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===Satavian Federation (1976-present)=== | |||
;Parties | ;Parties | ||
{{legend2|# | {{legend2|#1f7ae0|[[Conservative & Country Party (Satavia)|Conservative & Country]]|border=1px solid #AAAAAA}} | ||
{{legend2|# | {{legend2|#e29a1d|[[Liberal Party (Satavia)|Liberal]]|border=1px solid #AAAAAA}} | ||
{| class="wikitable" style="width:100%; text-align:center;" | {| class="wikitable" style="width:100%; text-align:center;" | ||
Line 17: | Line 18: | ||
! Time in office | ! Time in office | ||
|- style="background:#EEEEEE" | |- style="background:#EEEEEE" | ||
! style="background: | ! style="background:; color:black;" rowspan="2"|— | ||
|rowspan="2"|[[File: | |rowspan="2"|[[File:GeldenHuys.jpg|100px]] | ||
|rowspan="2"|<small>{{wpl| | |rowspan="2"|<small>{{wpl|Lt. Col.}}</small><br>[[Johannes Klopper]]<br />{{small|(1930-2009)}}<br>{{small|—}} | ||
| | |27 September 1976 | ||
| | |29 November 1976 | ||
|{{Age in years and days| | |{{Age in years and days|1976|9|27|1976|11|29}} | ||
| — | |||
| — | | — | ||
|[[National Party (Satavia)| | |[[Johannes Klopper|Klopper]] | ||
|[[ | |- | ||
| colspan="6"|{{small|Klopper overthrew the National Party dictatorship during the [[1976 Satavian coup d'état]], installing himself as temporary Prime Minister. Despite fears that Klopper would refuse to relinquish power, just two months after the coup he handed power over to Eric Edwards, Satavia's first democratically elected Prime Minister since 1936.}} | |||
|- style="background:#EEEEEE" | |||
! style="background:#e29a1d; color:white;" rowspan="2"|27 | |||
|rowspan="2"|[[File:Sir Henry Winneke (cropped).JPG|100px]] | |||
|rowspan="2"|[[Eric Edwards]]<br />{{small|(1935-2017)}}<br />{{small|{{wpl|MP}} for [[Division of Baxter]], [[Hope Province]]}} | |||
|29 November 1976 | |||
|22 August 1984 | |||
|{{Age in years and days|1976|11|29|1984|8|22}} | |||
|[[1976 Satavian federal election|1976]] ({{ordinal|30}})<br />[[1980 Satavian federal election|1980]] ({{ordinal|31}}) | |||
|[[Liberal Party (Satavia)|Liberal]] | |||
|[[Eric Edwards|Edwards I]]–[[Eric Edwards|II]] | |||
|- | |- | ||
| colspan="6"|{{small| | | colspan="6"|{{small|First elected Prime Minister of Satavia since 1936. Edwards lead the campaign to defeat right-wing reactionary forces during the [[Satavian Crisis]], and pursued closer ties with [[Rizealand]], the [[NVO]] and the [[Euclean Community]]. Edwards won a {{wpl|supermajority}} in the [[1980 Satavian federal election|1980 federal election]].}} | ||
|- style="background:#EEEEEE" | |- style="background:#EEEEEE" | ||
! style="background:# | ! style="background:#e29a1d; color:white;" rowspan="2"|28 | ||
|rowspan="2"|[[File: | |rowspan="2"|[[File:Don Dunstan 1968 crop.jpg|100px]] | ||
|rowspan="2"|[[ | |rowspan="2"|[[Leander Kokkinakis]]<br />{{small|(1951-)}}<br />{{small|{{wpl|MP}} for [[Division of St George]], [[Western Freestate]]}} | ||
| | |22 August 1984 | ||
| | |3 April 1987 | ||
|{{Age in years and days| | |{{Age in years and days|1984|8|22|1987|3|3}} | ||
| | |[[1984 Satavian federal election|1984]] ({{ordinal|32}}) | ||
|[[ | |[[Liberal Party (Satavia)|Liberal]] | ||
|[[ | |[[Leander Kokkinakis|Kokkinakis]] | ||
|- | |- | ||
| colspan="6"|{{small| | | colspan="6"|{{small|Leander Kokkinakis became Satavia's youngest elected Prime Minister as well as the first Satavian Prime Minister of [[Piraea|Piraean descent]] when he was elected with a supermajority in the [[1984 Satavian federal election|1984 federal election]]. Kokkinakis introduced a number of public welfare reforms, in addition to a system of {{wpl|food stamps}} {{wpl|food coupon|popularly known as Kokkinakis Coupons}}, which remain in use across Satavia. Kokkinakis was forced to resign after the ''[[Hope Post]]'' published revelations of an affair Kokkinakis was having with a younger man. Despite {{wpl|legal status of homosexuality|the criminal status of homosexuality}}, Kokkinakis was never charged by police but the affair ended his political career.}} | ||
|- style="background:#EEEEEE" | |- style="background:#EEEEEE" | ||
