Tom Stott

Tom Stott

Tom Cleave Stott CBE (6 June 1899-21 October 1976) spent 37 years as an independent member of the South Australian House of Assembly, serving as Speaker of the House from 1962 to 1965 and 1968 to 1970.

Born in Norwood, South Australia, Stott completed primary school and began working for his father on their 2225 hectare wheat farm near Mindarie, in the Murray Mallee region of South Australia, while continuing his education through Workers' Educational Association (WEA) classes and extensive reading.

Stott showed great interest in the problems facing his fellow wheat farmers and joined the newly formed Country Party in 1920. As President of his local branch, Stott began to raise his profile around the electorate and in farming circles, helping to found the Farmers Protection Association in 1929, the South Australian Wheatgrowers Protection Association (SAWPA) in 1930 and the Australian Wheatgrowers Federation (AWF) in 1931. He was also appointed General Secretary of each of these organisations.

Stott was considering seeking Country Party preselection for his local Electoral district of Albert at the 1933 election when it was announced that the Country Party would merge with the urban based Liberal Federation to form the Liberal and Country League (LCL). He opposed the move, fearing both that the rural prerogative of the Country Party would be diminished and that his preselection may become more difficult. His fears were partly realised when he lost LCL pre-selection; Stott promptly resigned from the party to run as an independent.

Stott was given little chance of winning but his standing within the influential wheat farming community in Albert, his Freemasonry connections and his vocal opposition to the Country Party/Liberal Federation merger led to his election. He soon proved to be a thorn in the side of the newly elected LCL government of Richard Layton Butler, being dubbed the "Farmer's Champion" due to his vocal support of Great Depression affected farmers, and, due to the ineffectiveness of the Labor Party, Stott was considered by the LCL to be "a greater nuisance than the whole of the Opposition put together".

Upon his election in 1933, Stott was forced to resign from his Secretariat position with SAWPA but retained his role with the AWF. He also helped found the Primary Producers Council of Australia (the antecedent of the National Farmers' Federation) in 1934 and continued to play a leading role within that organisation. This influence within these important primary industry bodies allowed Stott to build a power base for himself that assisted with his continued re-election over the next three decades.

In addition to his parliamentary work on rural issues, such as successfully introducing legislation to secure a (high) stable price for wheat and to enable bulk handling of grain, Stott also proved himself to be adept at championing prickly social issues, including introducing a successful Private Member's Bill to reduce the period a divorce could be granted in the case of desertion from five to three years. This success led the government to approach Stott to introduce other controversial social issue legislation that the LCL supported but did not want to introduce. The public recognised this and many people who approached Stott for assistance were not in his electorate.

While Stott was comfortably re-elected at the 1938 election in the newly formed Electoral district of Ridley (following the division of Albert into two single electoral districts), the result of the election, whereby 15 independents were elected, alongside 15 LCL and nine ALP, led to uncertainty over which party, if any could form government. This confusion led Stott, as the most experienced and well known of the Independent MPs, to believe that he could become Premier. He failed to gain the support of sufficient independents and LCL members to achieve this but, as the de facto leader of the Independent caucus within parliament, the LCL government were forced to rely on his support far more than they would have liked.

The commencement of World War II led Stott to argue that the forthcoming 1941 election should be cancelled and an LCL/ALP/Independent coalition government instigated (perhaps with himself in a prominent position) to concentrate on fighting the war. The election went ahead with Stott easily retaining his seat due to his reputation for his unstinting support of farmers, to the point that he was known as "Christ of the Mallee" where, it was written, "few would have glanced if he had walked on water".

Following the 1941 election, Premier Tom Playford approached Stott about joining the LCL but while Stott refused, he remained a fervent admirer of Playford and publicly praised the Premier wherever possible. In return, Playford pressured the LCL into not standing a candidate against Stott for successive elections and when the local LCL branch finally refused Playford's request, he apologised profusely to Stott and did little to support the candidate of his own party.

Stott's continued electoral success can not purely be credited to his influence within bodies like the AWF. Stott was also heavily involved with the wine and citrus industries and helped get producers in both industries significant government concessions. He was renowned for his indepth knowledge of any issue he debated, which he achieved through prodigious research. His wife Linda, whom he married in 1926, was also a savvy political campaigner who was heavily involved in issues around the electorate and proved a great asset for Stott. Perhaps however, his greatest asset was his reputation as a tireless campaigner who never gave up on a constituent issue; in one case Stott spent over twenty years arguing with government departments on behalf of constituent seeking to be connected to the water supply before his eventual success. Taking into account his public persona as a man with a square jaw, resonant voice and great presence who drank, smoked and owned and wagered on horses (Stott would serve as President of the South Australian Racehorse Owners Association), and who was not afraid of condemnation by the churches for this lifestyle, Stott retained statewide popularity throughout his term in parliament.

Following the 1962 election, there was a hung parliament whereby the LCL held 19 seats, Labor 19 and Stott held the balance of power. The ALP were initially hopeful of convincing Stott to support them in government but Playford praised Stott for his long service to South Australia, Stott referred to Playford as the greatest Premier in history and the Labor Party resigned itself to another three years in opposition. Playford named Stott Speaker of the House, ensuring that Stott had the casting vote on any contentious legislation, which he used almost without fail to support the LCL.

Stott lost the speakership following the 1965 election but regained it (and the balance of power) in 1968 when the LCL, under Steele Hall returned to power. The government, being reliant on Stott's support, always welcomed his suggestions and when Stott recommended the construction of a dam at Chowilla (within his electorate), the LCL initially readily agreed. However, Hall realised the proposed dam would be an expensive white elephant and refused to fund the dam. Protests in Ridley forced Stott to vote with the Opposition to defeat Hall's government, leading to the return of Don Dunstan as Premier, something that Stott had fervently worked against for the previous decade.

Following his retirement at the 1970 election Stott lent his expertise to the Country Party as an organiser and campaign director and died in 1976, still angry with Steele Hall over Chowilla Dam.

References

*Australian Dictionary of Biography
last= Jennings
first= Reece
authorlink=
year=2002
id=A160391b
title= Stott, Tom Cleave (1899 - 1976)
accessdate=2008-05-03

*"Barnacles and Parasites", R. Jennings, Nesfield Press, Adelaide (1992). ISBN 978-0-9599230-4-9


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