Unity is Strength. A history of the Australian Labor Party and the Trades and Labor Council in Western Australia, 1899-1999

In April 1899, 28 men met in Coolgardie on the Eastern Goldfields to hold Western Australia's first Trades Union Council. It was the genesis of an organised labour movement that, by 1907 was to span the vast State. For 60 years the Australian Labor Party in Western Australia was unique, compris...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Oliver, Bobbie
Format: Book
Published: API Network, Australia Research Institute, Curtin University 2003
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/36358
_version_ 1848754747144667136
author Oliver, Bobbie
author_facet Oliver, Bobbie
author_sort Oliver, Bobbie
building Curtin Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description In April 1899, 28 men met in Coolgardie on the Eastern Goldfields to hold Western Australia's first Trades Union Council. It was the genesis of an organised labour movement that, by 1907 was to span the vast State. For 60 years the Australian Labor Party in Western Australia was unique, comprising political and industrial wings in one united body, thus exemplifying the motto, Unity is Strength. Changing circumstances, including the Party split in the 1950s, however, revealed the need to change the existing structure and an independent Trades and Labor Council formed in 1963. During the ALP's first century, Labor governments held in office in the State for a total of 45 years, leaving an impressive record of social and political reform despite always having to contend with a non-Labor majority in the Legislative Council.Interwoven with the stories of Premiers, Party and union leaders, however, in this Centenary History of the Australian Labor Party (WA), Bobbie Oliver includes the contributions of bush organisers and party workers. Drawing on a vast body of archival material, Dr Oliver relates the slow and often unseen progress of women and minority groups in achieving influence in the Party or the industrial organization. Together with the well publicized struggles and triumphs of the twentieth century including: the 40-hour week, the right of free speech and assembly, health and safety in the workplace, an equitable voting system, are Party splits over conscription in 1916 and in the 1950s creating the Democratic Labor Party; the rise of factionalism, disputes between the Party and the TLC, and 'WA Inc'.In the late 1990s, in the context of hostile 'Third Wave' industrial legislation and the 'War on the Wharves', the ALP and the Trades and Labor Council found new truth in the old motto, Unity is Strength.
first_indexed 2025-11-14T08:45:19Z
format Book
id curtin-20.500.11937-36358
institution Curtin University Malaysia
institution_category Local University
last_indexed 2025-11-14T08:45:19Z
publishDate 2003
publisher API Network, Australia Research Institute, Curtin University
recordtype eprints
repository_type Digital Repository
spelling curtin-20.500.11937-363582017-01-30T13:55:21Z Unity is Strength. A history of the Australian Labor Party and the Trades and Labor Council in Western Australia, 1899-1999 Oliver, Bobbie Political history Australian Labor Party Labour history Western Australia Trades and Labor Council Trade unions Political Parties In April 1899, 28 men met in Coolgardie on the Eastern Goldfields to hold Western Australia's first Trades Union Council. It was the genesis of an organised labour movement that, by 1907 was to span the vast State. For 60 years the Australian Labor Party in Western Australia was unique, comprising political and industrial wings in one united body, thus exemplifying the motto, Unity is Strength. Changing circumstances, including the Party split in the 1950s, however, revealed the need to change the existing structure and an independent Trades and Labor Council formed in 1963. During the ALP's first century, Labor governments held in office in the State for a total of 45 years, leaving an impressive record of social and political reform despite always having to contend with a non-Labor majority in the Legislative Council.Interwoven with the stories of Premiers, Party and union leaders, however, in this Centenary History of the Australian Labor Party (WA), Bobbie Oliver includes the contributions of bush organisers and party workers. Drawing on a vast body of archival material, Dr Oliver relates the slow and often unseen progress of women and minority groups in achieving influence in the Party or the industrial organization. Together with the well publicized struggles and triumphs of the twentieth century including: the 40-hour week, the right of free speech and assembly, health and safety in the workplace, an equitable voting system, are Party splits over conscription in 1916 and in the 1950s creating the Democratic Labor Party; the rise of factionalism, disputes between the Party and the TLC, and 'WA Inc'.In the late 1990s, in the context of hostile 'Third Wave' industrial legislation and the 'War on the Wharves', the ALP and the Trades and Labor Council found new truth in the old motto, Unity is Strength. 2003 Book http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/36358 API Network, Australia Research Institute, Curtin University restricted
spellingShingle Political history
Australian Labor Party
Labour history
Western Australia
Trades and Labor Council
Trade unions
Political Parties
Oliver, Bobbie
Unity is Strength. A history of the Australian Labor Party and the Trades and Labor Council in Western Australia, 1899-1999
title Unity is Strength. A history of the Australian Labor Party and the Trades and Labor Council in Western Australia, 1899-1999
title_full Unity is Strength. A history of the Australian Labor Party and the Trades and Labor Council in Western Australia, 1899-1999
title_fullStr Unity is Strength. A history of the Australian Labor Party and the Trades and Labor Council in Western Australia, 1899-1999
title_full_unstemmed Unity is Strength. A history of the Australian Labor Party and the Trades and Labor Council in Western Australia, 1899-1999
title_short Unity is Strength. A history of the Australian Labor Party and the Trades and Labor Council in Western Australia, 1899-1999
title_sort unity is strength. a history of the australian labor party and the trades and labor council in western australia, 1899-1999
topic Political history
Australian Labor Party
Labour history
Western Australia
Trades and Labor Council
Trade unions
Political Parties
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/36358