National Party of Australia (WA)
National Party of Australia (WA) | |
---|---|
Leader | Mia Davies |
President | James Hayward |
Founded | 1913 (as Country Party of Western Australia) |
Headquarters | Level 1, 3 Ord Street, West Perth WA 6005 |
Ideology | Conservatism Agrarianism |
Political position | Centre to Centre-right |
Colours | Green and Yellow |
Legislative Assembly | 5 / 59 |
Legislative Council | 4 / 36 |
Website | |
The Nationals WA | |
|
The National Party of Australia (WA) Inc[1] is a political party in Western Australia. It is affiliated with the National Party of Australia but maintains a separate structure and identity.
Founded in 1913 as the Country Party of Western Australia to represent the interests of farmers and pastoralists, it was the first agrarian party in Australia to contest and win seats at the 1914 state election. Since then, it has continuously held seats in the state's Legislative Assembly and Legislative Council, particularly in the state's Wheatbelt region, and for many years it also held federal seats. While the party had historically functioned as part of a two-party coalition with the centre-right Liberal Party (and its predecessors) for most of its existence, tensions have existed over the coalition arrangement, and on two occasions the party split over the issue.
Since the passage of reforms to the electoral system initiated by the Labor Party reducing the number of non-metropolitan seats,[2] the Nationals have refashioned themselves as an independent third party in Western Australian politics in an effort to ensure their survival and continued representation for agrarian interests in Parliament.[citation needed]
In 2005 the party confirmed its intention to maintain parliamentary independence from the Liberal Party. In 2007, leader Brendon Grylls stated that the party "took a significant step and said no to a traditional coalition with the Liberal Party and will contest the (next, 2008) election as a stand-alone conservative party".[3] Following the unexpected hung parliament produced by the election, the Nationals found themselves holding the balance of power in both houses of the Western Australian parliament, opting ultimately to support the Liberals without establishing with them a coalition of one political force.
Nationals WA candidate Tony Crook defeated Liberal Party incumbent Wilson Tuckey in the lower house seat of O'Connor at the 2010 federal election, where a four-seat deficit for both sides saw the first hung parliament since the 1940 federal election. Crook initially sat on the crossbench after the election; he and his party remained open to negotiations with both sides on the formation of the 2010 federal government. In April 2012, however, he moved from the crossbench to sit with the Nationals. His main platform was pro-Royalties for Regions policy and anti-Mineral Resource Rent Tax. Since his election, Crook voted at times for federal Labor government policies in parliament contrary to the official position of the National Party of Australia. Crook retired at the 2013 federal election and the seat of O'Connor was won by Liberal Rick Wilson, who narrowly defeated Nationals WA candidate Chub Witham.[4]
Contents
1 Naming
2 History
2.1 Background
2.2 Formation of the Country Party
2.3 Coalition and division
2.4 Official opposition
2.5 Demographic and political challenges
2.6 The National Alliance and coalition tensions
2.7 The split (1978–1985)
2.8 The Cowan era
2.9 21st century
3 Party leaders
4 Party performance
5 References
6 Bibliography
7 External links
Naming
On foundation, the party was known as the Country Party of Western Australia. In 1944, it was renamed the Country and Democratic League following its severance from the Primary Producers' Association; however, the name proved confusing, especially after the Liberals' decision to adopt the name Liberal and Country League, and the parliamentary party reverted to being the Country Party at the 1949 federal election. The organisation followed suit at its 1961 conference.[5] In 1974, the party contested state and federal elections under the National Alliance banner, and then was officially renamed the National Country Party. On 1 April 1985, upon its union with the breakaway National Party, it became the National Party of Western Australia, which was formally affiliated with the National Party of Australia. As with all National parties around Australia, in late 2003 the party was rebranded as The Nationals Western Australia, although the official name has not changed.[6]
History
Background
The gold rush of the 1890s had seen tremendous growth in the state in terms of both capital and population. Between the discovery of gold at Halls Creek in 1885 and federation in 1901, the population increased from 35,959 to 184,124, and by 1911 had risen to 282,114—in all, an almost eightfold increase.[7] The gold rush peaked in 1903 and, while gold still represented over 65% of the total exports of Western Australia, the industry had started to enter a period of decline. With this decline came a recognition by government that continued economic growth depended on the development of agriculture. Massive public loans from overseas together with assisted immigration from the United Kingdom saw large areas of land opened up—from 1900 to 1910, the area under crop rose from 74,308 acres (30,071 ha) to 521,862 acres (211,190 ha), while the railway network doubled in size and many public buildings were erected throughout the cultivated areas of the state. In addition, immigrants who had come in search of gold or work increasingly took on jobs as farm workers—the proportion of the population on the Goldfields had fallen from 32.2% of the State in 1901 to 22.3% by 1911, while the agricultural population had risen from 28.2% to 35.5% in the same period.[8] Land was also given to unemployed labourers and retrenched public servants, which they could gain title on by making it productive. Following the pioneering work in 1903 by William Farrer in New South Wales on marginal-rainfall wheat varieties,[9] wheat became by far the most important agricultural export, with the rate of expansion from 1904 to 1913 in wheat production and export surpassing all other states.[10]
