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All 66 seats in the House of Assembly 34 seats needed for a majority | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Composition of the House of Assembly after the election | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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General elections were held in Rhodesia on 30 July 1974. They saw the Rhodesian Front of Ian Smith re-elected, once more winning every one of the 50 seats elected by white voters. [1] [2] [3]
Since the previous election in 1970, the main African nationalist groups had changed their strategy and gone into exile in Zambia (and to a lesser extent Mozambique and Botswana), launching a war to overthrow white minority rule by force. The main African groups, the Zimbabwe African National Union (ZANU), Zimbabwe African People's Union (ZAPU) and the Front for the Liberation of Zimbabwe (FROLIZI), formed the African National Council under Bishop Abel Muzorewa to act as a collective political leadership and undertake any negotiations with the Rhodesian government.
In June 1974, the African National Council rejected settlement proposals which had come out of discussions between itself and the Rhodesian government. As the Rhodesian Parliament was into its fifth year, a general election became a real prospect. Timothy Gibbs of the Rhodesia Party announced on 9 June 1974 that he expected a September election, and on 19 June, Prime Minister Ian Smith announced that there would be an election imminently (he did not name the date). He also announced round table talks with Africans, including the Council of Chiefs. These talks were rejected by the African National Council as a waste of time.
The Rhodesia Party, a white opposition party, had been formed by ex-Rhodesian Front MP Allan Savory in 1972. They were a moderate group which advocated more moves towards including the African population in internal politics. Early in June 1974, Savory made a speech at Hartley in which he was reported as saying that if he had been a black Rhodesian, he would be a terrorist. The uproar was such that Savory was forced from the leadership (replaced by Gibbs) and resigned from the party on 16 June. Despite the turmoil, the Rhodesia Party managed to nominate candidates in 40 out of the 50 seats.
There were also several Independent candidates including six right-wingers sponsored by the Rhodesian Group. The multi-racial Centre Party, which had provided the main opposition at the previous election, nominated a single candidate (who was from an Indian background). When nominations closed on 7 July, two seats (including that of Ian Smith) were elected unopposed. A victory by the Rhodesian Front was almost inevitable, although six seats were regarded as marginal.
The most marginal seat was clearly Salisbury City, where a right-wing Rhodesian Front candidate Ted Sutton-Pryce faced Dr Ahrn Palley, an Independent ex-member of the House of Assembly who had been a lone white opponent of UDI. In the 1970 election, the Rhodesian Front had defeated a mixed-race Independent candidate by only 40 votes, with a Centre Party candidate taking 157. Allan Savory, despite his departure from the Rhodesia Party, fought in Highlands North in the Salisbury suburbs as an Independent.
The Rhodesian Front responded to the challenge from the Rhodesia Party by attacking it for holding secret negotiations with the African National Council behind the backs of the Rhodesia government with the intent of undermining them. Ian Smith identified the Rhodesia Party with the 'liberal establishment' of Rhodesia, which had been responsible for the 1962 constitution and the inadequate arrangements of the Federation of Rhodesia and Nyasaland in 1953.
The electorate of Rhodesia returned 66 members of the House of Assembly of Rhodesia, in three different classes of seat:
Both European and African rolls had a range of property qualifications. No change to boundaries or the qualification of voters was made compared to the 1970 election.
