The Queensland Government is trying to kill off Labour Day by
moving the public holiday from its traditional May date to October,
however it will be business as usual for the Queensland union movement on Sunday, 5 May 2013.
THE FIRST WEEKEND in May has been of major cultural and historical
significance for the union movement in Queensland ever since the state’s
first Labour Day procession
took place in Barcaldine on 1 May 1891 and the Labour Day public
holiday has been celebrated by workers in Queensland on the first Monday
in May since 1901. It is deeply ingrained in Queensland’s history as a
day to recognise workers’ rights.
During 2011, there had been
widespread consultation on changing the holiday system and it was agreed that Labour Day would remain in May and the Queen’s Birthday public holiday would move from June to October.
At the time, Premier
Anna Bligh
said all holidays, except for the Queen’s Birthday, marked significant
dates and were punctuated with official ceremonies or significance:
“Unlike other public holidays, it’s not celebrated on a date that is particularly meaningful.”
The Queen’s birthday public holiday originated in 1912 to observe the birthday of
King George V
on 3 June. Over the years, Queensland, along with most other states,
has continued to observe the Queen’s birthday in June even though the
actual birthday of Queen Elizabeth II is 21 April. In Western Australia,
the Queen’s birthday public holiday is held in either September or
October. The Queen’s birthday is observed as a mark of respect to the
sovereign but is not widely celebrated in community events like other
public holidays.
Other public holidays are on dates of significance. Australia Day (26
January). Tick. Anzac Day (25 April). Tick. Labour Day (1 May). Tick.
Easter. Christmas. Tick. Tick. Queen’s Birthday…errrr? It’s not
celebrated on the correct date and there is no official ceremony or
community engagement around it. However, all this was thrown out the
window last year when legislation was passed through the Queensland
Parliament by the LNP Newman Government to move the Labour Day public
holiday to the first Monday in October and the Queen’s Birthday public
holiday back to its previous June timing.
The history of Labour Day in Australia spans over 150 years. It is an
important annual event that commemorates the granting of the eight-hour
working day for Australians and remembers those who struggled and
succeeded to ensure decent and fair working conditions in Australia.
During the mid to late 1800s, the working day was long and arduous,
where some employees would work up to 12 hours a day, six days a week.
Many Australians saw the need for better working conditions and in the
1850s there was a strong push for this. On 21 April 1856, stonemasons at
the University of Melbourne marched to Parliament House to push for an
eight-hour working day. An agreement with employers for a 48-hour week
was eventually reached and Australian workers welcomed the new
eight-hour day. A victory march was held on 12 May 1856 that year and
each year after that. In 1856, the new work regulations were recognized
in New South Wales, followed by Queensland in 1858 and South Australia
in 1873. In 1874, Tasmania joined the other states in adopting the
shorter eight-hour working day. In 1879, the Victorian Government made
one further step towards better conditions for employees by proclaiming a
paid public holiday that year. However, while a change was made to the
hours worked each day, the five day work week we enjoy today took almost
a century longer to be adopted finally in 1948.
In Queensland, the first Labour Day celebration took place in
Brisbane on 16 March 1861 and was essentially a celebration by a small
number of skilled building workers who had recently achieved an
eight-hour working day. The date of the event was chosen to coincide
with the anniversary of the first workers achieving the eight hour day
in Queensland. For more than 20 years, the bulk of workers who did not
enjoy an eight hour working day were excluded from the celebrations and
the focus was on celebrating trade union achievements. The small number
of elite Queensland trade unionists who participated in the eight hour
day celebrations showed little sympathy for their fellow workers who
laboured in excess of eight hours.
The first to follow the example of the Australian workers were the
Americans. In 1886, they decided that May 1 should be the day of
universal work stoppage. On this day, 200,000 of them left their work
and demanded the eight hour day. The historic strike of 1 May 1886 was a
culmination of a concerted struggle. Chicago was the major industrial
centre of the USA. Police attacked striking workers from the McCormack
Harvester Co., killing six.
On 4 May 1886, at a
demonstration in Haymarket Square
to protest the police brutality, a bomb exploded in the middle of a
crowd of police killing eight of them. The police arrested eight
anarchist trade unionists claiming they threw the bombs. To this day,
the subject is still one of controversy. The question remains whether
the bomb was thrown by the workers at the police or whether one of the
police’s own agent provocateurs dropped it in their haste to retreat
from charging workers.
In what was to become one of the most infamous show trials in America
in the nineteenth century, but certainly not to be the last of such
trials against radical workers, the State of Illinois tried the
anarchist workingmen for fighting for their rights as much as being the
actual bomb throwers. Whether the anarchist workers were guilty or
innocent was irrelevant — they were agitators, fomenting revolution and
stirring up the working class, and they had to be taught a lesson.
Albert Parsons,
August Spies,
George Engel and
Adolph Fischer were found guilty and executed by the State of Illinois.
In Paris in 1889, the
International Workingmen’s Association
(the First International) declared 1 May an international working-class
holiday in commemoration of the 1886 Haymarket Martyrs. The red flag
became the symbol of the blood of working-class martyrs in their battle
for worker’s rights.
In light of the labour movement’s successful push for an eight-hour
day, a large May Day meeting was held in Melbourne on 1 May 1890. Other
Australian capital cities also held May Day meeting at the same time. On
1 May 1890, the Brisbane
Workers editorial stated:
May Day, this is our May Day, the by-gone jubilation
of our forefathers for the reconquering by the bright sunshine of the
bitter northern winter, the new-born celebration of the passing of the
workers’ winter of discontent. In Germany, in Austria, in Belgium, in
France, all through Europe, in the United Kingdom and in the great
English speaking republic across the Pacific, millions of workers are
gathering at this hour to voice the demands of Labor for fair conditions
of laboring. Never in all history was there such a meeting.

