Reference List

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Reference List Reference list Abbot K, Pressure groups and the Australian Federal Parliament, AGPS, Canberra, 1996. Ackerman P, ‘Rudd will dance to union tune should he win office’, Sunday Mail (Adelaide), 3 June 2007. Button J, As it happened, Text Publishing, Melbourne, 1998. Chalmers E, ‘Coalition trump PM with pension promise’, Courier-Mail, 11 September 2008. Crabb A, ‘Opposition campaigns to cushion its benches’, Sydney Morning Herald, 21 March 2008. Crisp LF, Australian national government, fifth edn, Longman Cheshire, Melbourne, 1983. ‘Facing Off’, Advertiser, 24 January 2007. Farr M, ‘Nelson rolled on IR strategy’, Daily Telegraph, 20 February 2008. Faulkner J and Macintyre S, eds, True believers: the story of the Federal Parliamentary Labor Party, Allen and Unwin, Sydney, 2001. Galligan B and Roberts W, The Oxford companion to Australian politics, Oxford University Press, Melbourne, 2007. Grattan M, ‘Nelson looking over his shoulder as he names his team’, Age, 7 December 2007. Hayden B, Hayden: an autobiography, Angus and Robertson, Sydney, 1996. Horne N, The Members of Parliament (Staff) Act 1984: framework and employment issues, Research paper, no. 26, 2008–09, Parliamentary Library, Canberra, 2009. Jaensch D and Weller P, eds, Responsible government in Australia, Drummond, Melbourne, 1980. Jones B, A thinking reed, Allen and Unwin, Sydney, 2006. Latham M, The Latham diaries, Melbourne University Press, Melbourne, 2005. Lucy R, The Australian form of government: models in dispute, MacMillan, Melbourne, 1993. Maddox G, Australian democracy in theory and practice, fifth edn, Pearson, Melbourne, 2005. McManus G, ‘Key trio to stay as Rudd backtracks’, Herald-Sun, 28 September 2007. Manthorpe L, Parliamentary benefits, allowances and salaries of office, Background Note, online, updated 1 July 2008, revised 26 November 2008. Menzies, RG, The measure of the years, Cassell, Melbourne, 1970. Murphy K, ‘The day they brought old WorkChoices down’, Age, 20 February 2008. Oakes L, ‘The A(LP) Team’, The Bulletin, 2 October 2007. Parker RS, The government of New South Wales, University of Queensland Press, Brisbane, 1978. ‘Party Face-Off’, Australian, 23 September 2008. The Penguin Macquarie dictionary of Australian politics, Penguin, Melbourne, 1988. Punnett RM, Frontbench opposition: The role of the Leader of the Opposition, the Shadow Cabinet and Shadow government in British politics, Heinemann, London, 1973. Reference list Rudd K, Kevin Rudd’s new Shadow Ministry, media release, Parliament House, Canberra, 11 December 2006. Ryan S, Catching the waves: life in and out of politics, HarperCollins, Sydney, 1999. ‘Shadow Ministry vote stirs Caucus anger’, Sydney Morning Herald, 6 May 1965. Shanahan D, ‘Tensions sure to resurface’, Australian, 7 December 2007. Snedden BM and Schedvin MB, Billy Snedden: an unlikely Liberal, McMillan, Melbourne, 1990. Senate Standing Committee on Finance and Public Administration, Budget Estimates, Prime Minister and Cabinet portfolio, Debates, 26 May 2008. Turnbull M, Appointment of Shadow Ministry, media release, Parliament House, Canberra, 22 September 2008. Turner DR, The Shadow Cabinet in British politics, Routledge and Kegan Paul, London, 1969. Van Onselen P, ‘Nelson’s army’, The Bulletin, 15 January 2008. Ward I and Stewart R, Politics one, third edn, Palgrave, Melbourne, 2006. Weller P, Malcolm Fraser PM: a study in prime ministerial power in Australia, Penguin, Melbourne, 1989. Weller P, Cabinet government in Australia, 1901–2006, University of New South Wales Press, Sydney, 2007. 2 .
