Leaders of the Australian Labor Party

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There are Leaders of the Australian Labor Party (ALP) at the federal level as well as in each Australian state and territory. Australian Labor Party leaders are chosen from among the members of the respective parliamentary parties either by the members only or with an input from the ALP rank-and-file members.

Anthony AlbaneseBill ShortenKevin RuddJulia GillardKevin RuddKim BeazleyMark LathamSimon CreanKim BeazleyPaul KeatingBob HawkeBill HaydenGough WhitlamArthur CalwellH.V. EvattBen ChifleyJohn CurtinJames ScullinMatthew CharltonFrank TudorBilly HughesAndrew FisherChris Watson

Background

The federal Labor Caucus comprising the elected members of the Labor party in both Houses of the national Parliament is involved in the election of the federal parliamentary leaders from among its members. The leader has historically been a member of the House of Representatives. Caucus also has the power to dismiss a party leader in a process called a leadership spill. Until 2013, a spill vote could be called at any time and a simple majority of votes in Caucus was sufficient to remove a leader. Following the return of Kevin Rudd to the leadership of the ALP in 2013, he sought changes to the party's rules so that leadership spills would be more difficult to launch in future, including a requirement for 75% majority in Caucus for a leadership spill against a sitting Labor prime minister, or 60% against an opposition leader.[1] The changes also provided for equally weighted voting rights between Caucus and party rank and file members. These changes were adopted by Caucus in July 2013, which was not a change to the party's constitution[2] (and theoretically can be reverted by a simple majority in Caucus). At the October 2013 leadership spill Bill Shorten was the first leader elected under the new rules. Shorten received 55-43 votes in Caucus, which was sufficient to overcome his 40% support among party members.[3]

When the Labor Party is in government, the party leader becomes the Prime Minister and the deputy leader becomes the Deputy Prime Minister. If a Labor prime minister resigns or dies in office, the deputy leader becomes party leader and is sworn in as prime minister on an interim basis until a party successor is elected. This was the case upon the death in office of John Curtin on 5 July 1945. Frank Forde, the deputy party leader, was sworn in as interim prime minister until Ben Chifley was elected by Caucus as party leader on 13 July. If the leader is out of the country or is on leave, the deputy leader acts as party leader and prime minister, without being sworn into the office.

ALP federal parliamentary leaders

The federal Leaders of the Australian Labor Party have been as follows (acting leaders indicated in italics):

# Leader Term start Term end Time in office Prime Minister
1 Chris Watson 20 May 1901 30 October 1907 6 years, 163 days Yes (1904)
2 Andrew Fisher 30 October 1907 27 October 1915 7 years, 362 days Yes (1908–09, 1910–13, 1914–15)
3 Billy Hughes 27 October 1915 14 November 1916 1 year, 18 days Yes (1915–23)
4 Frank Tudor 14 November 1916 10 January 1922 5 years, 57 days No
5 Matthew Charlton 16 May 1922 29 March 1928 5 years, 318 days No
6 James Scullin 26 April 1928 1 October 1935 7 years, 128 days Yes (1929–32)
7 John Curtin 1 October 1935 5 July 1945 9 years, 277 days Yes (1941–45)
Frank Forde 6 July 1945 13 July 1945 7 days Yes (1945)
8 Ben Chifley 13 July 1945 13 June 1951 5 years, 335 days Yes (1945–49)
9 H. V. Evatt 20 June 1951 9 February 1960 8 years, 241 days No
10 Arthur Calwell 7 March 1960 8 February 1967 6 years, 338 days No
11 File:Whitlam1955.jpg Gough Whitlam 9 February 1967 22 December 1977 10 years, 316 days Yes (1972–75)
12 File:BillHayden.jpg Bill Hayden 22 December 1977 3 February 1983 5 years, 43 days No
13 Bob Hawke 3 February 1983 20 December 1991 8 years, 320 days Yes (1983–91)
14 Paul Keating 20 December 1991 2 March 1996 4 years, 73 days Yes (1991–96)
15 Kim Beazley 19 March 1996 11 November 2001 5 years, 237 days No
16 Simon Crean 11 November 2001 2 December 2003 2 years, 21 days No
17 Mark Latham 2 December 2003 18 January 2005 1 year, 47 days No
(15) Kim Beazley 18 January 2005 4 December 2006 1 year, 320 days No
18 Kevin Rudd 4 December 2006 24 June 2010 3 years, 202 days Yes (2007–10)
19 Julia Gillard 24 June 2010 26 June 2013 3 years, 2 days Yes (2010–13)
(18) Kevin Rudd 26 June 2013 13 September 2013 79 days Yes (2013)
Chris Bowen 18 September 2013 13 October 2013 25 days No
20 Bill Shorten 13 October 2013 10 years, 215 days No

