This is a list of members of the South Australian House of Assembly from 1930 to 1933, as elected at the 1930 state election:
Name | Party in 1930 | Party in 1933 | Electorate | Term of office |
---|---|---|---|---|
Ernest Anthoney | Liberal | LCL | Sturt | 1921–1938 |
Frederick Birrell | Labor | PLP | North Adelaide | 1921–1933 |
Alfred Blackwell | Labor | PLP | West Torrens | 1918–1938 |
Richard Layton Butler | Liberal | LCL | Wooroora | 1915–1918, 1921–1938 |
Hon Thomas Butterfield | Labor | PLP | Newcastle | 1915–1917, 1918–1933 |
Archie Cameron | Country | LCL | Wooroora | 1927–1934 |
Martin Collaton [1] | N/A (Lang Labor) | Labor | Adelaide | 1931–1933 |
Clement Collins | Labor | PLP | Murray | 1924–1933 |
George Cooke | Labor | PLP | Barossa | 1924–1933 |
Edward Craigie | Single Tax League | Single Tax League | Flinders | 1930–1941 |
Jack Critchley | Labor | PLP | Burra Burra | 1930–1933 |
Bob Dale | Labor | Lang Labor | Sturt | 1930–1938, 1944–1947 |
Edgar Dawes | Labor | Labor | Sturt | 1930–1933 |
Hon Bill Denny | Labor | PLP | Adelaide | 1900–1905, 1906–1933 |
Samuel Dennison | Country | LCL | Wooroora | 1930–1938 |
Bert Edwards [1] | Labor | N/A | Adelaide | 1917–1931 |
Thomas Edwards | Labor | PLP | Barossa | 1930–1933 |
John Fitzgerald | Labor | Labor | Port Pirie | 1918–1936 |
Even George | Labor | PLP | Burra Burra | 1930–1933 |
Herbert George | Labor | Labor | Adelaide | 1926–1933 |
Edward Giles | Liberal | LCL | Yorke Peninsula | 1926–1933 |
William Harvey | Labor | PLP | Newcastle | 1918–1933 |
Percy Heggaton | Liberal | LCL | Alexandra | 1906–1915, 1923–1938 |
Lionel Hill | Labor | PLP | Port Pirie | 1915–1917, 1918–1933 |
Leonard Hopkins | Labor | PLP | Barossa | 1924–1927, 1930–1933 |
Herbert Hudd | Liberal | LCL | Alexandra | 1912–1915, 1920–1938, 1941–1948 |
Robert Hunter | Labor | PLP | Murray | 1930–1933 |
John Jonas | Labor | Labor | Port Adelaide | 1927–1933 |
Beasley Kearney | Labor | Labor | East Torrens | 1930–1933 |
George Laffer | Liberal | LCL | Alexandra | 1913–1933 |
John Lyons | Liberal | LCL | Stanley | 1926–1948 |
Arthur McArthur | Labor | PLP | East Torrens | 1930–1933 |
Sydney McHugh | Labor | PLP | Burra Burra | 1924–1927, 1930–1933, 1941–1944 |
John McInnes | Labor | PLP | West Torrens | 1918–1950 |
Malcolm McIntosh | Liberal | LCL | Albert | 1921–1959 |
Frederick McMillan | Liberal | LCL | Albert | 1921–1933 |
James Moseley | Liberal | LCL | Flinders | 1910–1933 |
Robert Nicholls | Liberal | LCL | Stanley | 1915–1956 |
Frank Nieass | Labor | Labor | East Torrens | 1930–1933, 1938–1941, 1944–1947 |
Baden Pattinson | Liberal | LCL | Yorke Peninsula | 1930–1938, 1947–1965 |
John Pedler | Labor | PLP | Wallaroo | 1918–1938 |
Vernon Petherick [4] | N/A (Liberal) | LCL | Victoria | 1918–1924, 1932–1938, 1941–1945 |
Peter Reidy [4] | Liberal | N/A | Victoria | 1915–1932 |
Robert Richards | Labor | PLP | Wallaroo | 1918–1949 |
Eric Shepherd | Labor | PLP | Victoria | 1924–1933 |
Frank Staniford | Labor | PLP | Murray | 1924–1927, 1930–1933 |
Albert Thompson | Labor | Labor | Port Adelaide | 1930–1946 |
Walter Warne | Labor | Labor | North Adelaide | 1930–1933 |
- 1 Adelaide MHA Bert Edwards had his seat vacated for absence without leave on 23 June 1931. Lang Plan Campaign Committee candidate Martin Collaton won the resulting by-election on 25 July. He sat in parliament as a member of the new Lang Labor Party.
- 2 The Labor Party split in August 1931 over the Cabinet's support for the Premiers' Plan. The state conference of the party expelled the 21 MHAs who had supported it in parliament: Lionel Hill, Bill Denny, Robert Richards, John McInnes, Sydney McHugh, Eric Shepherd, Frank Staniford, Frederick Birrell, Alfred Blackwell, Thomas Butterfield, Clement Collins, Jack Critchley, Even George, William Harvey, Leonard Hopkins, Robert Hunter, Beasley Kearney, Arthur McArthur, John Pedler, Albert Thompson, and Walter Warne. They appealed the decision, but by November most had accepted their expulsion and formed a separate party, the Parliamentary Labor Party; the remnants of the caucus continued to sit as official Labor.
- 3 Sturt MHA Bob Dale was also expelled from the Labor Party in August 1931 for supporting the rival Lang Plan of New South Wales Premier Jack Lang. He subsequently sat as a member of the nascent Lang Labor Party.
- 4 Victoria MHA Peter Reidy died on 17 January 1932. Liberal candidate Vernon Petherick won the resulting by-election on 5 March.
- 5 The Lang Labor Party split in April 1932, with MHA Martin Collaton and a number of senior officials forming the Lang Australian Labor Party. The party merged into the official Labor Party in October.
- 6 The Liberal Federation merged with the SA branch of the Country Party to form the Liberal and Country League on 9 June 1932.
- 7 Two expelled MHAs, Albert Thompson and Beasley Kearney, were reinstated to the official Labor Party in June 1932 after an appeal to the party's federal executive. A third MHA, Walter Warne, was also readmitted by the time of the 1933 election.