South Australian Labor Party Explained

Country:Australia
South Australian Labor
Native Name:South Australian Labor Party
Leader1 Title:Leader
Leader1 Name:Peter Malinauskas
Leader2 Title:Deputy Leader
Leader2 Name:Susan Close
Leader3 Title:President
Leader3 Name:Rhiannon Pearce
Leader4 Title:Secretary
Leader4 Name:Aemon Bourke[1]
Ideology:Social democracy
Headquarters:141 Gilles Street, Adelaide, South Australia
Youth Wing:South Australian Young Labor
Womens Wing:Labor Women's Network
Wing2 Title:LGBT wing
Wing2:Rainbow Labor
Colours: Red
Position:Centre-left
National:Australian Labor
Affiliation1 Title:Union affiliate
Affiliation1:SA Unions
Seats2 Title:Legislative Council

The South Australian Labor Party, officially known as the Australian Labor Party (South Australian Branch) and commonly referred to simply as South Australian Labor, is the South Australian Branch of the Australian Labor Party, originally formed in 1891 as the United Labor Party of South Australia. It is one of two major parties in the bicameral Parliament of South Australia, the other being the Liberal Party of Australia (SA Division).

Since the 1970 election, marking the beginning of democratic proportional representation (one vote, one value) and ending decades of pro-rural electoral malapportionment known as the Playmander, Labor have won 11 of the 15 elections. Spanning 16 years and 4 terms, Labor was last in government from the 2002 election until the 2018 election. Jay Weatherill led the Labor government since a 2011 leadership change from Mike Rann. During 2013 it became the longest-serving state Labor government in South Australian history, and in addition went on to win a fourth four-year term at the 2014 election. After losing the 2018 election, the party spent 4 years in opposition before leader Peter Malinauskas led the party to a majority victory in the 2022 election.

Labor's most notable historic Premiers of South Australia include Thomas Price in the 1900s, Don Dunstan in the 1970s, John Bannon in the 1980s, and Mike Rann in the 2000s.

Formation

A United Trades and Labor Council meeting with the purpose of creating an elections committee was convened on 12 December 1890, and held on 7 January 1891. The elections committee was formed, officially named the United Labor Party of South Australia (unlike state Labor, prior to 1912 their federal counterparts included the 'u' in their spelling of Labour) with John McPherson the founding secretary. Four months later, Labor enjoyed immediate success, electing David Charleston, Robert Guthrie and Andrew Kirkpatrick to the South Australian Legislative Council. A week later, Richard Hooper won the 1891 Wallaroo by-election as an Independent Labor member in the South Australian House of Assembly. McPherson won the 1892 East Adelaide by-election on 23 January, becoming the first official Labor leader and member of the House of Assembly.

Prior to party creation, South Australian politics had lacked parties or solid groupings, although loose liberal and conservative blocs had begun to develop by the end of the 1880s. The 1893 election was the first general election Labor would stand at, resulting in liberal and conservative leaning MPs beginning to divide, additionally with unidentified groupings and independents, as well as the subsequent formation of the staunchly anti-Labor National Defence League. The voluntary turnout rate increased from 53 to 68 percent, with Labor on 19 percent of the vote, and 10 Labor candidates including McPherson and Hooper were elected to the 54-member House of Assembly which gave Labor the balance of power. The Kingston liberal government was formed with the support of Labor, ousting the Downer conservative government. Kingston served as Premier for a then-record of six and a half years, usually implementing legislation with Labor support.

Thomas Price formed the state's first Labor minority government and the world's first stable Labor Party government at the 1905 election with the support of several non-Labor MPs to form the Price-Peake administration, which was re-elected at the 1906 double dissolution election, with Labor falling just two seats short of a majority. So successful, John Verran led Labor to form the state's first of many majority governments at the 1910 election, just two weeks after the 1910 federal election where their federal counterparts formed Australia's first elected majority in either house in the Parliament of Australia, the world's first Labor Party majority government at a national level, and after the 1904 Chris Watson minority government the world's second Labor Party government at a national level.[2] [3] [4]

