Lance Sharkey

Lance Sharkey in the late 1930s

Lawrence Louis "Lance" Sharkey (18 August 1898  13 May 1967) was an Australian trade union activist, a radical journalist, and a Communist politician. From 1948 to 1965 Sharkey served as the Secretary-General of Communist Party of Australia (CPA). Sharkey was an orthodox Communist throughout his political career, closely following the prevailing Soviet line in each major turn of policy.

Biography

Early years

Lawrence Sharkey was born on 18 August 1898 at Warry Creek, near Cargo, via Orange, New South Wales. His farming parents, Michael and Mary, were Irish and raised him as a Roman Catholic: a religious background he would share with numerous other Australian communist officials. He left school when only 14 years old, and commenced an apprenticeship as a coachmaker in Orange. Later he worked as a farmhand,[1] claiming that itinerant bushworkers drew him into the anti-conscription struggle during World War I and into support of the Industrial Workers of the World.

After World War I Sharkey moved to Sydney and obtained a job as a lift attendant, also becoming a militant activist in the Sydney Federated Miscellaneous Workers Union.[2] In 1922 Sharkey became a member of the Sydney labor union council.[3] Sharkey was elected to the executive of the Miscellaneous Workers' Union, but lost that post in another election in 1925. In 1928 he became a union delegate to the Labor Council of New South Wales.

Political career

By this stage Sharkey had already been a member of the Communist Party of Australia (CPA) for four years.[4] Elected to the executive of the CPA in 1926, he was dismissed from it the following year, when he resisted the turn from a 'united front' with the Australian Labor Party (ALP).

In 1928, he re-emerged as a strong advocate of the Comintern's new 'Third Period' line of opposition to all forms of reform. Sharkey was elected to the CPA's governing Central Committee and rose to prominence in the party alongside his factional allies Bert Moxon and J.B. Miles. After they won control of the party in 1929, Sharkey was appointed editor of the party's newspaper Workers' Weekly. He continued to edit that paper and another party publication, The Tribune, throughout the 1930s.

Sharkey was named Chairman of the CPA in 1930. He remained in this post without interruption until 1948, despite the twists and turns of party policy during that time.[5]

In the summer of 1930 Sharkey visited the Soviet Union for the first time as one of the Australian party's representatives to the 5th World Congress of the Red International of Labor Unions (RILU).[6] At the 7th World Congress of the Comintern Sharkey was elected as an alternate to the Executive Committee of the Communist International (ECCI).[7]

When Prime Minister Sir Robert Menzies declared the CPA illegal in June 1940, Sharkey and other party leaders went underground. A year later Nazi Germany invaded the Soviet Union, and the Soviet Union entered the Second World War as an ally of Britain. The ban on members of the CPA was accordingly relaxed, and Sharkey resumed open political activity. In 1942 the ban was removed completely.

With the onset of the Cold War Sharkey displaced Miles as the Australian Communist Party's Secretary-General. The CPA became openly hostile to the ALP, and withdrew its previous conditional support of the American-sponsored program of post-war reconstruction.

Portrait of Lance Sharkey at the time of his conviction for sedition in 1949.

In March 1949 Sharkey told a Sydney journalist that "if Soviet Forces in pursuit of aggressors entered Australia, Australian workers would welcome them." For this statement Sharkey was tried and convicted of sedition. The High Court upheld his conviction; and in October he was sentenced to three years' imprisonment, although actually he served a mere 13 months.

On his release, he undertook a national speaking tour. He then spent six months at a sanatorium in the Soviet Union, for treatment of a heart condition. Under his strong leadership he was able to ensure that the CPA did what many other countries' Communist parties failed to do: namely, minimise the impact of Nikita Khrushchev's repudiation of Joseph Stalin early in 1956, and of the Soviet invasion of Hungary later that year.

In November 1960 Sharkey attended the Meeting of 81 Communist and Workers Parties in Moscow, at which the CPA initially sympathised with the Chinese in the Sino-Soviet split. Ultimately, though, it backed the Soviets.[8] Eleven months afterwards, Sharkey attended the 22nd Congress of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union in Moscow.[9]

Later years, death, and legacy

Increasingly ill, Sharkey ceded supreme control of the CPA to Laurie Aarons, the party's first Jewish leader, in June 1965. Thereafter he held a ceremonial post as the party's Vice-Chairman.[10] He died of a heart attack on 13 May 1967 in Sydney. His body was cremated.

Sharkey was lauded by many in his wartime and post-war heyday as a hero, but his reputation sank during the 1960s, along with the fortunes of his party as a whole. In a 1998 book, the historian of Australian Communism Stuart Macintyre (who had long since abandoned his own CPA membership) noted the hyperbolic way in which Sharkey was portrayed during the cult of personality period of the 1930s:

"[Sharkey] was presented as a son of the soil, steeped in communist theory, yet always a man of the people. The list of his virtues was directed so unerringly to his limitations as to suggest parody. It was noted that 'like all the leaders of our Party, Comrade Sharkey was temperate in his habits'; in fact his binges in Moscow were notorious. He was a brilliant mass agitator; actually his oratory was leaden. He had an instinctive genius; yet when he took up Lenin's favourite pastime of chess, lesser party members had to be careful to lose."[11]

Footnotes

  1. Branko Lazitch and Milorad M. Drachkovitch, Biographical Dictionary of the Comintern: New, Revised, and Expanded Edition. Stanford, CA: Hoover Institution Press, 1986; pg. 424.
  2. Stuart Macintyre, The Reds: The Communist Party of Australia from Origins to Illegality. Sydney: Allen and Unwin, 1998; pg. 134.
  3. Lazitch and Drachkovitch, Biographical Dictionary of the Comintern, pg. 424.
  4. Lazitch and Drachkovitch, Biographical Dictionary of the Comintern, pg. 424.
  5. Lazitch and Drachkovitch, Biographical Dictionary of the Comintern, pg. 424.
  6. Macintyre, The Reds, pg. 176.
  7. Lazitch and Drachkovitch, Biographical Dictionary of the Comintern, pg. 424.
  8. Lazitch and Drachkovitch, Biographical Dictionary of the Comintern, pg. 424.
  9. Lazitch and Drachkovitch, Biographical Dictionary of the Comintern, pp. 424-425.
  10. Lazitch and Drachkovitch, Biographical Dictionary of the Comintern, pg. 425.
  11. Macintyre, The Reds, pg. 362.

Writings

External links

Party political offices
Preceded by
Jack Miles
General Secretary of the Communist Party of Australia
1948-1965
Succeeded by
Laurie Aarons
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