| Other years in New Zealand |
| 1909 • 1910 • 1911 • 1912 • 1913 • 1914 • 1915 |
The 1911 General Election, the first contested by the Reform Party, left parliament in an indeterminate state, with Reform holding 38 seats, Liberal 36, Labour 1 and with 5 independents.
Liberal, who had been in government for the past 21 years, claimed that Reform did not have a mandate, since many of their seats were the smaller rural electorates, and the Liberals proceeded to form a government under Joseph Ward as per the previous two parliaments.
Such were the loyalties of the independent members that votes were often deadlocked and dependent upon the casting vote of the Speaker. As a result, Joseph Ward resigned on March 28th, to be succeeded by agriculture minister Thomas Mackenzie. However, the government was defeated on the next occasion that parliament met, and the first Reform Government was formed under William Massey in July.
Contents |
Leader of the Opposition - William Massey (Reform Party) until July 10. The Liberal opposition had no recognised leader until the following year. [2]
See 1912 in art, 1912 in literature, Category:1912 books
See: 1912 in music
See: Category:1912 film awards , 1912 in film , List of New Zealand feature films , Cinema of New Zealand, Category:1912 films
See: New Zealand Order of Merit , Order of New Zealand
For world events and topics in 1912 not specifically related to New Zealand see: 1912
No comments have been added.