PM Transcripts

Transcripts from the Prime Ministers of Australia

Howard, John

Period of Service: 11/03/1996 - 03/12/2007
Release Date:
27/10/1999
Release Type:
Speech
Transcript ID:
11394
Released by:
  • Howard, John Winston
TRANSCRIPT OF THE PRIME MINISTER THE HON JOHN HOWARD MP THE OFFICIAL LAUNCHING OF THE MENZIES 200 CLUB AND CELEBRATION OF THE 50TH ANNIVERSARY OF SIR ROBERT MENZIES BEING ELECTED PRIME MINISTER OF AUSTRALIA RINGWOOD, MELBOURNE SUBJECTS: Sir Robert Menzies, the Liberal Party, Kevin Andrews, Australian economy, Victorian election, Indonesia, East Timor, Constitutional preamble, indigenous people.

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

Thank you very much Kevin. To your wife, Margie, to Mr Tom Sweeney, my State

parliamentary colleagues, ladies and gentlemen.

When you started saying that there were similarities between myself and

the founder of our Party, whose name has been given to this electorate,

I allowed my mind to wander for a moment and I thought, well, is he going

to, sort of, draw some sporting analogies. Because I was sitting next to

a former Wallaby I thought to myself, well, to use a rugby analogy I think

the founder would have got into the second row but I am probably 5/8th

or halfback in terms of physical bulk.

But, ladies and gentlemen, it's a great pleasure to be with you tonight

and it's a pleasure to reflect very briefly before I have some other things

to say about contemporary politics, to reflect very briefly about some of

the things that were in that quite remarkable video. We were all struck

by the incredible capacity of Sir Robert with his home movies and that remarkable

footage of war torn Coventry. I remember when it was shown eight or nine

years ago how incredibly impressive it was.

Of course the old gentleman, he was fairly old then, the late Sir John Kramer

who was Army Minister in the Menzies Government was my predecessor in the

seat of Bennelong. He held it between 1949 and 1974 when he retired at the

age of 78 and I took over the seat from him. And he lived to the age of

97 and he towards the end of his life he wrote a memoir about his own political

experiences and he invited me to launch it. And I well remember the occasion.

And I read it in preparation for the launch and there was the odd chapter

here and there that presented a slightly different version of the foundation

of the Liberal Party than the one that I'd been brought up on. And I said

to John when I was watching, I said "this is very interesting",

I said "I thought it occurred in a slightly different fashion but you

seem to have rearranged it a little bit." And he said "My boy,

when you reach my age there's nobody left around to contradict you."

And I was reminded of him. But what was tremendously evocative about what

he said on that video was the emphasis that he placed on the importance

of the individual in our Party. And one of the things that we have always

respected is the fact that as a political movement we do allow our membership

on some issues to be a lot more pluralistic than do our political opponents.

And I think that's a good thing.

And that is why I am not going to, as some of our friends from the media

might expect, I am not going to say anything tonight about the debate which

is going to be resolved on the 6th of November in relation to

our Constitution. Although I will say something in support of a "yes"

vote for the preamble because we have a Government position on that. But

in relation to the other issue I respect the fact that we are allowing a

free vote within the Liberal Party on that issue as we should because of

the special character of it. And part and parcel of respecting that free

vote is that I choose not to use Liberal Party forums to put my own personal

point of view. And it's one of the arrangements that we have entered into

within our parliamentary party for the conduct of the issue.

But it is a great pleasure for me to be in Kevin's electorate. And it's

with great ease and enthusiasm that I commend him to you as a remarkable,

hardworking, articulate and very effective local member. And I commend him

to you as a person of great personal integrity and conscience and dedication.

It is important that we have people in public life who feel very strongly

about certain issues. You may not agree with them on those issues but it's

very important that we have people who still believe in causes and issues

as well as making sure that the continuity of the party's broad philosophy

is continued.

We have a remarkable opportunity in the Liberal Party at present at a national

level to, if we are sensible, to secure more reforms and more beneficial

changes and to really guide this nation of ours into the 21st

Century.

Economically Australia now, in my view, is stronger than it has been at

any time since World War II. In many respects the economy's strength is

more broadly based now than what it even was in the halcyon days of the

Menzies period, strong though the Australian economy was then. Because the

Australian economy now is a lot less protected. There is less artificiality

about some of its strength now than was the case 30 years ago. We have fewer

trade barriers. We have a less regulated economy. We are exporting a greater

variety of products and services and we have tackled over the last few years

some of the basic economic weaknesses that we had. And as a consequence

we have given ourselves the remarkable situation where we have been able

to stare down the worst economic downturn that the Asian-Pacific region

has experienced since World War II.

And if I'd have been talking to you a little over a year ago I would have

said that although I thought the economy was going well and we had achieved

a lot I felt that we were going to be in some way affected by the Asian

economic downturn. And whilst we haven't been completely unscathed by it

we have really achieved a continuing strength that has surprised the Government

and it has certainly surprised all of the commentators and it has won us

a great deal of national economic respect around the world.