Party | European roll | African roll | Total seats | +/– | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Votes | % | Seats | Votes | % | Seats | ||||
Rhodesian Front | 55,597 | 76.98 | 50 | 50 | 0 | ||||
Rhodesia Party | 13,776 | 19.08 | 0 | 0 | New | ||||
African National Council independents | 1,590 | 53.36 | 6 | 6 | New | ||||
Rhodesian Group Independents | 736 | 1.02 | 0 | 0 | New | ||||
Centre Party | 25 | 0.03 | 0 | 477 | 16.01 | 1 | 1 | –6 | |
African Progressive Party | 54 | 1.81 | 0 | 0 | New | ||||
NSF | 6 | 0.20 | 0 | 0 | New | ||||
Independents | 2,085 | 2.89 | 0 | 853 | 28.62 | 1 | 1 | +1 | |
Tribal representatives | 8 | 0 | |||||||
Total | 72,219 | 100.00 | 50 | 2,980 | 100.00 | 8 | 66 | 0 | |
Registered voters/turnout | 80,437 | – | 5,500 | – |
Constituency Electorate and turnout | Candidate | Party | Votes | % |
---|---|---|---|---|
ARUNDEL 2,393 (93.1%) | Archibald Wilson | RF | 1,505 | 67.5 |
Nicholas John McNally | RP | 723 | 32.5 | |
AVONDALE 1,983 (90.9%) | † Colin Eric Barlow | RF | 1,397 | 77.5 |
Myfanwy Eleanor Bridget Nolan van Hoffen | RP | 405 | 22.5 | |
BELLEVUE 2,272 (92.7%) | † Wallace Evelyn Stuttaford | RF | 1,735 | 82.3 |
Robert Duncan Bothwell Fleming | RP | 372 | 17.7 | |
BELVEDERE 1,862 (91.6%) | † Dennis Divaris | RF | 1,155 | 67.7 |
Ralph Albert Newmarch | RP | 456 | 26.7 | |
John Fraser Caladine Whiting | Ind RG | 69 | 4.0 | |
Ratilal Damodar Devchand | CP | 25 | 1.5 | |
BORROWDALE 2,672 (91.2%) | † Douglas Hamilton Ritchie | RF | 1,596 | 65.5 |
Peter Anthony Bridger | RP | 835 | 34.3 | |
Wendy Ann Truen | Ind | 6 | 0.2 | |
BRAESIDE 1,570 (89.0%) | Richard Cartwright | RF | 1,269 | 90.8 |
David Murray | Ind RG | 128 | 9.2 | |
BULAWAYO CENTRAL 1,252 (90.7%) | Edward Stanley White | RF | 722 | 63.6 |
Timothy Durant Gibbs | RP | 414 | 36.4 | |
BULAWAYO DISTRICT 1,613 (88.9%) | † Alexander Moseley | RF | 1,112 | 77.5 |
Michael Theodore Hayes Auret | RP | 322 | 22.5 | |
BULAWAYO EAST 2,080 (91.4%) | † Elias Broomberg | RF | 1,274 | 67.0 |
Jurick Goldwasser | RP | 628 | 33.0 | |
BULAWAYO NORTH 1,725 (83.1%) | Denis Walker | RF | 1,339 | 93.4 |
Austen Sales Perkins | Ind | 94 | 6.6 | |
BULAWAYO SOUTH 1,071 (87.1%) | Ian Peter Rees-Davies | RF | 697 | 74.7 |
Ronald Edward Clark | RP | 236 | 25.3 | |
CHARTER 1,417 (87.6%) | † Rowan Cronjé | RF | 1,147 | 92.4 |
Neil Diarmid Campbell Housman Herbert Wilson | Ind RG | 94 | 7.6 | |
EASTERN 1,312 (91.7%) | John Hamilton Wright | RF | 952 | 79.1 |
Obe Veldman | RP | 251 | 20.9 | |
GATOOMA 1,410 (92.3%) | † Albert Gannaway Mells | RF | 1,098 | 84.3 |
Raymond Thomas Mossop | RP | 203 | 15.7 | |
GREENDALE 2,050 (92.6%) | † Mark Partridge | RF | 1,332 | 70.2 |
Norman James Hendry | RP | 373 | 19.7 | |
Ernest Roy Wright | Ind RG | 193 | 10.2 | |
GWEBI 1,328 (89.7%) | † Thomas Ian Fraser Sandeman | RF | 939 | 78.8 |
James Strathearn Brown | RP | 252 | 21.2 | |