! style="background:# | ! style="background:#e29a1d; color:white;" rowspan="2"|29 | ||
|rowspan="2"|[[File: | |rowspan="2"|[[File:John England 1971.jpg|100px]] | ||
|rowspan="2"| | |rowspan="2"|[[Maximilian Dumfries]]<br />{{small|(1939-1996)}}<br />{{small|{{wpl|MP}} for [[Division of Katter]], [[Hope Province]]}} | ||
| | |5 April 1987 | ||
| | |1 December 1987 | ||
|{{Age in years and days| | |{{Age in years and days|1987|5|3|1987|12|1}} | ||
| — | |— | ||
|[[ | |[[Liberal Party (Satavia)|Liberal]] | ||
|[[ | |[[Maximilian Dumfries|Dumfries]] | ||
|- | |- | ||
| colspan="6"|{{small| | | colspan="6"|{{small|Dumfries was elected Prime Minister by parliamentary members of the Liberal Party after a two-day period of indecision between the left-wing and centrist elements of the party. Dumrfries - a member of the extreme left of the party - soon moved to ensure stability within the party, by threatening to expel members of the centrist factions. Many MPs and Senators of the Liberal Party {{wpl|crossed the floor}} to join the Conservatives, SDP, United or became independents. Dumfries was forced to call for a {{wpl|general election}}, in wich both houses (Senate and Representatives) are dismissed, held in December 1987, which saw a resounding defeat for the Liberal party.}} | ||
|- style="background:#EEEEEE" | |- style="background:#EEEEEE" | ||
! style="background:# | ! style="background:#1f7ae0; color:white;" rowspan="2"|30 | ||
|rowspan="2"|[[File: | |rowspan="2"|[[File:Sir Ninian Stephen.jpg|100px]] | ||
|rowspan="2"|[[ | |rowspan="2"|[[Ben De Villiers]]<br />{{small|(1946-)}}<br />{{small|{{wpl|MP}} for [[Division of Werlaigh]], [[New Borland]]}} | ||
| | |1 December 1987 | ||
| | |24 June 1994 | ||
|{{Age in years and days| | |{{Age in years and days|1987|12|1|1994|6|24}} | ||
|[[1987 Satavian general election|1987]] ({{ordinal|33}})<br>[[1990 Satavian federal election|1990]] ({{ordinal|34}}) | |||
|[[ | |[[Conservative & Country Party (Satavia)|Conservative & Country]] | ||
|[[ | |[[Ben De Villiers|De Villiers I]]-[[Ben De Villiers|II]] | ||
|- | |- | ||
| colspan="6"|{{small| | | colspan="6"|{{small|De Villiers was elected in a landslide as a result of the unpopularity of the Liberal party. De Villiers was the first Conservative Prime Minister since 1903 and the first Country Party Prime Minister since 1906. De Villiers launched massive spending cuts as well as a huge privatisation programme that saw several state owned enterprises, most notably [[Satavian Airlines]], sold off or publicly floated. De Villiers called an early election in 1990, looking to capitalise off the continued instability and unpopularity of the Liberal opposition. Ultimately, De Villiers' popularity would wane as cost of living increased, and proposals made by the De Villers government to cut federal benefits saw him lose the 1994 federal election to the Liberal party.}} | ||
|- style="background:#EEEEEE" | |- style="background:#EEEEEE" | ||
! style="background:# | ! style="background:#e29a1d; color:white;" rowspan="2"|31 | ||
|rowspan="2"|[[File: | |rowspan="2"|[[File:Colin Barnett (formal) crop.jpg|100px]] | ||
|rowspan="2"|[[ | |rowspan="2"|[[John Barrett]]<br />{{small|(1958-)}}<br />{{small|{{wpl|MP}} for [[Division of Pienaar]], [[Hope Province]]}} | ||
| | |24 June 1994 | ||
| | |7 September 1996 | ||
|{{Age in years and days| | |{{Age in years and days|1994|6|24|1996|9|7}} | ||
| | |[[1994 Satavian federal election|1994]] ({{ordinal|35}}) | ||
|[[ | |[[Liberal Party (Satavia)|Liberal]] | ||
|[[ | |[[John Barrett|Barrett]] | ||
|- | |- | ||
