Tony Luchetti

http://dbpedia.org/resource/Tony_Luchetti an entity of type: Thing

Anthony Sylvester Luchetti, AM (27 May 1904 – 11 July 1984) was a long serving Australian federal member of parliament. Born of Italian/Irish parentage in Lowther, New South Wales, Luchetti was educated in the Catholic school system before working in jobs as varied as miner and journalist. Involved in the Australian Labor Party (ALP) from an early age, Luchetti was elected to the Lithgow City Council and served on the New South Wales ALP Executive from 1929 to 1931. rdf:langString
rdf:langString Tony Luchetti
rdf:langString Tony Luchetti
rdf:langString Tony Luchetti
xsd:date 1984-07-11
xsd:date 1904-05-27
xsd:integer 1449921
xsd:integer 1089912229
xsd:date 1904-05-27
xsd:date 1984-07-11
rdf:langString Australian
rdf:langString Miner, journalist
rdf:langString Australian
xsd:date 1975-11-11
xsd:date 1951-07-28
rdf:langString Member for Macquarie
xsd:integer 1951
rdf:langString Anthony Sylvester Luchetti, AM (27 May 1904 – 11 July 1984) was a long serving Australian federal member of parliament. Born of Italian/Irish parentage in Lowther, New South Wales, Luchetti was educated in the Catholic school system before working in jobs as varied as miner and journalist. Involved in the Australian Labor Party (ALP) from an early age, Luchetti was elected to the Lithgow City Council and served on the New South Wales ALP Executive from 1929 to 1931. Luchetti developed a close friendship with the local federal Member of Parliament, the future Prime Minister Ben Chifley, and served as Chifley's campaign manager for the electoral Division of Macquarie for two elections. However, following a split in the New South Wales Labor ranks led by New South Wales Premier Jack Lang, Luchetti, a Lang supporter, stood against Chifley. The Labor vote split between the two candidates, enabling the opposition United Australia Party candidate, John Lawson, to win the seat. The two would remain on less than cordial terms for the rest of Chifley's life. Luchetti remained active in the Labor movement, however, and following the death of Chifley in 1951, Luchetti won Labor pre-selection for the Macquarie electorate and the subsequent by-election and served as the member for Macquarie until his retirement in 1975.
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 3483

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