Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://dbpedia.org/resource/Parliamentary_Labor_Party> ?p ?o }
Showing triples 1 to 72 of
72
with 100 triples per page.
- Parliamentary_Labor_Party abstract "The Parliamentary Labor Party (also known as the Premiers' Plan Labor Party or Ministerial Labor Party) was a political party active in South Australia from August 1931 until June 1934.The party came into existence as a result of intense dispute, especially within the Australian Labor Party, about the handling of the response to the Great Depression. In June 1931, a meeting of state premiers agreed on the Premiers' Plan, which involved sweeping austerity measures combined with increases in revenue. In August 1931, the South Australian state conference of the Labor Party expelled the 23 of the 30 lower house and the 2 of the 4 upper house Labor MPs who had voted for it, including Premier Lionel Hill and his entire Cabinet.Expelled MPs (23) in the House of Assembly: Frederick BirrellAlfred BlackwellThomas ButterfieldClement CollinsGeorge CookeJack CritchleyBill DennyThomas EdwardsEven GeorgeWilliam Smith HarveyLionel HillLeonard HopkinsRobert HunterBeasley KearneyArthur McArthurSydney McHughJohn McInnesJohn PedlerRobert RichardsEric ShepherdFrank StanifordAlbert ThompsonWalter WarneExpelled MPs (2) in the Legislative Council: James JelleyStanley WhitfordUpon the failure of a November appeal to the federal executive of the Labor Party, the expelled MPs definitively constituted themselves as a separate parliamentary party.The PLP ministry remained in power until the 1933 election with the support of the opposition, having soundly lost its majority. Hill, facing increasing political challenges, had himself appointed Agent-General in London and abruptly quit politics in February 1932. Robert Richards briefly succeeded him as Premier, and led the party into the 1933 election.The party, along with the official Labor Party and the rival splinter Lang Labor Party, performed poorly at the 1933 election. Of the 23 MPs the party had going into the election, only five – Blackwell, McInnes, Pedler, and Richards in the House of Assembly, and Whitford in the Legislative Council, remained afterwards. The three Labor factions won only 13 seats between them.Two of the three Lang Labor Party MHAs elected at the 1933 state election, Bob Dale and Tom Howard, left the party in 1933 post-election after falling out with leader Doug Bardolph and formed their own party, the South Australian Lang Labor Party (SALLP).The four Labor parties merged back into the official Labor Party in June 1934 under the leadership of Andrew Lacey of the official Labor faction, following a successful unity conference. Whitford, the party's sole member of the Legislative Council, had left the party to sit as an independent by the time of the conference, and was not re-admitted.".
- Parliamentary_Labor_Party wikiPageID "44845043".
- Parliamentary_Labor_Party wikiPageLength "6607".
- Parliamentary_Labor_Party wikiPageOutDegree "51".
- Parliamentary_Labor_Party wikiPageRevisionID "700451979".
- Parliamentary_Labor_Party wikiPageWikiLink Albert_Thompson_(Australian_politician).
- Parliamentary_Labor_Party wikiPageWikiLink Alfred_Blackwell.
- Parliamentary_Labor_Party wikiPageWikiLink Andrew_Lacey.
- Parliamentary_Labor_Party wikiPageWikiLink Arthur_McArthur_(politician).
- Parliamentary_Labor_Party wikiPageWikiLink Australian_Labor_Party_(South_Australian_Branch).
- Parliamentary_Labor_Party wikiPageWikiLink Beasley_Kearney.
- Parliamentary_Labor_Party wikiPageWikiLink Bill_Denny.
- Parliamentary_Labor_Party wikiPageWikiLink Bob_Dale_(politician).
- Parliamentary_Labor_Party wikiPageWikiLink Category:Australian_Labor_Party_breakaway_groups.
- Parliamentary_Labor_Party wikiPageWikiLink Category:Defunct_political_parties_in_South_Australia.
- Parliamentary_Labor_Party wikiPageWikiLink Category:Political_parties_disestablished_in_1934.
- Parliamentary_Labor_Party wikiPageWikiLink Category:Political_parties_established_in_1931.
- Parliamentary_Labor_Party wikiPageWikiLink Category:Politics_of_South_Australia.
- Parliamentary_Labor_Party wikiPageWikiLink Clement_Collins.
- Parliamentary_Labor_Party wikiPageWikiLink Doug_Bardolph.
- Parliamentary_Labor_Party wikiPageWikiLink Eric_Shepherd.
- Parliamentary_Labor_Party wikiPageWikiLink Even_George.
- Parliamentary_Labor_Party wikiPageWikiLink Frank_Staniford.
