1891 Canterbury colonial election re-count
In September 1891 the Elections and Qualifications Committee conducted a re-count of the 1891 Canterbury election. There were 4 seats available. Joseph Carruthers (Free Trade) had been comfortably re-elected at the head of the poll with 7,231 votes, 19.8%. The following 4 candidates were separated by 105 votes, with John Wheeler (Free Trade) defeating James Eve (Ind. Free Trade) for the final seat with a margin of 5 votes. The next best candidate, John Grant (Labour) was a further 487 behind, with 3,857 votes, 10.6%.[1]
The committee declared that John Wheeler (Free Trade) had not been elected the member for Canterbury, however no by-election was conducted. Instead the committee declared that James Eve (Ind. Free Trade) based on its own count of the result.[1][2]
Dates
[edit]Date | Event |
---|---|
17 June 1891 | 1891 Canterbury election |
24 June 1891 | Petition lodged by James Eve.[3] |
14 July 1891 | John Wheeler sworn in as member for Canterbury |
16 July 1891 | Elections and Qualifications Committee appointed.[2] |
29 July 1864 | Petition referred to the Elections and Qualifications Committee.[2] |
2 September 1891 | Elections and Qualifications Committee declared that James Eve had been elected.[2] |
Result
[edit]Party | Candidate | Votes | % | ±% | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Free Trade | Joseph Carruthers (re-elected 1) | N/A | |||
Labour | Thomas Bavister (elected 2) | 4,453 | 12.19 | +0.01 | |
Labour | Cornelius Danahey (elected 3) | 4,363 | 11.99 | +0.03 | |
Ind. Free Trade | James Eve (elected 4) | 4,349 | 11.92 | +0.02 | |
Free Trade | John Wheeler (defeated) | 4,344 | 11.90 | −0.02 | |
Total formal votes | 36,491 | 99.30 | −0.02 | ||
Informal votes | 258[a] | 0.70 | +0.02 | ||
Turnout | 10,279 | 54.96 | '"`UNIQ−−ref−0000000E−QINU`"' | ||
Ind. Free Trade gain 1 from Free Trade |
See also
[edit]Notes
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ a b c Green, Antony. "1891 Canterbury". New South Wales Election Results 1856-2007. Parliament of New South Wales. Retrieved 11 April 2020.
- ^ a b c d Francis Suttor (2 September 1891). "Elections and Qualifications Committee" (pdf). Parliamentary Debates (Hansard). New South Wales: Legislative Assembly. p. 1393. Retrieved 19 September 2020.
- ^ "Canterbury petition". New South Wales Government Gazette. No. 414. 1 July 1891. p. 4977. Retrieved 19 September 2020 – via Trove.