First Cabinet of Louis Botha

First Botha Cabinet

1st Cabinet of the Union of South Africa
(since the 1909 South Africa Act)
1910–1915
Louis Botha (c. 1919)
Date formed15 September 1910 (1910-09-15)
Date dissolved20 October 1915 (1915-10-20)
People and organisations
MonarchKing George V
Governor-General
Prime MinisterLouis Botha
Member partySouth African Party
Status in legislatureMajority
Opposition partyUnionist Party
Opposition leaderLeander Starr Jameson
History
Election1910 election
Legislature terms5 years, 1 month and 5 days
SuccessorBotha II
1st Cabinet of Union of South Africa.
(c.1910)
Front (left to right): J. W. Sauer, Louis Botha and Abraham Fischer.
Back (left to right): J. B. M. Hertzog, Henry Burton, F. R. Moor, C. O'Grady Gubbins, Jan Smuts, H. C. Hull, F. S. Malan and David Graaff.

The Louis Botha government appointed the members of the government in South Africa led by Prime Minister Louis Botha between 31 May 1910 and 3 September 1919.

The former boer general Louis Botha, Prime Minister of Transvaal was appointed by the British crown to become the first Prime Minister of the Union of South Africa during its formation on 31 May 1910. The first national general elections were held on 15 September 1910 and ended in the victory of the coalition led by the "Het Volk" party led by Louis Botha (67 seats) against the 37 seats won by the Unionists of Leander Starr Jameson. The remaining 26 seats were won by small parties.

The Botha coalition, made up of Anglo-Afrikaner parties, became the South African Party. In Elections of October 1915, the South African Party won 54 seats against 40 for Unionists 27 seats in the National Party, 4 seats to the Labour Party of South Africa and six seats distributed among small groups.