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Western Australian state election, 1911

Western Australian state election, 1911
Western Australia
← 1908 3 October 1911 1914 →

All 50 seats in the Western Australian Legislative Assembly
  First party Second party
  John Scaddan.jpg Frank Wilson (1859-1918).jpeg
Leader John Scaddan Frank Wilson
Party Labour Ministerialist
Leader since 3 August 1910 16 September 1910
Leader's seat Brown Hill-Ivanhoe Sussex
Last election 22 seats 28 seats
Seats won 34 seats 16 seats
Seat change Increase12 Decrease12
Percentage 52.64% 44.80%
Swing Increase14.73 Decrease16.82

Premier before election

Frank Wilson
Ministerialist

Elected Premier

John Scaddan
Labour


Frank Wilson
Ministerialist

John Scaddan
Labour

Elections were held in the state of Western Australia on 3 October 1911 to elect 50 members to the Western Australian Legislative Assembly. The Labor Party, led by Opposition Leader John Scaddan, defeated the conservative Ministerialist government led by Premier Frank Wilson. In doing so, Scaddan achieved both Labor's first absolute majority on the floor of the Assembly with 68% of the seats (34 of 50) won, and its largest to date. The result came as something of a surprise to many commentators and particularly to the Ministerialists, as they went to an election for the first time as a single grouping backed by John Forrest's Western Australian Liberal League, under a new system of compulsory preferential voting and new electoral boundaries both of which had been passed by Parliament earlier in the year despite ardent Labor opposition.

The 1911 election is considered by political historians such as Brian de Garis and David Black to mark the end of the first phase of the development of party politics in Western Australia, which had begun with the granting of responsible government to the then British colony in 1890. Labor held onto government with a one-seat majority in the following 1914 election but lost power in 1916 after losing a by-election and after another member left the Labor Party to sit as an Independent.


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