Queensland Labor Party

Last updated

Queensland Labor Party
Australian Labor Party (State of Queensland)
Leader Steven Miles
Deputy Leader Cameron Dick
PresidentJohn Battams [1]
Secretary Kate Flanders [2]
Founded5 August 1892;131 years ago (5 August 1892) [3] [4]
HeadquartersTLC Building, South Brisbane, Queensland
Newspaper Queensland Labor Times
Think tank T. J. Ryan Foundation
Youth wing Young Labor
Women's wing Labor Women's Network
LGBT wingRainbow Labor
Membership (2021)Increase2.svg10,000 [lower-alpha 1] [6]
Ideology
Political position
National affiliation Australian Labor
Union affiliate QCU
Colours  Red
Slogan"Putting Queenslanders First." [12]
Legislative Assembly
51 / 93
House of Representatives
5 / 30
(Qld seats)
Senate
3 / 12
(Qld seats)
Brisbane City Council
5 / 26
Website
queenslandlabor.org

The Queensland Labor Party, officially known as the Australian Labor Party (State of Queensland) [13] and commonly referred to simply as Queensland Labor, is the state branch of the Australian Labor Party (ALP) in the state of Queensland. [14] It has functioned in the state since the 1880s. [lower-alpha 3] The Queensland branch of the Australian Labor Party (ALP) was the first Labour Party to win government in the world, when, in December 1899, following the resignation of the Dickson ministry, Labour Leader Anderson Dawson accepted to form a ministry by Lieutenant-Governor Samuel Griffith. [15]

Contents

History

Trade unionists in Queensland had begun attempting to secure parliamentary representation as early as the mid-1880s. William McNaughton Galloway, the president of the Seamen's Union, mounted an unsuccessful campaign as an independent in an 1886 by-election. A Workers' Political Reform Association was founded to nominate candidates for the 1888 election, at which the Brisbane Trades and Labor Council endorsed six candidates. Thomas Glassey won the seat of Bundamba at that election, becoming the first self-identified "labor" MP in Queensland. The Queensland Provincial Council of the Australian Labor Federation was formed in 1889 in an attempt to unite Labor campaign efforts. Tommy Ryan won the seat of Barcoo for the labour movement-run People's Parliamentary Association in 1892, and the Labor Party was formally established in Queensland following the first Labor-in-Politics Convention later that year. [16]

The Queensland branch subsequently formed the first Labor government in Australia, albeit briefly, when Anderson Dawson took office for a week in 1899 after a falling out between the non-Labor forces. [17]

Since 1989, when the party came back to power after thirty-two years in Opposition, all its leaders have become Premiers despite two spells in Opposition in 1996–98 and 2012–2015.

As of 2020, the Queensland branch has three factions: the right, headed by Annastacia Palaszczuk, the left, headed by Steven Miles, and the centralist faction, the Old Guard. Discounting Speaker Curtis Pitt, of the 47 Labor MPs, 24 belong to the Left, 16 to the Right, and 7 to the Old Guard. [18]

As of the 2020 state election, Queensland Labor's seat distribution was as follows:

2020 state election Queensland Labor seat distribution
RegionElectoratesLabor seats%
North & Far North Queensland (N/FNQ)10770.00
South East Queensland (SEQ)633860.32
Wide Bay–Burnett 5360.00
Central Queensland (CQ)7342.86
Mackay, Isaac and Whitsunday 3133.33
Darling Downs–South West 5

Membership and voter base

Historically (1910s–1960s) Queensland Labor's voter base and membership has been distributed fairly equitably across the metropolitan, urban, and rural areas of the state, although maintaining a demographic majority within the South East region. [19] Beginning in the 1970s, Queensland Labor's voter base in particular has swayed more heavily toward the metropolitan and urban areas of the state such as Brisbane, the Sunshine Coast, the Gold Coast, and Townsville, with the Country (later National) and Liberal parties competing with Labor in both regions as an electoral bloc. [19]

Membership figures

Local government

Labor contests Brisbane City Council elections, and has done so since the inaugural election in 1925. It has been in opposition to the LNP (and before that, the Liberal Party) since 2008. The last Labor member to serve as Lord Mayor of Brisbane was Tim Quinn, who was defeated in 2004. [20]

Historically, Labor also endorsed candidates outside of Brisbane, including in Ipswich, Townsville and Toowoomba. [21]

