Quarterly Essay 28 Exit Right: The Unravelling of John Howard

Quarterly Essay 28 Exit Right: The Unravelling of John Howard

by Judith Brett
Quarterly Essay 28 Exit Right: The Unravelling of John Howard

Quarterly Essay 28 Exit Right: The Unravelling of John Howard

by Judith Brett

eBook

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Overview

In Exit Right, Judith Brett explains why the tide turned on John Howard. This is an essay about leadership, in particular Howard’s style of strong leadership which led him to dominate his party with such ultimately catastrophic results.

In this definitive account, Brett discusses how age became Howard’s Achilles heel, how he lost the youth vote, how he lost Bennelong, and how he waited too long to call the election. She looks at the government’s core failings – the policy vacuum, the blindness to climate change, the disastrous misjudgment of WorkChoices – and shows how Howard and his team came more and more to insulate themselves from reality.

With drama and insight, Judith Brett traces the key moments when John Howard stared defeat in the face, and explains why, after the Keating–Howard years, the ascendancy of Kevin Rudd marks a new phase in the nation’s political life.

“It is when a leader’s grip on political power starts to slip, when his threats and bribes miss their mark, when he starts to make uncharacteristic mistakes and when what had once been strengths reveal their limitations, that we can see most clearly the inner workings of that leadership. This essay is about John Howard’s leadership, seen through the prism of its failings.” —Judith Brett, Exit Right

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781921825279
Publisher: Schwartz Books Pty. Ltd.
Publication date: 12/14/2007
Series: Quarterly Essay , #28
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 124
File size: 390 KB

About the Author

Judith Brett is professor of politics at La Trobe University and one of Australia’s leading political thinkers. She is a former editor of Meanjin and columnist for the Age. She is the author of the award-winning Robert Menzies’ Forgotten People and Australian Liberals and the Moral Middle Class: From Alfred Deakin to John Howard (2003), which was shortlisted for the Queensland premier’s prize for non-fiction.
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