PM Transcripts

Transcripts from the Prime Ministers of Australia

Keating, Paul

Period of Service: 20/12/1991 - 11/03/1996
Release Date:
21/11/1993
Release Type:
Interview
Transcript ID:
9050
Document:
00009050.pdf 4 Page(s)
Released by:
  • Keating, Paul John
TRANSCRIPT OF THE PRIME MINISTER, THE HON P J KEATING, MP INTERVIEW WITH DAVID MARGAN, 7.30 REPORT SEATTLE, USA, 21 NOVEMBET 993

PRIME MINISTER
TRANSCRIPT OF THE PRIME MINISTER, THE HON P J KEATING, MP
INTERVIEW WITH DAVID MARGAN, 7.30 REPORT
SEATTLE, USA, 21 NOVEMBER 1993
E& OE PROOF COPY
DM: There's been an awful lot of discussion about what APEC should be.
And certainly perhaps coming into this conference there were hopes
within the Australian contingent, Singapore, South Korea and the
United States, that perhaps the institutional basis of APEC may move
forward fairly quickly. There was some discussion about whether it
should really be a community, and in fact, you were suggesting the
idea that the name be changed. None of that though really happened.
PM: Now, some members of the APEC constituency thought the word the
big community meant a Brussells style bureaucracy with supra
national decision making in one place, that is, a bureaucracy able to
make decisions for each of them. Now, none of us has ever envisaged
that this is a much more lose arrangement without any formal treaties.
So, it is a small community, but it is definitely a community. But the
success of it can only be measured by the fact that all of the leaders of
the APEC community met, including China, which is half the world's
production, representing half the world's production and 40 per cent of
the worlds population, and decided to meet again. So, decided to
meet next year in Jakarta and adopt a whole range of things in the
meantime which will then come up for endorsement at the Jakarta
meeting. So, APEC Is off and running.
DM: So, what was your reaction to certain elements of the Australian
media, particularly in relation to your attempt to have the name
changed, when they described that attempt as a failure, that you had
been rebuffed?
PM: It is foolishness bordering on what seems to me a sort of negativism
and a complete lack of pride in anything Australia does. Some of the
nit picking by Australian journalists abroad, I mean, what other country
our size would put together a thing this large? When I first started
talking about the APEC leaders' meeting, the same people were
saying, oh well, it is beyond anyone's imagination, this won't happen,
Mta -. Ptlo

Australia can't put a thing like this together. When it actually comes
together then they say, well you want to get the name changed, so
thats a failure too. Here's the rest of the Asia-Pacific basking in this
sense of engagement, including and most particularly a US President
who had lent all of his prestige to it, and large countries which have got
very particular differences like China and Japan, and Japan and the
United States all there trying to draw the best from it. So, it really puts,
I think, some of the negativism by Australian based journalists abroad
in its proper perspective. That is, when are they ever going to say,
well this was a great thing Australia put together and it has actually
come off, it has actually come off. That Australian diplomacy has
again produced another very great change.
DM. It is said by a number of people looking at this conference before it
started that its success will be measured by how many concrete things
It comes out with. I am particularly talking about trade liberalisation.
There was some criticism of the Eminent Persons Group for having a
timetable for discussion that didn't start until 1996, but it seems the
conference has even thrown that aside and delayed the idea of trade
liberalisation even further, and some would suggest it would be the
year 2000 before they have even liberalised trade in snow ploughs.
PM: Well four years ago APEC didn't exist at all. Four years later it has
gone from a mini OECD information policy secretariat in 1989, to an
executive Heads of Government body today in four years. But what's
not adopted this year Is Invariably getting adopted the following year,
you know what I mean, it takes people a while to warm up to see that
there is no hidden punch, there Is no catch. You have got a very
disparate group of economies. And what happens with some of the
simple simons in our media, they are saying, hang on, look you have
got this, now you said you were going to do this, but you never got
there. I say, but hang on, look, four years ago this didn't exist, I mean
this is a grouping of very disparate forces, people have been arraigned
against each other for most of the century. Either we keep pushing
and pull same of the others behind us, or we stop pushing and wait till
they get some natural momentum. Now, if we do that it will be much
slower. So, if you are sitting in Australia's seat or the US's seat, but
particularly Australia's seat, as we have been the prime movers in this,
you keep pushing, and then gather in the things which we have done,
including now turning this into an executive body, and rapidly, and then
going on as we have this weekend, on to design up a set of investment
rules for an investment agreement between now and next year. I
mean, who could have thought four years ago we would have had an
Investment agreement in the Asia-Pacific, it would have been
unthinkable.
DM: In terms though of our sort of Immediate concr-ete results, would
perhaps the unified position that this group has taken on the GATT
Round be the most significant for the moment?

PM: Has the Position they have taken?
DM: In that the APEC leaders have decided to take a unified approach to
the GATT Round and have sent therefore a message?
PM: Yes.
DM: To those talks.
PM: We were saying to President Clinton yesterday, you have got to go for
the triple whammy, that's NAFTA, APEC and GATT. He said, well I am
going for it, I am telling you, I am going to go for it. And the statement
we made yesterday about the GATT, I mean, that is coming from half
the worlds production, that's representing half the worlds production
saying to the French and the Europeans, get this finished, get this
done.
DM-. On another issue, perhaps the gloss of this event, this pride at the
moment was taken away momentarily, perhaps, by the comments of
-Conrad Black on an ABC television program.
PM: No that is only just an Australian sleeve issue, I mean who cares about
those things, they are just ephemeral day to day things. This is the
biggest of the big pictures, and the Black business is just, not even a
splash of paint on the picture.
DM: But for some it Is a very Important matter of public policy. Some have
thought it was a sleazy inside deal to give a foreigner some rewards,
financial rewards.
PM: No, Australian Governments have got to make decisions about equity
issues in print and broadcasting and we will make them on the highest
motives, and we have. But, you have only got to say Fairfax and the
Fairfax joumno's go Into a tizz, and they play the first stanza and
generally the ABC does the second stanza for them.
DM: But so the issue of balance.
PM: Break the mould.
DM: Doesn't it seem a bit strange that we should discover this notion of the
Prime Ministers view of balance in an investment matter that involves
millions of dollars from a book published by Conrad Black himself. I
mean, why wasn't this on the public record before. We have had these
conversations, we have told him..
PM: But all these things were discussed at the time.

DM: So, deciding, I mean, why did he in the end get 25 per cent?
PM: I mean, this is just simply dust in the cracks of history. Just forget
about it. I mean you are on the APEC picture, that's the picture to stay
on, this stuff just slides into nowhere.
DM: But it is an Important matter of public policy, our control of our media,
how the deals are done, who gets what.
PM: Compared to what has been done here, this last weekend it is hardly
worth a mention.
DM: So, you think the Australian public should have no concern about how
its broadcasting policy is run?
PM: Yes, but all in the right frame work, not juxtaposed with haughty
subjects tike this.
DM: I am still interested though, in the Prime Ministers notion of balance.
Should you be the one who decides that, though?
PM: Well Prime Ministers have got to decide, I mean, I noticed a bit of
comment about this saying, well isn't it unusual that the Prime Minister
has had to make a decision about the acceptability or otherwise of a
particular set of proprietors. That's one of the things, I am afraid,
Prime Ministers have to do. Because we are the ones who have got to
take the decisions about who gets what in terms of equity. So, it may
be an uncomfortable lot and a burden, but that is part of the job.
DMV: Do you think the next media baron should come to you about
questions of balance and objectivity, for your decision?
PM: If they are foreigners, and if they want to buy a large ch'unk of
Australia, yes.
Ends

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