PM Transcripts

Transcripts from the Prime Ministers of Australia

Howard, John

Period of Service: 11/03/1996 - 03/12/2007
Release Date:
02/11/1999
Release Type:
Interview
Transcript ID:
11084
Released by:
  • Howard, John Winston
TRANSCRIPT OF THE PRIME MINISTER THE HON JOHN HOWARD MP INTERVIEW WITH LEIGH MCCLUSKY AND TONY PILKINGTON RADIO 5AA

Subjects: Republic referendum, interest rates, Melbourne Cup

E&OE.............

MCCLUSKY:

Prime Minister John Howard, a very good morning to you.

PRIME MINISTER:

Good morning, how are you, Leigh?

MCCLUSKY:

Very well. Prime Minister, could I ask you, the yes case is saying that

on a day like - and it's opportune that we speak to you on Melbourne Cup

Day - they're saying this is exactly the sort of day that would make or

should make Australia focus on a future and that, they say, is a future

that should be as a republic. What do you say?

PRIME MINISTER:

Well, I say that Australians are going to enjoy Melbourne Cup Day irrespective

of the sort of system of government they have. I think people who try and

associate days like Melbourne Cup Day with one or other side of a political

argument are really missing the point. They're also misunderstanding their

Australia. If I know Australians they'll go to the Melbourne Cup, they'll

go to their parties, they'll participate in their office sweeps and they

won't be asking their friends and their work mates how they're going to

vote on Saturday. They'll be respecting the fact that we have different

views on that. But, at the end of the day, we are all Australians together.

So, can I just politely say to the yes campaigners, in voting national folk

occasions and national festivals like the Melbourne Cup in aid of either

side of the debate is silly.

PILKINGTON:

Prime Minister, you looked stunned on television last night when obviously

somebody from overseas said that if you were to lose the campaign, if the

yes vote were to get up on the weekend, would you resign, I mean, you genuinely

looked surprised at the question and you took a while to answer it. If,

indeed, the yes vote did get up, do you think that would weaken your position

personally at all?

PRIME MINISTER:

Well, the reason I took a moment to answer it was that there was a delay

on the satellite. You must understand that. Well, I was surprised at the

question. It was a silly question. The answer to your question, Tony, is

no. Just remember the history of this. I, despite my support for the current

system, consistent support, always indicated to the Australian people where

I stood. Despite that I promised before I became Prime Minister that I would

personally hold a convention and if clear support for a model emerged from

that convention I'd put that model to the Australian people for a vote before

the turn of the century. And that is exactly what I've done. I've delivered

on that promise. But I have never disguised the fact that I, personally,

am opposed to change. I have allowed members of the Parliamentary Liberal

Party a free vote and I make no apology for that. I think it was the right

thing to do and I think the debate has been conducted, in the main, with

a great deal of civility. And so the answer to your question is, whatever

verdict the Australian people deliver on Saturday, and I hope they vote

for the present system and I'm urging them to do so, but whatever decision

they take I will, of course, accept it. And it doesn't make any difference

to my position within the Government at all.

MCCLUSKY:

Mr Howard, would it be fair to say that there is - and obviously there are

some people who feel very passionately about this as an issue but there

are others who I think are, a) confused and b) increasingly disappointed

by the fact that the whole thing seems to have become terribly politicised,

that we've got former politicians, good, bad and otherwise, from both sides

now doing these terribly patriotic, hand-on-heart, this is what I think

you should vote and why. Do you feel that the Australian public is almost

saying, look, I don't want to know, I know we should want to know, but just

back off, let us actually make up our own minds?

PRIME MINISTER:

I guess there's an element of that but you get that in any election campaign.

What I've personally tried to do is present a reasoned argument. I didn't

get involved in the debate in any detail until last week and I delivered

a reasoned argument.

MCCLUSKY:

Well, in principle, Mr Howard, what is your main objection, what is the

one thing that says to you, we don't need to and we should not change?

PRIME MINISTER:

Because the present system has worked brilliantly and it's given us great

stability.

MCCLUSKY:

What of the argument where they say, but hang on, we've got to move into

the future, that, you know, we've got to cut the shackles?

