Albert Robinson

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Albert Robinson
Albert Robinson

Albert William Robinson (187725 May 1943) was a Senator and long serving member of the South Australian House of Assembly.

Born in Lyndoch, South Australia, Robinson was educated in Clare and Roseworthy Agricultural College before commencing work as a pastoralist near Balaklava. His stature in the area led to his election as President of the Balaklava-Dalkey Agricultural Society and Chairman of the Balaklava Racing Club. Robinson used this local prominence to good effect by gaining Liberal Federation pre-selection for the South Australian House of Assembly Electoral district of Wooroora at the 1915 election. During his time in parliament, Robinson chaired the influential Government Railways Standing Committee and through this influence in combination with the wealth he had gained from farming, Robinson was considered a possible future Premier.

He surprisingly lost his seat at the 1924 election, when the Australian Labor Party swept to power. Robinson remained involved in Liberal politics and was appointed by the South Australian parliament in April 1928 to the senate position vacated by Sir Henry Barwell upon the latter's resignation to become South Australian Agent-General in London. Robinson sat with the Nationalist Party of Australia (the federal equivalent of the South Australian based Liberal Federation) in the Senate for eight months before his defeat at the 1928 election.

Angry with his perceived treatment by the Liberal Federation, Robinson resigned from the party and ran for Wooroora as an independent candidate at a by-election in 1934. Although he could not find a scrutineer in some towns and had no one attend a campaign meeting in another town, Robinson surprisingly won the by-election and, following an electoral redistribution, was comfortably elected as the member for Gouger at the 1938 election.

The result of the 1938 election, whereby 15 independents were elected to parliament (compared to 15 Liberal and Country League and nine Australian Labor Party representatives), there was speculation that the independents, led by Tom Stott, could form government. Robinson remained involved in discussions with other independents and LCL members to achieve this end but took his place on the cross benches following the Richard Layton Butler led LCL's success in gaining the support of sufficient independents to form government.

Following re-election in 1941, Robinson died in office in 1943.