This is a list of members of the Victorian Legislative Assembly as elected at the 15 November 1914 election and subsequent by-elections up to the election of 15 November 1917:
Name | Party | Electorate | Term in Office |
---|---|---|---|
Henry Angus | Comm. Liberal / Nationalist | Gunbower | 1911–1934 |
Henry Bailey | Labor | Port Fairy | 1914–1932; 1935–1950 |
Matthew Baird | Comm. Liberal / Economy / Nationalist | Ballarat West | 1911–1927 |
Samuel Barnes | Comm. Liberal / Nationalist | Walhalla | 1910–1927 |
Norman Bayles | Nationalist / Economy | Toorak | 1906–1920 |
Alfred Billson | Nationalist / Economy | Ovens | 1901–1902; 1904–1927 |
John Billson | Labor | Fitzroy | 1900–1924 |
Maurice Blackburn | Labor | Essendon | 1914–1917; 1925–1934 |
John Bowser | Nationalist / Economy | Wangaratta | 1894–1929 |
Allan Cameron | Comm. Liberal / Nationalist | Dalhousie | 1914–1923 |
James Cameron | Comm. Liberal / Nationalist | Gippsland East | 1902–1920 |
Hugh Campbell | Comm. Liberal / Nationalist | Glenelg | 1906–1920 |
John Carlisle | Comm. Liberal / Nationalist / Economy | Benalla | 1903–1927 |
John Chatham | Labor | Grenville | 1913–1917 |
Ted Cotter | Labor | Richmond | 1908–1945 |
Alfred Downward | Unaligned | Mornington | 1894–1929 |
George Elmslie | Labor | Albert Park | 1902–1918 |
James Farrer | Comm. Liberal / Nationalist / Economy | Barwon | 1906–1917 |
Alfred Farthing | Comm. Liberal / Nationalist | East Melbourne | 1911–1927 |
John Gordon | Comm. Liberal / Nationalist/ Economy | Waranga | 1911–1927 |
Achilles Gray | Comm. Liberal / Nationalist | Korong | 1914–1917 |
John Gray | Comm. Liberal / Nationalist | Swan Hill | 1904–1917 |
Alfred Hampson [a] | Labor | Bendigo East | 1911–1915 |
Martin Hannah | Labor | Collingwood | 1904–1906; 1908–1921 |
Edmond Hogan | Labor | Warrenheip | 1913–1943 |
William Hutchinson | Comm. Liberal / Nationalist | Borung | 1902–1920 |
James Jewell | Labor | Brunswick | 1910–1949 |
John Johnstone [b] | Comm. Liberal | Polwarth | 1911–1917 |
William Keast | Ministerial / Comm. Liberal | Dandenong | 1900–1917 |
Harry Lawson | Nationalist | Castlemaine and Maldon | 1900–1928 |
John Leckie [c] | Nationalist | Benambra | 1913–1917 |
John Lemmon | Labor | Williamstown | 1904–1955 |
Thomas Livingston | Comm. Liberal / Nationalist | Gippsland South | 1902–1922 |
Robert McCutcheon | Ministerialist / Comm. Liberal | St Kilda | 1902–1917 |
Robert McGregor | Comm. Liberal / Nationalist | Ballarat East | 1894–1924 |
Hugh McKenzie | Comm. Liberal / Nationalist | Rodney | 1904–1917 |
Malcolm McKenzie | Unaligned | Upper Goulburn | 1892–1903; 1911–1920 |
John Mackey | Comm. Liberal / Nationalist / Economy | Gippsland West | 1902–1924 |
Donald Mackinnon | Liberal | Prahran | 1900–1920 |
James McLachlan | Independent | Gippsland North | 1908–1938 |
Donald McLeod | Nationalist | Daylesford | 1900–1923 |
William McPherson | Comm. Liberal / Nationalist / Economy | Hawthorn | 1913–1930 |
Frank Madden | Comm. Liberal / Nationalist | Boroondara | 1894–1917 |
James Membrey | Comm. Liberal / Nationalist | Jika Jika | 1907–1917 |
James Menzies | Comm. Liberal / Nationalist | Lowan | 1911–1920 |
John Mitchell | Comm. Liberal / Nationalist | Goulburn Valley | 1914–1920 |
John Murray [d] | Comm. Liberal | Warrnambool | 1884–1916 |
David Oman | Comm. Liberal / Nationalist | Hampden | 1900–1927 |
Alfred Outtrim | Labor | Maryborough | 1904–1920 |
Alexander Peacock | Comm. Liberal / Nationalist | Allandale | 1889–1933 |