GWELO 1,257 (91.6%) | † Roger Hawkins | RF | 971 | 84.4 |
Gordon Hamilton Peters | RP | 180 | 15.6 | |
HARTLEY 2,135 (91.9%) | † P. K. van der Byl | RF | 1,668 | 85.0 |
James McClure Sinclair | RP | 295 | 15.0 | |
HATFIELD 1,768 (90.8%) | Frederick Roy Simmonds | RF | 1,231 | 76.7 |
William John Harper | RP | 288 | 17.9 | |
Jack Peche | Ind | 80 | 5.0 | |
Christoph William Utley | Ind | 6 | 0.4 | |
HIGHLANDS NORTH 1,779 (92.4%) | Fergus Craig Blackie | RF | 931 | 56.7 |
† Clifford Allan Redin Savory | Ind | 394 | 24.0 | |
Philip Robert James Grinham | RP | 230 | 14.0 | |
Diana Mitchell | Ind | 88 | 5.3 | |
HIGHLANDS SOUTH 1,886 (91.4%) | † Richard Hope Hall | RF | 1,299 | 75.3 |
Marcus Patrick Doyle | RP | 425 | 24.7 | |
HILLCREST 1,727 (93.1%) | † John Arthur Newington | RF | 1,390 | 86.4 |
Peter Henry Corbishley | RP | 218 | 13.6 | |
HILLSIDE 1,834 (93.3%) | † Dennis Fawcett Phillips | RF | 1,143 | 66.8 |
Ewen Cardno Greenfield | RP | 569 | 33.2 | |
JAMESON 1,700 (85.2%) | † John Peter Broberg Nilson | RF | 1,264 | 87.2 |
Raymond Stallwood | Ind | 185 | 12.8 | |
KAROI 1,241 (85.0%) | Jan Jacobus Buitendag | RF | 842 | 79.8 |
Peter William Richards | RP | 213 | 20.2 | |
MABELREIGN 1,823 (89.6%) | John Cornelius Gleig | RF | 1,171 | 71.7 |
Ian George Anderson | RP | 462 | 28.3 | |
MARANDELLAS 1,446 (91.4%) | † David Colville Smith | RF | 1,046 | 79.1 |
Alfred John Harrison | RP | 276 | 20.9 | |
MARLBOROUGH 2,608 (72.3%) | † William Michie Irvine | RF | 1,479 | 78.5 |
Nigel Graham-Smith | RP | 406 | 21.5 | |
MATOBO 1,673 (88.0%) | Robert Henry Warren McGee | RF | 1,218 | 82.7 |
Marshall P. Baron | Ind | 255 | 17.3 | |
MAZOE 1,589 (92.5%) | † George Rollo Hayman | RF | 1,241 | 84.4 |
Henry John Wells | RP | 229 | 15.6 | |
MIDLANDS 1,258 (92.4%) | Henry Swan Elsworth | RF | 1,009 | 86.8 |
William Septimus Beckett | RP | 154 | 13.2 | |
MILTON PARK 1,664 (91.2%) | John Alfred Landau | RF | 1,135 | 74.8 |
Niels Erik Oldenburg | RP | 382 | 25.2 | |
MOUNT PLEASANT 1,882 (90.5%) | Jonas Christian Andersen | RF | 1,045 | 61.3 |
Muriel Ena Rosin | RP | 658 | 38.7 | |
MTOKO 1,718 (91.7%) | † Rodney Guy Swayne Simmonds | RF | 1,070 | 67.9 |
Guy Kerry Webb | RP | 506 | 32.1 | |
QUEENS PARK 1,530 | Arthur Denis Crook | RF | unopposed | |
QUE QUE 1,632 (91.9%) | † Jacobus Johannes Burger | RF | 1,201 | 80.1 |
Louis Henry Bennett | RP | 299 | 19.9 | |
RAYLTON 1,844 (90.3%) | † Patrick Francis Shields | RF | 1,223 | 73.5 |
James Kinley | RP | 442 | 26.5 | |
RUSAPE 1,295 (95.2%) | † Johannes Jacobus Lodewickus de Kock | RF | 1,040 | 84.3 |
Raymond Boxwell Holcroft | RP | 193 | 15.7 | |
SALISBURY CENTRAL 1,250 (88.2%) | Hilary Squires | RF | 855 | 77.5 |
Lance Halford Reynolds | RP | 216 | 19.6 | |
Patrick Gerard Keane | Ind | 32 | 2.9 | |
SALISBURY CITY 1,309 (89.3%) | † Edward Aylett Sutton-Pryce | RF | 586 | 50.1 |