However, falling wheat prices after 1908 and a drought in 1911–1912 caused major hardship to the newly established farmers, especially in the eastern wheatbelt which had lower rainfall, less capital and less preparation. This led to some resentment towards the Liberal government then in power, and especially towards Minister for Lands James Mitchell, who had adopted a particularly enthusiastic attitude towards settlement in such areas.[11] Two new events on the horizon brought things to a head—the 1911 state election which produced the first majority Labor government in Western Australia (including several members from agricultural areas); and an attempt by the Rural Workers Union to bring agricultural workers into the Commonwealth arbitration system to regulate their wages and working conditions. In March 1912, the Western Australian Farmers and Settlers' Association was formed to represent small employers' interests, and included primarily wheat farmers, but also small graziers, dairy farmers and orchardists. By 1914, it had 180 branches and 6,000 members, mostly located in the Wheatbelt region with some penetration of the South West region. It was inspired in part by the success of Canadian grain growers' associations from 1900 onwards.[12][13]
Formation of the Country Party
At its second conference in June 1912, held at Perth Technical School, the FSA decided to adopt a political platform and elect members to Parliament who were pledged to support it. The FSA's leadership at this time was dominated by conservative established farmers, and particularly by its founding president Alexander Monger, a former member of the Liberal party. However, the association had also been highly successful in attracting Labor supporters, so the entire question of the platform was referred to a special conference held in March 1913. Strongly influenced by eastern Wheatbelt representatives, the conference was militant in tone and decided by a vote of 103 to 17 to form a country party in both State and Federal parliaments. By early 1914, the emergent Country Party of Western Australia had adopted some elements of Labor's political structure such as preselection ballots, a local branch structure, annual conferences and the observance of a pledge by party members, and saw their role as a balance of power capable of bargaining for concessions from the government of the day, clearly influenced by Labor's past practice before emerging as a major party in 1904.[11][14]
These events took the Liberal party by surprise and caused some consternation amongst them. Their initial view of the FSA had been positive—federal member for Swan and former Premier (1890–1901), Sir John Forrest, believed the movement "would be of great use to the Producers, add to the strength of Liberalism and prove advantageous in every way". The FSA's first meetings were at the Liberal League's clubrooms in Perth, and its Executive was dominated by well-established families from the established farming districts around York and Beverley, epitomising the conservative values of pre-1890s Western Australian society. The Executive was staunchly opposed to the Labor party, and was concerned about the support Labor was able to attract in the newer districts, but at the same time wished for a more considered land settlement policy than the Liberals were offering, and opposed protectionism. The emergence of a three-party contest with a new Country Party remaining "entirely distinct from and not allied with any other Party" and representing the political interests of farmers, a compromise that both the Executive and the membership wholeheartedly supported, resulted in sharp criticism from key Liberals such as Forrest, who engaged in a two-month correspondence with Monger until April 1914 attempting to convince him to rejoin the FSA to the Liberal cause, and State opposition leader Frank Wilson.[14] An invitation from the Liberal League for an exchange of preferences in the Legislative Council had been rejected by the Executive on the ground that "our constitution does not permit the council to comply with their request".[15]
