Full text: Responsible government in the Dominions (Vol. 2)

1078 ADMINISTRATION AND LEGISLATION [PART V 
legislated and imposed a poll-tax of £100, and allowed only 
one Chinese to three hundred tons, and, while the Bill was 
still én posse, there was held a conference of all the states in 
Sydney in June 1888. It was agreed then to adopt the 
principle of no poll-tax and one Chinese to every five hundred 
tons,?2 and to penalize transit across the Colonial borders. 
The New South Wales Government promised to amend their 
Act if two other Colonies adopted the legislation approved 
by the Conference, and on this understanding the Bill was 
allowed to become law. The result was that Victoria and 
South Australia legislated in 1888 on the lines of the agree- 
ment ; Western Australia followed suit in 1889 ; Queensland 
legislated in 1888, going beyond the lines of the Conference 
by increasing the penalties and diminishing the exemptions ; 
this Bill was only allowed in 1889 (No. 22), after having been 
reserved, on a promise of amendment, and an amending Bill 
was passed in 1890 (No. 29), reserved, and assented to, but 
further amendments were vainly asked for by the Secretary 
of State. New Zealand in 1888 passed an Act (No. 34) 
which increased the restrictions and the penalties. 
In 1893 Western Australia, now a self-governing Colony, 
threw in its lot with the others and prohibited the importation 
of Chinese under the labour law of 1884, but this was modified 
in 1897 (No. 27) by permitting such importation of indentured 
labour north of the 27° south latitude, and restricting the 
number to one for five hundred tons. New Zealand passed 
in 1896 another Act (No. 19) against Chinese, which limited 
the number imported to one for two hundred tons and in- 
creased the poll-tax to £100. In 1907 an Act (No. 79) was 
passed requiring any Chinese immigrant to be able to read 
a printed passage of not less than a hundred words of English, 
! Parl. Pap., C. 5448, pp. 35 seq. Cf. also Dilke, Problems of Greater 
Britain, i. 146, 147 ; Parkes, Fifty Years of Australian History, ii. 204-31. 
* The Imperial Government was to ask the Chinese Government to 
arrange for restriction of the entry of Chinese, and a joint representation 
for this end was agreed on. The Chinese exclusion movement in America 
had just then come to its height, and influenced the Colonies in their 
views of action; a treaty of March 1888 had agreed to restriction, but 
failed to become law.
	        
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