Ahrn Palley | Ind | 583 | 49.9 | |
SALISBURY NORTH 1,588 (91.1%) | † André Sothern Holland | RF | 1,103 | 76.2 |
John Philip Gold Duncan | RP | 344 | 23.8 | |
SELUKWE 1,682 (90.7%) | John Morris Lowenthal | RF | 1,249 | 81.9 |
Trevor Foster Booth | RP | 187 | 12.3 | |
James William Redmond | Ind RG | 89 | 5.8 | |
SHABANI 1,266 (83.8%) | † Ian Birt Harper Dillon | RF | 944 | 89.0 |
Geoffrey Jackson | RP | 117 | 11.0 | |
SINOIA/UMWUKWES 1,531 (88.1%) | † Esmond Meryl Micklem | RF | 1,057 | 78.4 |
Robert Arnold Anderson | RP | 292 | 21.6 | |
UMTALI EAST 1,571 (91.2%) | † Bernard Horace Mussett | RF | 1,203 | 83.9 |
John Grant | RP | 230 | 16.1 | |
UMTALI WEST 1,437 (90.1%) | † John Christie | RF | 933 | 72.0 |
Dr Johannes Martheus Wessels | RP | 362 | 28.0 | |
UMZINGWANE 1,698 | † Ian Smith | RF | unopposed | |
VICTORIA 2,071 (89.5%) | † Gordon Richard Olds | RF | 1,530 | 82.6 |
Peter Southerton Hingeston | RP | 323 | 17.4 | |
WANKIE 1,432 (86.6%) | † Reginald Edward Dennis Cowper | RF | 1,068 | 86.1 |
Mike Huckle | RP | 172 | 13.9 | |
WATERFALLS 1,531 (87.9%) | † Arthur Philip Smith | RF | 1,183 | 87.9 |
Norman Henry | Ind RG | 163 | 12.1 |
Constituency Electorate and turnout | Candidate | Party | Votes | % |
---|---|---|---|---|
HARARE 1,118 (63.7%) | Godfrey Guwa Chidyausiku | Ind ANC | 424 | 59.6 |
Isaac Hanzi Samuriwo | Ind | 145 | 20.4 | |
† Edward Gabriel Watungwa | CP | 71 | 10.0 | |
Lovemore Christopher Mbanga | Ind | 32 | 4.5 | |
Ian George Garikayi Charambarara | Ind | 24 | 3.4 | |
Hativakwane Lewis Mundawarara | Ind | 10 | 1.4 | |
Mark Taurai Muchabaiwa | NSF | 6 | 0.8 | |
INSUKAMINI 481 (64.7%) | John Zachary Maposa | Ind ANC | 188 | 60.5 |
Phillip Elijah Chigogo | Ind | 71 | 22.8 | |
Judah John Ntini | Ind | 30 | 9.6 | |
† Lewis Alban Ndhlovu | CP | 15 | 4.8 | |
Joseph Bunu Ngulube | APP | 7 | 2.3 | |
KUNYASI 1,543 | Thomas Tavagwisa Zawairi | Ind ANC | unopposed | |
MABVAZUKA 946 (57.8%) | Elijah Smile Gende Magavan Nyandoro | Ind ANC | 253 | 46.3 |
Davidson Murambiwa Jahwi | Ind | 123 | 22.5 | |
Moses Mvenge | Ind | 63 | 11.5 | |
† Lazarus Masenda | CP | 52 | 9.5 | |
Ambrose Charles Majongwe | APP | 31 | 5.7 | |
Solomon Gomba Zisengwe | Ind | 25 | 4.6 | |
MATOJENI 905 (51.2%) | † Lot Enock Dewa | Ind ANC | 452 | 97.6 |
Samson Chibi | APP | 11 | 2.4 | |
MPOPOMA 394 (52.5%) | † Lwazi Joel Mahlangu | Ind | 149 | 72.0 |
Theophilus Mali Zondo | Ind | 58 | 28.0 | |
NEMAKONDE 867 (37.9%) | † Ronald T.D. Sadomba | Ind ANC | 273 | 83.0 |
Stephen Amos Dzuka Chirenda | Ind | 51 | 15.5 | |
Mulena Mwana Sherena Mundawarara | APP | 5 | 1.5 | |
NTSHONALANGA 789 (52.1%) | † Micah Mahamba Bhebe | CP | 339 | 82.5 |
Ephraim Jiho Mhlanga | Ind | 72 | 17.5 |
Josia Hove died on 14 June 1976. At the byelection on 5 August 1976, Adam Hove was elected to replace him; Benjamin Panga Mbuisa and Twyman Mafohla Sibanda were unsuccessful candidates.