John Pennington | Comm. Liberal / Nationalist | Kara Kara | 1913–1917; 1918–1935 |
William Plain [e] | Labor / Nationalist | Geelong | 1908–1917 |
George Prendergast | Labor | North Melbourne | 1894–1897; 1900–1926; 1927–1937 |
Andrew Robertson | Comm. Liberal / Nationalist / Economy | Bulla | 1903–1924 |
Alexander Rogers | Labor | Melbourne | 1908–1924 |
James Rouget | Comm. Liberal / Nationalist | Evelyn | 1914–1917 |
George Sangster [f] | Labor | Port Melbourne | 1894–1915 |
David Smith | Labor | Bendigo West | 1904–1924 |
William Kennedy Smith | Comm. Liberal / Nationalist | Dundas | 1914–1917 |
Oswald Snowball | Comm. Liberal / Nationalist | Brighton | 1909–1928 |
Robert Solly | Labor | Carlton | 1904–1906; 1908–1932 |
Richard Toutcher | Comm. Liberal / Nationalist | Stawell and Ararat | 1904–1935 |
Tom Tunnecliffe | Labor | Eaglehawk | 1903–1904; 1907–1920; 1921–1947 |
Edward Warde | Labor | Flemington | 1900–1925 |
Gordon Webber | Labor | Abbotsford | 1912–1932 |
Francis Gwynne Tudor was an Australian politician who served as the leader of the Australian Labor Party from 1916 until his death. He had previously been a government minister under Andrew Fisher and Billy Hughes.
The 19th New Zealand Parliament was a term of the New Zealand Parliament. It opened on 24 June 1915, following the 1914 election. It was dissolved on 27 November 1919 in preparation for 1919 election.
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The Victorian Farmers' Union (VFU) was an association of farmers and primary producers formed in 1914 in the Australian state of Victoria. Although initially formed as an "absolutely non-political" entity, the VFU became a political party in 1916, and nominated candidates for the 1917 state election and subsequent elections. In later years it used the names Victorian Country Party, then United Country Party and is now the National Party of Australia – Victoria. At the 1917 election, because the support for the VFU was concentrated in rural seats, it won four of the 11 seats in the Victorian Legislative Assembly it contested, gaining about 6% of the vote state-wide. In 1918 it also won its first seat in the federal parliament, after preferential voting was introduced. At the 1920 state election the VFU vote increased to 8% and the number of seats to 13, giving the VFU the balance of power in the state Legislative Assembly.
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This is a list of members of the Victorian Legislative Assembly, from the elections of 28 February 1880. Another election was held on 14 July 1880, see second table below. Victoria was a British self-governing colony in Australia at the time.
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This is a list of members of the Victorian Legislative Council at the election of 5 June 1919 until 31 May 1922 election. As half of the Legislative Council's terms expired at each triennial election, half of these members were elected at the 1916 triennial election with terms expiring in 1922, while the other half were elected at the 1919 triennial election with terms expiring in 1925.
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This is a list of members of the Victorian Legislative Assembly as elected at the 15 November 1917 election and subsequent by-elections up to the election of 6 August 1920:
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Elections to Liverpool City Council were due to be held on 2 November 1914.