PRIME MINISTER:

Well, you're asking me what is my main reason and, I mean, I've given you

my main reason. Now, I don't think that argument about moving into the future

and cutting the shackles is sufficiently persuasive for us to take the risk

in moving away from a system we know works. What interests me about this

debate is that we've had a lot, we've had monumental attempts by the yes

proponents to argue that their model is an improvement on the present system.

I think deep down most people in this country, even those who intend to

vote yes, acknowledge that the present system is very stable and predictable

and has given us great security. And this is not a debate about who is the

better Australian. There are passionate Australians on both sides of this

debate. This is not a debate about the Australian identity. This is a debate

about what is the better system. I mean, this idea, which is implicit in

much of the yes propaganda, that you're really not being a full-on Australian

unless you vote yes, I mean, that is nonsense. And my main reason on this

issue is a conservative reason. I believe in changing things that are clearly

broken and clearly in need of change. And I've argued, as you know, to change

our tax system, to change our industrial relations system. I've never been

reluctant about arguing for change when I've thought it was good for Australia

but I don't think this change is good for Australia and that's why I'm going

to vote no. Now, that in a nutshell is why I'm against it.

PILKINGTON:

Prime Minister, at the end of the week and after the vote's taken on Saturday,

when can you see this issue coming up again? Do you think it's going to

be put to bed for the next four or five years and then is there any way

we can say, okay, that's the end of the argument and the debate for a given

period of time?

PRIME MINISTER:

Well, I don't think anybody can start putting periods of time on it. I think

there will be a mood in the community no matter what the result not to revisit

the issue for a while. Now, if there's a yes vote I don't think there's

any prospect at all that there'll be a referendum, another referendum some

time into the future on the question of a directly elected President. I

think if there is a yes vote, well, the model that's being proposed on Saturday

will be with us for a long, long, long time. I've said forever, well, I

suppose you can never really define forever but it will certainly be with

us for the foreseeable future. If there's a no vote, I don't think the issue's

going to come back for a while but I can't sort of say forever and a day

that it won't. I mean, nobody can do that. I think the mood of the community

will be, whatever the outcome, that they won't want to revisit it for a

while. But I can't guarantee that at some time in the future the issue wouldn't

come back. I mean, nobody can. It will depend on a lot of things. And in

a democracy why should you expect to? I mean, in a democracy people in governments

have got a right to revisit issues if they choose and there's nothing wrong

with that. I know people find, on occasions, find votes irksome and everything

but, gee, isn't it better for us to be able to decide these things with

everybody having an equal vote.

MCCLUSKY:

Mr Howard, talking about everybody having an equal vote, as you have already

mentioned, there are members of your own party who feel passionately opposed

to you when it comes to this issue of a republic. I see there is speculation

today that somehow you and Peter Costello have closed ranks, you are about

to freeze out Peter Reith. Well, is there a plan and secondly, given the

fact that you have people who are working so closely for the Liberal Party

who are at opposite ends of a scale, has your relationship perhaps with

Peter Reith been damaged by his stance?

PRIME MINISTER:

Well, no, it hasn't. And can I say in relation to that story I haven't made

any deals with anybody. The leadership of the Government is determined by

the members of the government parties, it's not determined by me or by any

other individual. And I am the Prime Minister, I am the leader of the Liberal

Party because my colleagues in the party chose me not because of any particular

deal making capacity. I don't do deals.

MCCLUSKY:

Your relationship though with Peter Reith seems.

PRIME MINISTER:

My relationship with Peter Reith is, in fact, very good. I was on the phone

to him barely 10 minutes ago discussing a range of matters. Can I just say

this that strange though it is for some people in the media, I don't mean

you and Tony, but others to understand - the Liberal Party has a tradition

on issues like this of allowing a free vote. We are a party of conscience,

we are a broad church, we do have conservatives and small 'l' Liberals on

a variety of issues. And the way in which we work together effectively as

a Government is that on occasions like this we recognise the reality and

that is people of good conscience are going to have different views. And

we have allowed a free vote and I am proud that my party has done that.