Recommended publications
  • Australian Democrats.[1]
    CHIPP, Donald Leslie (1925–2006)Senator, Victoria, 1978–86 (Austral... http://biography.senate.gov.au/chipp-donald-leslie/ http://biography.senate.gov.au/chipp-donald-leslie/ Don Chipp's Senate career almost never happened. Dropped from Malcolm Fraser's Liberal Party ministry in December 1975, he turned this career blow into an opportunity to fight for the causes in which he believed. The result of Chipp's personal and political upheaval was the creation of a third force in Australian politics, the Australian Democrats.[1] Donald Leslie Chipp was born in Melbourne on 21 August 1925, the first child of Leslie Travancore Chipp and his wife Jessie Sarah, née McLeod. Don's father Les was a fitter and turner who later became a foreman. With Les in regular employment during the 1930s, the Chipp family was cushioned from some of the harsher aspects of the Depression years. However, the economic downturn must have had some impact, because Don remembered his father saying to his four boys that 'When you all grow up, I want you to be wearing white collars. White collars, that's what you should aim at'. Chipp matriculated from Northcote High School at the age of fifteen, then worked as a clerk for the State Electricity Commission (SEC). He also began studying part-time for a Bachelor of Commerce at the University of Melbourne. In 1943, at age eighteen, he joined the Royal Australian Air Force, and spent much of the last two years of the Second World War undergoing pilot training within Australia. Discharged as a Leading Aircraftman in September 1945, Chipp took advantage of the Commonwealth Reconstruction Training Scheme which provided ex-service personnel with subsidised tuition and living allowances.
    [Show full text]
  • William Mcmahon: the First Treasurer with an Economics Degree
    William McMahon: the first Treasurer with an economics degree John Hawkins1 William McMahon was Australia’s first treasurer formally trained in economics. He brought extraordinary energy to the role. The economy performed strongly during McMahon’s tenure, although there are no major reforms to his name, and arguably pressures were allowed to build which led to the subsequent inflation of the 1970s. Never popular with his cabinet colleagues, McMahon’s public reputation was tarnished by his subsequent unsuccessful period as prime minister. Source: National Library of Australia.2 1 The author formerly worked in the Domestic Economy Division, the Australian Treasury. This article has benefited from comments provided by Selwyn Cornish and Ian Hancock but responsibility lies with the author and the views are not necessarily those of Treasury. 83 William McMahon: the first treasurer with an economics degree Introduction Sir William McMahon is now recalled by the public, if at all, for accompanying his glamorous wife to the White House in a daringly revealing outfit (hers not his). Comparisons invariably place him as one of the weakest of the Australian prime ministers.3 Indeed, McMahon himself recalled it as ‘a time of total unpleasantness’.4 His reputation as treasurer is much better, being called ‘by common consent a remarkably good one’.5 The economy performed well during his tenure, but with the global economy strong and no major shocks, this was probably more good luck than good management.6 His 21 years and four months as a government minister, across a range of portfolios, was the third longest (and longest continuously serving) in Australian history.7 In his younger days he was something of a renaissance man; ‘a champion ballroom dancer, an amateur boxer and a good squash player — all of which require, like politics, being fast on his feet’.8 He suffered deafness until it was partly cured by some 2 ‘Portrait of William McMahon, Prime Minister of Australia from 1971-1972/Australian Information Service’, Bib ID: 2547524.
    [Show full text]
  • Prince Philip Knighthood Is Heck of an Own Goal for Tony Abbott
    Prince Philip knighthood is heck of an own goal for Tony Abbott THE AUSTRALIAN JANUARY 28, 2015 12:00AM Janet Albrechtsen Columnist Sydney THERE is no polite way to describe the Prime Minister’s decision to award a knighthood to Prince Philip. Let’s opt for a rough Latin phrase that sums up the comments of some of Tony Abbott’s close Liberal MPs: Caput ex ano extrahe. It’s something about a head being within close proximity of a backside. And when you get text messages from conservative friends in Queensland asking, “Has Tony completely lost the plot?” you know 2015 is starting out as an annus horribilis for Abbott and the government. The unanswered question is: why? If the PM didn’t foresee that this decision would be controversial, raise questions about his judgment and potentially damage his leadership, you have to ask: why not? If the PM knew all of that, you have to ask why he did it. Clearly the uproar is not simply on social media. The criticism extends beyond anonymous graffiti on the side of a building, as the PM has described it. Abbott’s captain’s call picked an unnecessary fight over a minor issue on Australia Day when MPs would be chatting among themselves and with voters at functions. The common sentiment was utter bewilderment. The year needed to kick off with a great start. A good start was not enough. Instead, it’s kicked off with one heck of an own goal. And the eternal lesson of politics is that people can hate you, even distrust you, but when people, apart from your usual critics, start to ridicule you, it’s difficult to recover.