The Land Tenure Amendment Bill of 1977 was highly controversial among Rhodesian Front MPs who objected to the opening of some areas previously designated for Europeans to African ownership. In a vote on 4 March 1977, twelve Rhodesian Front MPs voted against the Bill on a three line whip. They were Reginald Cowper, Dennis Fawcett Phillips, Richard Hope Hall, Robert McGee, John Newington, Peter Nilson, Gordon Olds, Ian Sandeman, Rodney Simmonds and Ted Sutton-Pryce. The Rhodesian press quickly nicknamed them The Dirty Dozen. In July 1977 these MPs formed the right-wing Rhodesian Action Party; this action precipitated the 1977 election as it deprived the government of the needed two-thirds majority to amend the constitution.
Ian Douglas Smith was a Rhodesian politician, farmer, and fighter pilot who served as Prime Minister of Rhodesia from 1964 to 1979. He was the country's first leader to be born and raised in Rhodesia, and led the predominantly white government that unilaterally declared independence from the United Kingdom in November 1965 in opposition to their demands for the implementation of majority rule as a condition for independence. His 15 years in power were defined by the country's international isolation and involvement in the Rhodesian Bush War, which pitted the Rhodesian Security Forces against the Soviet- and Chinese-funded military wings of the Zimbabwe African National Union (ZANU) and Zimbabwe African People's Union (ZAPU).
The Rhodesian Action Party (RAP) was a political party in Rhodesia formed in 1977 by a group of MPs from the Rhodesian Front (RF) who were dissatisfied by the leadership of Ian Smith and his attempts to negotiate an 'internal settlement' with African nationalists. Twelve members of the Rhodesia House of Assembly joined the party when it was launched in May 1977, including Ted Sutton-Pryce, Reg Cowper, Ian Sandeman and former Rhodesian Front chairman Des Frost.
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Rhodesia had limited democracy in the sense that it had the Westminster parliamentary system with multiple political parties contesting the seats in parliament, but as the voting was dominated by the White settler minority, and Black Africans only had a minority level of representation at that time, it was regarded internationally as a racist country. It is thus an example of a state which practiced herrenvolk democracy.
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General elections were held in Rhodesia on 31 August 1977, the last general election in the country dominated by the white minority. Prime Minister Ian Smith, who was conducting negotiations with moderate African nationalists, was forced into an early election by the defection of twelve MPs from his Rhodesian Front party, which denied him the two-thirds majority of the House of Assembly needed to change the constitution. In the event, the Front overwhelmed the breakaway Rhodesian Action Party and all other forces, once again winning every single seat in the 50 seats elected by those of European descent.
General elections were held in Rhodesia in April 1979, the first where the majority black population elected the majority of seats in parliament. The elections were held following the Internal Settlement negotiated by the Rhodesian Front government of Ian Smith and were intended to provide a peaceful transition to majority rule on terms not harmful to White Rhodesians. In accordance with the Internal Settlement, on 1 June, Rhodesia officially became the nation of Zimbabwe Rhodesia, under the government of the United African National Council elected in the 1979 elections. The Internal Settlement was not approved internationally but the incoming government under Bishop Abel Muzorewa did decide to participate in the Lancaster House talks which led to the end of the dispute and the creation of Zimbabwe.
Parliamentary elections were held in Zimbabwe in June and July 1985. The result was a victory for the ruling ZANU–PF party led by Robert Mugabe, which increased its majority in parliament.
