Two letters to the editor appeared under the one title, “Hancock and the Workers,” in The Australian, April 1, 1992, p. 10; the first one by Bill Stacey, the second Roger Wickham. Here they are:

The Weekend Australian’s obituary for Lang Hancock (28-29/3) referred to his financial support for the “extreme right wing” and misnamed Workers Party. This is not an accurate description of Hancock’s position or that of the Workers Party.

In 1987, while a student at the University of Western Australia, I conducted research into the Workers Party. Although the party sought support and finance from Hancock and a number of Workers Party members were personal friends or had discussions with him, financial support was never forthcoming. Hancock attended the party launch at the Sydney Opera House on January 25, 1975, and was the guest speaker at some party functions in recognition of their common belief in free enterprise.

However, Hancock had doubts about the electoral prospects of the party and strongly disagreed with some aspects of the Workers Party platform. This is not surprising since the Workers Party was no “right-wing” party, but a radical proponent of free enterprise libertarianism. It sought to remove government-initiated coercion from business and from private relations between people.

Provisions of the 1975 platform included: “The repeal of all laws restricting or controlling the production, transportation, sale, possession or use of any food supplement or drug”; “that land currently held ‘in trust’ by various governments be returned to the Aboriginal Australians with full property rights”; and the rights of a child “to seek alternative guardians, and to enjoy full rights of ownership over his own property”.

These rights were seen as an essential component of liberty, along with free trade, lower taxes, the privatisation of government instrumentalities and open immigration. This does not constitute a “right-wing” agenda. The Workers Party was more interested in influencing ideas than votes. Ideas such as privatisation, free trade and ending prohibition in drug policy are now part of political debate. Despite its short life the Workers Party did have some success.

WILLIAM J. STACEY
Fitzroy, Vic

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The need to define our words, labels and terms today, before we can understand each other in routine communication is highlighted in your obituary on Lang Hancock.

You say he was “a champion of extreme right-wing politics”. I have read that the Ku Klux Klan, the Nazi Party and Eugene Terre Blanche, for example, practise extreme right-wing politics. Is theirs the kind of politics you will have us believe that Lang Hancock championed? If so, that is not true. If not, then what exactly do you mean?

“He also championed failed political parties such as the misnamed Workers Party and the National Party of … Sir Joh Bjelke-Petersen”. Joh Bjelke-Petersen’s National Party was a failure? Where? When? Compared with which successful political parties?

Finally, “… the misnamed Workers Party”. Misnamed? How? Why? In whose opinion beside yours? Does that mean that the Labor, Liberal and Democrat parties are correctly named — or would you just care to explain what you do mean?

ROGER J. WICKHAM
Ascot, Qld