Responsible Government Association
{{short description|Political party in Southern Rhodesia}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=March 2024}}
{{Use South African English|date=May 2013}}
{{Infobox political party
| colorcode = #FF7F00
|name = Rhodesia Party
|logo =
| abbreviation = RGA
| leader1_title = First Leader
| leader1_name = Charles Coghlan
| founded = {{Start date|1917}}
{{Start date|1962}}
| dissolved = {{End date|1934}}
{{End date|1968}}
| merged = United Party (1934)
Centre Party
| headquarters = Salisbury, Southern Rhodesia
| ideology = Liberalism
Anti-Unionism
| position = Centre
| international = None
| country = Rhodesia
}}
The Responsible Government Association (RGA), called the Rhodesia Party from 1923, was a political party in Southern Rhodesia.{{#tag:ref|Renamed Zimbabwe in 1980|group=n}} Founded in 1917, it initially advocated responsible government for Southern Rhodesia within the British Empire, as opposed to incorporation into the Union of South Africa. When responsible government was achieved in 1923, the party became the governing Rhodesia Party. It endured until 1934, when it merged with the right wing of the Reform Party to create the United Party, which remained in power for 28 years afterwards, and was itself defunct by 1965.
History
=Responsible Government Association (1917–23)=
Led by Sir Charles Coghlan, a Bulawayo lawyer originally from South Africa, the RGA was formed in 1917, and fought the 1920 election to the colony's Legislative Council.{{Harvnb
|Blake
|1977
|p=179}} The party's main platform was one in favour of responsible government for Southern Rhodesia within the British Empire, and against incorporation into the Union of South Africa, which had been formed in 1910 by the British South Africa Act, 1909. In this campaign the RGA was allied to the Labour Party, whilst its main opponents were the Unionists, who advocated integration into South Africa. A government referendum was organised in 1922, and responsible government won the day. Southern Rhodesia was duly made self-governing and semi-independent within the Empire in October 1923.{{Harvnb
|Saint Brides
|1980}}
=Rhodesia Party (1923–34)=
Coghlan became the first Premier of Southern Rhodesia, and the party continued as the Rhodesia Party, which had a broader base of support, including a number of former unionists in its cabinet. It remained in power until September 1933, when the party narrowly topped the popular vote, but lost the election, winning only nine of the 30 seats compared to the Reform Party's 16.{{Harvnb
|Willson
|1963
|p=129}} Although the Reform Party was left-wing in name, many of its leading members, including the new prime minister Dr Godfrey Huggins, were politically conservative; the Rhodesia Party merged with the Reform Party's more rightist members in 1934 to form the United Party.
=Legacy=
With Huggins at the helm, the United Party roundly defeated the rump left wing of the Reform Party in an election held the same year.{{Harvnb
|Blake
|1977
|pp=220–221}} The United Party thereafter remained in government for nearly three decades, with Huggins leading it until his retirement in 1956. The party renamed itself the United Rhodesia Party in 1953, soon after Southern Rhodesia was federated with Northern Rhodesia and Nyasaland, and merged with the Federal Party in 1958 to become the United Federal Party. Its leaders included Garfield Todd and Edgar Whitehead, both of whom pursued mildly reformist policies which led to expanded political participation by black Africans. It was removed from power by the Rhodesian Front's 1962 electoral victory, and was inactive by 1965.{{Harvnb
|Gale
|1973
|pp=88–89}}
The Rhodesia Party name was revived twice. Following the UFP's electoral defeat in 1962, the opposition would regroup under the RP moniker and Roy Welensky unsuccessfully attempted to re-enter Parliament, pursuing a moderate platform in opposition to the RF government and UDI. In 1973, the name was revived again by white moderates who entered the 1974 election on a reformist platform but won no seats.
Notes and references
;Notes
{{Reflist|group=n}}
;References
{{Reflist}}
;Bibliography
{{Refbegin}}
- {{cite book|title=A History of Rhodesia|last=Blake|first=Robert|authorlink=Robert Blake, Baron Blake|year=1977|location=New York|publisher=Alfred A. Knopf|isbn=0-394-48068-6|url-access=registration|url=https://archive.org/details/historyofrhodesi00blak}}
- {{cite book|title=The years between 1923–1973: half a century of responsible government in Rhodesia|last=Gale|first=William Daniel|year=1973|location=Salisbury|publisher=H. C. P. Andersen}}
- {{cite journal|last=Lord Saint Brides|authorlink=Morrice James, Baron Saint Brides|date=April 1980|title=The Lessons of Zimbabwe-Rhodesia|journal=International Security|publisher=The MIT Press|location=Cambridge, Massachusetts|volume=4|issue=4|pages=177–184|jstor=2626673|doi=10.2307/2626673|ref={{harvid|Saint Brides|1980}}}}
- {{cite book|title=Source Book of Parliamentary Elections and Referenda in Southern Rhodesia, 1898–1962|editor-first=F. M. G.|editor-last=Willson|publisher=Department of Government, University College of Rhodesia and Nyasaland|location=Salisbury|year=1963}}
{{Refend}}
{{Zimbabwean political parties}}
{{Authority control}}
Category:1917 establishments in Southern Rhodesia
Category:1934 disestablishments in Southern Rhodesia
Category:Defunct political parties in Zimbabwe
Category:Liberal parties in Zimbabwe
Category:Political parties disestablished in 1934