1903 Australian federal election

1903 Australian federal election

← 1901 16 December 1903 (1903-12-16) 1906 →

All 75 seats in the House of Representatives
38 seats were needed for a majority in the House
19 (of the 36) seats in the Senate
Registered1,893,586 Increase93.62%
Turnout739,402 (39.05%)[a]
(Decrease12.34 pp)
  First party Second party
 
Leader Alfred Deakin George Reid
Party Protectionist Free Trade
Leader since 24 September 1903 (1903-09-24) 11 May 1901
Leader's seat Ballaarat (Vic.) East Sydney (NSW)
Last election 32 seats 25 seats
Seats won 26 seats 24 seats
Seat change Decrease 6 Decrease 1
Popular vote 210,738 228,721
Percentage 29.23% 31.73%
Swing Increase1.71% Decrease1.48%

  Third party Fourth party
 
Leader Chris Watson William McWilliams
Party Labour Revenue Tariff
Leader since 20 May 1901 1903
Leader's seat Bland (NSW) Franklin (Tas.)
Last election 16 seats New party
Seats won 22 seats 1 seat
Seat change Increase 6 Increase 1
Popular vote 214,713 3,546
Percentage 29.78% 0.49%
Swing Increase11.53% Increase0.49%

Results by division for the House of Representatives, shaded by winning party's margin of victory.

Prime Minister before election

Alfred Deakin
Protectionist

Subsequent Prime Minister

Alfred Deakin
Protectionist

The 1903 Australian federal election was held in Australia on 16 December 1903. All 75 seats in the House of Representatives, and 19 of the 36 seats in the Senate were up for election. The incumbent Protectionist Party minority government led by Prime Minister Alfred Deakin retained the most House of Representatives seats of the three parties and retained government with the parliamentary support of the Labour Party led by Chris Watson. The Free Trade Party led by George Reid remained in opposition.

The election outcome saw a finely balanced House of Representatives, with the three parties each holding around a third of seats − the Protectionists on 26, the Free Traders on 24 and Labour on 22. This term of parliament saw no changes in any party leadership but did see very significant and prolonged debates on contentious issues − the Protectionist minority government fell in April 1904 to Labour, while the Labour minority government fell in August 1904 to the Free Traders, while the Free Trader minority government fell in July 1905 back to the Protectionists, which continued until the 1906 election and beyond. The Free Traders remained in opposition throughout this eventful period with the exception of Labour forming the opposition for the first time during the period of the Free Trader minority government. Additionally, the Watson government was the world's first Labour Party government at a national level.

Despite a break in prime ministerships in 1904-1905 and 1908–1909, this is the first of three consecutive elections in which Deakin was the sitting prime minister.
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