1925 Western Australian prohibition referendum

Referendum held in Western Australia in 1925 From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

A referendum was held on 4 April 1925 in the Australian state of Western Australia on the topic of prohibition.

Quick facts Results, Choice ...
1925 Western Australian prohibition referendum
4 April 1925
Results
Choice
Votes %
Yes 41,254 34.88%
No 77,030 65.12%
Valid votes 118,284 99.33%
Invalid or blank votes 795 0.67%
Total votes 119,079 100.00%
Close

History

The Licensing Act Amendment Act 1922 (No.39 of 1922) was assented to by the Governor of Western Australia on 22 December 1922. Section 60 of the Act (which became Section 87(e) of the Licensing Act 1911) stipulated that "in 1925, and in every fifth year thereafter... there shall be taken a poll of the electors in every electoral district on the proposal that prohibition shall come into force in Western Australia". It also provided that if prohibition was passed, then in subsequent polls "the proposal shall be that licenses for the sale of intoxicating liquor shall be restored". The franchise was to be the same as that for the Western Australian Legislative Assembly, and a proposal could only be carried if 60% of all votes were in favour.[1]

Prior to the enactment of this provision, two referendums, one in 1911 and another in 1921, had rejected prohibition.

Referendum results

Question: Do you favour Prohibition coming into force in Western Australia?

More information Valid votes, Informal votes ...
Valid votes Informal votes For[2] Against
119,079 795 41,254 34.88% 77,030 65.12%
Close

The proposal was rejected.[3]

Aftermath

Despite the legislation calling for five-yearly referendums, only one more was held in 1950.[4] Section 87 of the Licensing Act was repealed in 1959.[5]

References

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