    [Show full text]
  • Gough Whitlam, a Moment in History
    Gough Whitlam, A Moment in History By Jenny Hocking: The Miegunyah Press, Mup, Carlton Victoria, 2008, 9780522111 Elaine Thompson * Jenny Hocking is, as the media release on this book states, an acclaimed and accomplished biographer and this book does not disappoint. It is well written and well researched. My only real complaint is that it should be clearer in the title that it only concerns half of Gough Whitlam’s life, from birth to accession the moment of the 1972 election. It is not about Whitlam as prime minister or the rest of his life. While there are many books about Whitlam’s term as prime minister, I hope that Jenny Hocking will make this book one of a matched pair, take us through the next period; and that Gough is still with us to see the second half of his life told with the interest and sensitivity that Jenny Hocking has brought to this first part. Given that this is a review in the Australasian Parliamentary Review it seems appropriate to concentrate a little of some of the parliamentary aspects of this wide ranging book. Before I do that I would like to pay my respects to the role Margaret Whitlam played in the story. Jenny Hocking handles Margaret’s story with a light, subtle touch and recognizes her vital part in Gough’s capacity to do all that he did. It is Margaret who raised the children and truly made their home; and then emerges as a fully independent woman and a full partner to Gough. The tenderness of their relationship is indicated by what I consider a lovely quote from Margaret about their first home after their marriage.
    [Show full text]
  • Leslie Bury — from Treasury to Treasurer
    Leslie Bury — from Treasury to Treasurer John Hawkins1 Les Bury was a Treasury employee who rose to become Treasurer. Although one of the best qualified treasurers, with a serious interest in economics, he only had a short time in the job and was by most accounts well past his peak before he became treasurer. He was ahead of his time in advocating broader measures of wellbeing, taking steps towards replacing some income tax with indirect tax and supporting the compilation of forward estimates. Source: National Archives of Australia2 1 The author formerly worked in the Domestic Economy Division, the Australian Treasury. This article has benefited from information provided by Jonathan Holmes, Keeper of the Records at Queens’ College, Cambridge, and comments, information, reminiscences and suggestions provided by Mike Bury, Nick Bury, Selwyn Cornish, Ian Hancock, Alex Millmow and John Wanna. The views in this article are those of the author and not necessarily those of the Australian Treasury. 2 Portrait of Leslie Bury, Minister for Labour and National Service in the Australian Federal Parliament, National Archives of Australia: A1200, L29420. 113 Leslie Bury: from Treasury to Treasurer Introduction Bury was a Treasury employee who rose to become Treasurer.3 He was also the first professional economist to hold the post. Indeed he has been called ‘among treasurers, the one best qualified as an economist’.4 But unfortunately this was not enough to guarantee success as by the time he held the post his health had deteriorated. Bury admired ‘the greatest economist of all time, Adam Smith.’5 He had a ‘close interest in economics’ since schooldays.6 But he once said of it, ‘…if one pursues the learned journals in this subject, both the abstractions of the arguments and the passion of the disputants recall to mind the theological controversies of long ago.
    [Show full text]
  • Working Paper 15/2020 November 2020
    Crawford School of Public Policy TTPI Tax and Transfer Policy Institute Post-war tax reviews and the Asprey Blueprint TTPI - Working Paper 15/2020 November 2020 Paul Tilley Visiting Fellow Tax and Transfer Policy Institute, Crawford School of Public Policy The Australian National University Abstract After World War II, international attention turned to economic reconstruction and the transition back to peace-time. As Australia settled into the 1950s and 1960s ‘golden years’ there wasn’t an obvious imperative to tackle basic economic reform and tax design issues. Underlying structural problems were building, though, that would ultimately call for an economic reform agenda and tax would be part of that. This paper tracks these developments, looking at some limited tax reviews along the way but the main focus will be on the 1975 Asprey review which provided a blueprint for reform of the Australian tax system. Its recommendations for a capital gains tax, a fringe benefits tax, a foreign tax credit system, dividend imputation and a value added tax would take 25 years to implement. Keywords: tax, reform, economic, public finance, government * Sincere thanks to Greg Smith, Robert Carling, Geoff Leeper and Brant Pridmore as referees for the paper and to Professor Robert Breunig and Diane Paul at the TTPI for guiding the work and running the seminar on the paper. Author contact is [email protected] THE AUSTRALIAN NATIONAL UNIVERSITY Tax and Transfer Policy Institute Crawford School of Public Policy College of Asia and the Pacific +61 2 6125 9318 [email protected] The Australian National University Canberra ACT 0200 Australia www.anu.edu.au The Tax and Transfer Policy Institute (TTPI) is an independent policy institute that was established in 2013 with an endowment from the federal government.
