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The NSW branch of the Australian Labor Party, known as the Labor Electoral League of New South Wales from 1891 to 1917, first won 35 of the 141 seats in the NSW parliament at the 1891 election.
The Australian Worker was a newspaper produced in Sydney, ... Later a share was sold to the Labor Electoral League. [2] and the last issue 3 September 1892.
With the support of the Labor Electoral League, he unsuccessfully stood for election to the New South Wales Legislative Assembly in 1894 and 1895. During that period, he was the proprietor of the Daily Post newspaper, sympathetic to the labour movement, which ended in liquidation, with Holman and four other directors convicted of fraud. He ...
NSW None [n] [86] CV: Community Voice [o] 2007–2008: Jenny Stirling QLD Townsville [88] CI: Cumberland Independents 2018–2018 NSW Cumberland [70] IM: Innovate Melbourne 2020–2020: Andrew Rowse VIC Melbourne [81] IWBOM: It Will Be Okay Melbourne 2020–2020: Joseph Burke VIC Melbourne [81] TFT: It's Time for Townsville 2020–2020: Greg ...
John George Gough (5 November 1848 – 15 November 1907) was one of the founders of the New South Wales Labour Party, initially the Labour Electoral League, the first political Labour movement in Australia. He was also one of Labour's five-member leadership group when the party first made its appearance in the New South Wales parliament in 1891.
NSW 1999–2007 RR: Residents Rally: ACT 1989–1992 SAF: SA First: SA 1999–2002 SUPA: Seniors United Party of Australia: NSW 2015–2022 Pensioners' interests: STL: Single Tax League: SA 1930–1941 Georgism: SLP: Socialist Labor Party: NSW 1920–1921 De Leonism: TA: Territory Alliance: NT 2019–2020 TMP: Transport Matters Party: VIC 2018 ...
He was elected to the executive of the Trades and Labor Council. He supported maritime workers in the 1890 strike, paying his own way to travel to England to raise support for the strikers. He returned to Sydney where he was one of the founders of the Labor Electoral League, which became the Labor party. [1]
Following Labor's loss in the 2021 Upper Hunter by-election, then-leader Jodi McKay resigned under pressure from the party caucus. [1] Initially the leadership election saw former opposition leader Michael Daley, who led Labor to a defeat in the 2019 New South Wales state election declare his candidacy for a second time on 30 May 2021.