| colspan="6"|{{small| | | colspan="6"|{{small|Barrett won his electoral campaign prosper by promising huge government handouts in the wake of the ongoing Satavian cost of living crisis that disproportionately affected minorities living in Satavia. Barrett also campaigned for increased provisions of {{wpl|universal healthcare}} and fought a long and costly legal battle with the governments of the Orange Province, Western Freestate and New Borland, that argued that healthcare provisions were within the remit of the provincial governments and not the federal government. Barrett ultimately failed to deliver on his promise after the Supreme Court ruled in favour of the provincial governments, and was forced into making an embarrassing public u-turn that ultimately lost him the support of the Conservative-controlled Senate. Barrett called on the President to dismiss parliament for a general election, but his request was controversially refused by [[Damian de Jager]], who instead called for a federal election that did not dismiss the Senate.}} | ||
|- style="background:#EEEEEE" | |- style="background:#EEEEEE" | ||
! style="background:# | ! style="background:#1f7ae0; color:white;" rowspan="2"|32 | ||
|rowspan="2"|[[File: | |rowspan="2"|[[File:Jim Bolger at press conference cropped.jpg|100px]] | ||
|rowspan="2"|[[ | |rowspan="2"|[[Rian de Klerk]]<br />{{small|(1939-)}}<br />{{small|{{wpl|MP}} for [[Division of Williams]], [[Western Freestate]]}} | ||
| | |7 September 1996 | ||
| | |16 August 1998 | ||
|{{Age in years and days| | |{{Age in years and days|1996|9|7|1998|8|16}} | ||
| | |[[1996 Satavian federal election|1996]] ({{ordinal|36}}) | ||
|[[ | |[[Conservative & Country Party (Satavia)|Conservative & Country]] | ||
|[[ | |[[Rian de Klerk|De Klerk-Pieterson]] | ||
|- | |- | ||
| colspan="6"|{{small| | | colspan="6"|{{small|Elected without a majority, De Klerk was forced to enter into a fractious coalition with the United Party's [[E. K. Pieterson]]. This coalition government proved deeply unpopular as policy clashes stunted De Klerk's agenda. The coalition's unpopularity was demonstrated by the loss of the presidency and overall control of the Senate in the [[1997 Satavian senate elections|1997 senate elections]]. With the coaltion now unable to pass legislation through the Senate, De Klerk was forced to ask newly elected President [[Donald Pienaar]] to call for a double election.}} | ||
|- style="background:#EEEEEE" | |- style="background:#EEEEEE" | ||
! style="background:# | ! style="background:#e29a1d; color:white;" rowspan="2"|33 | ||
|rowspan="2"|[[File: | |rowspan="2"|[[File:James D. Wolfensohn 2003.jpg|100px]] | ||
|rowspan="2"|[[ | |rowspan="2"|[[Milo Malan]]<br />{{small|(1959-)}}<br />{{small|{{wpl|MP}} for [[Division of Clarke]], [[Groenvelde Vrystaat]]}} | ||
| | |16 August 1998 | ||
| | |21 July 2001 | ||
|{{Age in years and days| | |{{Age in years and days|1998|8|16|2001|7|21}} | ||
| | |[[1998 Satavian general election|1998]] ({{ordinal|37}}) | ||
|[[ | |[[Liberal Party (Satavia)|Liberal]] | ||
|[[ | |[[Milo Malan|Malan]] | ||
|- | |- | ||
| colspan="6"|{{small| | | colspan="6"|{{small|Malan was elected in the narrowest margin in Satavian electoral history in a fiercely contested election against Conservative candidate [[Edward Norton]]. Despite allegations of electoral irregularities, Malan declined to launch an inquiry into the claims. Malan's premiership was tainted by persistent rumours and speculation which were outed after an investigation by the ''Hope Post'' in July 2001. Malan resigned on the seventh and was arrested by the [[Satavian Federal Police]] the following day. In 2004, he was found guily of massive electoral fraud (including {{wpl|Electoral fraud#ballot stuffing|ballot stuffing}} in several key marginal constituencies) and sentenced to nine years imprisonment.}} | ||
|- style="background:#EEEEEE" | |- style="background:#EEEEEE" | ||
! style="background:#; color: | ! style="background:#e29a1d; color:white;" rowspan="2"|34 | ||
|rowspan="2"|[[File: | |rowspan="2"|[[File:Chris Bowen 2016.jpg|100px]] | ||
|rowspan="2"|[[ | |rowspan="2"|[[Andries Kuiper]]<br />{{small|(1960-)}}<br />{{small|{{wpl|MP}} for [[Division of Kayle]], [[Orange Province]]}} | ||
| | |21 July 2001 | ||
| | |14 October 2001 | ||
|{{Age in years and days| | |{{Age in years and days|2001|7|21|2001|10|14}} | ||
| — | | — | ||
| | |[[Liberal Party (Satavia)|Liberal]] | ||
|[[ | |[[Andries Kuiper|Kuiper]] | ||
|- | |- | ||
