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New Zealand National Party leadership election, 1936

New Zealand National Party leadership election, 1936
New Zealand
31 October 1936 1940 →
  Adam Hamilton (1926).jpg Charles Wilkinson.jpg
Candidate Adam Hamilton Charles Wilkinson
Party Reform Independent
Popular vote 13 12
Percentage 52.00 48.00

Leader before election

George Forbes (acting)

Leader after election

Adam Hamilton


George Forbes (acting)

Adam Hamilton

The New Zealand National Party leadership election, was held in 1936 to select the inaugural leader of the newly founded New Zealand National Party. The election was won by Wallace MP Adam Hamilton.

The National Party was only recently set up by the defeated remnants of the Reform and United parties. Over the issue of leadership the two parties leaders Gordon Coates and George Forbes were known to personally detest one another, and neither would serve under the other's leadership threatening to divide the budding party. This led to alternative figures to be turned to in order to find a leader, however Coates (who was reluctant to the merger to begin with) was determined that the leader should be a Reform MP.

First elected in 1919, Hamilton had served as the Minister of Internal Affairs and Postmaster-General in the United-Reform Coalition government which governed during the Great Depression. In what some called an act of blackmail, Coates and a group of Reform MPs went as far as to threaten to leave the new National Party and re-establish the old Reform Party unless Hamilton was chosen as leader.

Wilkinson was the MP for Egmont from a 1912 by-election to 1919 when he retired before returning in 1928. It was well known that Forbes was known to prefer Wilkinson and was of the opinion that as a new party National should have a new leader free from association of the coalition government of which Wilkinson was not a member.


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