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1908 Queensland state election

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FieldValue
election_name1908 Queensland state election
countryQueensland
typeparliamentary
ongoingno
previous_election1907 Queensland state election
previous_year1907
next_election1909 Queensland state election
next_year1909
seats_for_electionAll 72 seats in the Legislative Assembly of Queensland
37 Assembly seats were needed for a majority
turnout78.91 ( 7.30 pp)
election_date
image1[[File:William Kidston (cropped).jpg170x170px]]
leader1William Kidston
leader_since119 January 1906
colour18CB4D2
party1Kidstonites
leaders_seat1Rockhampton
popular_vote144,997
percentage124.04%
swing17.84
last_election124 seats, 31.88%
seats125
seat_change11
image2[[File:Robert Philp portrait (cropped 2).jpg170x170px]]
leader2Robert Philp
leader_since219 September 1904
party2Conservative
color20C1BA8
leaders_seat2Townsville
popular_vote275,563
percentage240.37%
swing20.21
last_election229 seats, 40.58%
seats222
seat_change27
image3[[File:StateLibQld 1 51912 The Honourable David Bowman (cropped).jpg170x170px]]
leader3David Bowman
leader_since315 April 1907
party3Labour
leaders_seat3Fortitude Valley
colour3DC241F
popular_vote355,771
percentage329.80%
swing33.41
last_election318 seats, 26.39%
seats322
seat_change34
titlePremier
posttitleResulting Premier
before_electionRobert Philp
before_partyConservatism
after_electionWilliam Kidston
after_partyKidston Party

37 Assembly seats were needed for a majority

Elections were held in the Australian state of Queensland on 5 February 1908 to elect the 72 members of the state's Legislative Assembly. The election, held less than 9 months after the previous election, was made necessary by a series of events which had seen former premier William Kidston, who commanded a majority on the floor of the Assembly, resign following an attempt to convince the governor of Queensland to appoint sympathetic members to the Queensland Legislative Council, which had blocked key legislative measures. Following Kidston's resignation, Opposition leader Robert Philp was sent for and formed a ministry, but the ministry almost immediately lost a vote of no confidence in the Assembly, and as such, a new election had to be called.

This election used contingent voting, at least in the single-member districts.

Five districts were two-seat districts - Mackay, Marlborough, North Brisbane, Rockhampton and South Brisbane. In the two-member constituencies, plurality block voting was used -- electors could cast two valid votes but were allowed to "plump".

Key dates

DateEvent
12 November 1907Premier William Kidston resigned, and Robert Philp was sent for to form a ministry.
19 November 1907The First Kidston Ministry resigned, and the Second Philp Ministry was sworn in.
31 December 1907The Parliament was dissolved.
3 January 1908Writs were issued by the governor to proceed with an election.
15 January 1908Close of nominations.
5 February 1908Polling day, between the hours of 8am and 6pm.
18 February 1908The Second Philp Ministry resigned and the Second Kidston Ministry was sworn in.
26 February 1908The writ was returned and the results formally declared.
3 March 1908Parliament resumed for business.

Results

The Kidstonites contested only 32 of the 72 seats, compared to 55 at the previous election.

| turnout % = 78.91 | informal % = 1.06 |votes % = 40.37 |votes % = 29.80 |votes % = 24.04 |votes % = 3.61 |votes % = 2.18 |}

: 205,892 electors were enrolled to vote at the election, but 12 seats (16.7% of the total) representing 30,069 voters were uncontested—six Labor seats, five Conservatives and one Kidston. : In 11 electorates, voters had two votes each, so the total number of votes exceeds the total number of voters.

References

References

  1. (2000). "Elections in Australia, Ireland, and Malta under the single transferable vote: reflections on an embedded institution". University of Michigan Press.
  2. Hughes and Graham, "Voting for the Queensland Legislative Assembly 1890-1964" (online) accessed February 20, 2025
  3. {{Gazette QLD. (31 December 1907)
  4. {{Gazette QLD. (3 January 1908)
  5. {{Gazette QLD. (18 February 1908)
  6. {{Gazette QLD. (20 February 1908)
  7. Australian Government and Politics Database. "Parliament of Queensland, Assembly election, 5 February 1908".
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