| colspan="6"|{{small| | | colspan="6"|{{small|After Malan's resignation, Kuiper was appointed Prime Minister as his replacement. Kuiper was not named as guilty of electoral fraud by the ''Hope Post'' and the SFP declined to investigate Kuiper. Nonetheless, Kuiper was forced to call a federal election later that year, which saw the Liberals suffer their worst electoral defeat since Satavia's return to democracy in 1976.}} | ||
|- style="background:#EEEEEE" | |- style="background:#EEEEEE" | ||
! style="background:# | ! style="background:#1f7ae0; color:white;" rowspan="2"|35 | ||
|rowspan="2"|[[File: | |rowspan="2"|[[File:Bill English 09-16 (2).jpg|100px]] | ||
|rowspan="2"| | |rowspan="2"|[[Edward Norton]]<br />{{small|(1961-)}}<br />{{small|{{wpl|MP}} for [[Division of Johnson]], [[Hope Province]]}} | ||
| | |14 October 2001 | ||
|27 | |27 June 2012 | ||
|{{Age in years and days| | |{{Age in years and days|2001|10|14|2012|6|27}} | ||
| | |[[2001 Satavian federal election|2001]] ({{ordinal|38}})<br>[[2005 Satavian general election|2005]] ({{ordinal|39}})<br>[[2009 Satavian federal election|2009]] ({{ordinal|40}}) | ||
|[[ | |[[Conservative & Country Party (Satavia)|Conservative & Country]] | ||
|[[ | |[[Edward Norton|Norton I]]-[[Edward Norton|II]]-[[Edward Norton|III]] | ||
|- | |- | ||
| colspan="6"|{{small| | | colspan="6"|{{small|Norton was elected with a landslide majority in the [[2001 Satavian federal election|2001 federal election]], and perused conservative policies in his first term. However, as campaigning began for the [[2005 Satavian federal election|2005 election]], Satavia was struck by the [[Great Recession of 2005|2005 financial crash]], crippling Satavia's economy. Nonetheless, the Government's rapid response saved Satavia from the worst effects being felt elsewhere internationally, and Norton remained personally popular - achieving a double majority in the 2005 election. Norton would win re-election again in [[2009 Satavian federal election|2009]], based primarily upon his social and fiscally conservative policies. Norton resigned and retired from politics in 2012 after a car accident killed his wife and two young daughters, at the height of his popularity.}} | ||
|- style="background:#EEEEEE" | |||
! style="background:#1f7ae0; color:white;" rowspan="2"|36 | |||
|rowspan="2"|[[File:David Cameron official.jpg|100px]] | |||
|rowspan="2"|[[Jago Elliot]]<br />{{small|(1973-)}}<br />{{small|{{wpl|MP}} for [[Division of Cape Devon]], [[Hope Province]]}} | |||
|27 June 2012 | |||
|9 February 2017 | |||
|{{Age in years and days|2012|6|27|2017|2|9}} | |||
|[[2013 Satavian federal election|2013]] ({{ordinal|41}}) | |||
|[[Conservative & Country Party (Satavia)|Conservative & Country]] | |||
|[[Jago Elliot|Elliot I]]-[[Jago Elliot|II]] | |||
|- | |- | ||
| colspan="6"|{{small|Having previously served as Treasurer under the Norton government, Elliot took victory in the Conservative & Country Party leadership election of 2012 unopposed after Norton endorsed him. His re-election in 2013 saw a strong majority for the Conservative party. Elliot was percieved as a continuation of the Norton government and his policies closely mimicked those of Edward Norton, leading to the popularly-coined ideology of "''[[Nortonism]]''". In early 2017, Elliot faced an unexpected leadership challenge from within his party, lead by right-wing Deputy Prime Minister Ella Van Schalkwyk. Elliot lost the leadership election by one vote and resigned as Prime Minister}} | |||
|} | |} |
Revision as of 16:09, 7 June 2023
Satavian Federation (1976-present)
- Parties
Conservative & Country Liberal
No. | Portrait | Name (Birth–Death) Constituency |
Term of office | Elected (Parliament) |
Political party | Government | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Took office | Left office | Time in office | ||||||
— | Lt. Col. Johannes Klopper (1930-2009) — |
27 September 1976 | 29 November 1976 | 63 days | — | — | Klopper | |
Klopper overthrew the National Party dictatorship during the 1976 Satavian coup d'état, installing himself as temporary Prime Minister. Despite fears that Klopper would refuse to relinquish power, just two months after the coup he handed power over to Eric Edwards, Satavia's first democratically elected Prime Minister since 1936. | ||||||||
