Not Just For This Life: Gough Whitlam Remembered

Not Just For This Life: Gough Whitlam Remembered

Not Just For This Life: Gough Whitlam Remembered

Not Just For This Life: Gough Whitlam Remembered

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Overview

Not Just For This Life is a salute and tribute to Gough Whitlam, commemorating what would have been his 100th birthday. Upon his death in October 2014 there was a national outpouring of grief and affectionate remembrances across the nation. This book includes condolences from politicians of all political stripes; eulogies from the State Memorial Service and a selection of messages of condolence from the men and women of Australia. Not Just For This Life also includes a foreword by Graham Freudenberg and short introductions by Laurie Oakes, Anita Heiss, Geraldine Doogue, Don Watson, Patricia Hewitt, Nick Whitlam and Tim Soutphommasane where they tell their stories of the period following Gough's death and their experiences with Gough.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781742242484
Publisher: UNSW Press
Publication date: 06/10/2016
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 304
File size: 305 KB

About the Author

Gary Gray AO was born in Yorkshire in 1958. His family migrated to Australian in 1966 and he met Gough Whitlam for the first time in 1977 when Gough was campaigning in the seat of Grey. Gary was National Secretary of the ALP from 1993 to 2000 and the Member for Brand, holding both cabinet and shadow cabinet positions, from 2007 to 2016. Gough and Gary had an active, friendly, often humorous relationship for more than 30 years. Wendy Guest was born in the steel making, coal mining, Labor voting districts of the Illawarra in 1958. She began her career as a journalist, worked in the media office of NSW Premier Barrie Unsworth, as a communication consultant to the ALP and in the Prime Minister's Office as speech writer and media assistant to Anita Keating in the 1990s. She moved to Chicago and a career in corporate education in 2000, returning to Australia in 2013. She is a freelance writer in Sydney.

Read an Excerpt

Not Just for This Life

Gough Whitlam Remembered


By Wendy Guest, Gary Gray

University of New South Wales Press Ltd

Copyright © 2016 Wendy Guest and Gary Gray
All rights reserved.
ISBN: 978-1-74224-248-4



CHAPTER 1

TRANSFORMATION

INTRODUCTION BY LAURIE OAKES


Faced with concern about what one party official termed 'the confusion of incessant decision-making' in his early months as prime minister, Gough Whitlam told an ALP National Executive meeting: 'I am not going to leave behind a society which is not demonstrably different from the one we inherited.' He meant it, and he had no truck with those who argued that he should hasten slowly. It was almost as though he knew his government would have only a limited term and he was determined to accomplish as much as possible in the time available.

What happened between 1972 and 1975 was far more than proof of Paul Keating's dictum that 'if you change the government, you change the country'. Australia was transformed, and vastly for the better. This brief period of remarkably creative politics produced profound and lasting reforms that could not have been so broadly conceived or so firmly implemented by a lesser man. The list is long, ranging from the introduction of the most civilised and sensible divorce laws in the world to legislation against restrictive trade practices, from a fundamental change in Federal-State financial relations that saw money poured into education and health, to a coming of age of Australia's foreign policy.

Much of what Whitlam accomplished had been heralded in his earliest speeches after election to parliament. Two decades before becoming Prime Minister he was lecturing the House on the need for Canberra to play a greater role in such State activities as hospitals, schools, housing, power, surface transport, soil and water conservation. I remember as a young journalist being ear-bashed by him over a cup of tea about section 96 of the Constitution. That is the section that says the Federal Government 'may grant financial assistance to any State on such terms and conditions as the Parliament thinks fit'. Whitlam saw how this could allow the Federal Government, through 'tied' grants, to determine priorities and impose policies in fields over which it technically had no constitutional power.

His determination to achieve a more independent approach to international affairs also emerged early. When I found myself in the small press party accompanying then Opposition Leader Whitlam on his historic 1971 visit to China, I researched a speech he had given as a relatively new backbencher in 1954, calling for the recognition of the Communist Government in Beijing. Just 20 days after the 1972 election he brought that about, announcing Australia and the People's Republic of China had reached agreement on mutual recognition and the establishment of diplomatic relations. It was the most dramatic example of what Whitlam described, in a speech in Washington a few months later, as Australia trying to 'break out of a kind of ideological isolationism which has limited the conduct of our affairs in the past'.

