Democratic Party of Australia | |
|---|---|
| President | Henry Woodward (1953; 1953–1954) |
| Founded | 17 February 1953 |
| Dissolved | 6 June 1954 |
| Willoughby Municipal Council | 1 / 12 (1953−1954) |
TheDemocratic Party of Australia (DPA), sometimes referred to as theAustralian Democratic Party, was anAustralian political party that was active in the mid-1950s.[1]
Ahead of the1953 Senate election, the party merged with theQueensland-basedIndependent Democratic Party (IDP).[2] However, they split following the election.[3] The party was also separate from theNorth Queensland Democratic Party, which had itself been formed just weeks after the DPA.[4][5]
The party was formed inSydney on 17 February 1953 by a group who had organised the campaign ofindependent candidate Martin Hardie at the1952 Bradfield by-election. It was chaired by formerWilloughby mayor A. R. Baldwin.[6][7] According to its secretary,Major S. K. Hatfleld, the party opposed theLiberal Party's policy on taxation and theLabor Party's policy on socialisation.[8]
The party merged with theIndependent Democrats several months before the 1953 Senate election, with the DPA'sCharles Russell (a formerCountry Party MP) saying the decision was made because both parties had similar aims and ideologies.[9] The party endorsed public health administratorRaphael Cilento (of the IDP) as its lead candidate in Queensland.[10][11]
At the Senate election, the party's ticket was unsuccessful, winning 6% of the vote.[12] Shortly after, the party opened nominations for candidates for thenext federal election.[13]
The party endorsed Thomas Brosnan as its candidate for the1953 Lang by-election. However, Brosnan was disendorsed after the close of nominations as he had not been a resident of Australia for three years.[14]
Following the by-election, several members of the party's New South Wales executive resigned, including organising secretary Douglas Maxwell in October 1953.[15][16] Around this time, the DPA split from the IDP.[17]
On 6 June 1954, the party's New South Wales branch disbanded, thus dissolving the party entirely.[18][19]
| No. | Image | Name | Term start | Term end | Office | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Henry Woodward (1898–1966) | 22 March 1953 | 8 August 1953 | MP forLane Cove (1944−1947) | [20] | |
| 2 | J. A. Garnsey | 8 August 1953 | September−November 1953 | [21] | ||
| (1) | Henry Woodward (1898–1966) | September−November 1953 | 6 June 1954 | MP forLane Cove (1944−1947) | [22] |
The Democratic team was announced in a joint statement tonight by the chairman of the Democratic Party (Mr Lance Jones) and the chairman of the Independent Democrats (Sir Raphael Cilento).
Announcing the party's formation, Mr. A. D. Hooper said it was not associated with the Democratic Party of Australia.
The North Queensland Democratic Party had been invited to associate itself with the Independent Democrats, but had decided not to run candidates for the Senate
The Queensland Democratic Party chairman today said that his party had dissociated itself from the organisation calling itself the New South Wales branch of the Democratic Party.