Senator Rt Hon George Pearce: Minister for Home and Territories
Hon Littleton Groom, KC MP: Attorney-General. Minister for Trade and Customs (29 May 1924 to 13 June 1924), Minister for Health (29 May 1924 to 13 June 1924) (Nat)
Hon William Gibson, MP: Postmaster-General (CP)
Hon Austin Chapman, MP: Minister for Trade and Customs (to 26 May 1924), Minister for Health (to 26 May 1924) (Nat)
Hon Percy Stewart, MP: Minister for Works and Railways (to 8 August 1924) (CP)
Hon Eric Bowden, MP: Minister for Defence (to 16 January 1925) (Nat)
Hon Llewellyn Atkinson, MP: Vice-President of the Executive Council (CP)
Senator Hon Reginald Wilson: Honorary Minister (to 16 January 1925), Minister for Markets and Migration (from 16 January 1925) (Nat)
Senator Hon Thomas Crawford: Honorary Minister (from 14 February 1923) (Nat)
Hon Herbert Pratten, MP: Minister for Trade and Customs (from 13 June 1924), Minister for Health (13 June 1924 to 16 January 1925) (Nat)
Hon William Hill, MP: Minister for Works and Railways (from 8 August 1924) (CP)
Hon Sir Neville Howse, VC, KCMG, MP: Minister for Defence (from 16 January 1925), Minister for Health (from 16 January 1925) (Nat)
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Stanley Melbourne Bruce, 1st Viscount Bruce of Melbourne (15 April 1883 – August 25, 1967), Australian politician and diplomat, was the eighth Prime Minister of Australia.
He was the first Prime Minister who had not been involved in the movement for federation, had not been a member of a colonial Parliament, and had not been a member of the 1901 federal Parliament.
Bruce formed an effective partnership with the Country Party leader, Dr Earle Page, and exploited public fears of communism and militant trade unions to dominate Australian politics through the 1920s.