Jump to content

Shadow Ministry of Gough Whitlam (1975–77): Difference between revisions

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Content deleted Content added
m v2.04 - Repaired 1 link to disambiguation page - (You can help) - John Button / Fix errors for CW project (DEFAULTSORT missing for titles with special letters)
Fix bare URLs references
 
(3 intermediate revisions by 3 users not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
{{refimprove|date=July 2022}}
{{more citations needed|date=July 2022}}
The '''Shadow Ministry of Gough Whitlam''' was the opposition [[Australian Labor Party]] [[Shadow Ministry of Australia|shadow ministry]] of [[Australia]] from 21 January 1976 to 29 December 1977, opposing [[Malcolm Fraser]]'s [[Coalition (Australia)|Coalition]] [[Second Fraser ministry|ministry]].
The '''Shadow Ministry of Gough Whitlam''' was the opposition [[Australian Labor Party]] [[Shadow Ministry of Australia|shadow ministry]] of [[Australia]] from 21 January 1976 to 29 December 1977, opposing [[Malcolm Fraser]]'s [[Coalition (Australia)|Coalition]] [[Second Fraser ministry|ministry]].


Line 6: Line 6:
Whitlam had not formed a Shadow Ministry after losing government during the [[1975 Australian constitutional crisis|1975 constitutional crisis]] and had used the title "Leader of the Majority in the House of Representatives" for himself rather than [[Leader of the Opposition (Australia)|Leader of the Opposition]]. When the Labor Party lost their majority at the [[1975 Australian federal election|1975 election]], Whitlam returned to use of the Opposition Leader title and a new Shadow Ministry was appointed.
Whitlam had not formed a Shadow Ministry after losing government during the [[1975 Australian constitutional crisis|1975 constitutional crisis]] and had used the title "Leader of the Majority in the House of Representatives" for himself rather than [[Leader of the Opposition (Australia)|Leader of the Opposition]]. When the Labor Party lost their majority at the [[1975 Australian federal election|1975 election]], Whitlam returned to use of the Opposition Leader title and a new Shadow Ministry was appointed.


==Shadow Ministry (1975-1977)==
==Shadow Ministry (1975–1977)==
The following were members of the Shadow Cabinet from 21 January 1976 to 29 December 1977:<ref>http://psephos.adam-carr.net/countries/a/australia/officebearers/shadows1.txt</ref>
The following were members of the Shadow Cabinet from 21 January 1976 to 29 December 1977:<ref>{{cite web|url=http://psephos.adam-carr.net/countries/a/australia/officebearers/shadows1.txt|title=OPPOSITION EXECUTIVES AND SHADOW MINISTRIES|access-date=2023-08-16|format=txt}}</ref>


{| class="wikitable"
{| class="wikitable"
Line 81: Line 81:
| Senator [[Doug McClelland]]
| Senator [[Doug McClelland]]
|
|
* Shadow Minister for Adminsitrative Services
* Shadow Minister for Administrative Services
|-
|-
| [[Peter Morris (politician)|Peter Morris]] {{post-nominals|country=AUS|MP}}
| [[Peter Morris (politician)|Peter Morris]] {{post-nominals|country=AUS|MP}}

Latest revision as of 22:07, 16 August 2023

The Shadow Ministry of Gough Whitlam was the opposition Australian Labor Party shadow ministry of Australia from 21 January 1976 to 29 December 1977, opposing Malcolm Fraser's Coalition ministry.

The shadow cabinet is a group of senior Opposition spokespeople who form an alternative Cabinet to the government's, whose members shadow or mark each individual Minister or portfolio of the Government.

Whitlam had not formed a Shadow Ministry after losing government during the 1975 constitutional crisis and had used the title "Leader of the Majority in the House of Representatives" for himself rather than Leader of the Opposition. When the Labor Party lost their majority at the 1975 election, Whitlam returned to use of the Opposition Leader title and a new Shadow Ministry was appointed.

Shadow Ministry (1975–1977)

[edit]

The following were members of the Shadow Cabinet from 21 January 1976 to 29 December 1977:[1]

Shadow Minister Portfolio
Gough Whitlam QC MP
Tom Uren MP
Senator Ken Wriedt
Senator Jim Keeffe
  • Deputy Leader of the Opposition in the Senate (to 31 May 1977)
  • Shadow Minister for Northern Australia and Aboriginal Affairs
Kim Beazley MP
  • Shadow Minister for Education
  • Shadow Minister for Defence (to 15 March 1976)
Lionel Bowen MP
  • Shadow Attorney-General
Senator John Button
  • Shadow Minister for Construction (to 25 March 1976)
  • Shadow Minister for Media and Films (from 25 March 1976)
Dr Moss Cass MP
  • Shadow Minister for Health (to 31 May 1977)
Rex Connor MP
  • Shadow Minister for Science (to 22 August 1977)
Senator Donald Grimes
  • Shadow Minister for Social Security
  • Shadow Minister for Repatriation and Compensation (25 March 1976 to 2 June 1977)
  • Shadow Minister for Veterans' Affairs and Compensation (from 2 June 1977)
Chris Hurford MP
  • Shadow Treasurer
  • Shadow Minister for Trade (from 2 June 1977)
Ted Innes MP
  • Shadow Minister for Immigration and Ethnic Affairs
Paul Keating MP
  • Shadow Minister for Agriculture (to 25 March 1976)
  • Shadow Minister for Minerals and Energy (from 25 March 1976)
Senator Doug McClelland
  • Shadow Minister for Administrative Services
Peter Morris MP
  • Shadow Minister for Transport
Senator Tony Mulvihill
  • Shadow Minister for Environment
Gordon Scholes MP
  • Shadow Minister for Postal and Telecommunications (to 2 June 1977)
  • Shadow Minister for Primary Industry (from 2 June 1977)
Senator John Wheeldon
  • Shadow Minister for Repatriation and Compensation (to 19 March 1976)
  • Shadow Minister for Media and Films (to 19 March 1976)
Ralph Willis MP
  • Shadow Minister for Industrial Relations
Mick Young MP
  • Shadow Minister for Industry and Commerce, Business and Consumer Affairs
Senator Arthur Gietzelt
  • Shadow Minister for Agriculture (25 March 1976 to 31 May 1977)
Bill Hayden MP
  • Shadow Minister for Health and Social Security
Charles Jones MP
  • Shadow Minister for Transport
Dr Dick Klugman MP
  • Shadow Minister for Health and Science (from 2 June 1977)

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ "OPPOSITION EXECUTIVES AND SHADOW MINISTRIES" (txt). Retrieved 2023-08-16.