "Victorian Election Position". Daily Advertiser.
  38. (5 November 1945). "BATTLE OF PAMPHLETS IN TOORAK". The Argus.
  39. (31 October 1945). "PREFERENCES IN TOORAK". The Argus.
  40. (9 November 1945). "VICTORIAN ELECTIONS". Cairns Post.
  41. (10 November 1945). "TOORAK UNENDORSED LIBERALS". The Argus.
  42. (3 November 1945). "POSITION IN TOORAK CONFUSED". The Argus.
  43. (9 November 1945). "LABOUR QUARREL IN TOORAK". The Argus.
  44. (10 November 1945). "STATE ELECTION POLL TODAY". The Age.
  45. (30 October 1945). "ELECTION ISSUES STAYED BY PARTY LEADERS". The Herald.
  46. (23 October 1945). "Premier Says Government Was Hopeless". The Sun News-Pictorial.
  47. (22 October 1945). "COMMUNIST PARTY POLICY". The Age.
  48. "THE THIRTY-SIXTH PARLIAMENT ELECTED 10 NOVEMBER 1945". Psephos: Adam Carr's Electoral Archive.
  49. "Election of 10 November 1945". University of Western Australia.
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