Northern Rhodesian general election, 1959
This article is part of a series on the politics and government of Zambia |
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Government |
Legislature |
General elections were held in Northern Rhodesia on 20 March 1959,[1] although voting did not take place in two constituencies until 9 April.[2] The United Federal Party (UFP) was expected to win the elections,[1] and did so by taking 13 of the 22 elected seats on the Legislative Council.[2]
Electoral system
The elections were the first held under the Lennox-Boyd constitution.[3] It provided for a 30 member Legislative Council with 22 elected members, six official members and two appointed members.[3] The 22 elected seats were divided into 12 "ordinary" seats with mostly European voters, six "special" seats mainly reserved for African voters, two reserved for African candidates and two reserved for European candidates.[2] "Ordinary" voters had to have at least four years of secondary education and either an income of at least £300 a year or own property worth £500. They could also qualify by having primary education and earning at least £480 a year or owning £1,000 of property, or for those not meeting the educational requirements, have an annual income of at least £720 or own over £1,500 of property. Certain people were automatically entitled to register as "ordinary voters", including ministers of religion, chiefs recognised by the Governor and wives of anyone qualified as an "ordinary" voter (although in the case of polygamous marriages, only the senior wife qualified).[4] "Special" voters had to have at least two years of secondary education and an income of at least £120 a year, or have an income of at least £150 or own property worth £500 or more. Automatic qualification as a "special" voter was given to pensioners receiving a monthly or annual pension for at least 20 years' service for one employer, headmen or herediary councillors with at least two years of unpaid service and who were recognised by their chief, or be the wife (or senior wife) of any qualified "special" voter.[4] All voters had to be over 21, able to complete their registration form in English and have lived in the Federation of Rhodesia and Nyasaland for at two years and in their constituency for three months.[4]
The African reserved seats were created by combining several ordinary seats, whilst the European reserved seats were based on combinations of the special seats. Every voter had two votes, one for their special or ordinary constituency member, and one for their reserved member. In the ordinary and European reserved seats, special votes were not allowed to account for more than a third of the total.[5]
A total of 30,234 people were registered to vote, up from 15,505 for the 1954 elections. Of the 23,388 "ordinary" voters, 20,546 were Europeans, 2,046 Indians and 796 Africans. The 6,846 special voters included 6,821 Africans, 20 Europeans and five Indians.[5]
Constituencies | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
Ordinary | Reserved African | Ordinary voters | Special voters | |
Broken Hill | South Central | 2,208 | 394 | |
Livingstone | 1,200 | 140 | ||
Lusaka Central | 1,428 | 102 | ||
Lusaka East | 1,503 | 289 | ||
Lusaka West | 2,483 | 163 | ||
Southern | 1,243 | 381 | ||
Chingola | Copperbelt | 1,317 | 325 | |
Kitwe East | 1,485 | 195 | ||
Kitwe West | 1,672 | 366 | ||
Luanshya | 2,296 | 275 | ||
Mufulira | 1,729 | 403 | ||
Ndola | 2,943 | 267 | ||
Special | Reserved European | Ordinary voters | Special voters | |
Barotseland | Western Rural | 239 | 488 | |
North Western | 187 | 637 | ||
South Western | 197 | 620 | ||
Eastern | Eastern Rural | 686 | 790 | |
Luapula | 306 | 473 | ||
Northern | 266 | 538 | ||
Total | 23,388 | 6,846 | ||
Source: East Africa and Rhodesia[5] |
Campaign
A total of 54 candidates contested the elections, of which 20 were African.[1] Four parties ran in the election, with the UFP led by John Roberts putting forward 18 candidates, the Dominion Party 10, the Central Africa Party led by John Moffat seven and the Northern Rhodesian African National Congress led by Harry Nkumbula one (Nkumbula himself). Seventeen candidates ran as independents, with one running as a Central Africa Party independent. The Zambian African National Congress, a breakaway from the NRANC, called for a boycott.[1] The UFP were unopposed in two seats.[6] No candidates were nominated for the Northern and Luapula Special constituencies,[5] requiring nominations to be reopened until 19 March.
