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词条 1859 Town of Dunedin by-election
释义

  1. Background

  2. Overview

     Speeches  Show of hands 

  3. Candidates

  4. Election

     Results 

  5. Aftermath

     1860 election results 

  6. References

{{short description|New Zealand by-election}}{{Use dmy dates|date=December 2016}}{{Use New Zealand English|date=December 2016}}

The 1859 Town of Dunedin by-election was a New Zealand by-election held in the single-member electorate of {{NZ electorate link|Town of Dunedin}} during the 2nd New Zealand Parliament on 14 January 1859, after the resignation of James Macandrew. The election was won by Macandrew, who had resigned from his seat on 2 November 1858 as a result of not attending a parliamentary session earlier in his term.[1]

Background

Macandrew had forfeited his seat on 2 November 1858 after his not attending of a session of parliament earlier in his term. It was said by the Otago Witness to be a remarkable fact that out of all the Members of Parliament that didn't attend that session of parliament, Macandrew was the only one to have resigned from his seat due to that.

Overview

A nomination meeting was held in the Mechanics' Institute on 12 January 1859. The Returning Officer gave a speech reminding the electors of the duty they were to perform. Mr. Shaw proposed Mr. James G. S. Grant, a nomination seconded by Mr. Carnegie. However, the proposal of Grant was not unanimous, with Mr. G. Smith, seconded by James Kilgour, proposing Mr. James Macandrew for the role. Mr. Shaw also proposed William John Dyer,[2] although since at the time it was considered unusual for an elector to propose multiple candidates for the same office at the same election, Dr. Williams, pro forma, proposed Dyer. Mr. W. Iles seconded that nomination. No other candidate was proposed.

Speeches

The Returning Officer then called upon the candidates to address the electors in the order of which they proposed.

Mr. Grant was therefore the first person to speak.

In an account in the 15 January 1859 issue of the Otago Witness, Mr. Grant was said to have delivered a long speech in which he alluded to Macandrew's absence from the General Assembly, and that he would push for the General Assembly to allocate funds for the establishment of a university in Wellington or Nelson.

According to the Otago Witness, Macandrew stated that he had no intention of representing New Zealand again in the House of Representatives, the highest council of New Zealand. During his speech, Macandrew said that he would push for banks to be as cheap as stores, that he would support the idea of having fewer laws, and that he would support the intention of seeing a simpler form of registration used—a system in which a person could sell their properties with no intervention of lawyers among other conservative ideas.

Again according to the Otago Witness, Dyer's stance differed quite a bit from Macandrew with regard to being solicited to take a seat, Dyer thought it was or should be a point of ambition with every person to hold a place in the House of Representatives; he thought that no doubt it was a large responsibility to make laws for future generations and that he would vote for allocating funds to be put into the education of the Maori people in the province of Otago.

Show of hands

The Returning Officer then called a show of hands for the candidates which the results were as follows:

PartyNameVotes
Independent politician}} Independent James Macandrew 24
Independent politician}} Independent William John Dyer 4
Independent politician}} Independent James Gordon Stuart Grant 3

The Returning Officer then declared the results were in favour of Macandrew.

Grant demanded a poll, which was held two days later and which Macandrew won. Dyer did not participate in the poll, therefore effectively withdrawing his candidacy.

Candidates

PartyNameNotesRough political position
Independent politician}} James Macandrew The MP for the electorate before the by-election, Macandrew had resigned from parliament following his not attending in a parliamentary session. He had expressed his desire to not be elected again.Right-wing
Independent politician}} James Gordon Stuart Grant A more left-wing candidate than Macandrew, Grant opposed many of the principles that Macandrew supported.Left-wing
Independent politician}} William John Dyer Like Grant, Dyer was a more left-wing candidate than Macandrew. He withdrew before the poll.Left-wing

Election

The election was on 14 January 1859.

The polling commenced at 10.00am and closed at 4.00pm.

Macandrew won the election in a landslide with over 90% of the votes. Grant only got 3 votes.

Results

{{Town of Dunedin by-election, 1859}}

Aftermath

The next election, in 1860, Macandrew did not contest and the electorate became a multi-member electorate. William John Dyer, who had withdrawn his nomination for representative of the electorate two years earlier for the by-election, contested the election. The election was held on 24 December 1860. The results were as follows:

1860 election results

{{General election, 1860: Town of Dunedin}}

References

1. ^{{cite book |authorlink = Guy Scholefield | last = Scholefield | first= Guy | title = New Zealand Parliamentary Record, 1840–1949 | edition = 3rd | origyear=First published in 1913 | year = 1950 |publisher = Govt. Printer |location = Wellington |page=121}}
2. ^{{cite news |title=Biographical Notes of Settlers of the First Decade |url=https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/OW18980331.2.183?query=dyer |accessdate=14 January 2017 |work=Otago Witness |issue=2300 |date=31 March 1898 |page=11}}
{{1853–1890 New Zealand by-elections}}{{DEFAULTSORT:Town of Dunedin by-election, 1859}}

5 : By-elections in New Zealand|1859 elections in New Zealand|January 1859 events|Politics of Dunedin|1850s in Dunedin

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