Manx Labour Party
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Manx Labour Party is a political party operating in the Isle of Man. It is independent of its namesake in Great Britain. It was formed in 1918, making it the first organised political party on the island. Its formation was prompted by the high level of indirect taxation as a proportion of the Manx government's income. The founders of the party saw that as being unfair to the poorest in society and wanted to increase the reliance on income taxation instead.[1]
Between 1919, when Labour Party candidates stood in every constituency on the island bar one, and 1946, the party won between four and seven seats in the House of Keys. At the 1946 election the party had high hopes of emulating the British Labour Party's success in the general election that had taken place the previous year, and contested the election on a staunchly socialist manifesto. The party contested every seat in the House of Keys except the Speaker's seat, but won only two. During the 1950s and 1960s the party made a limited recovery, but it has never been able to achieve the level of representation it had before 1946.
In the 2001 election, the Labour Party polled the highest percentage of votes (17.3%) among the parties standing, and two of its three candidates won seats. However, independent candidates won the vast bulk of the votes and seats at the election, and another party, the Alliance for Progressive Government won more seats (three), despite getting a smaller share of the vote (14.6%).
[edit] Manx Labour Party Members of Tynwald
[edit] References
- ^ Government in the Isle of Man: Tynwald and the Manx Council of Ministers -- Kermode 55 (4): 682 -- Parliamentary Affairs. pa.oxfordjournals.org. Retrieved on 2008-03-06.
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