Whitlam did not last long as Prime Minister, but the changes he brought about were built to last. Australia, when he left the Lodge, was a very different country from the one that existed when he took office.

Political journalist Laurie Oakes has worked in the Canberra Press Gallery since 1969, is the winner of several Walkley Awards and was inducted into the Logie Hall of Fame for services to television journalism in 2011.


In Australian politics there is now a dividing line. You can carbon date the dividing line at 1972: pre-Whitlam and post-Whitlam.

Wayne Swan, Member for Lilley


It may well be one of the great defining qualities of great political leadership to unchain a society from its past. That in its essence epitomises Whitlam's greatness.

Kim Carr, Senator for Victoria

* * *

TONY ABBOTT

MEMBER FOR WARRINGAH (NSW) • PRIME MINISTER • LIBERAL • B. 4.11.57


After 23 years of coalition government, Australians wanted change. It was time, as the famous campaign song proclaimed – probably the only campaign song that anyone can now remember. Whitlam represented more than a new politics; he represented a new way of thinking about government, about our region, about our place in the world and about change itself.

Nineteen-seventy-two was his time, and all subsequent times have been shaped by his time. His government ended conscription, recognised China, introduced Medibank, abolished university fees, decolonised Papua New Guinea, transformed our approach to Indigenous policy and expanded the role of the Commonwealth, particularly in the field of social services. These were highly contentious at the time; some of these measures are still contentious; but, one way or another, our country has never been quite the same. Members of his government displayed the usual human foibles, but, support it or oppose it, there was a largeness of purpose to all his government attempted – even if its reach far exceeded its grasp, as the 1975 election result showed. He may not have been our greatest Prime Minister, but he was certainly one of the greatest personalities that our country has ever produced. And no Prime Minister has been more mythologised.


BILL SHORTEN

MEMBER FOR MARIBYRNONG (VIC) • LEADER OF THE OPPOSITION • LABOR • B. 12.5.67


No-one who lived through the Whitlam era will ever forget it and perhaps nobody born after it can ever imagine it. Gough's ambition went beyond his desire to serve our nation. He wanted to transform it completely, permanently, and he did.

Today, I submit that like no other Prime Minister before or since, Gough Whitlam redefined our country and, in doing so, he changed the lives of a generation and generations to come. Think of Australia in, say, 1966: Ulysses was banned, Lolita was banned. It was the Australia of the six o'clock swill, with no film industry and only one television drama, Homicide. Political movements to the left of the DLP were under routine surveillance. Many Australians of talent – Clive [James], Barry [Humphreys], Germaine [Greer], Rupert [Murdoch], Sidney [Nolan], Geoffrey [Robertson] – as a matter of course, left their home, their native country, to try their luck in England. Yet Gough reimagined Australia, our home, as a confident, prosperous, modern and multicultural nation where opportunity belonged to everyone.

The Whitlam government should not be measured in years but in achievements. Whitlam defined patriotism as seeing things that were wrong about Australia and trying to change them. In 1970, he was referring to our unacceptably high infant mortality rate amongst Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people, our immigration policy based on race, our support for the Vietnam War. Whitlam said that a true patriot does not try to justify unfairness or prolong unfairness but tries to change it, and change it he did. Our country is most certainly different because of him. By any test, our country is better because of him. Gough Whitlam spent his political life reaching for higher ground.