I don't want to bore you with statistics but we do have a rate of growth

at present which is above the OECD average. We have a still very low level

of inflation, a bit of a spike today due to the increase in the price of

petrol as a result of the increase in the world price which has now begun

to abate. But the underlying rate is still very low indeed. And we are enjoying

the lowest interest rates for more than 30 years. And we have turned a $10.5

billion budget deficit into a surplus.

We have had a few things come along that we didn't expect including, of

course, the additional defence commitment arising out of our activity in

East Timor and I'll come to that in a moment. But we do have a great economic

strength that has won us a lot of respect. And it's not come by accident

it has come as a result of a lot of hard work in the three and a bit years

that we have been in office. And you make your own luck in politics as in

life. And we worked very hard to give Australia that economic strength and

I hope its paid dividends in terms of better business conditions and a more

benign and beckoning economic climate.

So we do have an opportunity in the years ahead to leave a very decent legacy

for the Australian people of this generation of Australian Liberals. But

having in that sense, I suppose, tried to draw a bit of an analogy with

the Menzies years I think I have to say to you that the world in which we

now live is very different from the world in which Menzies reigned as Prime

Minister. The political climate is a lot more volatile, it's unpredictable.

I don't need to remind a Victorian Liberal audience of that. Very unpredictable.

And the very disappointing and regrettable defeat of the Coalition Government

here in Victoria is a sharp reminder to all of us of how unpredictable is

the political world.

We live in a political world that is less tribal than it used to be. Looking

at that old footage you were reminded of the old divide that was created

by the Cold War between the democratic west and the communist east. And

that defined not only international politics but it also to a large extent

defined domestic politics. That's gone. As a result you no longer have as

many rusted on supporters of the two sides.

I was brought up in politics to believe that 40 per cent of the community

always voted Labor, 40 per cent always voted Liberal and the rest moved

around in the middle. I now feel that it's down to 30 per cent voting Labor,

30 per cent always voting Liberal with 40 per cent moving around in the

middle. And elections are less predictable. You have to look at each election

in its own right as a separate entity. You can't assume anything so much

any more. And that means that electorates have to be constantly understood,

listened to, sympathised with, interpreted and above all respected.

Electorates are not automatically dazzled by everything that you regard

yourself as having achieved. Electorates can appear on occasions to be ungrateful.

We saw a man on the movie again tonight by the name of Churchill who thought

he'd done a bit in winning a war and lost an election immediately the war

was over in 1945. Probably the most spectacular example of the unpredictability

of politics in the 20th Century.

The message therefore out of all of that is that you can't as Liberals ever,

or we can't as Liberals ever take anything for granted. You have to work

everyday to understand and win the respect and the sympathy and support

of the electorate. Electorates expect governments to do good things for

them, that's what they elect them for. You don't get the same measure of

gratitude for the good things you have done as you do their anger and disappointment

for the things that you neglect to do and the mistakes that you make.

I think over the last three and a half years we have given very good Government

to the Australian people. But we have got to keep on doing that and we have

got to understand as Liberals that they expect us to keep on doing it.

Kevin was kind enough to mention my role in relation to what has happened

in East Timor. That has been a very defining moment for Australia on the

international stage. The peacekeeping operation that was assembled in East

Timor was assembled with a speed which surpassed any other peacekeeping

operation in living memory assembled under the auspices of the United Nations.

And in leading the activity that led to the establishment of that peacekeeping

operation Australia was taking a very important stand for not only what

was right but also for what was in Australia's national interest. And the

skill and the professionalism of the men and women of the Australian Defence

Force has been quite remarkable and has very understandably won the respect

and the admiration of our allies and others around the world.

We have unavoidably entered a difficult phase in our relationship with Indonesia.

But I believe that that relationship can and will be rebuilt and there are

already signs to that effect following the election of the new President

and the new Vice-President of that country. And we should pause for a moment

and reflect on what an extraordinary transformation has occurred in that

nation of 211 million people. It is now the third largest democracy in the

world. And over the last year it has gone through the process of converting

itself into a democracy, the first democratically elected President in over

30 years, it has accepted that East Timor is no longer part of the Republic

of Indonesia. And all of this has occurred in this remarkable country to

our north.

Now, we have our differences and clearly the role we played in relation

to East Timor represented a point of difference and a point of strain. But

in the long run we have to accept that we are forever together in this part

of the world and on a basis, a proper basis of mutual respect and understanding

I am sure that we can rebuild that relationship and it will continue, I

think, on a more practical, realistic and open and candid basis than perhaps

has been the situation in the past.

And it will also be important that the new nation of East Timor be part

of that association because whatever the difficulties there may have been

in the past and now and whatever the feelings are between the people of

East Timor and the people of Indonesia it's very necessary that they also

recognise that they have a common future together and a common destiny together.

And the three of us, different sizes, different compositions, different

cultures, different backgrounds but having in common the fact that we exist

and will always exist together in this particular part of the world.

