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Socialist Labor Party (Australia)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Former New South Welsh political party

Socialist Labor Party
Founded4 May 1887; 138 years ago (4 May 1887), (as Australian Socialist League)
Dissolvedc. 1940
Headquarters107 Liverpool Street,Sydney,New South Wales[1]
NewspaperThe People
Membership(1893)Increase <9,000[2][3][4]
Ideology
Political positionFar-left
Part ofthe Politics series on
De Leonism
Part ofa series on
Socialism in
Australia
Part ofa series on
Labour politics
in Australia

TheSocialist Labor Party was asocialist political party of Australia that existed from 1901 to the 1970s. Originally formed as theAustralian Socialist League in 1887, it had members such asGeorge Black,New South Wales PremierWilliam Holman andPrime MinisterBilly Hughes.

History

[edit]

Australian Socialist League

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The Australian Socialist League, a multi-tendency organisation similar to theBritish Socialist League, was founded on 4 May 1887, and publicly launched several months later on 26 August at533 George Street,Sydney,New South Wales Colony.[5] The Socialist League was largest within the state ofNew South Wales.[6] The League consisted of three major groups, the "Modern Socialists", the "Scientific socialists orCommunist-Anarchists", and the "libertarian andindividualist anarchists"[5] Labor historianVerity Burgmann describes the Modern Socialists as a unique historical tendency that "espoused aco-operativist strategy: it was a kind of micro-socialism in that it aimed to build socialist society in bits and pieces, by the voluntary establishment of worker-owned enterprises that would eventually form a socialist whole".[5] Between the late 1890s and 1905, the League shifted towards the radical unionist ideas ofDe Leonism.[7][8] The Socialist League and their ideas were influential within the1890 Maritime strike and the1891 Australian shearers' strike.[6]

In March 1888 the party sought to establish a Labor Party within New South Wales with the policies of the "nationalization of land and resumption of allmonopolies".[6] The League supported theTrades & Labor Council's decision in 1891 to establish theLabor Electoral League of New South Wales, and actively campaigned and ran candidates within the party due to a belief the party would eventually establish the League's policies ofstate socialism.[6] During the1891 New South Wales election, in some regions nearly half of all the Labor candidates were League members.[6] At its peak the League had several members elected within the Trades & Labor Council, and several elected members of parliament.[6] The League's list of parliamentarians includedBilly Hughes,William Holman,George Black, andArthur Hill Griffith.[6]

By the mid-1890s, the League became dissatisfied with the ability of the Labor Party in achieving its goals of socialism. The League established a newspaper in 1894 namedThe Socialist in an attempt to promote socialist ideas. In 1898 the League split from the Labor Party, leaving behind its affiliated Labor parliamentarians, and sought to establish their own Labor Party.[6]

Socialist Labor Party

[edit]

The party was founded by the Australian Socialist League in 1901 to contest theAustralian federal election of 1901.[9] The party nominated six candidates (known as the "Socialist Six") for the Senate seats of New South Wales: Andrew Thomson, James Moroney,Harry Holland,James Morrish, John Neil, and Thomas Melling.[10] None of the candidates came close to winning a seat.[11]

The Socialist Labor Party is credited with introducing theIndustrial Workers of the World to Australia and establishing its first branch in 1908.[6]

In January 1920, the party merged with theIndustrial Socialist Labor Party, which had broken away from theLabor Party in 1919, retaining the name Socialist Labor Party.[12] The amalgamated Socialist Labor party ran in the1920 New South Wales state election,[13] with one of the membersPercy Brookfield winning the seat ofSturt as a Socialist candidate.[14] Brookfield had thebalance of power in the assembly following the election but was murdered the following year.[15][16] Several months before his death, in February 1921, Percy and several other members split from the Socialist Labor Party and reformed the independentIndustrial Labor Party, citing they were "dissatisfied with the manner in which the affairs of that party have been carried on".[17]Michael Considine,Labor member forBarrier in the federalHouse of Representatives from 1917, joined the Socialist Labor Party in 1920 after his expulsion from the ALP, and unsuccessfully contested the seat ofDarling for the party in 1922 as an Industrial Labor candidate.

