Ed Casey Explained

Honorific-Prefix:The Honourable
Ed Casey
Office:Leader of the Opposition in Queensland
Leader of the Labor Party in Queensland
Elections: 1980
Term Start:28 November 1978
Term End:20 October 1982
Deputy:Jack Houston (1978–1980)
Bill D'Arcy (1980–1982)
Predecessor:Tom Burns
Successor:Keith Wright
Office1:Minister for Primary Industries
Term Start1:7 December 1989
Term End1:31 July 1995
Premier1:Wayne Goss
Predecessor1:Mark Stoneman
Successor1:Bob Gibbs
Office2:Shadow Minister for Primary Industries
Term Start2:2 March 1988
Term End2:7 December 1989
Leader2:Wayne Goss
Predecessor2:Keith De Lacy
Successor2:Des Booth
Term Start3:17 May 1969
Term End3:15 July 1995
Predecessor3:Fred Graham
Successor3:Tim Mulherin
Birth Date:2 January 1933
Birth Place:Mackay, Queensland, Australia
Death Place:Mackay, Queensland, Australia
Birthname:Edmund Denis Casey
Party:
    Spouse:Laurette Norma Reeves
    Children:6
    Alma Mater:Christian Brothers' College, Mackay

    Edmund Denis Casey (2 January 1933 – 1 May 2006), known as Ed, was best known as the leader of the Australian Labor Party in Queensland between 1978 and 1982. He also served as Primary Industries Minister in the government of Wayne Goss between 1989 and 1995. Casey was the member for Mackay in the Legislative Assembly of Queensland between 1969 and 1995.[1]

    Early life and career

    Of Irish Catholic background, Casey started his working life as a bank clerk before entering his family's construction business.[2] He was active in local government, becoming deputy mayor of the City of Mackay. Shortly before the 1969 election, he won Labor Party preselection for the seat of Mackay in the state parliament. He lost preselection for the Labor Party in 1972, after opposing the then dominant, left-wing faction in Trades Hall. But he was re-elected twice without Labor Party endorsement, as an independent Labor candidate, for example running under the banner of 'The True Labor Party'.[3]

    Political career

    Leader of the Labor Party

    Casey was readmitted to the Labor caucus in 1977. In November 1978 he became Labor leader, replacing Tom Burns who had resigned unexpectedly.[4] He led Labor into the 1980 election but failed to achieve more than a small swing against the Coalition Government led by Joh Bjelke-Petersen, and as a result his own authority within the state ALP was diminished.

    Casey made an offer to the Queensland Liberal Party after the 1980 election to form a bipartisan alliance, with the aim of opposing the electoral malapportionment from which Bjelke-Petersen benefited, and of putting in its place a system of one-vote-one-value. Relations between the Liberals and the National Party in the Coalition were poor, with the Liberal Party being disadvantaged (though less severely than the ALP) by the prevailing pro-National gerrymander. Casey renewed his offer in 1982 when relations within the Coalition were still bad, but the offer was again rebuffed, despite a Liberal Convention in June voting against the existing electoral system. The following October, Casey lost the ALP leadership to Keith Wright.[4]

    Minister

    Casey remained popular in his electorate, despite no longer being party leader, and was re-elected comfortably in both the 1983 and the 1986 elections. By 1986, the popularity of the National Party had declined and the Coalition with the Liberals had acrimoniously ended. In late 1989 the ALP won its first Queensland election for 32 years. Wayne Goss thus became the new Premier, after the Fitzgerald Inquiry had uncovered serious problems with corruption in the Queensland police force.

    Goss appointed Casey as his Primary Industries Minister. In this role, Casey reformed the sugar industry, established agricultural academies, and set up a drought relief task force. But his health had declined, with diabetes having aggravated his long-standing weight problems, and in 1995 he resigned from both the ministry and the parliament. He died of a stroke on 1 May 2006.

    While Casey never became premier, and spent in opposition many of what should have been his most productive years, he remained a very popular member of his seat of Mackay. At the last election which he contested (1992), he achieved the rare feat of winning every single voting booth in the constituency.

    External links

    Notes and References

    1. Web site: Former Members. Parliament of Queensland. 2015. 8 February 2015.
    2. Web site: Former Qld ALP boss Casey 'a visionary' - Yahoo! Australia & NZ News . au.news.yahoo.com . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20060511161149/http://au.news.yahoo.com/060502/2/ysn6.html . 2006-05-11.
    3. John Wanna and Tracey Arklay, The Ayes Have It: the History of the Queensland Parliament 1957-1989, pp 326 and 474
    4. Encyclopedia of Australian Events 1978, The Macquarie Library Pty Ltd