Members of the Australian Senate, 1929–1932

This is a list of members of the Australian Senate from 1929 to 1932.[1] Half of its members were elected at the 14 November 1925 election and had terms starting on 1 July 1926 and finishing on 30 June 1932; the other half were elected at the 17 November 1928 election and had terms starting on 1 July 1929 and finishing on 30 June 1935. The process for filling casual vacancies was complex. While senators were elected for a six-year term, people appointed to a casual vacancy only held office until the earlier of the next election for the House of Representatives or the Senate.[2]

Senate composition at 1 July 1929

Coalition (28) - (10 seat majority) [lower-roman 1]
  Nationalist (24) [lower-roman 2][lower-roman 3]
  Country Party (4)

  Labor (8) - (10 seat minority) [lower-roman 1] [lower-roman 4]
 
Changes in composition

  1. The Coalition government was defeated by Labor at the October 1929 House of Representatives election
  2. In May 1931 the Nationalist party merged with pro-Joseph Lyons Labor defectors to form the United Australia Party.
  3. UAP Senator Walter Duncan resigned on 1 December 1931 and was replaced by Lang Labor member Patrick Mooney.
  4. In 1931 2 NSW Senators walked out of the Labor party to join Lang Labor

The Government changed during the Senate term as the Coalition of the Nationalist Party led by Prime Minister of Australia Stanley Bruce and the Country Party led by Earle Page lost the confidence of the House of Representatives and called an election for October 1929. The Labor Party, led by James Scullin, won the election with a large majority. This was the first time in which an election for the House of Representatives was held without an election for the Senate. Section 13 of the Constitution requires an election to occur within one year of the expiry of senate terms and the terms of senators elected in 1925 were not due to expire until 1932.[3]

In 1931 five Labor members in the House of Representatives split from the Scullin government in opposition to its economic policies on the Great Depression and joined the Nationalist Party and three conservative independents in the House to form the United Australia Party (UAP). Subsequently, some New South Wales members and senators were expelled from the Labor Party for their support of New South Wales Premier Jack Lang's policy of repudiating foreign debt and formed the Australian Labor Party (New South Wales)—known as Lang Labor—and later voted with the UAP to defeat the Scullin government, leading to the 1931 election.

Senator Party State End term Years in Office
John Barnes LaborVictoria19351913–1920, 1923–1935
Tom Brennan [lower-alpha 1] UAPVictoria1932 [lower-alpha 2]1931–1938
William Carroll CountryWestern Australia19321926–1936
John Chapman [lower-alpha 3] Nationalist /UAPSouth Australia19321926–1931
Hal Colebatch Nationalist /UAPWestern Australia19351929–1933
Walter Cooper CountryQueensland19321928–1932, 1935–1968
Charles Cox Nationalist /UAPNew South Wales19321920–1938
Thomas Crawford Nationalist /UAPQueensland19351917–1947
John Daly LaborSouth Australia19351928–1935
John Dooley LaborNew South Wales19351928–1935
Walter Duncan [lower-alpha 4] Nationalist/UAPNew South Wales19321920–1931
Jack Duncan-Hughes [lower-alpha 3] UAPSouth Australia19321931–38
James Dunn Labor/Lang LaborNew South Wales19351929–1935
Harold Elliott [lower-alpha 1] NationalistVictoria19321920–1931
Robert Elliott CountryVictoria19351929–1935
Harry Foll Nationalist /UAPQueensland19351917–1947
Hon. William Glasgow Nationalist /UAPQueensland19321920–1932
Charles Grant [lower-alpha 5] UAPTasmania1934 [lower-alpha 2]1925, 1932–1941
James Guthrie Nationalist /UAPVictoria19321920–1938
John Hayes Nationalist /UAPTasmania19351923–1947
Herbert Hays Nationalist /UAPTasmania19351923–1947
Bert Hoare LaborSouth Australia19351922–1935
Bertie Johnston CountryWestern Australia19351929–1942
Walter Kingsmill Nationalist /UAPWestern Australia19351923–1935
Harry Kneebone [lower-alpha 3] LaborSouth Australia1931 [lower-alpha 2]1931
Harry Lawson Nationalist /UAPVictoria19351929–1935
Patrick Lynch Nationalist /UAPWestern Australia19321907–1938
Hon. Walter Massy-Greene Nationalist /UAPNew South Wales19321923–1925, 1926–1938
Alexander McLachlan Nationalist /UAPSouth Australia19321926–1944
John Millen Nationalist /UAPTasmania19321920–1938
Patrick Mooney [lower-alpha 4] Lang LaborNew South Wales1932 [lower-alpha 2]1931–1932
Hon. John Newlands Nationalist /UAPSouth Australia19321913–1932
James Ogden [lower-alpha 5] UAPTasmania19351923–1932
Mick O'Halloran LaborSouth Australia19351928–1935
Herbert Payne Nationalist /UAPTasmania19321920–1938
Hon. Sir George Pearce [lower-alpha 6] Nationalist /UAPWestern Australia19321901–1938
William Plain Nationalist /UAPVictoria19321917–1923, 1925–1938
Arthur Rae Labor/Lang LaborNew South Wales19351910–1914, 1929–1935
Matthew Reid Nationalist /UAPQueensland19351917–1935
Burford Sampson Nationalist /UAPTasmania19321925–1938, 1941–1947
William Thompson Nationalist /UAPQueensland19321922–1932

Notes

  1. Nationalist Senator Harold Edward Elliott died on 23 March 1931; UAP member Tom Brennan was appointed on 12 May to replace him for the remainder of his term finishing on 30 June 1932.
  2. Appointed to a casual vacancy and only held office until the earlier of the next election for the House of Representatives or the Senate.[2]
  3. Labor Senator John Chapman died on 14 March 1931; Labor member Harry Kneebone was appointed on 1 April to replace him until the 19 December 1931 election when he was defeated by UAP candidate Jack Duncan-Hughes for the remainder of his term finishing on 30 June 1932.
  4. UAP Senator Walter Duncan resigned on 1 December 1931; Lang Labor member Patrick Mooney was appointed on 23 December to replace him for the remainder of his term finishing on 30 June 1932.
  5. UAP Senator James Ogden died on 5 February 1932; UAP member and former Senator Charles Grant was appointed on 3 March to replace him with his term expiring at the September 1934 election, when he was re-elected for the balance of the term expiring on 30 June 1935 and a six year term expiring on 30 June 1941.
  6. Father of the Senate

References

  1. "The Biographical Dictionary of the Australian Senate 1929". Parliament of Australia. Retrieved 19 March 2017.
  2. Evans, H. "Filling Casual Vacancies before 1977" (PDF). The Biographical Dictionary of the Australian Senate, Volume 3. Parliament of Australia. Retrieved 24 February 2017.
  3. Constitution (Cth) s 13 Rotation of senators.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.