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1938 South African general election

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1938 South African general election

← 1933 18 May 1938 1943 →

All 150 general roll seats in the House of Assembly
76 seats needed for a majority
Registered1,052,652
Turnout79.36% (Increase 45.59pp)
  First party Second party
 
JBM Hertzog - SA (cropped).jpg
DFMalanPortret (cropped).jpg
Leader J. B. M. Hertzog D. F. Malan
Party United Purified National
Leader's seat Smithfield Piketberg
Last election 53.95%, 136 seats[a] Did not exist
Seats won 111 27
Seat change Decrease 25 New party
Popular vote 446,032 259,543
Percentage 53.81% 31.31%
Swing Decrease 0.14pp New party

  Third party Fourth party
 
Charles Stallard (cropped).jpg
Walter Madeley (cropped).jpg
Leader Charles Stallard Walter Madeley
Party Dominion Labour
Leader's seat Roodepoort
(lost re-election)
Benoni
Last election Did not exist 6.34%, 2 seats
Seats won 8 3
Seat change New party Increase 1
Popular vote 52,356 48,641
Percentage 6.32% 5.87%
Swing New party Decrease 0.47pp


Prime Minister before election

J. B. M. Hertzog
United

Elected Prime Minister

J. B. M. Hertzog
United

General elections were held in South Africa on 18 May 1938 to elect the 150 members of the House of Assembly.[1] The United Party won an absolute majority.

Background

[edit]

The National Party (led by the Prime Minister J. B. M. Hertzog) and the South African Party (whose leader was the Deputy Prime Minister Jan Smuts) were in coalition at the time of the 1933 South African general election.

After the election the two coalition parties fused, to become the United South African National Party (commonly known as the United Party). The formal launch of the new party took place on 5 December 1934.

Those members of the National Party who did not accept the fusion, constituted themselves as the Purified National Party (PNP) in June 1934. The leader of the new party was Dr. D. F. Malan, who had been the National Party leader in Cape Province. Eighteen MPs joined the PNP caucus. Dr. Malan became the Leader of the Opposition, in the House of Assembly.

The members of the South African Party who rejected the fusion, formed the Dominion Party. Its leader was Colonel C. F. Stallard.[2]

Changes to the franchise and representation

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Under the Representation of Natives Act 1936, all registered black voters in the Cape Province were removed from the common voters' lists and placed on a special Cape Natives voters' roll. This served to effectively dismantle the traditional multi-racial "Cape Qualified Franchise" system.

Black voters had never been entitled to vote in Transvaal and the Orange Free State. Few had ever qualified in Natal.

The voters' rolls, for 1935, were broken down by race in each province (using the racial classifications in use in South Africa at the time).

Province White Native Coloured Asiatic
Cape 382,103 10,628 21,596 1,401
Natal 91,762 1 343 10
Transvaal 349,400 - - -
Orange FS 101,089 - - -

[3]

No black voters were eligible to participate in the 1938 general election, apart from the one from Natal. The three (white) Native Representative Members from Cape Province were elected on a different date, for a term (expiring on 30 June immediately following a period of five years after the previous election) unaffected by dissolutions of Parliament.[4]

The first group of native representatives had been elected in June 1937. The term for which they were elected expired on 30 June 1942. The representatives took their seats in the House of Assembly in 1938, and sat as Independent MPs.[5][6]

Delimitation of electoral divisions

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The South Africa Act 1909 had provided for a delimitation commission to define the boundaries for each electoral division. The representation by province, under the seventh delimitation report of 1937, is set out in the table below. The figures in brackets are the number of electoral divisions in the previous (1932) delimitation. If there is no figure in brackets then the number was unchanged.[7]

Provinces Cape Natal Orange Free State Transvaal Total
Divisions 59 (61) 16 15 (16) 60 (57) 150

The above table does not include the three Native representative seats in Cape Province, which were not included in the delimitation of the general roll seats under the South Africa Act 1909.

Nominations

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Candidates nominated for the election, by party, were United 150, Purified National 103, Labour 37, Dominion 33, Independent 31, Greyshirts 3 and Socialists 3. Total 360.[8]

Results

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PartyVotes%Seats+/–
United Party446,03253.81111–25
Purified National Party259,54331.3127New
Dominion Party52,3566.328New
Labour Party48,6415.873+1
Socialist Party4,9630.601New
Independents17,3622.090–10
Native Representative Members3New
Total828,897100.00153+3
Valid votes828,89799.22
Invalid/blank votes6,4810.78
Total votes835,378100.00
Registered voters/turnout1,052,65279.36
Source: South Africa 1982[9]

By province

[edit]
Province United Purified National Dominion Labour Socialist Total
Cape 38 20 1 - - 59
Natal 7 - 7 1 1 16
Orange FS 9 6 - - - 15
Transvaal 57 1 - 2 - 60
Total 111 27 8 3 1 150
Source: Keesing's Contemporary Archives[10]

Notes

[edit]

References

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  1. ^ Keesing's Contemporary Archives 1937-1940, pp. 3074-3075
  2. ^ Smuts: A Reappraisal
  3. ^ The South African Constitution, page 93
  4. ^ The South African Constitution, pp. 101–109 (for the details of the native representative seats); The South African Constitution, page 95: H.J. May, writing in 1955, discussed the qualification for non-Europeans in Natal to be voters on the common (or general) roll. "There was only one Native in Natal (and only one therefore in the whole of the Union) on the general voters' list in 1945, and now there are none.
  5. ^ The Times, 9 January 1937
  6. ^ Smuts: a Reappraisal, pp122, 213
  7. ^ South Africa 1982, page 129 (table setting out delimitations of seats by province, the relevant one being that of 1937)
  8. ^ Keesing's Contemporary Archives 1937-1940, pp. 3074-3075
  9. ^ South Africa 1982, pp174–176
  10. ^ Keesing's Contemporary Archives 1943-1946, pp. 6005-6008. The article is mostly about the 1943 general election, but includes the results, by province, of the 1938 election.
  • Keesing's Contemporary Archives
  • Smuts: A Reappraisal, by Bernard Friedman (George, Allen & Unwin 1975) ISBN 0-04-920045-3
  • South Africa 1982 Official Yearbook of the Republic of South Africa, published by Chris van Rensburg Publications
  • The South African Constitution, by H.J. May (3rd edition 1955, Juta & Co