Once the referendum is over, well, there won't be a free vote any more on

this issue, there will be a Government position on how it's going to be

handled. But in formulating that Government position around the Cabinet

table and in the party room each individual member will be able to contribute

his or her point of view. So if you are taking publicly a point of view

now on this issue you'll be able to continue to take that issue privately

but there will be developed a Government position and naturally all members

of the Cabinet will adhere to that Government position. But a suggestion

of, you know, people are being frozen, nobody is being frozen out or frozen

in. Once the referendum is over we revert to normal and our aim from Sunday

will be to resume what we have always done and that is serving the Australian

people as your elected Government.

PILKINGTON:

Prime Minister, has the Government done any polling on the issue?

PRIME MINISTER:

The Government?

PILKINGTON:

Yes.

PRIME MINISTER:

The Government has not done any partisan polling on the issue now. I understand

that the advertising agency in relation to the, some advertisements does

what they ever do but, I mean, the Government as such has not done any partisan

polling, no.

MCCLUSKY:

What's your feeling on how it's going to go?

PRIME MINISTER:

I don't know. I really.

MCCLUSKY:

[Inaudible]

PRIME MINISTER:

No, I don't. I am wary of polls. I read the poll this morning and I also

read the polls before the Victorian election.

MCCLUSKY:

Well, they didn't help really.

PRIME MINISTER:

No, they didn't. Well, one of them right at the end was, to be fair, was

accurate. And I think one of them, to be fair, was accurate at four weeks'

out. Look, this is a very unusual issue, Leigh. People who I've talked to

surprise me. I find some people I expect to be yes voters and they are not,

and I find others I expect to be no voters and they are yes voters. So I

just hope in the end that the undecided people who are those who are going

to decide this will consider the simple proposition that if you are in doubt

you should vote no. If you worry that you might be changing to something

that is unknown and less safe you shouldn't take that risk. And whatever

people say about symbolism, and I have not thought the arguments in favour

of a symbolic change have been very strong, the reality is that this has

been one of fewer than 10 nations on earth that has been continuously democratic

for the whole of the 20th Century. We have through an accident

and a divisive history, we have a marvellous arrangement where you have

a neutral person as governor-general and as an effective head of state.

And the reason that person is neutral is because that person applies the

conventions and the practices of the Crown which have been developed by

the hundreds and hundreds of years. And that history and the conventions

arising from that history have given our system of Government a special

and unique territory and I would be very loathe to risk that. And I feel

quite strongly that there's a very effective, affirmative taste for hanging

onto the present system. But it's not nostalgia, it's not imperial sentimentality,

it is a commonsense Australian belief that we have a good system.

MCCLUSKY:

Prime Minister, two quick questions before I let you go. As you know, the

Reserve Bank Board Meeting this morning, speculation about an increase of

.25 per cent. Would that surprise you?

PRIME MINISTER:

Well, I don't talk in any way about the future path of interest rates. I

am sorry, I have kept to that rule religiously since becoming Prime Minister.

MCCLUSKY:

Not talking about it but as a comment, would you reconsider.

PRIME MINISTER:

No, no. I think I had better take your betting advice, it's very well put.

Not talking about it but just a comment.

MCCLUSKY:

All right. And in terms of today, who have you got your money on?

PRIME MINISTER:

I have to confess that I am going for Sky Heights. I got a bit worried when

I saw that it had moved into favouritism, it always makes me very nervous.

MCCLUSKY:

You don't want those short price favourites.

PRIME MINISTER:

No, no, that's right. A tough horse is always there at the finish, he's

going for the double. But it does make me a little bit nervous as he has

moved in to favouritism. I mean, Rogan Josh is pretty close but I picked

Sky Heights a few days ago.

MCCLUSKY:

So you are not a man to change your mind though are you?

PRIME MINISTER:

Well, if there's a good reason put to me. If I think it's better for Australia

I'll change my mind.

MCCLUSKY:

Prime Minister, it's been a pleasure as always, thank you for your time.

PRIME MINISTER:

Thank you.

[ends]

11084