    [Show full text]
  • The Leader of the Opposition
    The Leader of the Opposition ‘…just as there can be no good or stable government without a sound majority, so there will be a dictatorial government unless there is the constant criticism of an intelligent, active, and critical opposition.’ –Sir Robert Menzies, 1948 The practice in Australia is for the leader of the party or coalition that can secure a majority in the House of Representatives to be appointed as Prime Minister. The leader of the largest party or Hon. Dr. H.V. Evatt coalition outside the government serves as Leader of the Opposition. Leader of the Opposition 1951 - 1960 The Leader of the Opposition is his or her party’s candidate for Prime National Library of Australia Minister at a general election. Each party has its own internal rules for the election of a party leader. Since 1967, the Leader of the Opposition has appointed a Shadow Ministry which offers policy alternatives and criticism on various portfolios. The Leader of the Opposition is, by convention, always a member of the House of Representatives and sits opposite the Prime Minister in the chamber. The Senate leader of the opposition party is referred to as the Leader of the Opposition in the Senate, even if they lead a majority of Senators. He or she usually has a senior Shadow Ministry role. Australia has an adversarial parliamentary system in which the Prime Minister and the Leader of the Opposition face off against one another during debates in the House of Representatives. The Opposition’s role is to hold the government accountable to the people and to Parliament, as well as to provide alternative policies in a range of areas.
    [Show full text]
  • Origins of the Royal Commission on Intelligence and Security
    Origins of the Royal Commission on Intelligence and Security CJ Coventry LLB BA A thesis submitted in fulfilment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Arts (Research) School of Humanities and Social Sciences UNSW Canberra at ADFA 2018 i Table of Contents Acknowledgements iii Introduction & Methodology 1 Part I: ASIO before Whitlam 9 Chapter One: The creation of ASIO 9 Chapter Two: Bipartisan anti-communism 23 Chapter Three: ASIO’s anti-radicalism, 1950-1972 44 Part II: Perspectives on the Royal Commission 73 Chapter Four: Scholarly perspectives on the Royal Commission 73 Chapter Five: Contemporary perspectives on ASIO and an inquiry 90 Part III: The decision to reform 118 Chapter Six: Labor and terrorism 118 Chapter Seven: The decision and announcement 154 Part IV: The Royal Commission 170 Chapter Eight: Findings and recommendations 170 Conclusion 188 Bibliography 193 ii Acknowledgements & Dedication I dedicate this thesis to Rebecca and our burgeoning menagerie. Most prominently of all I wish to thank Rebecca Coventry who has been integral to the writing of this thesis. Together we seek knowledge, not assumption, challenge, not complacency. For their help in entering academia I thank Yunari Heinz, Anne-Marie Elijah, Paul Babie, the ANU Careers advisors, Clinton Fernandes and Nick Xenophon. While writing this thesis I received help from a number of people. I acknowledge the help of Lindy Edwards, Toni Erskine, Clinton Fernandes, Ned Dobos, Ruhul Sarkar, Laura Poole-Warren, Kylie Madden, Julia Lines, Craig Stockings, Deane-Peter
    [Show full text]
  • Billy Snedden: the Challenge of Incipient Inflation
    Billy Snedden: the challenge of incipient inflation John Hawkins1 Billy Snedden was Treasurer in very challenging circumstances, with the global financial system undergoing intense change and the government in which he served in political difficulty. This made it hard for him to address effectively the emerging inflationary pressures. Source: National Library of Australia2 1 The author formerly worked in the Domestic Economy Division of Treasury. This article has benefited from comments and suggestions provided by Selwyn Cornish, Ian Hancock and Fiona Snedden. Thanks are due to the Snedden family for allowing access to the Snedden papers in the National Library of Australia. The views in this article are those of the author and not necessarily those of the Australian Treasury. 2 B.M. Snedden, Liberal Party member for Bruce, Victoria [picture]/Australian Information Service, Bib ID: 3660355 21 Billy Snedden: the challenge of incipient inflation Introduction Sir Billy Mackie Snedden was generally regarded as ‘affable, charming, friendly’3 and many contemporary accounts refer to his good looks.4 He possessed considerable ambition5 and all his life was a hard worker.6 Friends recalled him as having ‘a quick mind which absorbs and retains detail’.7 These traits allowed him to rise from his humble origins and become a Liberal Treasurer and leader without the benefits of the family wealth or establishment links that assisted peers such as William McMahon and Malcolm Fraser. He once described himself as ‘the first of the middle class radicals’.8 His weakness was his need to be liked and approved, and that he was ‘too trusting and insufficiently ruthless for his own good’.9 This sometimes left him trying to present a toughness he did not possess.10 Snedden had a lifelong aversion to ‘bullying’.
