1928 Southern Rhodesian general election

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1928 Southern Rhodesian general election
Flag of Southern Rhodesia (1924-1964).svg
 192419 September 1928 1933  

All 30 seats in the Legislative Assembly
16 seats needed for a majority
 First partySecond partyThird party
 
Leader Howard Moffat
Party Rhodesia Party Progressive Labour
Leader since2 September 1927
Leader's seatVictoria
Last election26 seats0 seats
Seats won2243
Seat changeDecrease2.svg 4NewIncrease2.svg 3
Popular vote11,1776,3582,474
Percentage52.76%30.01%11.68%

Premier before election

Howard Moffat
Rhodesia Party

Subsequent Premier

Howard Moffat
Rhodesia Party

General elections were held in Southern Rhodesia on 19 September 1928, the second elections to the Legislative Assembly. The Rhodesia Party, which had won an overwhelming victory in the previous elections in 1924, was re-elected with a slightly reduced majority.

Contents

Electoral system

The Electoral Act, 1928 added a procedure whereby electors could vote by post, but otherwise retained the same system as used previously.

At this election the franchise was codified for the first time by the Electoral Act, 1928. The basis for the act was a consolidation of the previous regulations created by Order in Council, but the opportunity was taken by the Legislative Assembly to change some of the regulations which they had come to dislike. The principal change in the franchise was to restrict registration to British subjects only, whether by birth or naturalisation; previously, resident aliens could take an oath of allegiance to qualify themselves.

A change was also made to the literacy requirements for voters, where the test of writing fifty words of English at the dictation of the registering officer was dropped and the would-be voter merely had to be able to fill in the form in their own handwriting. The financial means qualification was the subject of a minor wording change, whereby the word "income" was added as an alternative to salary or wages.

Having previously elected the Legislative Assembly by means of 15 electoral districts each returning two members, in 1927 a Delimitation Board was established to recommend new districts. The Board intended to recommend 30 single-member districts, but found this to be impractical given the strong population growth around Salisbury and Bulawayo and therefore recommended 22 single-member districts and four two-member districts. The retention of two-member districts was controversial. The Board found its work hampered by the inaccuracy of the electoral roll, and as a result registration procedure was tightened up in the Electoral Act, 1928.

Political parties

The development of political parties had advanced since the colony was granted self-government. The Progressive Party, an opposition group opposed to monopolies and advocating more development of Matabeleland, had been formed in June 1927 from a group of independent members, and was able to nominate 22 candidates for the 30 seats. The Rhodesia Labour Party had increased its strength in the towns.

Also in 1927 the Country Party had been formed by dissident farmers in the Rhodesian Agricultural Union.

Results

PartyVotes%Seats+/–
Rhodesia Party 11,17752.7622–4
Progressive Party 6,35830.014New
Rhodesia Labour Party 2,47411.683+3
Country Party6623.120New
Independents5142.431–3
Total21,185100.00300
Registered voters/turnout25,832
Source: Willson

By constituency

Constituency
Electorate and turnout
CandidatePartyVotes
BULAWAYO CENTRAL
Two members
2,138 (48.0%)
James Cowden RP626
Donald MacGillivray RP615
Francis Leslie Hadfield PP442
Gilbert Samuel HoughPP368
BULAWAYO NORTH
Two members
1,915 (47.5%)
Robert James Hudson RP774
Allan Ross Welsh RP711
Ernest Richard DaviesPP334
BULAWAYO SOUTH
1,110 (62.3%)
Harry Herbert Davies Lab440
George JohnsonRP252
CHARTER
791 (62.5%)
Ernest Lucas Guest RP283
Charles Edward Gilfillan PP211
EASTERN
842 (67.1%)
John Louis Martin Ind344
Ethel Tawse Jollie RP221
GATOOMA
900 (68.8%)
George Munro RP440
Sir Ernest William Sanders MontaguPP260
William MartinLab93
GWANDA
671 (70.0%)
George Mitchell RP173
Herbert Stephen HendersonInd RP170
Daniel JudsonPP127
GWELO
902 (68.2%)
Max Danziger RP412
John William WatkinsonPP203
HARTLEY
744 (58.7%)
Roger Edward Downes PP250
Osmond Charteris Du PortRP187
INSIZA
736 (64.3%)
Stephen Martin Lanigan O'Keeffe PP255
Joseph Ritchie StewartRP218
INYATI
717 (59.8%)
Charles Spearman Jobling RP252
Frederic Phillip Mennell PP177
LOMAGUNDI
881 (55.3%)
James Murdoch Eaton RP272
Thomas William WilliamsonCP215
MARANDELLAS
793 (63.8%)
Luke Lot Green RP266
Eric Arthur NobbsPP167
John Mitchell MoubrayCP73
MATOPO
749 (71.6%)
Robert Alexander Fletcher RP385
Edmund Gilchrist WrightsonPP151
MAZOE
775 (68.3%)
John Wallace Downie RP345
Milton Evan ClevelandCP184
QUE QUE
844 (70.6%)
Arthur James Taylor RP327
Alexander Louis Wynand Koch WorsthornePP269
RAYLTON
906 (64.6%)
Lawrence John Walter Keller Lab306
Henry Robert Barbour RP279
SALISBURY DISTRICT
968 (61.2%)
William Muter Leggate RP268
John Arnold EdmondsCP190
Edward Cuthbert NanglePP134
SALISBURY NORTH
Two members
2,205 (64.0%)
Godfrey Martin Huggins RP821
Percival Donald Leslie Fynn RP771
Frank William Frederick Johnson PP627
Vernon Arthur LewisPP601
SALISBURY SOUTH
Two members
2,743 (63.1%)
Harry Bertin PP639
Gordon Ross Milne RP629
Henry FultonRP616
John William DunlopLab600
Frederick EylesLab505
Walter HillPP473
SELUKWE
806 (67.6%)
Robert Dunipace Gilchrist PP300
James Baillie MacdonaldRP245
SHAMVA
473 (76.5%)
Mark Douglas Claxton RP259
Trevor FletcherPP103
UMTALI NORTH
707 (76.0%)
Charles Eickhoff RP292
Alexander TullochPP137
William HarrisonLab108
UMTALI SOUTH
741 (71.9%)
Jonathan Hunter Malcolm Lab253
Oswald Trevor BakerRP150
Robert Chaloner Critchley LongPP130
VICTORIA
797
Howard Unwin Moffat RPunopposed
WANKIE
775 (55.6%)
Alexander Robert Thomson RP262
George Francis ScougalLab169

Changes during the Assembly

Mazoe

John Wallace Downie gave up his seat on 28 October 1930 on his appointment as High Commissioner of Southern Rhodesia in London, precipitating a byelection in his electoral district which was held on 5 December 1930.

ConstituencyCandidatePartyVotes
MAZOE Edward Walter Lionel Noaks Ind361
Frank SmithReform Party98
Cyril AllenRP63

Salisbury South

Due to the resignation of Gordon Ross Milne who was in ill health, a byelection in this electoral district was held on 13 March 1931.

ConstituencyCandidatePartyVotes
SALISBURY SOUTH Jacob Hendrik Smit Reform Party564
Alexander Louis Wynand Koch WorsthorneLab526
Guy Harcourt PeallRP310
Henry FultonPP168

Gwelo

Max Danziger left the Rhodesia Party on 4 June 1931 and simultaneously decided to vacate his seat to test the opinion of his electors. The result of the election was:

ConstituencyCandidatePartyVotes
GWELO Max Danziger Indunopposed

Party changes

In October 1929 the Progressive Party merged with the Country Party to form the Reform Party.

References