James Henderson, “The ‘Workers’ speak out,”
Nation Review, November 7-13, 1975, p. 83.

The surprise in the by-election for the blueribbon Liberal Party seat of Greenough in Western Australia is not that the Liberal candidate has won — it’s that the Workers Party candidate gained almost 13 percent of the primary votes, just marginally less than the ALP. History students might well shudder as they recall that the so called Workers Party in Germany was used by Adolf Hitler as his power base in the early 1920s.

The Workers Party vote in Greenough was just below that of the ALP. The “worker” who attracted the vote is South Perth dentist Geoff McNeil, 36, who was asked by Perth’s Channel Seven news why he had polled so well.

McNeil: I believe the public are now starting to become aware that all political parties in Australia, all the established parties, are literally increasing the size of government at the public’s expense and the increase in taxation is bringing business to its knees with the consequent unemployment, and people in all political camps are increasingly dissatisfied with established parties.

Interviewer: Your party is committed for less government — how do you think you can achieve this?

McNeil: Well, less is by cutting out some of the unnecessary departments, for example the department of the media which is a horror department, there’s only one other in the world, that’s communist Russia, which may or may not be coincidental, cost $153 million last year of our money … the department of urban and regional development which doesn’t develop any blocks and hasn’t done anything at all very much, this expensive department. These particular things can lead to a reduction in taxation.

Interviewer: Will the Workers Party fight another federal election and in what electorates in WA? [In fact, Greenough was a state by-election.]

McNeil: Well, we reckon we’ll stand for marginal seats.

But the Workers Party people in Greenough were telling the electors of the district a bit more about their plans. In the cause of freedom, for instance, they would do away with unions and let each worker have the privilege of negotiating individually with his boss. If he was worth his salt, the worker would do all right.

The “worker” at the head of the party, advertising executive John Singleton, told the West Australian he was still not satisfied with 13 percent. What he really wanted was to beat the ALP on the primary count (nothing about winning a seat).

Premier Charles Court said the Greenough win by R. J. Tubby of Morawa was highly favourable to the Liberals. He said the ALP vote was seven percent below its 1974 state result and almost six percent below the vote it got in last year’s house of representatives poll.

What Court forgot to say was that the Liberal party’s vote, by the same comparison, was a cool 34 percent down on the last state result.

Flushed with his 13 percent, McNeil told the Perth Daily news: “I think we could do just as well in Dalkeith, East Perth or Meekatharta.” There might be something in that as far as Dalkeith is concerned. But if the Workers Party hopes to poll well in more proletarian electorates, it might consider shifting its headquarters from the swanky Riverside Lodge hotel — even if that does mean moving out to a building not owned by the family of Sir Charles Court.