Territory Labor Party Australian Labor Party (Northern Territory Branch) | |
---|---|
Abbreviation |
|
Leader | Selena Uibo |
Deputy Leader | Dheran Young |
Secretary | Karlee Dalton [1] |
President | Erina Early [2] |
Founded | August 1967 [3] |
Headquarters | 38 Woods Street, Darwin, Northern Territory [4] |
Ideology | Social democracy |
Political position | Centre-left |
National affiliation | Australian Labor |
Union affiliate | Unions NT [5] |
Colours | Red |
Legislative Assembly | 4 / 25 |
House of Representatives | 2 / 2 (NT seats) |
Senate | 1 / 2 (NT seats) |
Local government | 2 / 122 |
Website | |
territorylabor | |
The Territory Labor Party, [lower-alpha 1] officially known as the Australian Labor Party (Northern Territory Branch) and commonly referred to simply as Territory Labor, is the Northern Territory branch of the Australian Labor Party. [6] It has been led by Selena Uibo, the first Aboriginal woman to lead a major political party in Australia, since 3 September 2024. [7]
The first Labor candidate from the Northern Territory—which was then represented by the Northern Territory seat in the South Australian House of Assembly—was Pine Creek miner and former City of Adelaide alderman James Robertson in 1905. The first Labor MP was Thomas Crush, who was elected at a 1908 by-election and accepted into the South Australian Labor caucus despite not having signed the Labor pledge. He was re-elected in 1910, and served until the Northern Territory formally separated from South Australia in 1911, resulting in the loss of the seat in state parliament. A non-voting federal seat in the Australian House of Representatives, the Division of Northern Territory, was established for the 1922 election, and was won by independent candidate and former union leader Harold George Nelson, who joined the Labor caucus after the election. [8]
In March 1928, a general meeting of the North Australian Workers Union resolved to establish a Northern Territory branch of the Labor Party and elected an interim executive. [9] In July 1928, it was reported that the federal secretary had requested that the South Australian branch instead form a Darwin branch. [10] It was reported in October 1928 that affiliation with the South Australian branch had been granted, and that the South Australian state executive had re-endorsed Nelson to contest the 1929 election. [11] An Alice Springs branch was established in 1947. [12] The Northern Territory branch was upgraded to receive the status of a state branch in August 1967. [3]
The Northern Territory Legislative Council was established in 1947 as a partly elected representative body with limited powers, with the Labor Party endorsing candidates from the first election. [12] [13] Labor members of the Legislative Council included Tom Bell, Eric Marks, Charles Orr, Len Purkiss, Tom Ronan, and Richard Ward [14] [15] [16] [8]
In 1974, the Legislative Council was replaced by the fully elected Northern Territory Legislative Assembly in preparation for self-governance. [17] However, the 1974 election was disastrous for Labor, which failed to win a single seat. [18] The party recovered to some extent at the 1977 election, winning six seats. However, over the next 24 years, it never came particularly close to winning government; it never won more than nine seats at an election and never held more than two seats in the Darwin/Palmerston area at any time. [19]
As a result, Labor remained in opposition until 2001 election, when Clare Martin led the party to government for the first time primarily on the strength of a near-sweep of Darwin, including all seven seats in the northern part of the capital. [19] Four years later, in 2005, Martin led Labor to one of the most comprehensive victories on record at the state or territory level, winning 19 out of 25 seats, the second-largest majority government in the history of the Territory. [20] Martin retired in 2007 and was succeeded by Paul Henderson. Under Henderson, Labor won a third term with a reduced majority in 2008 before being defeated by the CLP at the 2012 election. After one term in opposition, Labor returned to power at the 2016 election. Under Michael Gunner, Labor won a landslide almost as massive as the one it won in 2005, with 18 seats, the third-largest majority government in the history of the Territory. Gunner was reelected in 2020 with a somewhat reduced mandate of 14 seats.