Known as the United Labor Party of South Australia until 1917, the Australian Labor Party at both a state/colony and federal level pre-dates, among others, both the British Labour Party and the New Zealand Labour Party in party formation, government, and policy implementation.[5]

Premiers

Post:Parliamentary Party Leader
Incumbent:Peter Malinauskas
Incumbentsince:9 April 2018
Deputy:Susan Close
Inaugural:John McPherson

Thirteen of the nineteen parliamentary Labor leaders have served as Premier of South Australia: Thomas Price (1905–1909), John Verran (1910–1912), Crawford Vaughan (1915–1917), John Gunn (1924–1926), Lionel Hill (1926–1927 and 1930–1931; expelled from party but continued as Premier until 1933), Frank Walsh (1965–1967), Don Dunstan (1967–1968 and 1970–1979), Des Corcoran (1979), John Bannon (1982–1992), Lynn Arnold (1992–1993), Mike Rann (2002–2011), Jay Weatherill (2011–2018) and Peter Malinauskas (2022–Present) . Robert Richards was Premier in 1933 while leading the rebel Parliamentary Labor Party of MPs who had been expelled in the 1931 Labor split; he would later be readmitted and lead the party in opposition. Bannon is Labor's longest-serving Premier of South Australia, ahead of Rann and Dunstan by a matter of weeks. Every Labor leader for more than half a century has gone on to serve as Premier.

Deputy Premiers

Since the position's formal introduction in 1968, seven parliamentary Labor deputy leaders have served as Deputy Premier of South Australia: Des Corcoran (1968 and 1970–1979), Hugh Hudson (1979), Jack Wright (1982–1985), Don Hopgood (1985–1992), Frank Blevins (1992–1993), Kevin Foley (2002–2011), John Rau (2011–18) and Susan Close (2022– Present). Foley is the state's longest-serving Deputy Premier.

List of parliamentary leaders

No!Party leaderConstituencyAssumed officeclass=unsortableLeft office!PremierReason for departure
1East Adelaide(1892–1897)23 February 1892 13 December 1897 Died
2West Adelaide(1893–1901)1897/1898 12 December 1899 Joined federal parliament
3Sturt/Torrens(1893–1909)12 December 1899 31 May 1909 1905–1909 Died
4Wallaroo(1901–1917)1909 26 July 1913 1910–1912Lost party room challenge to Vaughan
5Torrens/Sturt(1905–1918)26 July 1913 12 February 1917 1915–1917 Quit party
6Leg. Council
(1891–1897;
1900–1905)
Newcastle
(1915–1918)
6 March 1917 15 February 1918 Retired
7Adelaide(1915–1926)18 April 1918 18 August 1926 1924–1926Resigned
8East Torrens /
Port Pirie
(1915–1933)
18 August 1926 15 August 1931 1926–1927;
1930–1933
Expelled from party
9Sturt(1930–1933)12 May 1932 22 April 1933 Lost seat in 1933 election
10Port Pirie(1933–1946)22 April 1933 1 April 1938 Stepped down after splinter parties merged
11Wallaroo(1918–1949)1 April 1938 27 October 1949 (1933)Retired
12Burra Burra
(1918–1927)
Frome
(1938–1960)
27 October 1949 22 September 1960 Died
13Goodwood /
Edwardstown
(1941–1968)
22 September 1960
1 June 1967 1965–1967Retired
14Norwood(1953–1979)1 June 1967 15 February 1979 1967–1968;
1970–1979
Resigned
15Des CorcoranMillicent /
Coles /
Hartley
(1962–1982)
15 February 1979
2 October 19791979Resigned after 1979 election loss
16John BannonRoss Smith
(1977–1993)
2 October 19794 September 19921982–1992Resigned
17Dr Lynn ArnoldSalisbury /
Ramsay /
Taylor
(1979–1994)
4 September 199220 September 19941992–1993Resigned
18Mike RannBriggs /
Ramsay
(1985–2012)
20 September 199421 October 20112002–2011Lost party room challenge to Weatherill
19Jay WeatherillCheltenham(2002–2018)21 October 20119 April 20182011–2018Resigned after 2018 election loss
20Peter MalinauskasLeg. Council
(2015–2018)
Croydon
(since 2018)
9 April 20182022–

