Australian federal election, 1906

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Federal election major party leaders
< 1903 1906 1910 >

Protectionist Party
Alfred Deakin
Prime Minister
Parliament: 5 years
Leader since: 1905
Division: Ballarat

WIN


Labour Party
Chris Watson
Labour leader
Parliament: 5 years
Leader since: 1901
Division: South Sydney


Anti-Socialist Party
George Reid
Opposition leader
Parliament: 5 years
Leader since: 1901
Division: East Sydney

Federal elections were held in Australia on 12 December 1906. All 75 seats in the House of Representatives, and 18 of the 36 seats in the Senate were up for election. The incumbent Protectionist Party led by Prime Minister of Australia Alfred Deakin defeated the opposition Anti-Socialist Party led by George Reid.

House of Reps 1906-10 (FPTP) — Turnout 51.48% (Non-CV) — Informal 3.73%
  Party Votes % Swing Seats Change
  Anti-Socialist Party 363,257 38.17 +3.80 27 +2 (3 elected
unopposed)
  Federal Labour Party 348,711 36.64 +5.69 26 +3 (3 elected
unopposed)
  Protectionist Party 156,425 16.44 -13.26 16 -10 (1 elected
unopposed)
  Ind Protectionist 46,074 4.84 * 4 +4
  WA Party 22,154 2.33 * 2 +2
  Independents/Other 15,067 1.58 -2.91 0 -1
  Total 951,688     75
  Labour/Protectionist WIN 42 -7
  Anti-Socialist Party 27 +2


Senate 1906-10 (FPTP BV) — Turnout 50.21% (Non-CV) — Informal N/A
  Party Votes % Swing Seats Won Seats Held
  Anti-Socialist Party 1,384,662 46.53 +12.20 11 13
  Federal Labour Party 1,152,517 38.73 +8.98 5 15
  Protectionist Party 369,308 12.41 -5.12 2 6
  Independents 26,771 0.90 -11.84 0 2
  Other 42,292 1.42 +1.42 0 0
  Total 2,975,550     18 36

Contents


It was the third federal election in Australia following the adoption of the federal government. The election was largely important as it would demonstrate which of the parties (if any) could hold together a stable government after the unstable second term of the previous one, which saw four different governments in power. It would also see both of the Anti-Socialist parties could survive the implementation of protectionist policies which differentiated the two. This was also the first election where seats throughout the country were voted for via a First-past-the-post system, and the first time that Tasmania drew electorates. The election result was the creation of a Protectionist-Labour coalition government led by Deakin, which remained in power largely due to the unwillingness of the Anti-Socialist Party to support a vote of no confidence against it.

There were three main political parties contending for seats, each of which were present at the previous two elections. The Free Trade Party had changed its name under George Reid to the Anti-Socialist Party, in an attempt to differentiate it further from its left-wing rival, the Labor Party and to make its stance clearer to conservative voters. The third party standing for election was the Protectionist Party. However, since its primary platform of government tariffs had been dealt with by previous governments, the Party had become somewhat redundant. Those who remained were largely supporting the Party's leader, Alfred Deakin, rather than its policies. Of the three, the Labour Party, led by Chris Watson, now had the most realistic chance of becoming the dominant party after their gains in the 1903 election and after their leading status in the four minor states they were looking to make the same type of gains in Victoria and New South Wales.

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