Members of the South Australian Legislative Council, 1910–1912

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This is a list of members of the South Australian Legislative Council from 1910 to 1912

It was the third Legislative Council to be fully determined by provisions of the (State) Constitution Act 779 of 1901, which provided for, inter alia, a reduction in the number of seats from 24 to 18, realignment of District borders to encompass Assembly electorates, six-year terms (one half of the Council retiring every three years), and elections held jointly with the House of Assembly. [1]

The election of 1910 was called after a Constitutional crisis when Thomas Price died, and John Verran refused to negotiate a coalition government like the Price-Peake administration.

NameDistrictPartyTime in office
Arthur Richman Addison Northern LDU/LU [1] 1888–1915
John George Bice NorthernLDU/LU [1] 1894–1923
Theodore Bruce [2] Central FPPU/LU [1] 1909–1911
John Cowan Southern ANL/LU [1] 1910–1944
Sir John Downer SouthernANL/LU [1] 1905–1915
John Duncan North-EasternANL/LU [1] 1891–1896, 1900–1913
James Howe NorthernFPPU/LU [1] 1897–1918
Andrew Kirkpatrick Central Labor 1891–1897, 1900–1909, 1918–1928
Ern Klauer CentralLabor1910–1915
John Lewis NorthernANL/LU [1] 1898–1923
Edward Lucas North-EasternANL/LU [1] 1900–1918
Charles Morris [2] CentralLU1911–1912
Beaumont Arnold Moulden CentralANL/LU [1] 1903–1912
Thomas Pascoe North-EasternANL/LU [1] 1900–1933
Sir Lancelot Stirling SouthernANL/LU [1] 1891–1932
Alfred William Styles CentralLabor1910–1918
Alfred von Doussa SouthernANL/LU [1] 1901–1921
Frederick Samuel Wallis CentralLabor1907–1921
John Warren North-EasternANL/LU [1] 1888–1912
James Phillips Wilson CentralLabor1906–1918
1 The three anti-Labor parties, the Liberal and Democratic Union, the Australasian National League and the Farmers and Producers Political Union, formally merged to form the Liberal Union in late 1910. They had been in merger discussions for some time, and had jointly endorsed a united Liberal ticket for the Legislative Council at the 1910 election.
2 Liberal MLC Theodore Bruce died on 1 July 1911. Liberal candidate Charles Morris won the resulting by-election on 5 August.

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Do you approve of the Bill entitled "A Bill for an Act to Abolish the Legislative Council to provide that another Legislative Council shall not be created, constituted or established nor shall any Chamber, Assembly or House, other than the Legislative Assembly, designed to form part of the Legislative Parliament of New South Wales, be created, constituted or established until a bill for the purpose has been approved by the electors in a referendum to amend the Constitution Act, 1902 and certain other Acts; and for purposes connected therewith."

This is a list of members of the South Australian Legislative Council from 1900 to 1902.

This is a list of members of the South Australian Legislative Council from 1908 to 1910.

This is a list of members of the South Australian Legislative Council from 1912 to 1915

References

  1. "The New Constitution Act". The Chronicle . Adelaide: National Library of Australia. 8 March 1902. p. 15. Retrieved 25 October 2014. This article clearly lays out changes brought about by the Act, includes voter statistics and certain criticisms.