In May 1914, the Country Party won two of four contested seats in the Legislative Council—one in East Province and one in Central Province. At the Assembly elections on 21 October 1914, they contested 16 of the 50 seats in the Legislative Assembly, winning 8 of them. Five of these seats had Liberal incumbents (Beverley, Greenough, Irwin, Pingelly and York), while two had been held by Labor (Avon and Nelson). Alfred Piesse, the Liberal member for Toodyay, joined the Country Party and faced no contest for his seat. James Gardiner was selected as the first leader of the Country Party.[14][16] The Labor government was returned with a one-seat majority, but could not always rely on its own members, and Gardiner told the Assembly on 8 December 1914 that there should be a "legitimate truce" and that the Country Party would support the government for the benefit of the state. During this time the government enacted a number of financial aid and other relief measures with Country Party support. However, Gardiner's willingness to work with Labor to achieve Country Party aims on the land alarmed conservatives on the FSA executive, and on 12 March 1915, at the first joint Country Party-FSA conference, the decision was made to appoint a new leader. Gardiner resigned six days later, and Francis Willmott became leader of the party, which became increasingly dominated by Monger. The party had to act carefully, as Labor had committed to an agricultural relief programme and the Executive was wary of upsetting the radical eastern wheatbelt branches. The status quo was cautiously backed at the party's August 1915 conference.[17]
Coalition and division
Events in Western Australian politics assumed an unpredictable quality from late 1915 onwards. On 30 September 1915, the seat of Roebourne, previously held by Joseph Gardiner, was declared vacant and was won at a by-election two months later by the Liberal Party, leaving Labor with no majority in the Assembly. The FSA executive had tired of Gardiner and colleague Tom Harrison's continuing support for the government, writing in September 1915 accusing him of "always being the apologist for the bad administration of the present Government". In November, Country Party members were instructed to support a censure motion by the Liberal Party, but although all members did ultimately vote for the motion, it was defeated by the casting vote of the Speaker. On 18 December 1915, the Labor member for Williams-Narrogin, Edward Johnston, resigned from the party and was re-elected at a by-election as an Independent. For the first time since the Scaddan Government's election in 1911, non-Labor forces had a majority in the Assembly.[18]
On 27 July 1916, the Liberal and Country parties cooperated to defeat the government in the Legislative Assembly. After being refused a dissolution of Parliament by the governor, the premier John Scaddan resigned, and Wilson became premier for the second time.
Although the Country Party cooperated with the Liberals in bringing down Scaddan's Labour government, they declined to form a coalition ministry, and they were inconsistent in their support of Wilson's government. At one point in February 1917, a dispute between the parties prompted Wilson to tender his resignation, but this was refused by the governor. During this period the Liberal Party was transformed into the Nationalist Party, mirroring changes at the federal level. After an initial minority Liberal/Nationalist ministry under Frank Wilson, on 28 June 1917 the Lefroy Ministry was formed, the first Coalition ministry in Western Australia. It combined the Nationalist Party, the Country Party and the National Labor Party (who, unlike their federal counterparts, were not subsumed into the Nationalists until 1924). The Country Party held three posts, and the Coalition would last under a succession of leaders until defeat at the 1924 election.
During the 1921–1924 term, the Country Party split into rival factions, the Ministerial Country Party (MCP) which comprised the bulk of the parliamentary party—many of whom had switched allegiance from other parties since 1919—and the Executive Country Party (ECP), which was loyal to the Primary Producers' Association, which the Country Party was intended to represent in Parliament. After the 1924 election, which significantly strengthened the latter at the expense of the former, the Ministerial arm merged with the Nationalist Party.
Official opposition
The Coalition returned to government at the 1930 election, with new Country Party leader Charles Latham serving as Deputy Premier, but lost power again at the 1933 election. In that election the Nationalists fell to third place in the Legislative Assembly and so the Country Party leader took the post of Leader of the Opposition until 1947, with Latham serving until 1942 and then being succeeded in both posts by Arthur Watts.
Demographic and political challenges
In 1944 came a significant shift in the party's fortunes when the Primary Producers' Association, of which the Party had been the political wing, passed a motion during negotiations with the Wheatgrowers' Union deleting the rule which authorised the Party's existence and its use of PPA branches and funds for party purposes. A new organisation was hastily set up by Watts and the member for Pingelly, Harrie Seward, who were very active in setting up branches to endorse local candidates and obtaining donations on which to run the 1947 campaign. This was the start of a significant decline in the Country Party's fortunes over the ensuing decades. In 1946 the party changed its name to the "Country and Democratic League". The party's total of seats would slowly decline at successive elections from the twelve won in 1947 to eight or nine in the elections of the 1950s and 1960s until by the mid-1970s onwards the party would win a maximum of six seats
At the 1947 election the Coalition returned to power, with the Nationalists having now become the Liberals. The McLarty–Watts Ministry would held power until the 1953 election. During this time in March 1949, James Mann, the member for Beverley, led a breakaway faction out of the Country Party, and initially sat as an Independent. His faction merged with the Liberal Party in May 1949, and the party became known as the Liberal and Country League.
