The party attracted support from conservative voters in both rural and urban NSW.
[2] An urban wing, led by Thomas Ley and Walter Wearne, agreed to enter Fuller's coalition, but a rural wing ("The True Blues"), led by Michael Bruxner and Ernest Buttenshaw, offered Fuller only conditional support.
[citation needed] The Progressive Party was reduced to nine rural members at the 1922 election and was a coalition partner in Fuller's second government.
[citation needed] This table provides the details of the 1921 split, covering members of the Legislative Assembly.
Thomas Bavin (Ryde) Walter Bennett (Maitland) Theodore Hill (Oxley) Thomas Ley (St George) James Macarthur-Onslow (Eastern Suburbs) Stephen Perdriau (Byron) Walter Wearne (Namoi) James Wilson (Western Suburbs) Michael Bruxner (Northern Tableland) Ernest Buttenshaw (Murrumbidgee) David Drummond (Northern Tableland) Matthew Kilpatrick (Murray) Hugh Main (Cootamundra) Richard Price (Oxley) Thomas Rutledge (Goulburn)