JOHN FAULKNER

SENATOR FOR NEW SOUTH WALES • LABOR • B. 12.4.54


By 1972, Whitlam's and the ALP's time had come. In 1972 a simple slogan encapsulated the country's readiness for change: 'It's Time'. It was time. The list of the Whitlam government's legislative reforms is familiar to us all: replacing Australia's adversarial divorce laws with a new, no-fault system; introducing Australia's first federal legislation on human rights, the environment and heritage; establishing the Legal Aid Office, the National Film and Television School, the Australian Development Assistance Agency, the Prices Justification Tribunal and the Trade Practices Commission; introducing sweeping electoral reforms – the vote for 18-year-olds, Senate representation for the territories, and the cause of a lifetime, 'one vote, one value'; establishing the Australian National Parks and Wildlife Service, the Law Reform Commission, the Australian Film Commission, the Australian Heritage Commission, the Technical and Further Education Commission, a national employment and training program; launching construction of the National Gallery of Australia and making the Australia Council a statutory authority; vigorously promoting the arts, including the then controversial purchase of Blue Poles; improving the position of women and our Indigenous population through reforms such as laws banning discrimination on the grounds of race and sex, equal pay for women in the Public Service and the creation of a separate ministry responsible for Aboriginal affairs and instituting Indigenous land rights; ending the last legal vestiges of White Australia; creating a single Department of Defence rather than separate departments for Army, Navy and Air; establishing the Royal Commission on Human Relationships; slashing tariff barriers by 25 per cent; ending conscription; establishing Medibank, the precursor to Medicare; implementing education reforms like needs-based funding for schools and free vocational and university education, and introducing the Tertiary Education Assistance Scheme; changing the national anthem to 'Advance Australia Fair'; replacing the British Honours system with the Order of Australia; abolishing appeals to the Privy Council; replacing the Postmaster-General's Department with Telecom and Australia Post; and foreign policy achievements such as diplomatic and trade relations with the People's Republic of China.

Medibank and fair electoral boundaries were rejected by the Senate twice, to become matters resolved by a double dissolution – or so we thought. The measures were again rejected by the Senate, went before a joint sitting and were passed. Gough was, if nothing else, determined.


TANYA PLIBERSEK

MEMBER FOR SYDNEY (NSW) • DEPUTY LEADER OF THE OPPOSITION • LABOR • B. 2.12.69


I have often thought it was fitting that Gough Whitlam was Australia's 21st Prime Minister, because with Gough Whitlam Australia came of age. An Australia that once thought small was asked to think big. An Australia once closed and inward looking opened to the world. Gough rejected those old ideas of what Australia should be and led us to what Australia could be.


ALANNAH MACTIERNAN

MEMBER FOR PERTH (WA) • LABOR • B. 10.1.53


I remember, when I was around seven or eight, sitting at home in our housing commission house being full of Melbournian pride. I recall saying to my sister: 'Aren't we lucky? We are living in Melbourne, and Melbourne is the capital of Victoria, and Victoria is the best state in Australia, and Australia is the best country in the world!' My older sister looked at me and said: 'We are a pissant, insignificant nation that is led around by the nose by America, and we are the laughing stock of the world.' I did not realise until 1973 just how profound the black cloud that had descended upon me as a result of that conversation was.

I remember very clearly a moment in February 1973. It was a Saturday morning. By this stage I had moved to what was truly the best state in Australia. I was going into my Saturday morning job. I hopped off the bus. It was a beautiful sunny day, and there was the Perth Town Hall in all its glory. Suddenly I felt this black cloud lift. I felt so proud to be an Australian. I felt that we were now truly a nation that we could be proud of, a nation embarking on an independent foreign policy, a nation that was accepting the proper rights of Aboriginal people, a nation that was allowing women freedom, and a nation that was focusing on great social justice issues such as education. It was a magic moment. And for that I will always deeply thank Gough Whitlam and the work that he did, particularly in that first 100 days that led to this great energy.

The Whitlam years were really transformative ... There was definitely, as Paul Keating said, a 'before Whitlam' and an 'after Whitlam' Zeitgeist. That is not to deny that under Holt and Gorton some modernising had commenced. But it was a crack in the wall. What happened with Gough and his government was that the windows of this country were opened and the energising breezes of modernisation swept throughout the land. It has been extraordinary to be reminded, since his death, of the reach of his government. The number of areas that were changed and changed very profoundly, the areas of policy that he penetrated within his time, has been truly amazing.


DOUG CAMERON

SENATOR FOR NEW SOUTH WALES • LABOR • B. 27.1.51


When I came here from Scotland in 1973 I could not believe that there were still people in the western suburbs of Sydney who did not have reticulated sewerage. That was probably the second shock – after realising that there was no colour TV in this country! It just showed that we were not at the cutting edge of social and economic reform in the seventies in this country. In the early seventies to have Gough Whitlam lay out such a prodigious position on social and economic change was fantastic, to me personally it was a great thing. To put sewerage in the outer suburbs of our cities was great – as were changes on local government and gender and racial discrimination. Coming from Scotland in 1973 I could not believe that Indigenous people could not go into some areas of pubs. They were being told that they could not have a drink in a pub. To me, that was just unbelievable. And it was one of Whitlam's programs that made sure discrimination was gone.

