1864 Victorian colonial election

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1864 Victorian colonial election
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  1861 5 October to 3 November 1864 1866  

All 78 seats in the Victorian Legislative Assembly
40 seats needed for a majority
 First partySecond party
  Jamesmcculloch.jpg Johnoshanassy.jpg
Leader James McCulloch John O'Shanassy
Party Moderate Liberal (Protectionist) Conservative (Free Trade)
Leader's seat Mornington Kilmore
Seats won5314

Premier before election

James McCulloch
Liberal

Elected Premier

James McCulloch
Liberal

The 1864 Victorian colonial election was held from 5 October to 3 November 1864 to elect the 4th Parliament of Victoria. All 78 seats in 49 electorates in the Legislative Assembly were up for election, though sixteen seats were uncontested. [1]

Contents

There were 24 single-member, 21 two-member and 4 three-member electorates. [1]

Support for liberal protectionist candidates dominated this election, to such an extent that the colonial newspapers made no attempt to classify individual elected members as Ministerialists or Oppositionists. [1] While the election was still underway an editorial in The Argus commented that "the Opposition apparently is defunct", adding that "a surprising spirit of concord reigns throughout our political world". [2]

Results

Newspapers made no attempt to classify individual elected members as Ministerialists or Oppositionists. [1]

The members of the Legislative Assembly returned in the 1864 election were overwhelmingly supporters of the protectionist policies of the McCulloch ministry. Many of those elected were new to the Legislative Assembly, with only thirty-eight of the seventy-eight members having seats in the previous parliament. [3]

Legislative Assembly (FPTP) [A]
Party / GroupingVotes %SwingSeatsChange
  Ministerial 53
  Opposition 14
  Independent 11
 Totals74,94678

Aftermath

James McCulloch and his ministry remained in office throughout this parliament. [1]

The Land Act of 1865, amending an act passed in 1862, became law on 28 March 1865, allowing selection of Crown land subject to residential and improvements conditions. [4] [5]

With the majority of members in the Legislative Assembly supporting protectionist policies, the government's 1865 budget included restructured customs duties that increased the taxation of imports into the colony that competed with local products. [5] McCulloch included the protective tariff measures in the annual appropriation bill. The Upper House, dominated by conservative free-trade pastoralists, had no constitutional power to amend the appropriation bill and was therefore unable to block the tariff without rejecting the entire bill, which it did in July 1865. [6] [5] In November 1865 McCulloch agreed to separate the tariff legislation from the appropriation bill. The Tariff Bill was passed in the assembly and sent to the council, where it was also rejected. On 11 December 1865 parliament was dissolved in order for a general election to be held on the issue. [7]

See also

Notes

A. ^ The split of seats between Ministerialists and Oppositionists is based on the seating arrangements at the first sitting of the new parliament on 28 November 1864, with supporters of the government sitting to the right of the speaker and opposition members sitting to the left. A group of independents (unaligned members) sat between the two, in an area known as 'the corner'. [8] [9] The number of votes are tallied from Adam Carr's Electoral Archive website. [1]

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References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 "The Fourth Parliament Elected 5 October to 3 November 1864". Psephos: Adam Carr's Electoral Archive.
  2. Editorial, The Argus (Melbourne), 19 October 1864, page 4.
  3. Editorial, The Argus (Melbourne), 4 November 1864, page 4.
  4. Henry Gyles Turner (1904), pages 119-120.
  5. 1 2 3 John Waugh (2006), '"The inevitable McCulloch" and his rivals, 1863-1877', Chapter 3 (in) Paul Strangio & Brian Costar (eds.) (2006), The Victorian Premiers 1856-2006, Leichhardt, NSW: The Federation Press, pages 32-33.
  6. Geoffrey Bartlett (1974), Sir James McCulloch (1819–1893), Australian Dictionary of Biography website, National Centre of Biography, Australian National University; accessed 10 December 2023.
  7. Henry Gyles Turner (1904), pages 126-127.
  8. Henry Gyles Turner (1904), page 114.
  9. Editorial, The Argus (Melbourne), 29 November 1864, page 4.
Sources