List of deputy parliamentary leaders

Party deputy leaderAssumed officeLeft officeDeputy Premier
21 April 1933 22 June 1934[6]
22 June 1934 1 April 1938
1 April 1938 4 September 1946
4 September 1946 27 October 1949
Frank Walsh27 October 19495 October 1960
5 October 1960 1 June 1967
1 June 1967 15 March 1979 1967–1968;
1970–1979
15 March 1979 2 October 1979 1979
Jack Wright2 October 197916 July 19851982–1985
26 July 1985 4 September 1992 1985–1992
4 September 1992 14 December 1993 1992–1993
14 December 1993 20 September 1994
20 September 1994 31 December 1996
1 January 1997 Feb 2002
Kevin FoleyFeb 20027 February 20112002–2011
7 February 20119 April 20182011–2018
Susan Close9 April 20182022–

Current federal parliamentarians

House of Representatives

Senate

Historic party officials

State election results

ElectionLeaderSeats won±Total votes%Position
1893John McPherson1016,45818.8%Third party
1896239,10724.3%Third party
1899Lee Batchelor140,75625.4%Third party
1902Thomas Price648,51519.9%Opposition
190510148,55041.3%Minority government
19065143,57744.8%Minority government
1910John Verran2197,93549.1%Majority government
19126253,16346.7%Opposition
1915Crawford Vaughan10153,03445.9%Majority government
1918Andrew Kirkpatrick9145,09344.7%Opposition
1921John Gunn1179,30844.6%Opposition
192411192,25648.4%Majority government
1927Lionel Hill11243,45047.9%Opposition
193014102,19448.6%Majority government
1933Edgar Dawes2448,27327.8%Opposition
1938Andrew Lacey357,12426.1%Opposition
1941Robert Richards256,06233.3%Opposition
19445105,29842.5%Opposition
19473133,95948.6%Opposition
1950Mick O'Halloran1134,95248.1%Opposition
19532166,51750.9%Opposition
19561129,85347.4%Opposition
19592191,93349.3%Opposition
1962Frank Walsh2219,79053.9%Opposition
19652274,43255.0%Majority government
1968Don Dunstan2292,44551.9%Opposition
19708305,47851.6%Majority government
19731324,13551.5%Majority government
19753321,48146.3%Majority government
19774383,83151.6%Majority government
1979Des Corcoran7300,27740.8%Opposition
1982John Bannon5353,99946.3%Majority government
19853393,65248.2%Majority government
19895346,26840.1%Minority government
1993Lynn Arnold12277,03830.4%Opposition
1997Mike Rann11312,92935.2%Opposition
20022344,55936.4%Minority government
20065424,71545.2%Majority government
20102367,48037.5%Majority government
2014Jay Weatherill3364,42035.8%Minority government
20184343,896 32.8%Opposition
2022Peter Malinauskas8436,13440.0%Majority government

Note: Following the 2014 election, the Labor minority government won the 2014 Fisher by-election which took them to 24 of 47 seats and therefore majority government. Prior to the 2018 election, a Labor MP became an independent, reducing them back to a minority 23 seats.

See also

Notes and References

  1. News: State Champion ministry-bound, Libs out for new blood . Indaily . 23 March 2022 . 28 March 2022 . Richardson, Tom.
  2. Web site: History of South Australian elections 1857–2006, volume 1 – ECSA . 5 January 2016 . https://web.archive.org/web/20140302093736/http://www.ecsa.sa.gov.au/publications?view=document&id=480 . 2 March 2014 . dead .
  3. https://books.google.com/books?id=9N87xauZghkC&dq=%22united+labor+party%22+south+australia+mcpherson&pg=PA160 Sound of Trumpets: History of the Labour Movement in South Australia – By Jim Moss
  4. http://klarbooks.com/academic/labcris.html Why did a 'labour movement' emerge in South Australia in the 1880s? – By Nicholas Klar
  5. Web site: Australian Labor Party. AustralianPolitics.com. 6 October 2013. 11 December 2014.
  6. News: 22 April 1933 . LABOUR REMNANTS . 6 February 2024 . Toowoomba Chronicle and Darling Downs Gazette . 7 . Trove.