The two parties regained power at the 1959 election forming the Brand–Watts Ministry. Watts retired in 1962, to be succeeded by Crawford Nalder. The reconstituted Brand–Nalder Ministry retained power until the 1971 election.
The National Alliance and coalition tensions
The party entered into a temporary merger with the Democratic Labor Party, standing on a centrist platform as the "National Alliance" in both the March 1974 state election and the May 1974 federal election. The Alliance contested most of the state seats and every single federal seat, standing in many metropolitan seats for the first time. However, in both elections the party lost votes and seats compared to the combined performance of its component parties in previous elections,[19] losing its last seats in the federal House of Representatives and one of two Senators. The National Alliance was dissolved soon afterwards and the now-renamed National Country Party reverted to its traditional approach of contesting just rural seats afterwards. In the 1977 federal election the party's last Senator, Tom Drake-Brockman, retired and his seat was lost. The party would not win another federal seat until the 2010 federal election.
The 1974 state election saw the Liberals defeat Labor but they lacked a majority and so following negotiations a Liberal-National Country Coalition ministry was formed with the National Country Party holding three positions in the ministry, including leader Ray McPharlin as Deputy Premier under Sir Charles Court. However the National Country Party's reduced position led to public discussions about establishing a clear separate identity from the Liberals. Tensions grew over rural and education issues and, ultimately, milk quotas for dairy producers leading to a split. On 20 May 1975, McPharlin led the party out of the Coalition. The state party then came under pressure from the federal party to resume the coalition, with both federal leader Doug Anthony and Queensland Premier Joh Bjelke-Petersen making visits to encourage this. In the negotiations which followed, McPharlin was replaced as leader by Dick Old and the Coalition was resumed on 31 May; however, Court insisted Old was too inexperienced to be Deputy Premier, and from this point until the Liberals' defeat in 1983, while the Coalition was maintained between the two parties, the Liberal Party got to name both leading positions in the Ministry despite Old gaining experience as a minister.[20] At the 1977 state election the Liberals gained seats while the National Country Party stood still, resulting in the latter losing one of its three ministerial posts. The Coalition remained in office.
The split (1978–1985)
In July 1978 the tensions within the party came to the forefront once more. The schism was triggered over a political donation of $200,000 from mining entrepreneur Lang Hancock through the party president from which offers of campaign assistance were made to parliamentary officeholders to vote to oust Old.[21] By August the party had completely fractured when Hendy Cowan, the vice president of the party and an MLA, and Jim Fletcher, the general president, walked out of a strategy planning meeting. The allegation of the campaign offer had been made against Fletcher. Court's strong domination of conservative politics had resulted in the National Country Party having only minor influence and the split galvanised demands for greater independence.
A separate party called the "National Party" was formed. The name was initially disallowed after objections from the National Party in Queensland, Victoria and Tasmania but later formalised as the National Party of Australia (WA).[21] Disaffected members of the National Country Party joined including three Members of the Legislative Assembly, Cowan, McPharlin and Matt Stephens, and one Member of the Legislative Council, Thomas McNeil. The National Party operated as an independent force while the National Country Party remained in the Coalition. The two parties worked independently of one another while quietly (and occasionally, publicly) feuding. In the 1980 state election the National Country Party maintained the Coalition while the National Party agreed with the Labor Party not to contest each other's seats and Cowan publicly stated his party was willing to support a Labor minority government if it had the largest number of seats.[22] The election saw each party return its three sitting MLAs, with the Coalition retaining power. On 12 May 1982, McPharlin resigned from the National Party and rejoined the National Country Party.