ALP federal deputy parliamentary leaders

Shown in chronological order of leadership
# Deputy Leader Term start Term end Time in office Leader
1 Gregor McGregor 20 May 1901 30 July 1914 13 years, 71 days Chris Watson
Andrew Fisher
2 Billy Hughes 18 September 1914 27 October 1915 1 year, 39 days
3 George Pearce 27 October 1915 14 November 1916 1 year, 18 days Billy Hughes
4 Albert Gardiner 14 November 1916 30 June 1926 9 years, 228 days Frank Tudor
Matthew Charlton
5 James Scullin 17 March 1927 29 March 1928 1 year, 12 days
6 Arthur Blakeley 26 April 1928 5 February 1929 285 days James Scullin
7 Ted Theodore 5 February 1929 19 December 1931 2 years, 317 days
8 Frank Forde 16 February 1932 28 September 1946 14 years, 224 days
John Curtin
Ben Chifley
9 H. V. Evatt 31 October 1946 20 June 1951 4 years, 232 days
10 Arthur Calwell 20 June 1951 7 March 1960 8 years, 261 days H. V. Evatt
11 File:Whitlam1955.jpg Gough Whitlam 7 March 1960 9 February 1967 6 years, 339 days Arthur Calwell
12 Lance Barnard 9 February 1967 12 June 1974 7 years, 123 days Gough Whitlam
13 Jim Cairns 12 June 1974 2 July 1975 1 year, 20 days
14 Frank Crean 2 July 1975 22 December 1975 173 days
15 Tom Uren 22 December 1975 22 December 1977 2 years, 0 days
16 Lionel Bowen 22 December 1977 4 April 1990 12 years, 103 days Bill Hayden
Bob Hawke
16 Paul Keating 4 April 1990 3 Jun 1991 1 year, 60 days
17 Brian Howe 3 June 1991 20 June 1995 4 years, 17 days
Paul Keating
18 Kim Beazley 20 June 1995 19 March 1996 273 days
19 Gareth Evans 19 March 1996 19 October 1998 2 years, 214 days Kim Beazley
20 Simon Crean 19 October 1998 11 November 2001 3 years, 23 days
21 Jenny Macklin 11 November 2001 4 December 2006 5 years, 23 days Simon Crean
Mark Latham
Kim Beazley
22 Julia Gillard 4 December 2006 24 June 2010 3 years, 202 days Kevin Rudd
23 Wayne Swan 24 June 2010 27 June 2013 3 years, 3 days Julia Gillard
24 Anthony Albanese 27 June 2013 14 October 2013 109 days Kevin Rudd
25 Tanya Plibersek 14 October 2013 10 years, 214 days Bill Shorten

Past Labor premiers and chief ministers

Australian Capital Territory

New South Wales

Northern Territory

  • Clare Martin (2001–07, first Labor Chief Minister of the Northern Territory, first female Chief Minister of the Northern Territory)
  • Paul Henderson (2007–12)

Queensland

South Australia

Tasmania

Victoria

Western Australia

References

  1. ^ http://www.abc.net.au/news/2013-07-08/kevin-rudd-reveals-plan-for-labor-party-leadership-voting-reform/4806820
  2. ^ Kevin Rudd wins over party-p leadership-p rules
  3. ^ Harrison, Bill (13 October 2013). "Bill Shorten elected Labor leader". The Sydney Morning Herald. Retrieved 19 July 2014.