The 2024 election saw Territory Labor suffer its second-worst result since the establishment of self-government (second to only the first Northern Territory election in 1974, when Labor won no seats), as well as Labor's lowest primary vote share in the history of the Northern Territory. Party leader Eva Lawler lost her seat to the CLP, becoming the third Chief Minister and the first Labor Chief Minister to do so. Selena Uibo was subsequently elected unopposed as Leader of Territory Labor and Leader of the Opposition in the Northern Territory on 3 September 2024, the first Aboriginal woman to lead a major political party in Australia. [21]
Note: this section only lists elections for the Northern Territory Legislative Assembly.
Election | Leader | Seats | ± | Total votes | % | ±% | Position |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1974 | Richard Ward | 0 / 19 | 0 | 8,508 | 30.5% | 30.5% | Extra-parliamentary |
1977 | Jon Isaacs | 6 / 19 | 6 | 12,165 | 38.2% | 7.7% | Opposition |
1980 | 7 / 19 | 1 | 15,818 | 39.4% | 1.2% | Opposition | |
1983 | Bob Collins | 6 / 25 | 1 | 17,505 | 35.6% | 3.8% | Opposition |
1987 | Terry Smith | 6 / 25 | 0 | 18,307 | 36.0% | 0.4% | Opposition |
1990 | 9 / 25 | 3 | 23,827 | 36.6% | 0.6% | Opposition | |
1994 | Brian Ede | 7 / 25 | 2 | 30,507 | 41.4% | 4.8% | Opposition |
1997 | Maggie Hickey | 7 / 25 | 0 | 29,365 | 38.5% | 2.9% | Opposition |
2001 | Clare Martin | 13 / 25 | 6 | 33,038 | 40.6% | 2.1% | Majority government |
2005 | 19 / 25 | 6 | 44,822 | 51.9% | 11.3% | Majority government | |
2008 | Paul Henderson | 13 / 25 | 6 | 34,557 | 43.2% | 8.7% | Majority government |
2012 | 8 / 25 | 5 | 33,594 | 36.5% | 6.7% | Opposition | |
2016 | Michael Gunner | 18 / 25 | 11 | 41,476 | 42.2% | 5.7% | Majority government |
2020 | 14 / 25 | 4 | 40,291 | 39.4% | 2.8% | Majority government | |
2024 | Eva Lawler | 4 / 25 | 10 | 28,567 | 28.7% | 10.7% | Opposition |
The Country Liberal Party of the Northern Territory (CLP), commonly known as the Country Liberals, is a centre-right and conservative political party in Australia's Northern Territory. In territory politics, it operates in a two-party system with the Australian Labor Party (ALP). It also contests federal elections as an affiliate of the Liberal Party of Australia and National Party of Australia, the two partners in the federal coalition.
The Northern Territory is an Australian internal territory in the central and central northern regions of Australia. The Northern Territory shares its borders with Western Australia to the west, South Australia to the south, and Queensland to the east. To the north, the territory looks out to the Timor Sea, the Arafura Sea and the Gulf of Carpentaria, including Western New Guinea and other islands of the Indonesian archipelago.
Palmerston is a planned satellite city of Darwin, the capital and largest city of Australia's Northern Territory. The city is situated approximately 20 kilometres from Darwin and 10 kilometres from Howard Springs and the surrounding rural areas. Palmerston had a population of 33,695 at the 2016 census, making it the second largest city in the Northern Territory. According to the 2021 census, the population grew to 37,247 people.
The Northern Territory Police Force is the police body that has legal jurisdiction over the Northern Territory of Australia. This police service has 1,607 police members made up of 83 senior sergeants, 228 sergeants, 912 constables, 220 auxiliaries, and 64 Aboriginal Community Police Officers. The rest of the positions are members of commissioned rank and inoperative positions. It also has a civilian staff working across the NT Police, Fire and Emergency Services.
Stephen Edward "Sam" CalderAM, OBE, DFC was a decorated World War II flying ace, member of the Australian House of Representatives, and one of the founders of the Northern Territory Country Liberal Party. In federal parliament, he sat with the Country Party, later renamed the National Country Party.
Ronald John Withnall AM was an Australian politician and lawyer.
The Indigenous All-Stars is an Australian rules football team composed of players that identify as Indigenous Australian or with an indigenous culture.
