Background
Stanley was born in Marrickville, New South Wales. He was the son of a stonemason, and after an elementary education worked as a tram conductor.
Stanley was born in Marrickville, New South Wales. He was the son of a stonemason, and after an elementary education worked as a tram conductor.
During the Australian General Strike of 1917 he was dismissed but was later re-employed with a lower rank and was promoted to tram driver in 1925. Stanley was active in community organizations in the Lakemba area including the Sydenham-Bankstown Company-operative Building Society. He was elected to the office of alderman on Canterbury Municipal Council between 1925 and 1928.
Stanley was elected to the New South Wales Parliament as the Labor member for the new seat of Lakemba at the 1927 state election.
In the three months prior to that election, the party leader and Premier Jack Language had gained control of the party pre-selection process and ensured that his supporters were endorsed (see Language Labor). The sitting Labor member for Street George and Minister for Public Health, George Cann had been expected to contest the seat.
However, he had supported a caucus move to depose Language and had been expelled from the party. Cann contested the seat as an Independent Labor candidate but was easily defeated by Stanley.
Stanley retained Lakemba at the next seven elections. but did not hold party, parliamentary or ministerial office.
In November 1949, Jim Harrison resigned from the Legislative Council to successfully contest the federal seat of Blaxland at the 1949 election. His successor was due to be elected at a joint sitting of the two houses of state parliament on 22 March 1950. On the day of the election, Asher Joel, a wealthy Sydney businessman, was a surprise nomination against Labor"s James Thom.
The state executive of the Labor Party responded by withholding their endorsement as candidates at the forthcoming 1950 election.
Stanley and the other disendorsed members received support from the Caucus, and a significant rift developed between the parliamentary and extra-parliamentary sections of the party, which was a major factor in Labor"s poor showing at the election. Stanley resigned from the party and spent the rest of the term as an Independent Labor member.
He unsuccessfully contested the election against the endorsed Labor member Stan Wyatt. He then retired from public life.
He was a member of the New South Wales Legislative Assembly from 1927 until 1950. During his parliamentary career he was, at various stages, a member of the Australian Labor Party (ALP), the Australian Labor Party (NSW) the Australian Labor Party (Non-Communist) and an Independent Labor member of parliament. He was active in the Tramways Employees Union, eventually becoming a member of the executive.
Stanley remained loyal to Language until the early 1940s and was a member of Language"s breakaway parties the Australian Labor Party (NSW) in 1936-1938 and the Australian Labor Party (Non-Communist) in 1940.
Although the election was by secret ballot, each Labor member of the parliament had a unique how-to-vote card, and Labor scrutineers were able to determine if a member had broken caucus solidarity and voted against the endorsed Labor candidate. Although Joel was unsuccessful, he received 23 votes, and it became common knowledge within the Labor Party, although never officially stated, that four members of the party – Stanley, John Seiffert (Monaro), Roy Heferen (Barwon) and James Geraghty (North Sydney) – had voted for him.