Non-Labor parties, 1894-1912 : the development of their parliamentary and electoral organization in New South Wales and Tasmania
Abstract
Very little is known about the development of the
non-Labour parties in Australia. Furthermore, the emergence
of parties has seldom been the subject of theoretical
examination. In this thesis I suggest that the early stages
of development of any party can be studied by examining its
use of political resources, such as organization and ideology,
and its development of a collective identity.
Between 1894 and 1912 the non-Labor parties in New
South Wales and Tasmania gradually increased their activities
and became recognizable as distinct collective bodies. In
Parliament they devised methods of maintaining unity which
were informal but which were as effective as the procedures
of the Labor party. In the electorate the non-Labor parties
began to co-ordinate campaigns and to develop a coherent
policy and a well articulated organization. They deliberately
used procedures which turned existing political influences
to their own advantage. In both spheres of activity, the
non-Labor parties had to act within constraints created by
the existing political attitudes of the non-Labor members.
In both states the non-Labor parties developed along similar
lines because, despite the economic and geographical
differences, the political resources available to them were
generally the same.
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