From the Australian, 2/9/11:
and:ke Rann, while acknowledging it has been "very influential" within sections of the ALP's Right faction.
Senator Don Farrell, one of the "faceless men" behind last year's downfall of Mr Rudd, is a former South Australian secretary of the Shop, Distributive and Allied Employees Association, while his successor, Peter Malinauskas, played a critical role in the move against the South Australian Premier.
Joe De Bruyn, the national secretary of the 250,000-member shop assistants' union, said his organisation did exercise a "degree of influence within the Labor Party" given the size of its membership and the affiliation of its branches to the ALP.
"The SDA is very influential within the Right in South Australia and Western Australia," he told The Australian yesterday.
"There's no doubt about that. I wouldn't go so far as to say it controls things but it certainly is very influential in both states and that's by virtue of its size.
"I think you will find that influence is exercised very carefully to make sure that, on issues that are discussed, there is consensus."
From the Australian, 13/9/11:Asked to explain why the union was involved in the bid to remove Mr Rann as leader, Mr Malinauskas said it was for the benefit of South Australians.
"I'm sincerely of the view that working people in this state are better off under a Labor government," Mr Malinauskas said.
"I think it's important, to the extent that anyone could provide some assistance, to making sure Labor stays in government and that is a good thing for working people."
The Australian, 10/9/11:The socially conservative SDA has been extraordinary in the degree to which it has dominated the party, colouring its policies, determining its leadership and personnel, and funding its political campaigns.
This activism does not come from any groundswell of particularly political or class-conscious retail workers.
Au contraire, it derives from the precise opposite. Ignorance. Indeed it is possible that some of the SDA's disaggregated and docile members do not even know they are members. Few would have any real idea of what their money helps fund.
A Labor Party leader is formally elected by the caucus, the parliamentary membership. In theory then, the caucus has the authority to decide when a leader has reached a "use-by" date.
But a majority of the caucus are members of the Right faction, Labor Unity, which is controlled by the Shop Distributive and Allied Employees Association (SDA).
When the time came to advise Mr Rann his time was up, the message was delivered by the SDA, not by the caucus.