The Coalition lost power in the 1983 state election, in which McPharlin also lost his seat to the Liberals. All the other National Country and National MLAs retained their seats. The National Country Party was by this stage $1.25 million in debt, largely due to the failure of a grocery store it had entered to raise funds. This led to an unsuccessful motion to dissolve the party in May 1983.[23]
There were renewed calls for the two rural parties to reunify. In August 1984 a seventeen-point plan was agreed by both parties and on 2 October 1984 the two party organisations formally unified under the name "National Party of Western Australia". However the two parliamentary parties remained as separate entities because the three sitting National Country Party MLAs (Dick Old, Bert Crane and Peter Jones) refused to work with Cowan and Stephens. On 29 January 1985 the parliamentary National Country Party was formally dissolved. The sitting MLCs joined the National party, however all three sitting MLAs refused to accept the merger and instead joined the Liberal Party.[24][25]
The Cowan era
The conservative parties were in opposition through most of the 1980s with Labor yet to suffer from major fallout from the WA Inc fiasco and the 1987 stock market crash. In 1989 Liberal opposition leader Barry MacKinnon was pushing for the Nationals to help block supply in the Upper House to topple the Dowding government.[26] Cowan refused to cooperate knowing that a small swing to the Liberals in the coming election could see them (the Liberals) gain as many as nine seats and an absolute majority in the Assembly, thus weakening the Nationals' position. In February the following year, Cowan and the Nationals had reversed their stance and decided to block supply in a bid to present themselves as a decisive and consistent conservative force.[27]
In the 1993 state election, the conservative forces finally regained government, largely by just being able to finally present themselves as united. This was despite what should have been a relatively easy ride given Labor's problems with WA Inc. and the findings of the associated Royal commission which had been handed down the year before. The Liberals won a small, but absolute majority in both houses with the Nationals holding 6 seats in the lower house and 3 in the upper house. Nevertheless, a Liberal-National Party coalition was formed and Cowan was Deputy Premier under Richard Court from 1993 to 2001, as well as holding ministerial portfolios of Commerce and Trade (16 February 1993 to 16 February 2001), Small Business and Regional Development (10 February 1995 to 16 February 2001).
21st century
The Coalition was defeated at the 2001 state election. Subsequently Cowan resigned from both the party leadership and the state parliament to stand in the federal Senate election for the Nationals; however despite his profile and the party's belief that he was their best hope since Drake-Brockman's retirement, he was unsuccessful.[28][29]
Cowan was succeeded as leader by Max Trenorden who led the party for the next four years in coalition with the Liberals. At the 2005 state election the Nationals retained the same number of seats but the Labor Party retained power and came close to a majority in the Legislative Council and successfully implemented the ending of a malapportionment that had given the non-metropolitan parts of the state fewer voters per electorate than in the metropolitan parts; the National Party had long benefited from this arrangement. In May 2005 legislation was passed to remove the malapportionment in the Legislative Assembly (though rural areas remain significantly overrepresented in the Legislative Council) and shift to a system of one vote one value. The change was widely expected to devastate the National Party, leading to many questioning whether it would survive the coming election.[30][31]
In June 2005 Trenorden was challenged by Brendon Grylls for the leadership and stood down before a formal ballot was held.[32] Grylls sought to reposition the Nationals, taking them beyond their traditional rural base and making a greater appeal to regional Western Australia.[30] The party adopted the flagship policy of "Royalties for Regions", under which 25 per cent of mineral and oil royalty revenues would be spent in the regional areas of Western Australia to develop infrastructure.[31] Grylls also moved the party away from the traditional Coalition with the Liberals. He repositioned the party as an independent force willing to form government with either the Liberals or Labor to push for National policies.
In the 2008 state election the party won four lower house seats, which together with three independents, enabled the Liberals led by Colin Barnett to form an informal governing coalition after several days of negotiations. Unlike traditional non-Labor Coalition governments, however, the National members only had limited collective responsibility, and reserved "the right to exempt [themselves] from Cabinet and vote against an issue on the floor of the Parliament if it's against the wishes of the people [they] represent."[33] Additionally, Grylls was not appointed Deputy Premier, a post that went to Liberal deputy leader Kim Hames.
The winning MLAs were party leader Brendon Grylls (Central Wheatbelt), Terry Redman (Blackwood-Stirling), Terry Waldron (Wagin) and Grant Woodhams (Moore). In the upper house, the party won five seats with the members being Mia Davies, Philip Gardiner and Max Trenorden (Agricultural Region), Colin Holt (South West Region) and Wendy Duncan (Mining and Pastoral Region). Grylls, Waldron and Redman would hold cabinet positions in the Barnett Ministry, while Duncan served as a Parliamentary Secretary.
Grylls and his partners negotiated the implementation of its Royalties for Regions policy.[34] The policy is administered through the WA Department of Regional Development and provides for an additional $619 million (2009–10) in spending in regional communities above consolidated revenue allocations for the regions.
