Third Cain ministry
The Third Cain Ministry was a ministry of the Government of Victoria (Australia). It was led by the Premier of Victoria, John Cain of the Labour Party. The ministry was sworn in on 17 December 1952, and resigned on 7 June 1955 when it was succeeded by the Bolte Ministry.[1][2]
Three members of Cain's cabinet—Les Coleman (Minister of Transport), Bill Barry (Minister of Health) and Tom Hayes (Minister-in-Charge of Housing)—were expelled from the Labor Party on 31 March 1955 during the Australian Labor Party split of 1955 and formed the Australian Labor Party (Anti-Communist). They were replaced in their ministerial roles by Don Ferguson, Val Doube and John Sheehan respectively.[3] Frank Scully, a Minister without Portfolio, was also expelled from the party and the cabinet—he was not replaced.
Portfolios
Office | Minister |
---|---|
The Hon John Cain, MLA | |
Deputy Premier |
The Hon Bill Galvin, MLA |
Minister of Transport |
The Hon Les Coleman, MLC |
Minister of Transport |
The Hon Don Ferguson, MLC (from 31 March 1955) |
Attorney-General |
The Hon Bill Slater, MLA |
Minister of Health |
The Hon Bill Barry, MLA (until 31 March 1955) |
Minister of Health |
The Hon Val Doube, MLA (from 31 March 1955) |
Minister of Agriculture |
The Hon Clive Stoneham, MLA |
Minister-in-Charge of Housing |
The Hon Tom Hayes, MLA (until 31 March 1955) |
Minister-in-Charge of Housing |
The Hon John Sheehan, MLA (from 31 March 1955) |
Minister of Labour |
The Hon Archibald Fraser, MLC |
Minister of Education |
The Hon Ernie Shepherd, MLA |
Commissioner of Crown Lands and Survey |
The Hon Robert Holt, MLA |
Commissioner of Public Works |
The Hon Samuel Merrifield, MLA |
Minister-in-Charge of Electrical Undertakings |
The Hon John Galbally, MLC |
Ministers without Portfolio |
The Hon Joseph Smith, MLA |
References
- ^ "Ministers of the Crown". Victoria Government Gazette. Victorian Government Printer. 17 December 1952. p. 1952:7203.
- ^ "Ministers of the Crown". Victoria Government Gazette. Victorian Government Printer. 7 June 1955. p. 1955:2803.
- ^ "Cain silent on poll". The Argus. Melbourne. 2 April 1955. p. 5. Retrieved 10 May 2012 – via National Library of Australia.