1894 Victorian colonial election

Last updated
1894 Victorian colonial election
Flag of Victoria (Australia).svg
  1892 20 September 1894 1897  

All 95 seats in the Victorian Legislative Assembly
 First partySecond party
  Georgeturner.jpg 17Jamespatterson.jpg
Leader George Turner James Patterson
Party Liberal Conservative
Leader's seat St Kilda Castlemaine
Last election56 seats28 seats
Seats won4727
Seat changeDecrease2.svg 9Decrease2.svg 1

Premier before election

James Patterson
Conservative

Elected Premier

George Turner
Liberal

The 1894 Victorian colonial election was held on 20 September 1894 to elect the 16th Parliament of Victoria. All 95 seats in the Legislative Assembly were up for election, though 16 were uncontested. [1]

Contents

Background

The Electoral 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]

The Liberals were split between Oppositionists, led by George Turner, and Ministerialists, led by Conservative Premier James Patterson. [1]

Enrolments in most seats was lower than at the 1892 election, as a result of the Purification of the Rolls Act of 1891. [2] It had the effect of disenfranchising large numbers of voters, mostly the working class, who had changed their residence in the year before the election. [2]

Results

Legislative Assembly (FPTP) [1] [2]
PartyVotes %SwingSeatsChange
  Liberal Oppositionists 75,40446.0347Decrease2.svg 9
  Conservative Ministerialists 44,47927.1527Decrease2.svg 1
  United Labour and Liberal 32,47419.8218Increase2.svg 9
  Liberal Ministerialists 11,4486.993
 Formal votes163,805
 Informal votes754
 Total164,55995
 Registered voters / turnout234,55270.85

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References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 "Election of 20 September 1894". The University of Western Australia.
  2. 1 2 3 "THE SIXTEENTH PARLIAMENT ELECTED 20 SEPTEMBER 1894". Psephos: Adam Carr's Electoral Archive.