27 | Eric Edwards (1935-2017) MP for Division of Baxter, Hope Province |
29 November 1976 | 22 August 1984 | 7 years, 267 days | 1976 (30th) 1980 (31st) |
Liberal | Edwards I–II | |
First elected Prime Minister of Satavia since 1936. Edwards lead the campaign to defeat right-wing reactionary forces during the Satavian Crisis, and pursued closer ties with Rizealand, the NVO and the Euclean Community. Edwards won a supermajority in the 1980 federal election. | ||||||||
28 | Leander Kokkinakis (1951-) MP for Division of St George, Western Freestate |
22 August 1984 | 3 April 1987 | 2 years, 193 days | 1984 (32nd) | Liberal | Kokkinakis | |
Leander Kokkinakis became Satavia's youngest elected Prime Minister as well as the first Satavian Prime Minister of Piraean descent when he was elected with a supermajority in the 1984 federal election. Kokkinakis introduced a number of public welfare reforms, in addition to a system of food stamps popularly known as Kokkinakis Coupons, which remain in use across Satavia. Kokkinakis was forced to resign after the Hope Post published revelations of an affair Kokkinakis was having with a younger man. Despite the criminal status of homosexuality, Kokkinakis was never charged by police but the affair ended his political career. | ||||||||
29 | Maximilian Dumfries (1939-1996) MP for Division of Katter, Hope Province |
5 April 1987 | 1 December 1987 | 212 days | — | Liberal | Dumfries | |
Dumfries was elected Prime Minister by parliamentary members of the Liberal Party after a two-day period of indecision between the left-wing and centrist elements of the party. Dumrfries - a member of the extreme left of the party - soon moved to ensure stability within the party, by threatening to expel members of the centrist factions. Many MPs and Senators of the Liberal Party crossed the floor to join the Conservatives, SDP, United or became independents. Dumfries was forced to call for a general election, in wich both houses (Senate and Representatives) are dismissed, held in December 1987, which saw a resounding defeat for the Liberal party. | ||||||||
30 | Ben De Villiers (1946-) MP for Division of Werlaigh, New Borland |
1 December 1987 | 24 June 1994 | 6 years, 205 days | 1987 (33rd) 1990 (34th) |
Conservative & Country | De Villiers I-II | |
De Villiers was elected in a landslide as a result of the unpopularity of the Liberal party. De Villiers was the first Conservative Prime Minister since 1903 and the first Country Party Prime Minister since 1906. De Villiers launched massive spending cuts as well as a huge privatisation programme that saw several state owned enterprises, most notably Satavian Airlines, sold off or publicly floated. De Villiers called an early election in 1990, looking to capitalise off the continued instability and unpopularity of the Liberal opposition. Ultimately, De Villiers' popularity would wane as cost of living increased, and proposals made by the De Villers government to cut federal benefits saw him lose the 1994 federal election to the Liberal party. | ||||||||
31 | John Barrett (1958-) MP for Division of Pienaar, Hope Province |
24 June 1994 | 7 September 1996 | 2 years, 75 days | 1994 (35th) | Liberal | Barrett | |
Barrett won his electoral campaign prosper by promising huge government handouts in the wake of the ongoing Satavian cost of living crisis that disproportionately affected minorities living in Satavia. Barrett also campaigned for increased provisions of universal healthcare and fought a long and costly legal battle with the governments of the Orange Province, Western Freestate and New Borland, that argued that healthcare provisions were within the remit of the provincial governments and not the federal government. Barrett ultimately failed to deliver on his promise after the Supreme Court ruled in favour of the provincial governments, and was forced into making an embarrassing public u-turn that ultimately lost him the support of the Conservative-controlled Senate. Barrett called on the President to dismiss parliament for a general election, but his request was controversially refused by Damian de Jager, who instead called for a federal election that did not dismiss the Senate. | ||||||||