In the 2010 federal election, Tony Crook won the Australian House of Representatives seat of O'Connor for the National Party of Western Australia from long-term Liberal incumbent Wilson Tuckey. Crook campaigned on a policy of opposition to the Mineral Resource Rent Tax and support for a Royalties for Regions policy at a national level. He also declared his independence from the federal Nationals; indeed, the party declared during the campaign it would not take direction from federal Nationals leader Warren Truss.[35] Although some media outlets initially claimed Crook was part of the Coalition, Crook declared he would sit as a crossbencher in the parliament. The election resulted in a hung parliament. Crook ultimately announced he would support the Liberal-National Coalition on confidence and supply, but would otherwise remain on the crossbench.[36] Crook would announce his retirement after a single term, with the Liberal Party winning back O'Connor at the 2013 federal election.
At the state level the party continued to grow in strength in the Mining and Pastoral region, having won its first elected member of the modern era there in 2008 when Wendy Duncan won a seat in the Legislative Council. In 2009 Vince Catania, the MLA for North West, defected to the Nationals in support of their regional policies.[37] At the 2013 state election the party won seven Legislative Assembly seats in total, its largest total in over forty years, including three in the Mining and Pastoral region.[38] Duncan successfully moved from the Legislative Council to the Legislative Assembly, winning the lower house seat of Kalgoorlie for the first time in the Nationals' history. Fellow Goldfields resident Dave Grills won a seat in the multi-member Mining and Pastoral Region upper house electorate, along with Jacqui Boydell. Although the Liberals won a majority in their own right, Barnett kept the Nationals in his government. According to ABC election analyst Antony Green, Barnett would have been forced to keep the Nationals in his cabinet in any event. As mentioned above, even after the 2008 electoral reforms, the Legislative Council still has a significant rural overweighting. Green argued that the malapportionment in the Legislative Council all but forces a Liberal premier to seek National support in order to govern, even when the Liberals have enough support in the Legislative Assembly to govern alone.[39]
In November 2013, Grylls stepped down as party leader and WA Minister for Regional Development. He was replaced in both roles by Terry Redman, while Mia Davies was promoted to take the third Nationals' position in the Barnett Ministry. In August 2016, Grylls returned as party leader, after Redman resigned following a leadership challenge. Grylls announced a raft a new policy proposals, including an increase in an existing 25-cent per tonne production rental charge set in legacy state agreements between the state and Pilbara iron ore mining companies, BHP Billiton and Rio Tinto. Grylls lost his seat at the 2017 state election. His deputy, Mia Davies, became acting leader until she was formally elected as leader on 21 March.
Party leaders
Leader | Date started | Date finished |
---|---|---|
James Gardiner | 21 October 1914 | 18 March 1915 |
Francis Willmott | 18 March 1915 | August 1919 |
Tom Harrison | August 1919 | August 1922 |
Henry Maley | August 1922 | November 1923 |
Alec Thomson | 15 December 1923 | 12 April 1930 |
Charles Latham | 12 April 1930 | 8 October 1942 |
Arthur Watts | 8 October 1942 | 31 January 1962 |
Crawford Nalder | 1 February 1962 | 17 July 1973 |
Ray McPharlin | 17 July 1973 | 18 May 1975 |
Dick Old | 18 May 1975 | 30 January 1985 |
Hendy Cowan | 25 March 1985 | 16 October 2001 |
Max Trenorden | 17 October 2001 | 21 June 2005 |
Brendon Grylls | 21 June 2005 | 19 November 2013 |
Terry Redman | 19 November 2013 | 9 August 2016 |
Brendon Grylls | 9 August 2016 | 11 March 2017 |
Mia Davies | 21 March 2017[40] |
Party performance
The following table records Country Party and National Party votes in the Western Australian Legislative Assembly as cast at state general elections. While the statistics reflect exact counts, it may not be possible to strictly compare vote percentages over time due to the number of uncontested seats prior to 1971.