Australian rules football is the most popular sport in the Northern Territory (NT), particularly among the many remote Indigenous Australian communities of the outback such as the Tiwi Islands but also in the cities of Darwin and Alice Springs. There are more than 15 regional competitions across the territory, the highest profile being the semi-professional Northern Territory Football League based around Darwin and Central Australian Football League around Alice Springs. It is governed by AFL Northern Territory which has more than 10,000 registered players. In 2017, it was reported that 18% of Territorians participate in Australian rules football—the highest rate of participation in Australia. The sport also produces more professional players per capita for the Australian Football League (AFL) than any other state or territory.
Harold George "H. G." Nelson was an Australian politician and trade unionist who was the first person to represent the Northern Territory in the House of Representatives. He arrived in the territory in 1914 to work as an organiser for the Australian Workers' Union (AWU), and was a leader of the Darwin rebellion of 1918. He subsequently served in the House of Representatives from 1922 to 1934, initially as an independent and then as a member of the Labor Party.
The 1943 Australian federal election was held in Australia on 21 August 1943. All 74 seats in the House of Representatives and 19 of the 36 seats in the Senate were up for election. The incumbent Labor Party, led by Prime Minister John Curtin, defeated the opposition Country–UAP coalition led by Arthur Fadden in a landslide.
Rupert James Kentish was an Australian politician. He was a Country Party member of the Northern Territory Legislative Council from 1968 to 1974 and a Country Liberal Party member of the Northern Territory Legislative Assembly from 1974 to 1977.
The 1932 Victorian state election was held in the Australian state of Victoria on Saturday 14 May 1932 to elect 44 of the 65 members of the state's Legislative Assembly. The other 21 seats were uncontested.
Natasha Kate Fyles is an Australian politician and former teacher who served as the 12th Chief Minister of the Northern Territory and Minister for Health. She was the leader of the Northern Territory branch of the Australian Labor Party (ALP) from May 2022 until her resignation in December 2023. She was a member of the Northern Territory Legislative Assembly (MLA) for the division of Nightcliff from 2012 until her defeat at the 2024 election. She previously served as 22nd attorney-general of the Northern Territory and the territory’s minister for Justice from 2016 to 2020.
Larisa Antonia Lillian Lee is an Australian politician. She was elected to the Northern Territory Legislative Assembly as the Country Liberal member for Arnhem at the 2012 territory election. She left the CLP on 4 April 2014, sat as independent until 27 April, when she joined the Palmer United Party, resigned from that party on 29 November, and sat as an independent until her defeat at the 2016 election.
Lieutenant-Colonel Alfred Lionel Rose,, better known as Lionel Rose or Colonel Rose, was an Australian Army officer and veterinarian who served in both World War I and II. He is best known for pioneering the live cattle trade from the Northern Territory to Asia and curing cattle disease.
Ellen Mary Stack was an Australian medical doctor and the first female Lord Mayor of an Australian capital city. She was the mayor of the City of Darwin, Northern Territory, from 1975 to 1979, and lord mayor from 1979 to 1980. She is best known for her work following the destruction of Darwin due to Cyclone Tracy.
Selena Jane Malijarri Uibo is an Aboriginal Australian politician. She has served as leader of the Labor Party and Leader of the Opposition in the Northern Territory since 3 September 2024, the first Aboriginal woman to lead a major political party in Australia. She is a Labor member of the Northern Territory Legislative Assembly since 2016, representing the electorate of Arnhem.
The 2024 Northern Territory general election was held on 24 August 2024 to elect all 25 members of the Legislative Assembly in the unicameral Northern Territory Parliament. Members were elected through full preferential instant-runoff voting in single-member electorates. The election was conducted by the Northern Territory Electoral Commission (NTEC).
The North Australia Party (NAP) was a short-lived political party in Australia's Northern Territory, primarily active in Alice Springs and the surrounding areas of Central Australia. It was founded in 1965 under the leadership of Lionel Rose and contested the Northern Territory Legislative Council election later that year, winning a single seat. The party has been cited as a predecessor of the modern Country Liberal Party (CLP).
The 2024 Territory Labor Party leadership election was held on 3 September 2024 to elect a new leader of the Territory Labor Party and ex officio, Leader of the Opposition in the Northern Territory, following the resignation of Eva Lawler.