Background
His father, James Guy, had also been a Senator.
His father, James Guy, had also been a Senator.
Guy was elected to the Division of Bass in the Tasmanian House of Assembly in 1916 and was part of Joseph Lyons" cabinet when Labor came to power in 1923. He served as Chief Secretary (1923-1928), Minister for Mines (1923-1924), Minister for Railways (1924-1928), Acting Premier from July to December 1926, then Deputy Premier until Labor was defeated in 1928. He became Deputy Leader of the Opposition and remained in the Tasmanian parliament until 1929.
In 1931 he joined Joseph Lyons, James Fenton and two other Labor members in forming the United Australia Party along with the Nationalist Party of Australia opposition, which came to office in December with Lyons as prime minister.
In 1932 Lyons rewarded him for his loyalty by appointing him assistant Minister for Trade and Customs. After losing his seat in the 1934 election, Guy contested it unsuccessfully in 1937, and then the Division of Wilmot unsuccessfully in 1939, before winning it in 1940.
He represented Wilmot for the UAP until 1944 and for the Liberal Party until 1946. In 1949 he was elected to the Australian Senate as a Liberal, where he remained until being defeated in the 1956 election.
He was awarded a Commander of the Order of the British Empire in 1968 for services to "Parliament and the community.".
Australian Labor Party, Liberal Party.
One of Guy"s responsibilities was to defend film-censorship provisions which he described as "both necessary and admirable", for, without them, "all sorts of puerile and undesirable films could be displayed, to the detriment, not only of our civilization, but of the Christian religion".