The country quota was always unpopular with the
Labour Party, which took most of its support from the cities, and generally felt the system to be an undemocratic violation of the '
one man one vote' principle. Its policy of abolishing the quota was abandoned in the 1930s in order to win rural support, and the extra seats remained for the first three terms of the
First Labour Government. By the 1940s Labour had lost most of its rural support and felt that the quota could cost it the
1946 election. Consequently, the quota was abolished in 1945 after Labour had put the abolition bill (Clause 3 of the
Electoral Amendment Act, 1945) up in a surprise move, and Labour won the election by four seats. Labour Party President and Member of the
Legislative Council Tom Paul had stated his disapproval of the electoral process in an address during the
1914 election: The theory on which our electoral law is based is that each man and each woman shall have equal voice in the councils of our nation on polling day. It matters not whether one represents property worth a hundred thousand pounds or the other typifies poverty of the most extreme degree, the voice of each is equal. But the theory is not perfectly applied. For instance, the vote of the rural voter is worth 28 per cent more than that of a city voter—an anomaly which ought not to exist in a democracy. ==Analysis==