Third Bruce ministry

Third Bruce ministry

18th Ministry of Australia
Group photo of the Third Bruce ministry
Date formed29 November 1928
Date dissolved22 October 1929
People and organisations
MonarchGeorge V
Governor-GeneralLord Stonehaven
Prime MinisterStanley Bruce
No. of ministers13
Member partyNationalistCountry coalition
Status in legislatureCoalition majority government
Opposition partyLabor
Opposition leaderJames Scullin
History
Election17 November 1928
Outgoing election12 October 1929
Legislature term11th
PredecessorSecond Bruce ministry
SuccessorScullin ministry

The Third Bruce ministry (NationalistCountry Coalition) was the 18th ministry of the Government of Australia. It was led by the country's 8th Prime Minister, Stanley Bruce. The Third Bruce ministry succeeded the Second Bruce ministry, which dissolved on 29 November 1928 following the federal election that took place in November. The ministry was replaced by the Scullin ministry on 22 October 1929 following the federal election that took place on 12 October which saw Labor defeat the Coalition. That election also saw Bruce lose his own seat of Flinders; no sitting prime minister would lose his own seat again until 2007.[1]

Aubrey Abbott, who died in 1975, was the last surviving member of the Third Bruce ministry. Stanley Bruce was the last surviving Nationalist minister.

Ministry

Party Minister Portrait Portfolio
Nationalist Stanley Bruce
(1883–1967)

MP for Flinders
(1918–1929)

Country Earle Page
(1880–1961)

MP for Cowper
(1919–1961)

Nationalist Sir George Pearce
(1870–1952)

Senator for Western Australia
(1901–1938)

Nationalist John Latham
(1877–1964)

MP for Kooyong
(1922–1934)

Country Aubrey Abbott
(1886–1975)

MP for Gwydir
(1925–1929)

Nationalist Henry Gullett
(1878–1940)

MP for Henty
(1925–1940)

Nationalist Sir William Glasgow
(1876–1955)

Senator for Queensland
(1920–1932)

Country William Gibson
(1869–1955)

MP for Corangamite
(1918–1929)

Nationalist Sir Neville Howse
(1863–1930)

MP for Calare
(1922–1929)

Country Thomas Paterson
(1882–1952)

MP for Gippsland
(1922–1943)

Nationalist Charles Marr
(1880–1960)

MP for Parkes
(1919–1929)

  • Honorary Minister
Nationalist Alexander McLachlan
(1872–1956)

Senator for South Australia
(1926–1944)

  • Honorary Minister
Nationalist James Ogden
(1868–1932)

Senator for Tasmania
(1923–1932)

  • Honorary Minister
  • Assistant Minister for Industry

References

  1. ^ "Ministries and Cabinets". Parliamentary Handbook. Parliament of Australia. Retrieved 17 September 2010.