The current Labor leader on Brisbane City Council is Jared Cassidy, who has served in the position since September 2019. [22]

Leaders

Leader

The full list below is the official record of parliamentary leaders: [23]

No.Leader
(birth–death)
PortraitElectorateTerm of office
1 Thomas Glassey
(1844–1936)
Thomas Glassey.jpg Bundamba August
1892
May
1893
274 days
2 John Hoolan
(1842–1911)
StateLibQld 1 166351 John 'Plumper' Hoolan, ca. 1902 (cropped).jpg Burke May
1893
July
1894
1 year and 62 days
(1)Thomas Glassey
(1844–1936)
Thomas Glassey.jpg BundambaJuly
1894
May
1899
4 years and 305 days
3 Anderson Dawson
(1863–1910)
Anderson Dawson - Swiss Studios (cropped).jpg Charters Towers May
1899
July
1900
1 year and 62 days
4 W. H. Browne
(1846–1904)
Billy Browne - Queensland Politician.png Croydon July
1900
October
1903
3 years and 93 days
5 Peter Airey
(1865–1950)
Peter Airey - Queensland politician.jpg Flinders October
1903
April
1904
184 days
6 George Kerr
(1853–1930)
George Kerr, 1907.jpg Barcoo April
1904
April
1907
3 years and 1 day
7 David Bowman
(1860–1916)
StateLibQld 1 51912 The Honourable David Bowman.jpg Fortitude Valley April
1907
9 September
1912
5 years and 162 days
8 T. J. Ryan
(1876–1921)
T. J. Ryan 1916.jpg Barcoo9 September
1912
22 October
1919
7 years and 44 days
9 Ted Theodore
(1884–1950)
Ted Theodore 1928 (cropped).jpg Woothakata 22 October
1919
26 February
1925
5 years and 128 days
10 William Gillies
(1868–1928)
William Gillies 1920.jpg Eacham 26 February
1925
22 October
1925
239 days
11 William McCormack
(1879–1947)
William McCormack 1927 (cropped).jpg Cairns 22 October
1925
21 May
1929
3 years and 212 days
12 William Forgan Smith
(1887–1953)
William Forgan Smith 1942 (cropped).jpg Mackay 27 May
1929
16 September
1942
13 years and 113 days
13 Frank Arthur Cooper
(1872–1949)
FAC, 1940s (cropped 2).jpg Bremer 16 September
1942
7 March
1946
3 years and 173 days
14 Ned Hanlon
(1887–1952)
Ned Hanlon on election day, 1947 (cropped).jpg Ithaca 7 March
1946
15 January
1952
5 years and 315 days
15 Vince Gair
(1901–1980)
Queensland State Archives 4750 Hon VC Gair Premier of Queensland c 1953.png South Brisbane 17 January
1952
24 April
1957
5 years and 98 days
16 Jack Duggan
(1910–1993)
JE Duggan, 1963.jpg Toowoomba 30 April
1957
3 August
1957
96 days
17 Les Wood
(1907–1958)
Leslie Arnold Wood - Queensland politician.jpg North Toowoomba 28 August
1957
29 March
1958
214 days
18 Jim Donald
(1895–1976)
Australian-Labor-Party-stub.svg Ipswich East 14 April
1958
17 August
1958
126 days
(16)Jack Duggan
(1910–1993)
JE Duggan, 1963.jpg Toowoomba West 18 August
1958
11 October
1966
8 years and 55 days
19 Jack Houston
(1919–2008)
Jack Houston.png Bulimba 11 October
1966
22 July
1974
7 years and 285 days
20 Perc Tucker
(1919–1980)
PercTucker (cropped).jpg Townsville West 22 July
1974
19 December
1974
151 days
21 Tom Burns
(1931–2007)
Australian-Labor-Party-stub.svg Lytton 19 December
1974
28 November
1978
3 years and 345 days
22 Ed Casey
(1933–2006)
Australian-Labor-Party-stub.svg Mackay28 November
1978
20 October
1982
3 years and 327 days
23 Keith Wright
(1942–2015)
Australian-Labor-Party-stub.svg Rockhampton 20 October
1982
29 August
1984
1 year and 315 days
24 Nev Warburton
(1932–2018)
Australian-Labor-Party-stub.svg Sandgate 29 August
1984
2 March
1988
3 years and 187 days
25 Wayne Goss
(1951–2014)
Portrait of Wayne Keith Goss, Premier of Queensland.jpg Logan 2 March
1988
19 February
1996
7 years and 355 days
26 Peter Beattie
(b. 1952)
Peter Beattie orig.jpg Brisbane Central 19 February
1996
12 September
2007
11 years and 206 days
27 Anna Bligh
(b. 1960)
Anna Bligh crop.jpg South Brisbane 12 September
2007
28 March
2012
4 years and 199 days
28 Annastacia Palaszczuk
(b. 1969)
Annastacia Palaszczuk 2016 (crop).jpg Inala 30 March
2012
15 December
2023
11 years and 261 days
29 Steven Miles
(b. 1977)
Dr Steven Miles MP (cropped).jpg Murrumba 15 December
2023
Incumbent
151 days

