National Labor Party
| National Labor Party | |
|---|---|
| Leader | Billy Hughes | 
| Founded | 14 November 1916 | 
| Dissolved | 17 February 1917 | 
| Split from | Australian Labor Party | 
| Merged into | Nationalist Party | 
| Headquarters | Canberra | 
| Ideology | Australian nationalism Interventionism Social democracy | 
| Political position | Centre-left | 
| House of Representatives | 14 / 75(1916-1917) | 
| Western Australian Legislative Assembly | 9 / 50(March 1917) | 
| Part of a series on | 
| Labour politics in Australia | 
|---|
The National Labor Party (NLP) was an Australian political party formed by Prime Minister Billy Hughes in November 1916, following the 1916 Labor split on the issue of World War I conscription in Australia. Hughes had taken over as leader of the Australian Labor Party and Prime Minister of Australia when anti-conscriptionist Andrew Fisher resigned in 1915. He formed the new party for himself and his followers after he was expelled from the ALP a month after the 1916 plebiscite on conscription in Australia. Hughes held a pro-conscription stance in relation to World War I.