    [Show full text]
  • VOTES and PROCEEDINGS No
    1980-81-82 1039 THE PARLIAMENT OF THE COMMONWEALTH OF AUSTRALIA HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES VOTES AND PROCEEDINGS No. 102 TUESDAY, 14 SEPTEMBER 1982 1 The House met, at 1.45 p.m., pursuant to adjournment. Mr Speaker (the Right Honourable Sir Billy Snedden) took the Chair, and read Prayers. 2 MINISTERIAL ARRANGEMENTS: Mr Fraser (Prime Minister) informed the House that, during the absence through illness of Senator Durack (Attorney-General) and the absence of Mr McVeigh (Minister for Home Affairs and Environment), Mr N. A. Brown (Minister for Communications) was acting as Attorney-General and Mr Thomson (Minister for Science and Technology) would deal with Home Affairs and Environment matters in the House this week. 3 DISTINGUISHED VISITORS: Mr Speaker informed the House that delegates attending the 6th Australasian and Pacific Regional Parliamentary Seminar were present in the gallery. On behalf of the House, Mr Speaker extended to the visitors a very warm welcome. 4 SUSPENSION OF STANDING ORDERS-MOTION OF CENSURE OF TREASURER: Mr Hayden (Leader of the Opposition) having given a notice of motion- Sir James Killen (Leader of the House), by leave, moved-That so much of the standing orders be suspended as would prevent the Leader of the Opposition moving forthwith the motion of censure of the Treasurer of which he has given notice for the next sitting. Question-put and passed. 5 TREASURER-MOTION OF CENSURE: Mr Hayden (Leader of the Opposition) moved-That this House censures the Treasurer for the gross and culpable incompetence he has displayed in the administration of the taxation laws and accordingly requires his immediate dismissal.
    [Show full text]
  • John Howard’S Australia and September 11
    John Howard’s Australia and September 11 Ben Anwyl A thesis submitted to Victoria University in fulfilment of the requirements of the degree of Doctor of Philosophy College of Arts 30 November 2016 Student Declaration I, Ben Anwyl, declare that the thesis entitled ‘John Howard’s Australia and September 11’ is no more than 100,000 words in length, exclusive of figures, transcribed recordings of interviews and references. This thesis contains no material that has been submitted previously, in whole or in part, for the award of any other academic degree or diploma. Except where otherwise indicated, this thesis is my own work. Ben Anwyl 30 November 2016 ii Acknowledgements The completion of the research done in this entire thesis would not have been made possible without the ongoing support of so many people and I thank all of them. I would like to express special gratitude to my supervisor, Professor Robert Pascoe for his assistance, support and guidance. I am grateful also to everyone at Victoria University who have looked after me and helped me throughout. In particular I thank my co-supervisor, Dr Edward Lock, and Professor Phillip Deery for positive comments on the original manuscript and supporting the efforts of my supervisor. I would also like to thank and acknowledge Adjunct Associate Professor Rosemary Clerehan from Monash University, for assisting my supervisor with professional editing in the penultimate version of the thesis. I would like to express my appreciation to all the elite interviewees who gave up their valuable time and knowledge to assist me in doing this research project.
    [Show full text]
  • Proceedings of the Twenty-Fifth Conference of the Samuel Griffith
    Chapter Four Independents and Minor Parties in the Commonwealth Parliament J. B. Paul I accepted Julian Leeser’s invitation to address the Society on this subject without a second thought. Had I thought twice about it I might have queried him on a vexing problem: how to compress this subject into a presentation confined to thirty minutes. It follows that my fully prepared statement will have to be published with the other papers. The first and shorter part of this paper will deal with the House of Representatives; the second and more important part will deal with the Senate. The House of Representatives Two factors have limited the role of Independents and minor parties in the House: it comprises single-member constituencies and two succeeding electoral systems have governed its elections. From 1901 to 1918 the simple majority/plurality system applied. This has been misnamed “first-past-the-post”: a misnomer because there was no fixed post for the winning candidate to get past. Independents found it difficult to top the poll against candidates endorsed by political parties. Independents found their position more favourable under the preferential system introduced in 1918 especially when a seat was being contested by three or more candidates. If the count went to preferences an Independent could move to a winning position from behind with each distribution. Not that this happened often! I would isolate two examples when an Independent has succeeded. In the 1922 election, a prominent leader of the Victorian Bar, J G Latham, KC, contested and won the seat of Kooyong, then held by a grandee of the Nationalist Party, Sir Robert Best.
    [Show full text]