The UFP held a centrist position, supporting dominion status for the Federation of Rhodesia and Nyasaland and opposing the British Colonial Office (reflecting the views of most white Northern Rhodesians).[1] The Dominion Party put forward a right-wing platform including supporting a partition of the Federation into European and African areas.[1] The Central Africa Party ran on a liberal platform.[1]
Results
Party | Votes | % | Seats | +/– |
---|---|---|---|---|
United Federal Party | 17,376 | 52.4 | 13 | +3 |
Dominion Party | 3,719 | 11.2 | 1 | New |
Central Africa Party | 3,302 | 10.0 | 3 | New |
Northern Rhodesian African National Congress | 572 | 1.7 | 1 | New |
Independents | 8,211 | 24.7 | 2 | 0 |
Vacant | – | – | 2 | – |
Invalid/blank votes | – | – | – | |
Total | 33,180 | 100 | 22 | +10 |
Source: East Africa and Rhodesia[7] |
By voter roll
Party | Ordinary seats | Special seats | African seats | European seats | Total seats | ||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Votes | % | Seats | Votes | % | Seats | Votes | % | Seats | Votes | % | Seats | ||
United Federal Party | 8,540 | 61.2 | 11 | 421 | 14.3 | 0 | 7,855 | 53.6 | 2 | 560 | 34.4 | 0 | 13 |
Dominion Party | 2,993 | 21.5 | 1 | − | − | − | − | − | − | − | − | − | 1 |
Central Africa Party | 876 | 6.3 | 0 | 571 | 19.4 | 1 | 787 | 5.4 | 0 | 1,068 | 35.6 | 2 | 3 |
Northern Rhodesian African National Congress | − | − | − | 572 | 19.4 | 1 | 726 | 4.9 | 0 | – | – | – | 1 |
Independents | 1,540 | 11.0 | 0 | 1,380 | 46.9 | 2 | 5,291 | 36.1 | 0 | – | – | – | 2 |
Vacant | – | – | – | – | – | 2 | – | – | – | – | – | – | 2 |
Total | 13,949 | 100 | 12 | 2,944 | 100 | 6 | 14,659 | 100 | 2 | 1,628 | 100 | 2 | 22 |
Source: East Africa and Rhodesia[7] |
By constituency
Constituency | Candidate | Party | Votes | % | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Ordinary | Broken Hill | John Roberts | United Federal Party | 1,275 | 74.43 |
Gladys Douglas | Independent | 438 | 25.57 | ||
Chingola | William Gray Dunlop | United Federal Party | Unopposed | ||
Kitwe East | Hugh Stanley | United Federal Party | 831 | 76.52 | |
Francis Smith | Dominion Party | 255 | 23.48 | ||
Kitwe West | Jerry Steyn | United Federal Party | 890 | 73.92 | |
Cecil Earl | Dominion Party | 314 | 26.08 | ||
Livingstone | Maurice Rabb | United Federal Party | Unopposed | ||
Luanshya | Rodney Malcomson | United Federal Party | 1,208 | 74.38 | |
Robert Greer | Dominion Party | 416 | 25.62 | ||
Lusaka Central | Ernest Sergeant | United Federal Party | 607 | 62.64 | |
Donald Clarke | Independent | 188 | 19.40 | ||
Frederick Gray | Independent | 121 | 12.49 | ||
Cyril Thatcher | Dominion Party | 53 | 5.47 | ||
Lusaka East | Alfred Carlisle | United Federal Party | 562 | 46.22 | |
Alexander Scott | Independent | 405 | 33.31 | ||
Charles Fleming | Dominion Party | 234 | 19.24 | ||
Irene Buchanan | Independent | 15 | 1.23 | ||
Lusaka West | Eric Grindley-Ferris | United Federal Party | 735 | 45.20 | |
Frank Derby | Dominion Party | 282 | 17.34 | ||
Douglas Edmonds | Independent | 271 | 16.67 | ||
Ralph Seal | Central Africa Party | 236 | 14.51 | ||
Margaretha Seibrits | Independent | 102 | 6.27 | ||
Mufulira | Peter Wulff | United Federal Party | 734 | 52.32 | |
Bertram Redmond | Dominion Party | 669 | 47.68 | ||
Ndola | Cecil Dennistoun Burney | United Federal Party | 1,094 | 57.73 | |
Norman Hunt | Central Africa Party | 640 | 33.77 | ||
William van Zyl | Dominion Party | 161 | 8.50 | ||