The spirit of the activists and early workers organisers is summed up in
Bernard O’Dowd’s poem,
May Day where he calls for Australians to stand up united and maintain their rights to an eight-hour work day.
Come Jack, our place is with the ruck
On the open road today,
Not with the tepid “footpath sneak”
Or with the wise who stop away.
A straggling, tame procession, perhaps,
A butt for burgess scorn;
Its flags are ragged sentiments,
And its music’s still unborn.
Though none respectable are here,
And trim officials ban,
Our duty, Jack, is not with them,
But here with hope and Man.
The Labour Day date was moved from May to the second Monday in March
in some parts of Australia after World War II. Since 1948, Labour Day in
Western Australia has been observed on the first Monday in March and
marks the granting of the eight hour working day to Western Australians.
For a large section of the Brisbane labour movement, it remained
important that the Labour Day celebrations be changed to enable
participation by all Queensland workers and that the date of the
procession from the traditional one on 1 March to 1 May. The main
arguments for changing the date of the celebrations was to make them
part of the international campaign, begun by the International Labour
Congress in 1889, to make 1 May an official workers holiday around the
world. This campaign was given a major boost when, on 1 May 1891,
hundreds of striking bush workers held Australia’s first May Day
procession through the streets of Barcaldine where their leaders wore
blue sashes and they carried banners and the Eureka flag. It was
reported that cheers were given for “the eight-hour day”.

Henry Lawson wrote “Freedom on the Wallaby” to mark the day:
So we must fly a rebel flag
As others did before us,
And we must sing a rebel song
And join in rebel chorus.
We’ll make the tyrants feel the sting
O’those that they would throttle;
They needn’t say the fault is ours
If blood should stain the wattle.
From May 1893, the holding of Labour Day and May Day in Queensland
has proceeded hand-in-hand. Unfortunately, over time, the reasons for
shifting Labour Day so that it corresponded to May Day have been
forgotten. But, equally clearly, the now largely forgotten campaign to
link the two had made Labour Day in Queensland a significant occasion,
when not just the eight-hour working day is celebrated, but also the
international solidarity of labour. In fact, Queensland unionists, until
now, were almost alone in celebrating Labour Day on or around May Day,
as most other states still time their celebrations to coincide with
anniversaries of eight-hour day victories.
Labour Day, like Anzac Day, is a day when we remember the sacrifices
our forebears made — the mateship, the loyalty and the determination to
build and protect the freedom and rights we now enjoy. Both are also
occasions when we recognise the ongoing struggles of today and thank
those standing beside us in the fray. Today, we celebrate those workers
and union delegates who stand alongside their mates and colleagues to
preserve and better the working conditions of all Australians. For like
Anzac Day, Labour Day is – above and beyond its historical significance –
a day in which all Australians can celebrate our egalitarian society,
our innate sense of fairness and equity, and our willingness to campaign
side by side for a better world.
It is the day we celebrate the winding back of the exploitation and
oppressive working hours that were the norm in the early nineteenth
century during the Industrial Revolution. It is a day we remember the
efforts of the labour movement which brought us the eight hour day and
over the ensuing decades of struggle such basic advances as minimum wage
levels, safety in the workplace and the right – bar a brief return to
the industrial relations Dark Ages during the Howard era – to bargain as
a collective.

Callow fanatical monarchist Queensland Attorney-General Jarrod Bleijie is reported to have used doctored survey figures to justify moving Labour Day rather than the irrelevant Queen’s Birthday holiday.
For Labour Day is not a celebration of militant trade unionism. It is
not a conga-line of left-wing ratbags winding their way through the
streets chanting slogans calling for the downfall of capitalism. Labour
Day, particularly in today’s world – where ordinary hard-working people
are increasingly left bleeding on the economic roadside from collateral
damage inflicted by the global recession – it is about family, freedom,
and a fair go. It is about empowerment in a world where individuals
still too often have little control over their own destiny when it comes
to the workplace.
So celebrate Labour Day. Celebrate trade unions, freedom of
association, vigorous debate and working families. For that is the sum
of us.
(This is an edited version of the 2013 Alex Macdonald Lecture
Labour Day: Family, freedom and a fair go. The origins to Queensland’s Labour Day and the recent shift of date to be delivered to the Brisbane Labour History Association on 1 May 2013
by Dr Glenn Davies)