Victorian Labor
Karan Mehta is an experienced professional actively engaged in various roles within multicultural policy and education. Currently serving on the Multicultural Policy Committee for Victorian Labor and as a Victorian Branch Executive for The Australian Republic Movement, Karan has also worked as an Associate Data Operations Specialist at Keypath Education. Leadership experience includes chairing the Indian Students' Association of Victoria and holding a council member position at RMIT University. Previous roles encompass education officer at RMIT University Student Union and event coordinator for eChai.Network, where responsibilities included coordinating events and liaising with investors and startups. Karan's earlier experience includes operations management for the Centre for Innovation Incubation and Entrepreneurship at IIM Ahmedabad. Karan holds a Master's degree in Analytics from RMIT University and a Bachelor of Business Administration from FLAME University.
This person is not in any teams
Victorian Labor
The Australian Labor Party is Australia’s oldest political party, dating back to before Federation. The ALP was first formed in Queensland in 1891 and, during the ten years that followed, separate Labor parties emerged in other colonial states. All were sponsored by the trade union movement, which participated actively in the foundation of the infant political movement. The ALP became a federal party when the former Australian colonies federated in 1901. As a federal party, it is 20 years older than the Country Party (now known as the National Party) and 45 years older than the Liberal Party. The Victorian Branch of the ALP was formed at Federation, and was built on a history of labour movement involvement in the Victorian Parliament. The ALP, both nationally and in Victoria, is a genuine labour party in the sense that trade unions are part of its structure. This distinguishes a labour party from a social democratic party (although they may have common ideals and philosophies) and from broad-based progressive parties such as the United States’ Democratic Party. Like Australia itself, the ALP is a federal organisation. Each state and territory has its own branch, with its own membership, rules and policies. These branches come together to form a national ALP organisation. This is expressed most visibly through the National Conference and the National Secretariat, which are responsible for determining the Party’s national direction and administration.