William Long (Australian politician)
William John Long (18 June 1885 – 3 March 1957) was an Australian politician. Born in Newcastle, New South Wales, he received a primary education before becoming a boilermaker at the Eveleigh Railway Workshops for fifteen years and a member of the Federated Boilermakers Society.[1][2][3] He was the unsuccessful Labor candidate for Botany at the 1925 state election and for Nepean at the 1927 state election.[4][5] He was elected to the Australian House of Representatives as the Labor member for Lang at the 1928 federal election, defeating long-serving Nationalist MP and Speaker of the Australian House of Representatives Elliot Johnson. Long held the seat until his own defeat in 1931.[6] He made a final bid for public office at the 1944 state election, when he unsuccessfully contested the Parramatta as an independent.[2] He died in 1957.[6] References
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