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1931 East Sydney by-election

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
1931 East Sydney by-election

7 March 1931
  First party Second party
 
Candidate Eddie Ward Lionel Courtenay
Party Labor Nationalist
Popular vote 19,975 16,333
Percentage 54.1% 44.2%
Swing Decrease14.3pp Increase12.6pp
TPP 55.7% 44.3%
TPP swing Decrease14.3pp Increase14.3pp

MP before election

John West
Labor

Elected MP

Eddie Ward
Labor

A by-election was held for the Australian House of Representatives seat of East Sydney on 7 March 1931. This was triggered by the death of Labor MP John West.

The by-election was won by Labor candidate Eddie Ward, who was associated with New South Wales Premier Jack Lang's wing of the party.

This was the last by-election contested by the Nationalist Party as it would be replaced by the United Australia Party later that year.

Candidate selection

[edit]

Businessman and Sydney alderman Lionel Courtenay won Nationalist preselection for the by-election in February 1931, defeating fourteen other candidates including barrister Norman Cowper, former MLA's James Morrish and Thomas Morrow, former Australian cricket captain Monty Noble, and aviator Keith Smith.[1]

Results

[edit]
East Sydney by-election, 1931[2]
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Labor Eddie Ward 19,975 54.1 -14.3
Nationalist Lionel Courtenay 16,333 44.2 +12.6
Communist Bill Mountjoy 611 1.7 +1.7
Total formal votes 36,919 97.2
Informal votes 1,068 2.8
Turnout 37,987 81.3
Two-party-preferred result
Labor Eddie Ward 55.7 -14.3
Nationalist Lionel Courtenay 44.3 +14.3
Labor hold Swing -14.3

References

[edit]
  1. ^ "Courtenay in East Sydney". Daily Pictorial. Sydney. 13 February 1931.
  2. ^ "By-Elections 1929-1931". Psephos.