Election results

State elections

ElectionLeaderSeats won±Total votes %±%Position
1893 Thomas Glassey
16 / 72
Increase2.svg1625,98433.32%Increase2.svg33.3%Opposition
1896
20 / 72
Increase2.svg428,58134.97%Increase2.svg1.7%Opposition
1899
21 / 72
Increase2.svg133,75635.47%Increase2.svg0.5%Opposition
1902 William Browne
25 / 72
Increase2.svg439,57939.33%Increase2.svg3.9%Opposition
1904 George Kerr
34 / 72
Increase2.svg928,96136.05%Decrease2.svg3.3%Opposition
1907 David Bowman
18 / 72
Decrease2.svg1652,07926.39%Decrease2.svg9.7%Opposition
1908
22 / 72
Increase2.svg455,77129.80%Increase2.svg3.4%Opposition
1909
27 / 72
Increase2.svg577,71236.85%Increase2.svg7.1%Opposition
1912
25 / 72
Decrease2.svg2100,87846.70%Increase2.svg9.9%Opposition
1915 T. J. Ryan
45 / 72
Increase2.svg20136,41952.06%Increase2.svg5.4% Majority government
1918
48 / 72
Increase2.svg3180,70953.68%Increase2.svg1.6% Majority government
1920 Ted Theodore
38 / 72
Decrease2.svg7168,45547.77%Decrease2.svg5.9% Majority government
1923
43 / 72
Increase2.svg5175,65948.13%Increase2.svg0.4% Majority government
1926 William McCormack
43 / 72
Steady2.svg0189,96847.96%Decrease2.svg0.2% Majority government
1929
27 / 72
Decrease2.svg16173,24240.16%Decrease2.svg7.8%Opposition
1932 William Forgan Smith
33 / 62
Increase2.svg6225,27049.89%Increase2.svg9.7% Majority government
1935
46 / 62
Increase2.svg13247,13553.43%Increase2.svg3.6% Majority government
1938
44 / 62
Decrease2.svg2250,94347.17%Decrease2.svg6.3% Majority government
1941
41 / 62
Decrease2.svg3267,20651.41%Increase2.svg4.2% Majority government
1944 Frank Arthur Cooper
37 / 62
Decrease2.svg4224,88844.67%Decrease2.svg6.7% Majority government
1947 Ned Hanlon
35 / 62
Decrease2.svg2272,10343.58%Decrease2.svg1.1% Majority government
1950
42 / 75
Increase2.svg7295,13846.87%Increase2.svg3.3% Majority government
1953 Vince Gair
50 / 75
Increase2.svg8323,88253.21%Increase2.svg6.3% Majority government
1956
49 / 75
Decrease2.svg1335,31151.22%Decrease2.svg2.0% Majority government
1957 Jack Duggan
20 / 75
Decrease2.svg29201,97128.90%Decrease2.svg22.3%Opposition
1960
25 / 78
Increase2.svg5296,43039.89%Increase2.svg11.0%Opposition
1963
26 / 78
Increase2.svg1337,92843.83%Increase2.svg3.9%Opposition
1966
26 / 78
Steady2.svg0350,25443.84%Steady2.svg0.0%Opposition
1969 Jack Houston
31 / 78
Increase2.svg5383,38844.99%Increase2.svg1.2%Opposition
1972
33 / 82
Increase2.svg2424,00246.75%Increase2.svg1.8%Opposition
1974 Perc Tucker
11 / 82
Decrease2.svg22376,18736.03%Decrease2.svg10.7%Opposition
1977 Tom Burns
23 / 82
Increase2.svg12466,02142.83%Increase2.svg6.8%Opposition
1980 Ed Casey
25 / 82
Increase2.svg2487,49341.49%Increase2.svg1.3%Opposition
1983 Keith Wright
32 / 82
Increase2.svg7579,36343.98%Increase2.svg2.5%Opposition
1986 Nev Warburton
30 / 89
Decrease2.svg2577,06241.35%Decrease2.svg2.6%Opposition
1989 Wayne Goss
54 / 89
Increase2.svg24792,46650.32%Increase2.svg9.0% Majority government
1992
54 / 89
Steady2.svg0850,48048.73%Decrease2.svg1.6% Majority government
1995
45 / 89
Decrease2.svg9773,58542.89%Decrease2.svg5.8% Majority government
1998 Peter Beattie
44 / 89
Decrease2.svg1773,58538.86%Decrease2.svg4.0% Minority government
2001
66 / 89
Increase2.svg221,007,73748.93%Increase2.svg10.1% Majority government
2004
63 / 89
Decrease2.svg31,011,63047.01%Decrease2.svg1.9% Majority government
2006
59 / 89
Decrease2.svg41,032,61746.92%Decrease2.svg0.1% Majority government
2009 Anna Bligh
51 / 89
Decrease2.svg81,002,41542.25%Decrease2.svg4.7% Majority government
2012
7 / 89
Decrease2.svg44652,09226.66%Decrease2.svg15.6%Opposition
2015 Annastacia Palaszczuk
44 / 89
Increase2.svg35983,05437.47%Increase2.svg10.8% Minority government
2017
48 / 93
Increase2.svg4957,89035.43%Decrease2.svg2.0% Majority government
2020
52 / 93
Increase2.svg41,135,62539.58%Increase2.svg4.15% Majority government

