- Fred Daly
Frederick Michael Daly (
13 June 1912 -2 August 1995 ) was a long-servingAustralian Labor Party politician , a member of theAustralian House of Representatives for 32 years from 1943 to 1975, and Minister for Administrative Services in the government ofGough Whitlam (1972-75).Daly was born in Currabubulla, a small town in northern
New South Wales , and was educated at Catholic schools, becoming a clerk in the Department of the Navy and an official of theFederated Clerks Union , a stronghold of the Catholic right wing of the Labour movement. At the 1943 election he unexpectedly won Martin, a previously safeUnited Australia Party seat on the north shore ofSydney . He rapidly established himself as a skilled and witty debater, and became a protege ofBen Chifley , Labor Prime Minister from 1945.Labor was defeated at the 1949 election, at which Daly shifted to the safe Labor seat of Grayndler. Daly spent the next 23 years as an opposition frontbencher - one of a generation of Labor politicians whose career opportunities were greatly reduced by the splits and internal conflicts of the 1950s and 1960s. As a right-wing Catholic, Daly had many sympathies with the right-wing group which left the Labor Party in 1955 and later formed the
Democratic Labor Party , but he remained loyal to the party and defeated several attempts by the left to challenge his party endorsement.Daly became well known as one of the great humourists of the House. Among his well-known lines were: "the Country Party has two election policies - one for people and one for sheep," and "He (
Billy Snedden ) couldn't lead a flock of homing pigeons."From 1967 onwards Daly was a strong supporter of
Gough Whitlam in his battles with the left wing of the party, and in 1969 Whitlam made him Shadow Minister for Immigration. But his support for retaining some elements of theWhite Australia Policy in Labor's platform caused Whitlam to remove him from the portfolio. When Labor won the 1972 election - by which time Daly was the longest-serving member of the House - he became Minister for Services and Property (in 1974 renamed Administrative Services).This put Daly in charge of, among other things, the
Australian Electoral Commission , and he tried to pass legislation which would have abolished the malapportionment of electorates in favour of rural areas (seeAustralian electoral system ), but his bills were defeated in the Senate. After the 1974 election he was able to get many of his reforms to the electoral system passed.After the Whitlam government was dismissed by the Governor-General, Sir John Kerr in November 1975 (see
1975 Australian constitutional crisis ), Daly announced he would retire from parliament and not contest the December election. He delayed his announcement to the last minute to ensure that Whitlam's sonTony Whitlam was able to secure endorsement for Grayndler without opposition.In retirement Daly published two volumes of humorous memoirs, "From Curtin to Kerr" and "The Politician who Laughed". He remained active in the New South Wales Labor Party until his death in 1995, when he was accorded a state funeral at St Brigid's Church, Marrickville, attended by a huge crowd of Labor loyalists.
References
Persondata
NAME=Daly, Frederick Michael
ALTERNATIVE NAMES=Daly, Fred
SHORT DESCRIPTION=Australia npolitician
DATE OF BIRTH=13 June 1912
PLACE OF BIRTH=Currabubulla, New South Wales
DATE OF DEATH=2 August 1995
PLACE OF DEATH=
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