Year | Seats | Votes | | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Elected | % of House | Primary Count | % of State | ||
1914 | 8 | 16.0 | 13,344 | 13.98 | |
1917 | 12 | 24.0 | 15,560 | 18.49 | |
1921 | 16 | 32.0 | |||
1924 | 13[1] | 26.0 | |||
1927 | 7 | 14.0 | 22,439 | 15.97 | |
1930 | 10 | 20.0 | 25,792 | 18.77 | |
1933 | 11 | 22.0 | 27,381 | 15.06 | |
1936 | 13 | 26.0 | 19,685 | 14.60 | |
1939 | 12 | 24.0 | 24,681 | 12.00 | |
1943 | 10 | 20.0 | 43,529 | 24.29 | [2] |
1947 | 12 | 24.0 | 26,416 | 16.16 | [2] |
1950 | 9 | 18.0 | 20,922 | 9.31 | |
1953 | 9 | 18.0 | 9,196 | 4.91 | [3] |
1956 | 8 | 16.0 | 12,319 | 5.24 | |
1959 | 8 | 16.0 | 17,179 | 6.55 | |
1962 | 8 | 16.0 | 17,339 | 5.93 | |
1965 | 8 | 16.0 | 14,630 | 4.87 | |
1968 | 9 | 17.6 | 16,879 | 5.25 | |
1971 | 8 | 15.7 | 26,604 | 5.64 | |
1974 | 6 | 11.8 | 55,746 | 10.80 | [4] |
1977 | 6 | 10.9 | 30,784 | 5.28 | |
1980 | 6 | 10.9 | 42,671 | 7.26 | [5] |
1983 | 5 | 8.8 | 32,915 | 5.11 | [5] |
1986 | 6 | 10.5 | 29,303 | 3.73 | |
1989 | 6 | 10.5 | 37,075 | 4.60 | |
1993 | 6 | 10.5 | 48,394 | 5.31 | |
1996 | 6 | 10.5 | 55,817 | 5.79 | |
2001 | 5 | 8.8 | 33,450 | 3.26 | |
2005 | 5 | 8.8 | 39,548 | 3.69 | |
2008 | 4 | 6.8 | 53,068 | 4.87 | |
2013 | 7 | 11.9 | 71,806 | 6.05 | |
2017 | 5 | 8.5 | 71,313 | 5.40 |
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1 The totals given for 1924 reflect the combined seats and votes attracted by the Executive and Majority Country Party factions at the election.
2 In 1943 and 1947, a large disparity existed between the number of uncontested Labor and non-Labor seats. In 1943, 11 Labor seats were uncontested compared to one Nationalist seat, whilst in 1947, 15 Labor seats were uncontested compared to five non-Labor seats.
3 In 1953, seven of the Country Party's nine seats were uncontested at the election.
4 In 1974, the party combined with the Democratic Labor Party in the National Alliance which contested 44 of the 51 seats in the Assembly including many metropolitan seats. The result hence needs to be compared with the combined CP-DLP vote in 1971, which was 16.35%.
5 The totals given for 1980 and 1983 reflect the combined seats and votes attracted by the National Country and National parties.
References
^ "Current register of political parties". Australian Electoral Commission. 22 March 2017..mw-parser-output cite.citation{font-style:inherit}.mw-parser-output .citation q{quotes:"""""""'""'"}.mw-parser-output .citation .cs1-lock-free a{background:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/6/65/Lock-green.svg/9px-Lock-green.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center}.mw-parser-output .citation .cs1-lock-limited a,.mw-parser-output .citation .cs1-lock-registration a{background:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/d/d6/Lock-gray-alt-2.svg/9px-Lock-gray-alt-2.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center}.mw-parser-output .citation .cs1-lock-subscription a{background:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/a/aa/Lock-red-alt-2.svg/9px-Lock-red-alt-2.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center}.mw-parser-output .cs1-subscription,.mw-parser-output .cs1-registration{color:#555}.mw-parser-output .cs1-subscription span,.mw-parser-output .cs1-registration span{border-bottom:1px dotted;cursor:help}.mw-parser-output .cs1-ws-icon a{background:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/4/4c/Wikisource-logo.svg/12px-Wikisource-logo.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center}.mw-parser-output code.cs1-code{color:inherit;background:inherit;border:inherit;padding:inherit}.mw-parser-output .cs1-hidden-error{display:none;font-size:100%}.mw-parser-output .cs1-visible-error{font-size:100%}.mw-parser-output .cs1-maint{display:none;color:#33aa33;margin-left:0.3em}.mw-parser-output .cs1-subscription,.mw-parser-output .cs1-registration,.mw-parser-output .cs1-format{font-size:95%}.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-left,.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-wl-left{padding-left:0.2em}.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-right,.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-wl-right{padding-right:0.2em}
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^ Michelle Grattan (21 March 2012). "Gillard's Malaysia manoeuvre hooked on Crook". Smh.com.au. Retrieved 21 March 2013.
