Second Bruce Ministry
The Second Bruce Ministry was the eighteenth Australian Commonwealth ministry, and ran from 14 November 1925 to 29 November 1928.[1]
Nationalist Party of Australia–Australian Country Party Coalition
Portfolio | Minister |
---|---|
Prime Minister and Minister for External Affairs | Rt Hon Stanley Bruce, MP (Nat) |
Attorney-General | Hon Littleton Groom, KC MP (to 18 December 1925) (Nat)
Hon John Latham, KC MP (from 18 December 1925) (Nat) |
Treasurer | Rt Hon Dr Earle Page, MP (Country) |
Minister for Home and Territories | Senator Rt Hon George Pearce (to 18 June 1926) (Nat)
Senator Hon Sir William Glasgow, KCB CMG (18 June 1926 to 2 April 1927) (Nat) Hon Charles Marr, MP (2 April 1927 to 24 February 1928) (Nat) Hon Sir Neville Howse, VC, KCMG, MP (from 24 February 1928) (Nat) |
Minister for Trade and Customs | Hon Herbert Pratten, MP (to 7 May 1928) (Nat)
Rt Hon Stanley Bruce, MP (from 8 May 1928) (Nat) |
Minister for Defence | Hon Sir Neville Howse, VC, KCMG, MP (to 2 April 1927) (Nat)
Senator Hon Sir William Glasgow, KCB CMG (from 2 April 1927) (Nat) |
Minister for Health | Hon Sir Neville Howse, VC, KCMG, MP (to 2 April 1927) (Nat)
Rt Hon Stanley Bruce, MP (2 April 1927 to 24 February 1928) (Nat) Hon Sir Neville Howse, VC, KCMG, MP (from 24 February 1928) (Nat) |
Minister for Markets and Migration (to 19 January 1928)
Minister for Markets (from 19 January 1928) |
Senator Hon Victor Wilson (to 18 June 1926) (Nat)
Hon Thomas Paterson, MP (from 18 June 1926) (Country) |
Minister for Works and Railways | Hon William Hill, MP (Country) |
Postmaster-General | Hon William Gibson, MP (Country) |
Vice-President of the Executive Council | Hon Llewellyn Atkinson, MP (to 18 June 1926) (Country)
Senator Rt Hon George Pearce (from 18 June 1926) (Nat) |
Leader of the Government in the Senate | senator Rt Hon George Pearce (Nat) |
Honorary Minister | Senator Hon Thomas Crawford (Nat)
Hon Charles Marr, MP (16 January 1925 to 2 April 1927; from February 24 1928) Hon Sir Neville Howse, VC, KCMG, MP (2 April 1927 to 24 February 1928) Senator Hon Alexander McLachlan (from 29 August 1926) |
Notes
- ↑ "Ministries and Cabinets". Parliamentary Handbook. Parliament of Australia. Retrieved 17 September 2010.