- Parliamentary_Labor_Party wikiPageWikiLink Frederick_Birrell.
- Parliamentary_Labor_Party wikiPageWikiLink George_Cooke_(Australian_politician).
- Parliamentary_Labor_Party wikiPageWikiLink Great_Depression_in_Australia.
- Parliamentary_Labor_Party wikiPageWikiLink Jack_Critchley.
- Parliamentary_Labor_Party wikiPageWikiLink James_Jelley.
- Parliamentary_Labor_Party wikiPageWikiLink John_McInnes_(politician).
- Parliamentary_Labor_Party wikiPageWikiLink John_Pedler.
- Parliamentary_Labor_Party wikiPageWikiLink Lang_Labor_Party_(South_Australia).
- Parliamentary_Labor_Party wikiPageWikiLink Legislative_council.
- Parliamentary_Labor_Party wikiPageWikiLink Leonard_Hopkins.
- Parliamentary_Labor_Party wikiPageWikiLink Lionel_Hill.
- Parliamentary_Labor_Party wikiPageWikiLink Members_of_the_South_Australian_House_of_Assembly,_1930–1933.
- Parliamentary_Labor_Party wikiPageWikiLink Members_of_the_South_Australian_Legislative_Council,_1930–1933.
- Parliamentary_Labor_Party wikiPageWikiLink Political_party.
- Parliamentary_Labor_Party wikiPageWikiLink Premiers_Plan.
- Parliamentary_Labor_Party wikiPageWikiLink Richards_Ministry.
- Parliamentary_Labor_Party wikiPageWikiLink Robert_Hunter_(Australian_politician).
- Parliamentary_Labor_Party wikiPageWikiLink Robert_Richards_(Australian_politician).
- Parliamentary_Labor_Party wikiPageWikiLink South_Australia.
- Parliamentary_Labor_Party wikiPageWikiLink South_Australian_House_of_Assembly.
- Parliamentary_Labor_Party wikiPageWikiLink South_Australian_state_election,_1933.
- Parliamentary_Labor_Party wikiPageWikiLink Stanley_Whitford.
- Parliamentary_Labor_Party wikiPageWikiLink Sydney_McHugh.
- Parliamentary_Labor_Party wikiPageWikiLink Thomas_Butterfield.
- Parliamentary_Labor_Party wikiPageWikiLink Thomas_Edwards_(Australian_politician).
- Parliamentary_Labor_Party wikiPageWikiLink Tom_Howard_(politician).
- Parliamentary_Labor_Party wikiPageWikiLink Walter_Warne.
- Parliamentary_Labor_Party wikiPageWikiLink William_Smith_Harvey.
- Parliamentary_Labor_Party wikiPageWikiLinkText "PLP".
- Parliamentary_Labor_Party wikiPageWikiLinkText "Parliamentary Labor Party".
- Parliamentary_Labor_Party wikiPageWikiLinkText "Parliamentary Labor".
- Parliamentary_Labor_Party wikiPageWikiLinkText "Premiers Plan Labor".
- Parliamentary_Labor_Party wikiPageWikiLinkText "Premiers' Plan Labor".
- Parliamentary_Labor_Party wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:About.
- Parliamentary_Labor_Party wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Reflist.
- Parliamentary_Labor_Party subject Category:Australian_Labor_Party_breakaway_groups.
- Parliamentary_Labor_Party subject Category:Defunct_political_parties_in_South_Australia.
- Parliamentary_Labor_Party subject Category:Political_parties_disestablished_in_1934.
- Parliamentary_Labor_Party subject Category:Political_parties_established_in_1931.
- Parliamentary_Labor_Party subject Category:Politics_of_South_Australia.
- Parliamentary_Labor_Party hypernym Party.
- Parliamentary_Labor_Party type PoliticalParty.
- Parliamentary_Labor_Party comment "The Parliamentary Labor Party (also known as the Premiers' Plan Labor Party or Ministerial Labor Party) was a political party active in South Australia from August 1931 until June 1934.The party came into existence as a result of intense dispute, especially within the Australian Labor Party, about the handling of the response to the Great Depression.".
- Parliamentary_Labor_Party label "Parliamentary Labor Party".
- Parliamentary_Labor_Party sameAs Q19876841.
- Parliamentary_Labor_Party sameAs m.012hswtf.
- Parliamentary_Labor_Party sameAs Q19876841.
- Parliamentary_Labor_Party wasDerivedFrom Parliamentary_Labor_Party?oldid=700451979.
- Parliamentary_Labor_Party isPrimaryTopicOf Parliamentary_Labor_Party.