^ Black (1981b), p.436.
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^ Appleyard (1981), p.233-236.
^ Appleyard (1981), p. 227-230.
^ Bolton (1972), p.22.
^ Glynn, Sean (1975). Government policy and agricultural development: Western Australian Wheatbelt, 1900–1930. UWA Press. p. 2.
^ ab Black (1981a), p.384-388.
^ Layman (1979), p.159.
^ Graham (1966), p.9-10, 77–78, 91.
^ abc Graham (1966), p. 85-90; Mercer (1955), p.40-42.
^ Mercer (1955), p.42.
^ Black and Prescott (1997).
^ Graham (1966), p.104-105.
^ Graham (1966), p.106.
^ Hamilton, Barbara (August 1974). "Australian Political Chronicle: January–April 1974". Australian Journal of Politics and History. 20 (2): 256–259. ISSN 0004-9522.
^ Hamilton, Barbara (December 1975). "Australian Political Chronicle: January–June 1975". Australian Journal of Politics and History. 21 (3): 122–123. ISSN 0004-9522.
^ ab Watt, E. D. (Edward David) (April 1979). "Australian Political Chronicle". Australian Journal of Politics and History. 25 (1): 104. ISSN 0004-9522.
^ Elphick, R.J. (1996), Coalition or Cross Bench: the Country Party dilemma, West Perth: National Party of Western Australia, p. 118, ISBN 0-909790-34-5
^ Elphick, R.J. (1996), Coalition or Cross Bench: the Country Party dilemma, West Perth: National Party of Western Australia, pp. 121–123, ISBN 0-909790-34-5
^ Elphick, R.J. (1996), Coalition or Cross Bench: the Country Party dilemma, West Perth: National Party of Western Australia, pp. 128–140, ISBN 0-909790-34-5
^ Gallop, Geoff (December 1985). "Australian Political Chronicle". Australian Journal of Politics and History. 31 (3): 521.
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Bibliography
- Appleyard, Reg (1981). "Economic and demographic growth, 1850–1914", in Stannage, C.T.: A New History of Western Australia. Nedlands: UWA Press, p. 211–236.
ISBN 0-85564-170-3. - Black, David (1981a). "Party politics in turmoil", in Stannage, C.T.: A New History of Western Australia. Nedlands: UWA Press, p. 381–405.
ISBN 0-85564-170-3. - Black, David (1981b). "The era of Labor ascendancy", in Stannage, C.T.: A New History of Western Australia. Nedlands: UWA Press, p. 406–440.
ISBN 0-85564-170-3. - Black, David (1991). "Factionalism and stability, 1911–1947", in Black, D.W.: The house on the hill: A history of the Parliament of Western Australia 1832–1990. Perth: Parliamentary History Project, p. 97–152.
ISBN 0-7309-3983-9. - Black, David; Prescott, Valerie (1997). Election statistics, Legislative Assembly of Western Australia, 1890–1996. Perth: Parliamentary History Project and Western Australian Electoral Commission.
ISBN 0-7309-8409-5. - Bolton, Geoffrey (1972). A fine country to starve in. Nedlands: UWA Press.
ISBN 0-85564-061-8. - Elphick, R. J. (1996). Coalition or Cross Bench: the Country Party dilemma. West Perth: National Party of Western Australia.
ISBN 0-909790-34-5. - Gallop, Geoff; Layman, Lenore (1985), "Western Australia", in Costar, Brian and Woodward, Dennis: Country to National: Australian rural politics and beyond. Sydney: Allen & Unwin, p. 108–118.
ISBN 0-86861-716-4. - Graham, B. D. (1966). The formation of the Australian country parties. Canberra: Australian National University.
- Hyams, B. K. (1965). "The Country Party in Western Australia: 1914–1944," University Studies in History, 4(3), p. 85–94.
- Layman, Lenore (1979). "The Country Party: rise and decline", in Pervan, Ralph and Sharman, Campbell: Essays on Western Australian politics. UWA Press, 159–189.
ISBN 0-85564-149-5. - Mercer, F. R. (Frederick) (1955). On farmers' service : a short history of farmers' organisation in Western Australia. Perth: Farmers Union of Western Australia.
- Robertson, John R. (1958). The Scaddan government and the conscription crisis, 1911–17 : aspects of Western Australia's political history. M.A. thesis, University of Western Australia. Accessed at Reid Library.
External links
- Official website