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General elections were held in Rhodesia on 10 April 1970. They were the first elections to take place under the revised, republican constitution. The country had declared itself independent in November 1965, shortly after the previous elections; the Rhodesian Front government had always disliked the 1961 constitution and made sure to change it by the time of the next one.
The history of Rhodesia from 1965 to 1979 covers Rhodesia's time as a state unrecognised by the international community following the predominantly white minority government's Unilateral Declaration of Independence on 11 November 1965. Headed by Prime Minister Ian Smith, the Rhodesian Front remained in government until 1 June 1979, when the country was reconstituted as Zimbabwe Rhodesia.
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Mark Henry Heathcote Partridge was a Rhodesian politician who served as the minister of Lands and Natural Resources and Defence.
The modern political history of Zimbabwe starts with the arrival of white people to what was dubbed Southern Rhodesia in the 1890s. The country was initially run by an administrator appointed by the British South Africa Company. The prime ministerial role was first created in October 1923, when the country achieved responsible government, with Sir Charles Coghlan as its first Premier. The third premier, George Mitchell, renamed the post prime minister in 1933.
Richard Brathwaite Hope Hall ICD was a British-born merchant banker, businessman, and politician active in Rhodesia during the 1960s and 70s. A member of Prime Minister Ian Smith's UDI cabinet, he served as a member of parliament in Rhodesia's House of Assembly from 1965 to 1976. He began his political career as a member of the Dominion Party, and served as its chairman from 1960 to 1962. In 1962, he was a founding member of the Rhodesian Front, but switched to the Rhodesian Action Party in 1976. After unsuccessfully running for re-election in 1977, he moved back to the United Kingdom, where he lived until his death.
The Centre Party (CP) was a liberal political party in Rhodesia. Founded in 1968, it was a multiracial party opposed to the policies of the country's Rhodesian Front-dominated white minority government. It dissolved in 1977.
George Rollo Hayman was a Rhodesian farmer and politician. A member of the House of Assembly, he served in several portfolios as a member of the Cabinet of Rhodesia under Prime Minister Ian Smith. Born in the United Kingdom, he moved to Southern Rhodesia at age four and served as a Royal Air Force pilot in World War II.
David Colville Smith was a farmer and politician in Rhodesia and its successor states, Zimbabwe Rhodesia and Zimbabwe. He served in the cabinet of Rhodesia as Minister of Agriculture from 1968 to 1976, Minister of Finance from 1976 to 1979, and Minister of Commerce and Industry from 1978 to 1979. From 1976 to 1979, he also served Deputy Prime Minister of Rhodesia. He continued to serve as Minister of Finance in the government of Zimbabwe Rhodesia in 1979. In 1980, he was appointed Minister of Trade and Commerce of the newly independent Zimbabwe, one of two whites included in the cabinet of Prime Minister Robert Mugabe.
Rhodesia, was a self-governing British Crown colony in southern Africa. Until 1964, the territory was known as Southern Rhodesia, and less than a year before the name change the colony formed a part of the Federation of Rhodesia and Nyasaland and hosted its capital city, Salisbury. On 1 January 1964, the three parts of the Federation became separate colonies as they had been before the founding of the Federation on 1 August 1953. The demise of the short-lived union was seen as stemming overwhelmingly from black nationalist movements in Northern Rhodesia and Nyasaland, and both colonies were fast-tracked towards independence - Nyasaland first, as Malawi, on 6 July 1964 and Northern Rhodesia second, as Zambia, on 24 October. Southern Rhodesia, by contrast, stood firmly under white government, and its white population, which was far larger than the white populations elsewhere in the erstwhile Federation, was, in general, strongly opposed to the introduction of black majority rule. The Southern Rhodesian prime minister, Winston Field, whose government had won most of the federation's military and other assets for Southern Rhodesia, began to seek independence from the United Kingdom without introducing majority rule. However, he was unsuccessful and his own party, the Rhodesian Front, forced him to resign. Days prior to his resignation, on Field's request, Southern Rhodesia had changed its flag to a sky blue ensign defaced with the Rhodesian coat of arms, becoming the first British colony to use a sky blue ensign instead of a dark blue one.