Background
Spooner was born in the Sydney suburb of Waterloo and educated at Christ Church Street Laurence School.
Spooner was born in the Sydney suburb of Waterloo and educated at Christ Church Street Laurence School.
At 14 he became a telegraph messenger and studied at night at the University of Sydney to gain a diploma in economics and commerce.
He subsequently became Assistant Treasurer and Minister for Local Government. From 1935 he was Minister for Local Government, Secretary for Public Works and deputy leader of the parliamentary United Australia Party. He was responsible for establishing employment-creating schemes and the Sydney County Council, a gas and electricity supplier.
In 1939 he opposed budget cuts and resigned from Cabinet on 21 July.
On 1 August, he moved a motion that brought down the government, but he failed to get enough support to form his own government. In June 1941, he was appointed Minister for War Organisation of Industry in the third Menzies Ministry, a position he retained until the fall of the Fadden government in October 1941.
He lost his seat in the 1943 election. He joined the new Liberal Party, but was almost expelled for questioning the White Australia Policy.
He ran unsuccessfully against Prime Minister Ben Chifley in Macquarie in 1946.
Spooner was elected the seat of Ryde in 1932 and became an honorary minister in the United Australia Party government of Bertram Stevens.