First Playford IV ministry
First Playford ministry | |
|---|---|
58th ministry of South Australia | |
Playford in 1938 | |
| Date formed | 5 November 1938 |
| Date dissolved | 16 May 1944; 5 years, 193 days |
| People and organisations | |
| Monarch | King George VI |
| Governor | |
| Premier | Thomas Playford |
| No. of ministers | 6 |
| Member party | Liberal and Country |
| Status in legislature |
|
| Opposition cabinet | Richards shadow ministry |
| Opposition party | Labor |
| Opposition leader | Robert Richards |
| History | |
| Elections | |
| Legislature terms |
|
| Predecessor | Second Butler ministry |
| Successor | Second Playford ministry |
The first Playford ministry was the 58th ministry of the Government of South Australia, led by the state's 33rd premier Thomas Playford. Playford inherited the premiership in November 1938 after the resignation of Richard Butler, who sought to enter federal politics. Initially five seats short of a majority, Playford's 1941 election victory gave his government the exact amount required to form a majority. His first ministry was dissolved following the 1944 election after Percy Blesing refused to resign. His second ministry would stand for over 20 years, largely thanks to the Playmander.
Arrangement
The ministry was formed on 5 November 1938. The ministry saw little change over its five years; Lyell McEwin replacing George Ritchie was the only change in personnel. Playford picked up Shirley Jeffries' responsibilities shortly before the ministry was dissolved in May 1944, following his electoral defeat.
| Party | Minister | Portrait | Offices | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Liberal and Country | Thomas Playford (1896–1981) MHA for Gumeracha |
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| Liberal and Country | Shirley Jeffries (1886–1963) MHA for Torrens |
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| Liberal and Country | Reginald Rudall (1885–1955) MHA for Angas |
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| Liberal and Country | Malcolm McIntosh (1888–1960) MHA for Albert |
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| Liberal and Country | George Ritchie (1864–1944) MLC for Northern District |
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| Liberal and Country | Percy Blesing (1879–1949) MLC for Northern District |
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| Liberal and Country | Lyell McEwin (1897–1988) MLC for Northern District |
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Notes
- ^ The office of Premier was not officially recognised until 1965, however, the title was widely used to describe the leader of the majority party/coalition in Government since the beginning of responsible government in 1857.
References
- "Statistical Record of the Legislature 1836–2007" (PDF). Parliament of South Australia. 24 April 2007. p. 149. Archived from the original (PDF) on 12 March 2011.