Sneha Girap (Editor)

Tom Hayes (Australian politician)

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Premier
  
John Cain

Succeeded by
  
Arthur Clarey

Preceded by
  
Alexander Rogers


Succeeded by
  
John Sheehan

Preceded by
  
Ivan Swinburne

Name
  
Tom Hayes

Tom Hayes (Australian politician) City trader Tom Hayes jailed for 14 years for rigging Libor

Born
  
22 February 1890 Ararat, Victoria (
1890-02-22
)

Died
  
19 February 1967(1967-02-19) (aged 76) Warrandyte, Victoria, Australia

Thomas "Tom" Hayes (22 February 1890 – 19 February 1967) was an Australian politician. He was the Australian Labor Party member for Melbourne in the Victorian Legislative Assembly from 1924 to 1955.

Tom Hayes (Australian politician) Libor Fraud Accused Tom Hayes Motivated By Greed HuffPost UK

Hayes was born in Ararat, Victoria to an Irish railway worker, Patrick Hayes, and his wife Sarah. He was educated at St Mary's School, and then followed his father into the railway industry, joining the Ararat branch of Victorian Railways, and was later transferred to Melbourne. During the early 1920s, he was president of the shunters section and later the transportation sections of the Australian Railways Union.

At the 1924 state election, he was elected to the seat of Melbourne for the Australian Labor Party. He was also a councillor on the Melbourne City Council from 1939 to 1965. When the government of John Cain took office in December 1952, Hayes was appointed to the Cain Ministry as Minister-in-Charge of Housing and the associated portfolio of Minister-in-Charge of Materials.

In March 1955, Hayes left the ALP in the 1955 split and joined the Australian Labor Party (Anti-Communist)—relinquishing his ministerial portfolio to John Sheehan. He was defeated in the 1955 state election, but remained active in the Democratic Labor Party, serving as deputy leader in Victoria in 1961.

References

Tom Hayes (Australian politician) Wikipedia