But what Australia was able to do in relation to the events in East Timor

have been very much to the credit and the reputation of our nation. Not

something that one talks about in any boastful terms but realistically and

soberly saying that we are a community that has been willing to take a leadership

role, a community that has been willing sensibly and carefully to defend

what is right and what is in our own long-term interests. But also importantly

a country that had the national political will and the economic capacity

to do it. Economically strong nations are listened to with greater respect

than economically weak nations and economically strong nations have a capacity

to do things that economically weak nations don't have a capacity to do.

And there's a message in that for all of us coming out of what we have been

able to achieve in strengthening the Australian economy over the last three

and half years.

Now, I mentioned, ladies and gentlemen, that I would have something very

briefly to say about the second referendum question and that is the writing

into our Constitution of a new preamble. It hasn't received a great deal

of attention and it's Government policy to advocate a "yes" vote

for that particular question. I would like to see that preamble supported.

I would like to see it go into the Constitution. I think it would be a unifying

thing for the Australian people if the community, irrespective of the different

views it may have on the question of whether we change our other Constitutional

arrangement. I think it would be a very unifying thing if we could put into

our Constitution a statement of the fundamental beliefs and values of the

Australian community. And particularly the reference in that preamble to

the indigenous people would make a valuable contribution to the cause of

reconciliation within the Australian community.

We will inevitably continue to have a variety of views about how best to

assist the indigenous people of the Australian community but it cannot be

denied that as an identifiable group they remain the most disadvantaged

within our society. Nor can it be denied that they have a special place

within the Australian community as the first people of our nation. And it

would make a marvellous unifying symbolic contribution to their place in

the Australian community and the celebration of the Centenary of the Federation

of the Australian Commonwealth if that preamble could be carried and that

preamble could be inserted into the Australian Constitution.

So I quite unapologetically at this gathering invite you to give your sympathetic

support to the cause of an affirmative vote in relation to the preamble.

And can I finish, ladies and gentlemen, in saying how important it is that

gatherings like this occur that people gather around to provide significant

financial and community support for members of Parliament. All of you in

different ways are identified with the Liberal Party cause at a grass roots

level here in the electorate of Menzies.

I often say that everything that I have achieved in public life I owe to

the Liberal Party. I would never have been a member of Parliament without

the endorsement of the Liberal Party. I would never have been its Leader

without its support. I would never have been Prime Minister without the

support of the Liberal Party. And in the time that I have been Prime Minister

I have received the most magnificent loyalty from the rank and file members

of the Liberal Party all around Australia whether it's in New South Wales

or Victoria or Western Australia it's the same.

Liberals are wonderfully supportive. I want you to know that I value that

and I understand it. And I respect immensely the contribution that the rank

and file of the party make to our existence. I came through the party organisation

myself. I know how important it is to have a strong party organisation.

A party organisation that supports the parliamentary party and gives it

public loyalty but a party organisation that also has the capacity on occasions

to say to the parliamentary party, we think you should do this particular

thing in a slightly different fashion and to assert its role and its right

and its prerogative and its authority in relation to those matters that

properly belong to the party organisation.

Now, I know that here in Victoria because of the defeat at a State level

there is a process of stocktaking and introspection and review and assessment

going on. And that is right and proper. I have always found within the party

organisation amongst Liberals around Australia that where there is a willingness

to do that then lessons are learnt, understandings are gained. And here

in Victoria is no different in a sense from the process of introspection

at a State level that has been going on in New South Wales since the defeat

at a State level in New South Wales some months ago.

We have a big challenge ahead of us over the next two years before the next

federal election. We can't take that election for granted. I don't. It will

be a very big challenge. We'll be asking for a third victory in a row. That

is very achievable but it's not something we can assume is going to happen.

And given the sort of climate of which I spoke earlier it will be something

that we, all of us, collectively must ensure is not taken lightly. But if

we continue to give quality Government to the people of Australia, if we

continue to demonstrate a capacity to listen to them, to understand that

there is within rural Australia a very significant feeling of alienation

and disappointment that sections of our country are falling behind the generic

plenty and prosperity of other parts of our community then I think we will

retain and build upon the respect we now have within the Australian community.

But none of us, and it didn't really need the result in the Victorian election

although it's driven it home to us, none of us can ignore the fact that

there are many parts of the Australian community that aren't sharing in

the national economic well-being. We are doing very well as a nation but

there are still pockets of Australia that are not sharing in that. And I

think we all know it's human nature that if you feel that in relative terms

you are missing out in a big way you feel a lot more keenly than if your

disadvantage is, relatively speaking, not quite so profound.

So we do have tremendous challenges in front of us but it's important that

we remember some of the things that we saw on that video tonight. The emphasis

on the individual, the emphasis on the family, the emphasis on a sense of

community and a reminder that the Liberal Party of Australia was built on

commonsense Australian values. Values that do respect the individual liberty

that do respect the right of people to work hard and be properly rewarded

and to keep the fruits of their effort and their commitment and their skill.

And I think you have in Kevin a marvellous representative of that philosophy

and that's why I am delighted to be here tonight. Delighted to commend him

most warmly to you and delighted to congratulate those who put together

the 200 Club. I wish it well, it'll make a magnificent contribution to the

Liberal cause here in the nobly named seat of Menzies. Thank you.

[ends]

11394