Federal elections

ElectionSeats Won±Total Votes%±Leader
1901
3 / 9
Increase2.svg 321,26434.80%Increase2.svg 34.80%No leader
1903
7 / 9
Increase2.svg 463,87856.70%Increase2.svg 21.90% Chris Watson
1906
4 / 9
Decrease2.svg 351,23143.00%Decrease2.svg 13.70%
1910
6 / 9
Increase2.svg 278,88147.60%Increase2.svg 4.60% Andrew Fisher
1913
7 / 10
Increase2.svg 1149,44754.80%Increase2.svg 7.20%
1914
7 / 10
Steady2.svg 0125,01755.70%Increase2.svg 0.90%
1917
4 / 10
Decrease2.svg 3160,44848.70%Decrease2.svg 7.00% Frank Tudor
1919
3 / 10
Decrease2.svg 1149,58846.80%Decrease2.svg 1.90%
1922
2 / 10
Decrease2.svg 1132,51541.40%Decrease2.svg 5.40% Matthew Charlton
1925
1 / 10
Decrease2.svg 1152,77842.40%Increase2.svg 1.00%
1928
2 / 10
Increase2.svg 1112,98247.40%Increase2.svg 5.00% James Scullin
1929
3 / 10
Increase2.svg 1173,41739.80%Decrease2.svg 7.60%
1931
5 / 10
Increase2.svg 2141,44339.30%Decrease2.svg 0.50%
1934
5 / 10
Steady2.svg 0235,90446.80%Increase2.svg 7.50%
1937
5 / 10
Steady2.svg 0233,61243.00%Decrease2.svg 3.80% John Curtin
1940
6 / 10
Increase2.svg 1255,06346.10%Increase2.svg 3.10%
1943
6 / 10
Steady2.svg 0279,37247.80%Increase2.svg 1.70%
1946
5 / 10
Decrease2.svg 1256,37043.10%Decrease2.svg 4.70% Ben Chifley
1949
3 / 18
Decrease2.svg 2255,03639.50%Decrease2.svg 3.60%
1951
4 / 18
Increase2.svg 1257,09941.00%Increase2.svg 1.50%
1954
5 / 18
Increase2.svg 1295,42442.50%Increase2.svg 1.50% H.V. Evatt
1955
5 / 18
Steady2.svg 0258,99442.10%Decrease2.svg 0.40%
1958
3 / 18
Decrease2.svg 2270,67637.50%Decrease2.svg 4.60%
1961
11 / 18
Increase2.svg 8365,93048.10%Increase2.svg 10.60% Arthur Calwell
1963
8 / 18
Decrease2.svg 3369,57046.30%Decrease2.svg 1.80%
1966
6 / 18
Decrease2.svg 2354,67442.10%Decrease2.svg 4.20%
1969
7 / 18
Increase2.svg 1430,40348.20%Increase2.svg 6.10% Gough Whitlam
1972
8 / 18
Increase2.svg 1449,62047.20%Decrease2.svg 1.00%
1974
6 / 18
Decrease2.svg 2476,71044.00%Decrease2.svg 3.20%
1975
1 / 18
Decrease2.svg 5439,40538.80%Decrease2.svg 5.20%
1977
3 / 19
Increase2.svg 2443,22137.70%Decrease2.svg 1.10%
1980
5 / 19
Increase2.svg 2535,80042.80%Increase2.svg 5.10% Bill Hayden
1983
10 / 19
Increase2.svg 5621,14646.10%Increase2.svg 3.30% Bob Hawke
1984
9 / 24
Decrease2.svg 1605,68444.10%Decrease2.svg 2.00%
1987
13 / 24
Increase2.svg 4683,64045.00%Increase2.svg 0.90%
1990
15 / 24
Increase2.svg 2695,29141.60%Decrease2.svg 3.40%
1993
13 / 25
Decrease2.svg 2739,86240.50%Decrease2.svg 1.10% Paul Keating
1996
2 / 26
Decrease2.svg 11639,51033.20%Decrease2.svg 7.30%
1998
8 / 27
Increase2.svg 6719,74336.10%Increase2.svg 2.90% Kim Beazley
2001
7 / 27
Decrease2.svg 1730,91434.70%Decrease2.svg 1.40%
2004
6 / 28
Decrease2.svg 1765,50734.78%Increase2.svg 0.08% Mark Latham
2007
15 / 29
Increase2.svg 91,020,66542.91%Increase2.svg 8.13% Kevin Rudd
