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Deakin and supported
It supported liberal politicians such as Graham Berry, George Higinbotham and George Turner, and other leading liberals such as Alfred Deakin and Charles Pearson furthered their careers as The Age journalists.
Some politicians, such as Sir George Dibbs, supported the petitioners, but others, including Alfred Deakin, supported the design of the court as it was.
On other issues, McCay supported Federation, and was one of a number of young politicians who rallied around Alfred Deakin, threatening to bring down Sir George Turner's government if it attempted to block federation.
Lyne supported federation only at the last minute after long being a strong opponent and, as a result, he was unpopular with other leading colonial, pro-federation politicians including Edmund Barton and Alfred Deakin.

Deakin and Barton's
Barton's government consisted of himself as Prime Minister and Minister for External Affairs, Alfred Deakin as Attorney-General, Sir William Lyne as Minister for Home Affairs, Sir George Turner as Treasurer, Charles Kingston as Minister for Trade and Customs, Sir James Dickson as Minister for Defence, and Sir John Forrest as Postmaster-General.
Holder initially accepted, and was in Melbourne en route to Sydney to officially accept his ministry when he was convinced by Alfred Deakin to refuse Lyne and instead support Edmund Barton's claim to the premiership.
He was elected as a supporter of Edmund Barton's Protectionist Party, but he was not a supporter of Barton's more liberal successor, Alfred Deakin, and sat as an independent conservative until 1909, when he became a member of Deakin's Commonwealth Liberal Party, although still belonging to its conservative wing.

Deakin and position
When Shiels was defeated by the conservatives under James Patterson in 1893, he went into opposition, and succeeded Shiels as leader of the liberal party-mainly because Alfred Deakin, the colony's leading liberal, refused the position.
In some universities ( e. g. in Australian universities: Deakin University, Macquarie University ), there are several deputy vice-chancellors subordinate to the vice-chancellor, with pro-vice-chancellor being a position at executive level ranking below deputy vice-chancellor.

Deakin and over
Alfred Deakin took over from Barton as Prime Minister and leader of the Protectionists.
In 1955, while elections were underway for his successor, general secretary Arthur Deakin died suddenly and Tiffin took over as acting general secretary.
Leading colonial supporters of imperial federation, such as Australian prime minister Alfred Deakin, however saw the movement as a way to increase the influence of the dominions over imperial defence and foreign policy.
In 1929, after the death of Joseph Deakin, he took over as editor, with Joseph's son, Arthur, as managing director.
His memoir was published as The Embattled Mountain the title referring to Mount Durmitor, the environs of which Deakin and Tito's army had been pursued over by German and Italian forces ; see Battle of the Sutjeska
Upper Silurian Laidlaw Volcanics grey tuff form a wedge over the top of the Deakin Volcanics.
Deakin Volcanics green grey, purple and cream rhyolite occurs over most of the suburb and Deakin Volcanics green grey and purple rhyodacite is found in the far south east corner.
This erupted in the upper Silurian period over the top of the Deakin Volcanics rhyodacite which is visible on the surface on the lower slopes in the east and southeast sides.

Deakin and Labor
Fisher's 1910-13 Labor ministry completed a vast legislative programme which made him, along with Protectionist Alfred Deakin, the founder of the statutory structure of the new nation.
The Deakin government continued with Labor support for the time being, despite only holding 16 seats after losing 10, although with another 5 independent Protectionists.
Cook served as Defence Minister in Deakin's 1909 – 1910 ministry, then succeeded Deakin as Liberal leader when the government was defeated by Labor in the 1910 elections.
He settled on opposition to socialism, criticising both the Australian Labor Party and the support offered to it by the Protectionist Party, led by Alfred Deakin.
The Protectionist Party ended up splitting, with the more liberal Protectionists, such as Isaac Isaacs and H. B. Higgins, supporting Labor while Deakin and his supporters merged with the Anti-Socialist Party to become the Commonwealth Liberal Party, who would form another minority government, before Fisher and Labor achieved Australia's first federal majority government, and the first Senate majority, at the 1910 election.
In April 1904 the Prime Minister, Alfred Deakin, resigned, and was succeeded in quick succession by the Labor leader Chris Watson, the Free Trade leader George Reid and then Deakin again.
In 1909 Alfred Deakin, the leader of the Protectionist Party merged with the Anti-Socialist Party of Joseph Cook to form the CLP on a shared platform of opposing the Australian Labor Party.
She stood as the Labor candidate for the federal seat of Deakin at the 2001 election, and was thought to have a chance of winning it.

Deakin and Party
Deakin resigned from Parliament prior to the 1913 election, with Joseph Cook winning the Liberal Party leadership ballot.
In 1908, when Deakin proposed the Commonwealth Liberal Party, a " Fusion " of the two non-Labor parties, Reid stood aside from the leadership.
During Australia's first federal election in 1901, Cook was elected unopposed to the federal seat of Parramatta, and served as the deputy to Reid, then Alfred Deakin, following the creation of the Commonwealth Liberal Party from Cook's and Deakin's parties.
A scandalised establishment pressured the two non-Labor parties to form an anti-socialist alliance, which saw Deakin and Anti-Socialist Party leader Joseph Cook believe a merger was needed to counter Labor's increasing electoral dominance.
Alfred Deakin, Prime Minister of Australia 1903-1904, 1905-1908 ( Protectionist Party ), 1909-1910 ( CLP ) Joseph Cook, Prime Minister of Australia 1913-1914
Deakin has usually been held by the Liberal Party, though it became increasingly marginal from the 1980s onward.
He succeeded George Turner as leader of the Victorian Liberals, but was much more conservative than either Turner or the federal Protectionist Party leader, Alfred Deakin.
In March 1901, however, he was elected a member of the first Australian House of Representatives for the seat of Gippsland, and sat as a supporter of the Protectionist Party of Edmund Barton and Alfred Deakin.

Deakin and drafting
The Attorney General tasked with drafting the legislation was Alfred Deakin.

Deakin and Bill
The cast included Jonathan Pryce ( after much persuasion ) as Fagin, Sally Dexter as Nancy, Miles Anderson as Bill Sikes, James Villiers as Mr. Brownlow, James Saxon as Mr. Bumble, Jenny Galloway as Widow Corney, David Delve as Mr. Sowerberry and Julia Deakin as Mrs. Sowerberry.
Deakin was the second child of English immigrants, William Deakin and his wife Sarah Bill, daughter of a Shropshire farmer, who had migrated to Australia in 1850 and settled in the Melbourne suburb of Collingwood in 1853.
In 1902, the then Attorney-General Alfred Deakin introduced the Judiciary Bill 1902 in House of Representative.
Maclean made contact with Bill Deakin, an Oxford history don who had served as a research assistant to Churchill ; Anthony Hunter, a Scots Fusilier, and Major William Jones, an enthusiastic but unorthodox one-eyed Canadian.
* Prof Bill Deakin, Professor of Psychiatry since 1990 at the University of Manchester
Nashville Scene said: " Sounding like a cross between " Whip It "- era Devo and the pop pastiches on Phineas & Ferb, this merry kids ' band actually camouflages a genuine supergroup: the tag team of David Mead, Swan Dive's Bill DeMain, Brother Henry's David Henry and The Mavericks ' Paul Deakin.
In one attack, a cluster of bombs fell among them, killing Deakin's radio operator, Bill Stuart, Tito's Alsatian dog, ' Maks ', and wounding both Tito and Deakin.

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