Members of the Australian Senate, 1914–1917

Composition 1914-1916

Government (31) - (12 seat majority)
     Labor (31)

Opposition (5)

     Liberal (5)
Composition 1917

Government (17) - (2 seat minority)
     Nationalist (17)

Opposition (19)

     Labor (19)

This is a list of members of the Australian Senate from 1914 to 1917.[1] The 5 September 1914 election was a double dissolution called by Prime Minister of Australia Joseph Cook in an attempt to gain control of the Senate. All 75 seats in the House of Representatives, and all 36 seats in the Senate were up for election. The incumbent Commonwealth Liberal Party was defeated by the opposition Australian Labor Party led by Andrew Fisher, who announced with the outbreak of World War I during the campaign that under a Labor Government, Australia would "stand beside the mother country to help and defend her to the last man and the last shilling."[2]

In accordance with section 13 of the Constitution,[3] terms for Senators was taken to commence on 1 July 1914. The Senate resolved that in each State the three senators who received the most votes would sit for a six-year term, finishing on 30 June 1920 while the other half would sit for a three-year term, finishing on 30 June 1920.[4]

In September 1916, 24 Labor members of the House of Representatives and the Senate—including Prime Minister Billy Hughes—were expelled for their support of conscription during World War I and later formed the National Labor Party, which merged with the Commonwealth Liberal Party in February 1917 to form the Nationalist Party of Australia.

Senator Party State End term Years in Office
Bakhap, ThomasThomas Bakhap   Liberal/Nationalist Tasmania 1917 1913–1923
Barker, StephenStephen Barker   Labor Victoria 1920 1910–1920, 1923–1924
Barnes, JohnJohn Barnes   Labor Victoria 1920 1913–1920, 1923–1935
Blakey, AlbertAlbert Blakey   Labor Victoria 1917 1910–1917
Buzacott, RichardRichard Buzacott   Labor/Nationalist Western Australia 1917 1910–1923
de Largie, HughHugh de Largie   Labor/Nationalist Western Australia 1917 1901–1923
Earle, JohnJohn Earle [lower-alpha 1]  Nationalist Tasmania 1917 [lower-alpha 2] 1917–1923
Ferricks, MylesMyles Ferricks   Labor Queensland 1920 1913–1920
Findley, EdwardEdward Findley   Labor Victoria 1917 1904–1917, 1923–1929
Gardiner, AlbertAlbert Gardiner   Labor New South Wales 1920 1910–1926, 1928
Hon. Thomas Givens   Labor/Nationalist Queensland 1920 1904–1928
Hon. Albert Gould   Liberal/Nationalist New South Wales 1917 1901–1917
Grant, JohnJohn Grant   Labor New South Wales 1920 1914–1920, 1923–1928
Guthrie, RobertRobert Guthrie   Labor/Nationalist South Australia 1917 1904–1921
Guy, JamesJames Guy   Labor Tasmania 1920 1914–1920
Henderson, GeorgeGeorge Henderson   Labor/Nationalist Western Australia 1917 1904–1923
Hon. John Keating   Liberal/Nationalist Tasmania 1917 1901–1923
Long, JamesJames Long   Labor Tasmania 1920 1910–1918
Lynch, PatrickPatrick Lynch   Labor/Nationalist Western Australia 1920 1907–1938
Allan McDougall   Labor New South Wales 1920 1910–1920, 1922–1924
Andrew McKissock   Labor Victoria 1917 1914–1917
Maughan, WilliamWilliam Maughan   Labor Queensland 1920 1913–1920
Hon. Edward Millen   Liberal/Nationalist New South Wales 1917 1901–1923
Mullan, JohnJohn Mullan   Labor Queensland 1917 1913–1917
Needham, TedTed Needham   Labor Western Australia 1920 1907–1920, 1923–1929
Newlands, JohnJohn Newlands   Labor/Nationalist South Australia 1920 1913–1932
Okeefe, DavidDavid O'Keefe   Labor Tasmania 1920 1901–1906, 1910–1920
Ologhlin, JamesJames O'Loghlin   Labor South Australia 1920 1907, 1913–1920, 1923–1925
Hon. George Pearce   Labor/Nationalist Western Australia 1920 1901–1938
Ready, RudolphRudolph Ready [lower-alpha 1]   Labor Tasmania 1917 1910–1917
Rowell, JamesJames Rowell [lower-alpha 3]   Nationalist South Australia 1917 [lower-alpha 2] 1917–1923
Russell, EdwardEdward Russell   Labor/Nationalist Victoria 1920 1907–1925
Senior, WilliamWilliam Senior   Labor/Nationalist South Australia 1917 1913–1923
Shannon, JohnJohn Shannon   Liberal/Nationalist South Australia 1920 1912–1913, 1914–1920
Stewart, JamesJames Stewart   Labor Queensland 1917 1901–1917
Story, WilliamWilliam Story [lower-alpha 3]   Labor/Nationalist South Australia 1917 1904–1917
Hon. Harry Turley   Labor Queensland 1917 1904–1917
Watson, DavidDavid Watson   Labor New South Wales 1917 1914–1917

See also

Notes

  1. 1 2 Labor senator Rudolph Ready resigned on 1 March 1917; on the same day Nationalist John Earle was appointed to replace him.
  2. 1 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.[5]
  3. 1 2 Nationalist senator William Story resigned on 24 April 1917 to run successfully for the House of Representatives seat of Boothby; on 24 May 1917 Nationalist James Rowell—who had been elected at the 5 May 1917 election for a term commencing on 1 July 1917—was appointed to replace him.

References

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