2010
8 / 30
Decrease2.svg 7800,71233.58%Decrease2.svg 9.33% Julia Gillard
2013
6 / 30
Decrease2.svg 2751,23029.77%Decrease2.svg 3.81% Kevin Rudd
2016
8 / 30
Increase2.svg 2825,62730.91%Increase2.svg 1.14% Bill Shorten
2019
6 / 30
Decrease2.svg 2754,79226.68%Decrease2.svg 4.23%
2022
5 / 30
Decrease2.svg 1784,18927.5%Increase2.svg 0.8% Anthony Albanese

Related Research Articles

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Australian Labor Party</span> Federal political party in Australia

The Australian Labor Party (ALP), also commonly known as the Labor Party or simply Labor, is the major centre-left political party in Australia and one of two major parties in Australian politics, along with the centre-right Liberal Party of Australia. The party has been in government since being elected at the 2022 federal election, and with political branches in each state and territory, they currently form government in New South Wales, Queensland, South Australia, Victoria, Western Australia, the Australian Capital Territory, and the Northern Territory. As of 2023, Tasmania is the only state or territory where Labor forms the opposition. It is the oldest continuous political party in Australian history, being established on 8 May 1901 at Parliament House, Melbourne, the meeting place of the first federal Parliament.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Frank Forde</span> Prime Minister of Australia in 1945

Francis Michael Forde was an Australian politician who served as the 15th prime minister of Australia from 6 to 13 July 1945. He was deputy leader of the Australian Labor Party from 1932 to 1946 and served as prime minister in a caretaker capacity following the death of John Curtin. He is the shortest-serving prime minister in Australia's history.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Democratic Labor Party (Australia, 1955)</span> Former political party in Australia

The Democratic Labor Party (DLP) was an Australian political party. The party came into existence following the 1955 ALP split as the Australian Labor Party (Anti-Communist), and was renamed the Democratic Labor Party in 1957. In 1962, the Queensland Labor Party, a breakaway party of the Queensland branch of the Australian Labor Party, became the Queensland branch of the DLP.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Ted Theodore</span> Australian politician

Edward Granville Theodore was an Australian politician who served as Premier of Queensland from 1919 to 1925, as leader of the state Labor Party. He later entered federal politics, serving as Treasurer in the Scullin Labor government.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Fred Paterson</span> Australian politician (1897–1977)

