prior to the
1928 federal election In 1925, Ley stood for the seat of
Barton in the federal
House of Representatives. He unsuccessfully tried to bribe his
Labor opponent,
Frederick McDonald, with a £2,000 share in a property at
Kings Cross in return for withdrawing from the ballot. McDonald instead publicly revealed the attempted bribe. Despite that, Ley won the election on a large swing as part of the decisive
Coalition victory that year. Conventional wisdom would have suggested that Ley, as a former senior member of the New South Wales government, would have been given a post in the federal cabinet. However, Ley's fellow conservatives, including
Prime Minister Stanley Bruce, began to have doubts about him after the election. As a result, Ley was not considered for ministerial preferment. McDonald took the matter of the bribe to court, but disappeared in mysterious circumstances. The case against Ley collapsed for lack of evidence when McDonald failed to appear. While the disappearance may have been a coincidence, later events put the matter in a more sinister light. In 1928, state legislator
Hyman Goldstein, another of Ley's public critics, was found dead after apparently falling from "Suicide Point" on the cliffs of
Coogee. Then a group of businessmen, concerned at Ley's reputation for dubious business dealings, appointed Keith Greedor, a former Ley associate turned opponent, to investigate. Travelling to
Newcastle by boat, Greedor fell overboard and drowned. == Return to England ==