Background
Kay was born in the Sydney suburb of Petersham, New South Wales and educated at Petersham and Stanmore public schools.
Kay was born in the Sydney suburb of Petersham, New South Wales and educated at Petersham and Stanmore public schools.
He is described by the Australian Dictionary of Biography as a "harmless ratbag". He was given a state funeral. Alick became a clerk with New South Wales Government Railways and joined the army in 1915.
Kay ran unsuccessfully for the federal seat of South Sydney for the Nationalist Party in 1917.
In 1918 he left the Nationalists and started appearing regularly as an anti-Communist speaker at Sydney Domain. He also travelled regularly to Melbourne to orate next to the Yarra.
In parliament, he regularly voted with Labor to the horror of his former supporters. The Thomas Bavin government passed legislation in 1927 to remove him from the board.
After Language"s return to power in 1930, he was reappointed to the board, but was sacked again by the Bertram Stevens government.
In 1933, Kay travelled to England. He later claimed to have worked for the British Department of Information during World World War World War II In 1951, he returned to Sydney, and resumed speaking at the Domain on Sundays.
In 1925, he won one of the five seats of North Shore under proportional representation in the New South Wales Legislative Assembly as an independent. Under the electoral system, the Australian Labor Party automatically won his position if he resigned, so Jack Language offered him a position on the Metropolitan Meat Board in 1926 as a consumers" representative.