32 | Rian de Klerk (1939-) MP for Division of Williams, Western Freestate |
7 September 1996 | 16 August 1998 | 1 year, 343 days | 1996 (36th) | Conservative & Country | De Klerk-Pieterson | |
Elected without a majority, De Klerk was forced to enter into a fractious coalition with the United Party's E. K. Pieterson. This coalition government proved deeply unpopular as policy clashes stunted De Klerk's agenda. The coalition's unpopularity was demonstrated by the loss of the presidency and overall control of the Senate in the 1997 senate elections. With the coaltion now unable to pass legislation through the Senate, De Klerk was forced to ask newly elected President Donald Pienaar to call for a double election. | ||||||||
33 | Milo Malan (1959-) MP for Division of Clarke, Groenvelde Vrystaat |
16 August 1998 | 21 July 2001 | 2 years, 339 days | 1998 (37th) | Liberal | Malan | |
Malan was elected in the narrowest margin in Satavian electoral history in a fiercely contested election against Conservative candidate Edward Norton. Despite allegations of electoral irregularities, Malan declined to launch an inquiry into the claims. Malan's premiership was tainted by persistent rumours and speculation which were outed after an investigation by the Hope Post in July 2001. Malan resigned on the seventh and was arrested by the Satavian Federal Police the following day. In 2004, he was found guily of massive electoral fraud (including ballot stuffing in several key marginal constituencies) and sentenced to nine years imprisonment. | ||||||||
34 | Andries Kuiper (1960-) MP for Division of Kayle, Orange Province |
21 July 2001 | 14 October 2001 | 85 days | — | Liberal | Kuiper | |
After Malan's resignation, Kuiper was appointed Prime Minister as his replacement. Kuiper was not named as guilty of electoral fraud by the Hope Post and the SFP declined to investigate Kuiper. Nonetheless, Kuiper was forced to call a federal election later that year, which saw the Liberals suffer their worst electoral defeat since Satavia's return to democracy in 1976. | ||||||||
35 | Edward Norton (1961-) MP for Division of Johnson, Hope Province |
14 October 2001 | 27 June 2012 | 10 years, 257 days | 2001 (38th) 2005 (39th) 2009 (40th) |
Conservative & Country | Norton I-II-III | |
Norton was elected with a landslide majority in the 2001 federal election, and perused conservative policies in his first term. However, as campaigning began for the 2005 election, Satavia was struck by the 2005 financial crash, crippling Satavia's economy. Nonetheless, the Government's rapid response saved Satavia from the worst effects being felt elsewhere internationally, and Norton remained personally popular - achieving a double majority in the 2005 election. Norton would win re-election again in 2009, based primarily upon his social and fiscally conservative policies. Norton resigned and retired from politics in 2012 after a car accident killed his wife and two young daughters, at the height of his popularity. | ||||||||
36 | Jago Elliot (1973-) MP for Division of Cape Devon, Hope Province |
27 June 2012 | 9 February 2017 | 4 years, 227 days | 2013 (41st) | Conservative & Country | Elliot I-II | |
Having previously served as Treasurer under the Norton government, Elliot took victory in the Conservative & Country Party leadership election of 2012 unopposed after Norton endorsed him. His re-election in 2013 saw a strong majority for the Conservative party. Elliot was percieved as a continuation of the Norton government and his policies closely mimicked those of Edward Norton, leading to the popularly-coined ideology of "Nortonism". In early 2017, Elliot faced an unexpected leadership challenge from within his party, lead by right-wing Deputy Prime Minister Ella Van Schalkwyk. Elliot lost the leadership election by one vote and resigned as Prime Minister |