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Division of South Australia

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Created
  
1901

Founded
  
1901

Namesake
  
South Australia

Abolished
  
1903

Date dissolved
  
1903

The Division of South Australia was an Australian Electoral Division covering South Australia. The seven-member statewide seat existed from the inaugural 1901 election until the 1903 election. Each elector cast seven votes. Unlike most of the other states, South Australia had not been split into individual single-member electorates. The other exception was the five-member Division of Tasmania. The statewide seats were abolished at a redistribution conducted two months prior to the 1903 election and were subsequently replaced with single-member divisions, one per displaced member, with each elector now casting a single vote.

Contents

Members

Sorted in descending order of votes received

*Though labelled a Free Trader, Poynton was an Australasian National League (National Defence League) candidate.

The Division was split into seven single-member seats at the 1903 election – Adelaide (Kingston, Protectionist), Angas (Glynn, Free Trade), Barker (Bonython, Protectionist), Boothby (Batchelor, Labour), Grey (Poynton, Labour), Hindmarsh (Hutchison, Labour) and Wakefield (Holder, Independent).

Election results

Elected members in bold. South Australia elected seven members, with each elector casting seven votes.

References

Division of South Australia Wikipedia