Background
Clarey was born at Bairnsdale, Victoria, the fifth child of general agent Francis William Clarey and Jessie Littlejohn Clarey, née Lawson.
Clarey was born at Bairnsdale, Victoria, the fifth child of general agent Francis William Clarey and Jessie Littlejohn Clarey, née Lawson.
The family soon moved to Melbourne, and Percy attended South Yarra State School and the Working Men"s College.
In his youth, Clarey was crippled by rheumatoid arthritis, and walked with crutches for the rest of his life. Employed as a clerk, he was Victorian president of the Federated Clerks" Union by the time he was 24 and federal president at 27. He also served as federal president of both the Amalgamated Food Preservers" Union of Australia and the Federated Storemen and Packers" Union of Australia.
Clarey married schoolteacher Katherine Mary Isabel Chambers at Box Hill, Victoria on 31 March 1917.
They had two sons before their divorce in 1936. Katherine was also prominent in the labour movement, and was the Labor candidate for the Victorian Legislative Assembly seat of Caulfield in 1935, although she withdrew shortly before the poll.
Meanwhile, Clarey continued to rise in the union movement, being president of the Victorian branch of the Australian Labor Party in 1934 and president of the Melbourne Trades Hall Council in 1935. During World World War II, he was on the board of the Department of Munitions and the Manpower Priorities Board, as well as being a delegate to the 1944 International Labour Conference.
In 1937, Clarey was elected to the Victorian Legislative Council, a position he held until 1949.
He was minister of labour and public health during 1943 and minister of labour and employment from 1945-1947 under the premiership of John Cain. He was criticised for holding the positions of labour minister and President of the Australian Council of Trade Unions simultaneously. In 1949, Clarey transferred to the federal House of Representatives, winning the seat of Bendigo by only 152 votes.
He was defeated for the deputy leadership in 1951 by Arthur Calwell, and was mentioned as a possible successor to the troubled H.V. Evatt as parliamentary leader.
He had consistently cordial dealings with Robert Menzies. Sometimes accused of being a "bosses" man" and a "strike breaker" by union opponents, Clarey was nevertheless a supporter of the Indonesians against Dutch colonialism.
Additionally, although he supported the White Australia Policy, he held the term to be offensive and advocated its removal from the ALP platform. In 1954 Clarey was sent to New York as Australia"s delegate to the United Nations General Assembly, and visited China in 1957.
He was given a state funeral before being cremated with Methodist forms.
He conceded that the Communist Party had a right to exist, but was strenuously opposed to communism in the ALP.
Although associated with the right wing of the ALP, Clarey always kept to the party line.