List of members of the National Assembly of Zambia (1964–68)
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The 75 members of the National Assembly from 1964 until 1968 were elected in January 1964. A total of 29 candidates were returned unopposed, including 24 United National Independence Party members and five Zambian African National Congress.[1][2]
List of members
Main roll seats
Reserved roll seats
| Constituency | Member | Party | 
|---|---|---|
| Central | John Roberts | National Progressive Party | 
| Copperbelt Central | Jerry Steyn | National Progressive Party | 
| Copperbelt North | Pieter Wulff | National Progressive Party | 
| Copperbelt North-West | Samuel Magnus | National Progressive Party | 
| Copperbelt South | Rodney Malcolmson | National Progressive Party | 
| Copperbelt West | Hugh Stanley | National Progressive Party | 
| Luangwa | John Dickson | National Progressive Party | 
| Midlands | Hugh Mitchley | National Progressive Party | 
| Ndola | Cecil Dennistoun Burney | National Progressive Party | 
| Zambezi | John Burnside | National Progressive Party | 
| Source: East Africa and Rhodesia[3] | ||
Replacements
During the term of the National Assembly, several by-elections took place to replace members, or in cases where members had changed parties.
| Constituency | By-election date | New member | Party | 
|---|---|---|---|
| Choma | 1 March 1968 | Edward Nyanga | United National Independence Party | 
| Gwembe | 1 March 1968 | Godson Kanyama | United National Independence Party | 
| Kalomo | 1 March 1968 | Moffat Mpasela | United National Independence Party | 
| Magoye | 1 March 1968 | Hamwende Kayumba | United National Independence Party | 
| Source: Macola[4] | |||
References
- ↑ "Northern Rhodesian Elections: Independence Wanted in October", East Africa and Rhodesia, 23 January 1964
 - ↑ "U.N.I.P. Cabinet Sworn In: "Racial" Seats Must Go: Mr. Kaunda", East Africa and Rhodesia, 30 January 1964, p449
 - 1 2 "N. Rhodesian Results: "Importance of Commonwealth"", East Africa and Rhodesia, 13 February 1964, p488
 - ↑ Giacomo Macola (2010) Liberal Nationalism in Central Africa: A Biography of Harry Mwaanga Nkumbula, Palgrave Macmillan, p124
 
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