*THE
WORKER*
BRISBANE
APRIL 13, 1895.
Deputation
from the Worker's Union.
Mr.
Cameron introduced a deputation from the Australian Worker's Union to
the Hon. H. M. Nelson last week at Longreach, the deputation
consisting of Messrs. A. J. Brown, R. D. Shillington, and Henry
Kelly. The Hon. A. J. Thynne and the Hon. R. Philp were also present.
Mr.
Cameron said the deputation desired to explain the necessity for and
the advisable-ness of securing an alteration of the present electoral
laws, as such laws disfranchised a large number of men who were
perfectly competent to vote, but who by following their ordinary
vocations in the bush, were debarred from exercising their undoubted
rights through their inability to fulfil the requirements of the
residential clause. Mr. Cameron said he was a very old resident of
the outside districts, and he knew it was quite impossible for a
considerable number of men to qualify themselves for a vote and earn
their living at the same time. Men had to start, say, in the Gregory
district, and had to work up right through the Barcoo and Mitchell
districts, staying in none of such places long enough to acquire a
vote.
The
Premier; Where are their wives?
(What
a question? - ED.)
Mr.
Cameron said the majority were single men.
Mr.
Shillington said Mr. Cameron had very fairly stated the case, and if
the Government thoroughly understood the conditions under which the
bush workers had to live, they would acknowledge the impossibility of
their fulfilling the electoral qualifications. He thought the
Government might give the workers some kind of voter's right, such as
they had in Victoria.
Mr.
Nelson; The voter's right in Victoria only applies to one electorate.
Mr.
Shillington said if a worker changed from one electorate to another
he should be allowed to change his right easily; but if he was coming
back he should only exercise it in the original electorate.
Mr.
Brown said their very occupation debarred them from fulfilling the
residential conditions. The Government were sufficiently strong to
give them something which would make it easier for them to secure a
vote.
Mr.
Kelly said they only asked for facilities for Queensland men, not
those who might come over from New South Wales. Mr. Nelson, in reply,
said he did not feel inclined, from the arguments they had brought
forward, to take any action in the way they would like. In the first
place, it was not to the interest of the colony to encourage a
nomadic population, and the Government had tried by land laws and
other means to get the people to make homes for themselves. Surely
the men of the colony should have homes somewhere. The whole basis of
representation had been upon a certain number of people being located
in a certain locality. Of course if the colony was one electorate,
returning seventy members, that proposal might be right. They were
not in a worse position than commercial travellers, who were
constantly shifting in the pursuit of their ordinary business.
Mr.
Shillington said the commercial traveller had somewhere to start
from. He had a home.
Mr.
Nelson asked why they should not have a home? The Government had
offered every facility. The system they proposed would be utterly
subversive of all justice in any form of representation. He asked if
the deputation wanted the colony made one electorate.
Mr.
Cameron explained that what the deputation wanted was that a man
moving from one district to another should not lose his electoral
qualifications until he had had the opportunity of acquiring a new
one.
The
Premier said the men had that opportunity. He would not give further
electoral privileges, as those now existing were among the most
liberal in the world. The men here were in perfectly the same
position as those in the South.
Mr.
Shillington; They do not change as we change, every six months or
less.
After
further discussion, in which Mr. Cameron urged the men's cause, the
Premier said he could give them no encouragement. Every man should
have a stake in the country he had no right to vote.
The
deputation then withdrew. - Courier.
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