First Kidston Ministry

The First Kidston Ministry was the 23rd ministry of the Government of Queensland and was led by Premier William Kidston, who led a Labour–Liberal coalition. It succeeded the Morgan Ministry on 19 January 1906 upon the appointment of Arthur Morgan as president of the Queensland Legislative Council. The Labour Party split in 1907, with Kidston and several other moderate Labour members combining with the remaining Liberals in a new party, the "Kidstonites".

Despite maintaining the confidence of the Legislative Assembly at the 1907 election, the Ministry fell when Kidston resigned on 12 November 1907 after failing to have sympathetic members appointed to the Council. It was succeeded by the short-lived Second Philp Ministry headed by his conservative opponent Robert Philp on 19 November.

The Ministry

On 19 January 1906, the Governor, Lord Chelmsford, designated eight principal executive offices of the Government, and appointed the following Members of the Parliament of Queensland to the Ministry as follows. On 4 February 1907, Digby Denham left the Ministry and joined the opposition Conservative party. Peter Airey lost his parliamentary seat at the 1907 election held on 18 May 1907, but was retained as a minister without portfolio from 3 July 1907.

Office Minister

Premier
Chief Secretary
Treasurer

William Kidston

Deputy Premier
Secretary for Public Instruction

Andrew Henry Barlow, MLC

Attorney-General
Secretary for Mines

James Blair

Secretary for Public Lands
Secretary for Railways (6 February – 3 July 1907)

Joshua Thomas Bell

Secretary for Agriculture
Secretary for Railways

Digby Denham
(until 4 February 1907)

Home Secretary (until 3 July 1907)
Minister without portfolio (from 3 July 1907)

Peter Airey

Secretary for Public Works
Secretary for Agriculture (from 6 February 1907)

Thomas O'Sullivan

Home Secretary

Arthur Hawthorn
(from 3 July 1907)

Secretary for Railways

George Kerr
(from 3 July 1907)
gollark: Politicians can just go around spouting meaningless slogans and people vote for them. The system selects for it.
gollark: I spent a while rephrasing this, but whatever: ultimately, the stupid persuasive things politicians go around doing to get votes *do work* on people.
gollark: I mean, this looks like partly blaming issues with democracy on markets on the somewhat-biased-media thing.
gollark: Wait, you sort of did though.> effective democracy and market systems require rational operation of the general population. this rational operation is inhibited via a mechanism known as "manufacturing consent"
gollark: I see.

References

  • "Proclamation". Queensland Government Gazette. 19 January 1906. p. 86:119–120.
  • "Proclamation". Queensland Government Gazette. 6 February 1907. p. 88:263–264.
  • "Proclamation". Queensland Government Gazette. 19 November 1907. p. 89:1265–1267.
  • Hughes, Colin A.; Graham, B. D. (1968). A handbook of Australian government and politics, 1890-1964. Canberra: Australian National University. p. 173. ISBN 0-7081-0270-0.
Preceded by
Morgan Ministry
First Kidston Ministry
1906–1907
Succeeded by
Second Philp Ministry
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.