Frederick Woolnough Paterson was an Australian politician, activist, unionist and lawyer. He is the only representative of the Communist Party of Australia to be elected to an Australian parliament.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Robert Philp</span> Australian politician (1851–1922)

Sir Robert Philp, was a Queensland businessman and politician who was Premier of Queensland from December 1899 to September 1903 and again from November 1907 to February 1908.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Brisbane Trades Hall</span> Building in Brisbane, Queensland

The Brisbane Trades Hall is a former Trades Hall building in Edward Street, Brisbane, Queensland, Australia.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Queensland Greens</span> Political party in Australia

The Queensland Greens is a Green party in Queensland, Australia, and a state member of the Australian Greens. The party is currently represented in all three levels of government, by Larissa Waters and Penny Allman-Payne in the federal Senate; Stephen Bates, Max Chandler-Mather, and Elizabeth Watson-Brown in the House of Representatives; Michael Berkman and Amy MacMahon in the state Legislative Assembly; and Trina Massey and Seal Chong Wah in Brisbane City Council.

The Victorian Socialist Party (VSP), also known as the Socialist Party of Victoria, was a socialist political party in the Australian state of Victoria during the early 20th century.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">James Dooley (Australian politician)</span> Australian politician

James Thomas Dooley served twice, briefly, as Premier of New South Wales during the early 1920s.

Ross Andrew Fitzgerald is an Australian academic, historian, novelist, secularist, and political commentator. Fitzgerald is an Emeritus Professor in History and Politics at Griffith University. He has authored or co-authored forty-five books, including three histories of Queensland, two biographies, works about Labor Party politics of the 1950s, with other books relating to philosophy, alcohol and Australian Rules football, as well as ten works of fiction, including nine political/sexual satires about his corpulent anti-hero Professor Dr Grafton Everest.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Thomas Glassey</span> Australian politician

Thomas Glassey was an Irish-born Australian politician.

William Peter Barry was a Member of the Victorian Legislative Assembly for the Electoral district of Carlton from July 1932 until April 1955. Barry was a member of the Labor Party until March 1955, when he was expelled from the party as part of the Australian Labor Party split of 1955. He became, with Les Coleman in the Victorian Legislative Council, joint leader of the Australian Labor Party (Anti-Communist), a party that in 1957 became the Democratic Labor Party.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">T. J. Ryan</span> Australian politician

Thomas Joseph Ryan was an Australian politician who served as Premier of Queensland from 1915 to 1919, as leader of the state Labor Party. He resigned to enter federal politics, sitting in the House of Representatives for the federal Labor Party from 1919 until his premature death less than two years later.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">William McNaughton Galloway</span> Australian politician

William McNaughton Galloway was mayor of Brisbane, Queensland, Australia in 1889. He also built the now heritage-listed Breakfast Creek Hotel.

Fortitude Valley, originally known as Hamlet of Fortitude Valley, was a Legislative Assembly electorate in the state of Queensland.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Queensland National Party</span> Political party in Australia

The National Party of Australia – Queensland (NPA-Q), commonly known as Queensland Nationals, or the National Party of Queensland, was the Queensland-state branch of the National Party of Australia (NPA) until 2008. Prior to 1974, it was known as the Country Party. The party was disestablished in 2008.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Queensland Liberal Party</span> Political party in Queensland

The Queensland Liberal Party, officially known as the Liberal Party of Australia (Queensland Division), was the Queensland division of the Liberal Party of Australia until 2008.

The National Party, known as the United Party from 1923, was a political party in the Australian state of Queensland from 1917 to 1925. Although allied with the federal Nationalist Party, it had different origins in state politics. It sought to combine the state's Liberal Party with the Country Party but the latter soon withdrew. In 1923 the party sought a further unification with the Country Party but only attracted a few recruits. Then in 1925 it merged with the Country Party, initially as the Country Progressive Party with a few members left out and then they were absorbed into the renamed Country and Progressive National Party.

The Liberal Party was a political party in the Australian state of Queensland in the early 20th century. It combined the main non-Labor forces, the Kidstonites of William Kidston and the Conservative Party led by Robert Philp, similar to the federal Commonwealth Liberal Party whose fusion it preceded. The Liberals held government from their formation in 1908 until defeat in 1915 after which they combined with other elements in the state to form the National Party.

