This article offers a long‐term historical analysis of rural bias, electoral malapportionment, and their interaction with regional/urban social cleavages in Victoria, Australia. Both structural and identity‐based components underpin social cleavages. It explores the range of political and economic influences that ultimately led to significant electoral reforms in 1953 and traces the development of malapportionment alongside economic structural changes. The state's origins as a settler colony shaped the emergence of “responsible government” after 1851. A limited franchise in the upper house and electoral bias favouring squatter, pastoral, and extractivist rural areas offset the universal adult male European franchise in the colony's lower house. Over the 19th century, malapportionment decreased as urban populations grew and exerted their influence through political conflicts of the era. However, the prolonged economic crisis that began in the 1890s eventually weakened the political and economic power of urban social groups. The dominance of urban‐centred and Whiggish‐leaning governments was decisively challenged by rural‐based social and political mobilisation in 1902–1903 and the subsequent election. Electoral malapportionment re‐emerged after 1904. A secondary divide between rural and regional areas offset the central social class‐based electoral split. The centre‐right Country Party (CP) capitalised on malapportionment to eventually dominate Victoria's electoral politics. Nonetheless, despite its roots in agrarianism, the state continued shifting away from dependence on the rural sector, increasingly focussing on industrial production. Three factors ultimately prompted a decline and significant reduction in electoral malapportionment. First, the CP's prolonged dominance created growing frustration among central political actors. Second, Thomas Hollway, a key figure whose premiership was repeatedly impeded by the CP, eventually split from the Liberals to establish the Electoral Reform League. Third, the Liberals' electoral base and the social cleavages underpinning it were fractured. This process developed gradually before reaching a turning point in 1952. A core part of its urban‐based, upper social‐class, and professional supporters accepted a temporary alliance with Labor—undoubtedly tired of the CP's disproportionate influence. This attitudinal shift coincided with significant changes in the state's social and economic ties, with agriculture‐related sectors securing a larger share of investment and income. The formation of the Electoral Reform League enabled Labor's first decisive electoral victory in Victoria and a notable reduction in electoral malapportionment.
Ben Reid (Sun,) studied this question.