Southern | Gert Smith | Dominion Party | 609 | 50.21 | |
Geoffrey Beckett | United Federal Party | 604 | 49.79 | ||
Special | Barotseland | Kwalombota Mulonda | Independent | 382 | 66.90 |
Mufaya Mubuna | United Federal Party | 168 | 29.42 | ||
Yuyi Nganga | Independent | 21 | 3.68 | ||
Eastern | Alfred Gondwe | Central Africa Party | 398 | 36.28 | |
Chiwala Banda | Independent | 292 | 26.62 | ||
Isaac Nkholoma | United Federal Party | 253 | 23.06 | ||
Shadrick Cheme | Independent | 154 | 14.04 | ||
Luapula | No candidate nominated | ||||
North Western | William Nkanza | Independent Central Africa Party | 247 | 39.02 | |
Samuel Mbilishi | Independent | 213 | 23.65 | ||
Beston Muluku | Central Africa Party | 173 | 27.33 | ||
Northern | No candidate nominated | ||||
South Western | Harry Nkumbula | Northern Rhodesian African National Congress | 572 | 88.96 | |
Robinson Nabulyato | Independent | 71 | 11.04 | ||
African Reserved | Copperbelt | Gabriel Musumbulwa | United Federal Party | 4,451 | 58.26 |
Lawrence Katilungu | Independent | 2,674 | 35.00 | ||
Robinson Puta | Independent | 313 | 4.10 | ||
Pascale Sokata | Independent | 202 | 2.64 | ||
South Central | William Kazokah | United Federal Party | 3,404 | 48.50 | |
Safeli Chileshe | Independent | 2,102 | 29.95 | ||
Gwale Habanyama | Central Africa Party | 787 | 11.21 | ||
Noah Chyapeni | Dominion Party | 726 | 10.34 | ||
European Reserved | Eastern Rural | John Moffat | Central Africa Party | 662 | 60.90 |
Reuben Kidson | United Federal Party | 425 | 39.10 | ||
Western Rural | Harry Franklin | Central Africa Party | 406 | 75.05 | |
Hugh Mitcheley | United Federal Party | 135 | 24.95 | ||
Source: East Africa and Rhodesia[7] |
By-elections
By-elections were held in the Luapula and Northern Special constituencies on 9 April.
Constituency | Candidate | Party | Votes | % |
---|---|---|---|---|
Luapula | S M Mununga | Independent | 234 | 51.88 |
M M Simfukwe | 113 | 25.06 | ||
John Mutale | 57 | 12.64 | ||
G E Tafuna | 47 | 10.42 | ||
Northern | Lakement Ngandu | Independent | 228 | 42.22 |
M G M Chali | 223 | 41.30 | ||
Mateyo Kakumbi | 89 | 16.48 | ||
Source: East Africa and Rhodesia[8] |
Aftermath
Following the election, Governor Arthur Benson appointed six ministers; John Roberts as Minister of Labour and Mines, Alfred Carlisle as Minister of Lands and Natural Resources, William Gray Dunlop as Minister of Transport and Works, Rodney Malcomson as Minister of Local Government, Gabriel Musumbulwa as Minister of African Education and Edson Mwamba as Minister of African Agriculture.[9]
References
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 "Racial Issue In N. Rhodesia Elections: African Boycott", The Times, 12 March 1959, p11, Issue 54407
- 1 2 3 "Sir R. Welensky Gains Election Victory: Party Sure Of 13 Seats", The Times, 23 March 1959, p10, Issue 54416
- 1 2 "Election Move By Africans" The Times, 23 December 1958
- 1 2 3 David C. Mulford (1964) The Northern Rhodesian General Election 1962, Oxford University Press, pp11−12
- 1 2 3 4 "N Rhodesia's General Election: Full List of Candidates", East Africa and Rhodesia, 12 March 1959, p821
- ↑ "Northern Rhodesia Elections", East Africa and Rhodesia, 26 March 1959, p880
- 1 2 3 "Northern Rhodesian Election Results", East Africa and Rhodesia, 2 April 1959, p913
- ↑ "Election Results", East Africa and Rhodesia, 25 April 1959, p1007
- ↑ "New Ministers For N. Rhodesia: Two Africans Included", The Times, 28 March 1959, p5, Issue 54420