I came here from the British health system in 1973. When I was told that I had to take out private health insurance to make sure my family was looked after it was a foreign thing to me, as a beneficiary of the health system in the UK, to see how far back the health system in Australia was. Health was another example of the Whitlam approach to bringing about change that was good for society and good for individual Australians.

In 1973 we were in what was still a pretty rugged society. What comes to mind is the 1973 rugby league grand final, between Manly and Cronulla, where we were watching people nearly beating each other to death on a football field. I could not understand what was going on. That was the society we had in 1973. But we have come a long way and changed a lot of things since that time.


BRETT MASON

SENATOR FOR QUEENSLAND • LIBERAL • B. 15.3.62


I remember hearing the then-Prime Minister of the United Kingdom, Tony Blair, say that political leaders campaign in poetry and govern in prose. That said, Gough Whitlam was a marvellous poet – truly Labor's Henry Lawson. He was Labor's greatest-ever opposition leader and one of its greatest-ever campaigners. Mr Whitlam had a dozen ideas a day and, like Sir Winston Churchill, not all were good ones, but some certainly were, and they changed our country ...

The thing to me about Gough Whitlam was this: that Gough Whitlam was quintessentially modern. He was modern and he was a moderniser. When I think of political life before Gough Whitlam, it was black and white – actually, it was mostly grey. When Gough Whitlam became Prime Minister our political life exploded into colour, and it has never been the same since. Sometimes the colour was perhaps too bright, but I am very glad he brightened our nation's palette.


CHRISTINE MILNE

SENATOR FOR TASMANIA • LEADER OF THE GREENS • B. 14.5.53


In 1972 I was at the University of Tasmania as a 19-year-old. I was not able to vote in that election, because 21 was still the voting age at that time. But I had known nothing in my entire life except Liberal-Country Party government. It is an extraordinary thing to think about what it would mean to a young person to have got to the age of 19 and known nothing other than one political perspective. For 23 years, from 1949, the Liberal-Country Party had governed this country. That is why the Whitlam years politicised a generation. Those three years changed us. At that time we were still a nation which followed. We followed the United Kingdom. We followed the United States into the war in Vietnam. We still had capital punishment for federal crimes.

What Gough Whitlam did was throw off all the shackles and allow us to rethink who we were as a nation. What did we love about our country? What was our place in the world? What did we want for people? He set us all on a path of exploring what it is to be truly Australian – independent and confident – and distinctively Australian in the cultural context.


WARREN TRUSS

MEMBER FOR WIDE BAY (QLD) • DEPUTY PRIME MINISTER • NATIONAL • B. 8.10.48


One of the things that marked his two short terms in government was the sheer pace of the sweeping reforms. It was probably a credit to him but also in some senses a curse. His early days of government were simply cyclonic. A government of only two terms that set about change and seemingly changed everything. He was so eager to get things done that he risked leaving the community behind. But I do not think he cared; he was determined to get things done.


(Continues...)

Excerpted from Not Just for This Life by Wendy Guest, Gary Gray. Copyright © 2016 Wendy Guest and Gary Gray. Excerpted by permission of University of New South Wales Press Ltd.
All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
Excerpts are provided by Dial-A-Book Inc. solely for the personal use of visitors to this web site.

Table of Contents

Contents

Acknowledgments,
Foreword by Graham Freudenberg AM,
Introduction by Wendy Guest,
Parliamentary Condolences,
Transformation – Introduction by Laurie Oakes,
Belonging – Introduction by Anita Heiss,
Courage – Introduction by Geraldine Doogue AO,
Equality – Introduction by Tim Soutphommasane,
Enlarging – Introduction by Don Watson,
Comrades – Introduction by Patricia Hewitt,
Grace – Introduction by Nicholas Whitlam,
Eulogies – State Memorial Service,
Auntie Millie Ingram,
Graham Freudenberg AM,
Cate Blanchett,
Noel Pearson,
Senator John Faulkner,
Antony Whitlam,
List of Speakers and Contributors,

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