Support for the party rapidly diminished after the ALP adopted the Socialist Objective in 1921, with many members returning to the ALP and others joining the newly foundedCommunist Party of Australia founded in the same year. Unlike many other socialist organisations, the Socialist Labor Party rejected the unity conferences which led to the Communist Party, labelling it as "a front for capitalist spies".[18] The party survived into the 1940s, under the leadership ofE.E. Judd.[19]

The party was re-established at a significantly smaller size in 1961,[20][21] and maintained writing its newspaperThe People until the 1970s.[22]

Electoral results

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Senate results
YearOverall votesVote %Seats won±
190127,347[a]1.02
0 / 36
+1.02
190369,769[a]2.43
0 / 36
+1.41
191320,183[a]1.05
0 / 36
–1.38
191732,692[a]0.51
0 / 36
–0.54
191910,508[a]0.57
0 / 36
+0.06
19228,551[a]0.55
0 / 36
–0.02

See also

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Notes

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  1. ^abcdefThe party only contested one state:New South Wales.

References

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  1. ^Judd, E.E. (1925). "How To End Capitalism and Inaugurate Socialism".The People. New Series. No. 1.
  2. ^"Australian Socialist League – Institution – Reason in Revolt".reasoninrevolt.net.au. Retrieved4 November 2019.
  3. ^In Our Time: Socialism and the rise of Labor, 1885–1905 p. 49
  4. ^"Australian Socialist League".The Sydney Morning Herald. 4 October 1893.
  5. ^abcBurgmann, Verity (1985).In Our Time: Socialism and the rise of Labor, 1885–1905. Allen & Unwin. p. 36.ISBN 0868615293.
  6. ^abcdefghiO'Farrell, P. J. (May 1958). "The Australian socialist league and the labour movement, 1887–1891".Historical Studies: Australia and New Zealand.8 (30):152–165.doi:10.1080/10314615808595110.
  7. ^"Australian Socialist League - Institution - Reason in Revolt".Reason in Revolt. Retrieved5 September 2019.
  8. ^Archer, Robin (2008). "Chapter 8 Socialism".Why is there no labor party in the United States?. Princeton University Press.ISBN 9780691149349.
  9. ^"THE AUSTRALIAN SOCIALIST LABOR PARTY".The People And The Collectivist. Vol. IV, no. 170. New South Wales, Australia. 21 April 1900. p. 4. Retrieved5 April 2018 – via National Library of Australia.
  10. ^"THE SOCIALIST LABOR PARTY".People. Vol. V, no. 212. New South Wales, Australia. 9 February 1901. p. 3. Retrieved5 April 2018 – via National Library of Australia.
  11. ^Carr, Adam."1901 Senate New South Wales".Psephos.
  12. ^"Socialist Labor Party".Daily Observer. Vol. X, no. 12. New South Wales, Australia. 15 January 1920. p. 1. Retrieved5 April 2018 – via National Library of Australia.
  13. ^"PARTIES AMALGAMATE".The Northern Star. Vol. 44. New South Wales, Australia. 15 January 1920. p. 4. Retrieved4 November 2019 – via National Library of Australia.
  14. ^Green, Antony."1920 election for Sturt".NSW Election Results 1856-2007.Parliament of New South Wales. Retrieved12 May 2019.
  15. ^"Burial of the late Mr P S Brookfield".The Barrier Miner. 26 March 1921. p. 1. Retrieved12 May 2019 – via National Library of Australia.
  16. ^"Late Mr Percy Brookfield".The Observer. South Australia. 26 March 1921. p. 13. Retrieved5 April 2018 – via National Library of Australia.
  17. ^"NEW LABOR ORGANISATION".The Grafton Argus And Clarence River General Advertiser. New South Wales, Australia. 5 February 1921. p. 4. Retrieved4 November 2019 – via National Library of Australia.
  18. ^Farrell, Frank."Judd, Ernest Edward Job Pullin (Ernie) (1883–1959)".Australian Dictionary of Biography. National Centre of Biography,Australian National University.ISBN 978-0-522-84459-7.ISSN 1833-7538.OCLC 70677943. Retrieved12 August 2020.
  19. ^"SOCIALIST VIEW".Daily Advertiser. New South Wales, Australia. 18 August 1944. p. 2. Retrieved5 April 2018 – via National Library of Australia.
  20. ^"Manifesto of the Socialist Labor Party of Australia 1961".Parliament of Australia. Retrieved12 August 2020.
  21. ^"Adlib Internet Server 5 | Details".archival.sl.nsw.gov.au. Retrieved3 July 2019.
  22. ^Party (Australia), Socialist Labor (1960)."The people : official organ of the Socialist Labor Party of Australia".Trove. Sydney : The Party. Retrieved3 July 2019.
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