References

Notes

  1. The membership of Queensland Labor has increased roughly 1,000 members since 2014 (8–9,000 members to 9–10,000 members). [5]
  2. Also cited as "State Socialism".
  3. de facto.

Citations

  1. "John Battams – Queensland Labor". queenslandlabor.org.
  2. "Kate Flanders – Queensland Labor". queenslandlabor.org. Queensland Labor. Archived from the original on 1 July 2022. Retrieved 2 July 2022.
  3. Fitzgerald, Ross & Thornton, Harold. Labor in Queensland: From the 1880s to 1988. University of Queensland Press. pp. 1–11.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  4. "Labour in Politics. Call to Convention. Mr Glassey Appointed Leader". The Telegraph . 5 August 1892. A circular has been addressed to the various labour organisations in Queensland as follows: "Recognising the increasing importance of the Labour Party in Parliament, and in view of the approaching general elections, a meeting of the Labour members and their avowed supporters has been held, and the party formally established. Mr. Thomas Glassey was appointed to the responsible position of leader.
  5. O'Brien, Chris; Howells, Melinda (23 August 2014). "Qld Labor split on new leadership vote rules". ABC News. Archived from the original on 28 August 2014.
  6. Riga, Rachel (5 June 2021). "Queensland Labor president John Battams acknowledges shortcomings in federal election track record". ABC News. Archived from the original on 27 July 2021.
  7. 1 2 3 Barry, Nick; Chen, Peter; Haigh, Yvonne; C. Motta, Sara; Perche, Diana, eds. (13 January 2023). Australian Politics and Policy (PDF). Sydney University Press. p. 253. Archived (PDF) from the original on 26 November 2023.
  8. "2023 Rules of the Australian Labor Party (State of Queensland)". queenslandlabor. Australian Labor Party (State of Queensland). Retrieved 1 January 2024.
  9. 1 2 James Thornton, Harold (June 1986). "Socialism At Work? Queensland Labor in Office 1915–1957" (PDF). University of Adelaide Press.
  10. Robertson, Geoffrey (May 2009). "From Labourism to Social Democracy: Labor Governments and Fiscal Policy in the Australian States, 1911–40". Labour History . 96 (96): 57–78. JSTOR   27713744.
  11. Fitzgerald, Ross & Thornton, Harold. Labor in Queensland: From the 1880s to 1988 (PDF). University of Queensland Press.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  12. "State Platform 2017" (PDF). queenslandlabor.org. Queensland Labor. 28 July 2017.
  13. "Queensland Labor Rules 2022" (PDF). ecq.qld.gov.au. Queensland Labor Party. 2022.
  14. "Queensland Labor". Queensland Labor. Retrieved 15 April 2018.
  15. Murphy, DJ (1975). T.J. Ryan: A Political Biography (PDF). University of Queensland Press. p. xv. Archived from the original (PDF) on 22 August 2017.
  16. Fitzgerald, Ross & Thornton, Harold. Labor in Queensland: From the 1880s to 1988 (PDF). University of Queensland Press. pp. 1–11.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  17. Fitzgerald, Ross & Thornton, Harold. Labor in Queensland: From the 1880s to 1988. University of Queensland Press. p. 11.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  18. Lynch, Lydia (11 May 2020). "Queensland has a new deputy premier and treasurer: who are they?". Brisbane Times. Fairfax Media. Retrieved 1 August 2022.
  19. 1 2 3 4 Bowden, Bradley (November 2013). "Modern Labor in Queensland: Its Rise and Failings, 1978–98". Labour History (105): 1–26. doi:10.5263/labourhistory.105.0001. hdl: 10072/56318 . JSTOR   10.5263/labourhistory.105.0001.
  20. "Will Brisbane City Council be next to be swept away in an electoral Greenslide?". ABC News. 2 June 2022. Retrieved 28 September 2023.
  21. "Labour Team". Trove. Queensland Times.
  22. "Labor's lord mayoral candidate a mystery man to voters". The West Australian.
  23. Katherine Brennan (2015). Queensland Parliamentary Record: The 54th Parliament – 15 May 2012 – 6 January 2015 (PDF) (Report). Queensland Parliamentary Record. p. 155. ISSN   1449-2083 . Retrieved 12 July 2022.