The Split: Australian Labor in the Fifties Robert Murray
Author: Robert Murray
Date: 31 Dec 1984
Publisher: Hale & Iremonger,Pty.Ltd
Format: Paperback
ISBN10: 0868061433
File size: 8 Mb
Filename: the-split-australian-labor-in-the-fifties.pdf
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The Labor Split of the 1950s changed the whole shape of Australian politics, but until now it has been clouded myths and the emotions of the opposing factions. 'The Split' penetrates this confusion and with the aid of 'inside information' examines the complex series In Sydney a couple of years later, at the end of 1954, in midnight to dawn sessions at the old Phillip Street Journalists Club, we debated the coming of the Labor Split, unwittingly laying the foundations for his classic account The Split Australian Labor in the Fifties (1970). The labor spit of the 1950s changed the whole shape of Australian politics, but until now it has been clouded myths and the emotions of the opposing factions. 'The Split' penetrates the confusion and with the aid of 'inside information' examines the complex series of events that led to this momentous breakdown. From the jacket blurb. So it was with this view of the fifties firmly in mind that a couple of years ago Martha Ansara embarked on her oral history of Australian Cameramen, exploring film-making as expressed through labour, and Lisa Milner began delving into the work of the Waterside Workers' Federation Film Unit, exploring the labour movement as expressed The Australian Labor Party (Anti-Communist) (ALP-AC) was the name initially used the right-wing group which arose from the 1955 Labor split. In 1957 it changed its name to the Democratic Labor Party, and was dissolved in 1978. History AUSTRALIAN POLITICS 1945-1950s - Useful Weblinks The view is presented that Labor Party follows the socialist way whereas the Liberal Party believes in a democratic way of life with Why did the Labor Party split? The Split book. Read reviews from world s largest community for readers. To explore options for subscribing to this unique teaching, research, and publishing resource for Australian culture and storytelling, please contact us or find out more. AUTHOR ORGANISATION; Works (A13829) The Split:Australian Labor in the Fifties (1970), Fuels Rush In:Oil and Gas in Australia The Split: Australian Labor in the Fifties, Cheshire, Melbourne, 1970; later editions but has been criticised for alleged bias towards the Democratic Labor Party. The Labor Split of the 1950s changed the whole shape of Australian politics, but until now it has been clouded myths and the emotions of the opposing factions. The Split penetrates this confusion and with the aid of 'inside information' examines the complex series of events that led to this momentous breakdown. The Democratic Labor Party (DLP) in South Australia emerged from the 1955 split which convulsed the Australian Labor Party (ALP) throughout Australia. While it mirrored most aspects of the party elsewhere, the South Australian party was the least successful component of the DLP in mainland Australia. This article is about the Democratic Labor Party that existed between 1955 and 1978. For the modern-day party of the same name, see Democratic Labour Party (Australia). For other uses, see Democratic Labour Party. A disastrous division in its ranks in the mid-1950s kept the Australian Labor Party out of power federally for twenty-three years. Until Gough The Industrial Groups were groups formed the Australian Labor Party (ALP) in the late 1940s, to combat Communist Party influence in the trade unions. In the late 1930s and early 1940s, there was an effort the Communist Party of Australia to infiltrate trade unions in Australia. Had the legislation been upheld, Australia would have had the dubious distinction of being the only English-speaking democracy to ban the Communist Party The Democratic Labor Party emerged from the split in the Australian Labor Party (ALP) in the 1950s. The DLP was created because of opposition to the perceived extent of communist influence in the union movement and on the defence and foreign policies of the ALP in the 1950s. [9] Robert Murray, The Split, Australian Labor in the Fifties, Cheshire, 1970, pp47-48. Murray cites the first issue of the Movement s weekly newspaper, Freedom, where the movement s policy was described under twenty points. [10 ] Robert Murray, The Split, Australian Labor in the Fifties The Split: Australian Labor in the fifties Robert Murray; (Hale and Iremonger, 1984 first published F.W. Cheshire, 1970) The Democratic Labor Party P.l. Reynolds (Jacaranda Press 1974) Catholic Action and Australian Labor: a frank commentary on some of the methods which Catholic Action is subverting the true cause of Labor edited A.W. Sheppard. 114 Dr. Herbert Vere EVATT QC PC Leader of the Opposition 20 June 1951 to 9 February 1960 Bert Evatt became the 15th Leader of the Opposition after the death of Australian Labor Party leader and former Prime Minister Ben Chifley. Get this from a library! The split; Australian Labor in the fifties. [Robert Murray] - The Labor Split of the 1950s changed the whole shape of Australian politics, but until now it has been clouded myths and the emotions of the opposing factions. 'The Split' penetrates this This judgement is formed from Murray's assessment of the interviews conducted for his 1970 book The Split: Australian Labor in the Fifties. Robert Murray 1932 1964-1977 1981
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