First Collier Ministry

The First Collier Ministry was the 16th Ministry of the Government of Western Australia and was led by Labor Premier Philip Collier. It succeeded the First Mitchell Ministry on 16 April 1924, following the defeat of the Nationalist government at the 1924 election on 22 March.

The Collier Ministry, c. 1924
Back row: Cunningham, Drew, Munsie, Hickey
Front row: McCallum, Angwin, Collier, Willcock, Troy

The ministry was followed by the Second Mitchell Ministry on 23 April 1930 after the Labor Party lost government at the state election held on 26 March.

First Ministry

The following ministers served until the reconstitution of the Ministry on 30 April 1927, following the 1927 state election:

Office Minister

Premier
Colonial Treasurer
Minister for Forests

Philip Collier, MLA

Minister for Lands
Minister for Immigration

William Angwin, MLA

Minister for Mines
Minister for Agriculture

Michael Troy, MLA

Minister for Railways
Minister for Justice

John Willcock, MLA

Minister for Works

Alick McCallum, MLA

Chief Secretary
Minister for Education

John Drew, MLC
Minister without portfolio James Hickey, MLC
James Cunningham, MLA
Selby Munsie, MLA

Second Ministry

The following ministers served from their appointment on 30 April 1927 until the end of the Ministry on 23 April 1930, following the 1930 state election:

Office Minister

Premier
Colonial Treasurer
Minister for Forests

Philip Collier, MLA

Minister for Railways
Minister for Justice

John Willcock, MLA

Minister for Lands
Minister for Immigration

Michael Troy, MLA

Minister for Mines
Minister for Health

Selby Munsie, MLA

Minister for Agriculture

Harry Millington, MLA
(from 15 December 1927)

Minister for Works

Alick McCallum, MLA

Chief Secretary
Minister for Education

John Drew, MLC

Minister for Goldfields Water Supply

James Cunningham, MLA
(from 15 December 1927)
Minister without portfolio James Hickey, MLC (until 21 May 1928)
William Kitson, MLC (from 25 June 1928)
Harry Millington, MLA (until 15 December 1927)
James Cunningham, MLA (until 15 December 1927)
gollark: But webapps can work offline nowadays anyway, and it would be easier to maintain one implementation than two.
gollark: You immediately implode.
gollark: What happens if you edit a page on your phone while it's offline, but then edit it differently on your notphone?
gollark: - closed source (bad)- electron (bad)- actually works (good)- plugins (good)- uses filesystem for storage, not a database (not sure of goodness)
gollark: Well, that would be REALLY VERY HARD.

References

  • Black, David; Bolton, Geoffrey (2001). Biographical Register of Members of the Parliament of Western Australia, Volume One, 1870–1930 (Revised ed.). Parliament House: Parliament of Western Australia. ISBN 0730738140.
  • Black, David (1991). "Factionalism and Stability: 1911–1947". In Black, David (ed.). The House on the Hill: A History of the Parliament of Western Australia 1832–1990. Perth, Western Australia: Parliament of Western Australia. ISBN 0-7309-3983-9.
  • Bolton, Geoffrey; Mozley, Ann (1961). The Western Australian Legislature, 1870-1930. Canberra: Australian National University. (no ISBN)
Preceded by
First Mitchell Ministry
First Collier Ministry
1924–1930
Succeeded by
Second Mitchell Ministry
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.