Subjects: Liberal Party traditions; Liberal achievements; Tony Rundle; Hydro
policy, Tasmania's debt; Forest industry; Tough on Drugs policy; Gun control;
E&OE....................
Thank you very much, Shane; to Jim Bowler; to Sue Napier, your Grace; Senator
Jocelyn Newman, the senior Federal representative from Tasmania and my valued
Cabinet colleague, my other Parliamentary colleagues, ladies and gentlemen.
Can I say how happy I am again as Prime Minister to address this State Council,
this annual gathering, of the Tasmanian Division of the Liberal Party. I
wish also to extend my great gratitude to Jim for the tremendous work that
he's done over the past years as President of the Division. I came through
the Party organisation. I know that the pay is low and the material rewards
are limited but I also know that the immense satisfaction of fighting for
something that you believe in and contributing to a cause that you feel
will better the welfare of the people of Australia is about the most satisfying
and rewarding thing that you can do. But it hasn't been easy here in Tasmania.
And I thank you most warmly, Jim. You'll be remembered and the work that
you've done will be seen quite properly as an immense contribution to the
Liberal Party cause in Tasmania.
Can I also join Shane in remarking on the contribution of Tony Rundle. Shane
was right, he and Tony got away with blue murder on occasions through their
quiet, whimsical, effective way. I mean, they sort of sat and said nothing
and they, you know, when one or other of their colleagues was sort of railing
against the centralists in Canberra, they would say, oh, you know, they
shouldn't talk to you like that, John, that's shocking but how about such
and such. They did it very well. They did it very skilfully. But Tony did
something else at the last election here in Tasmania. And I know it's not,
in a sense, of much comfort and satisfaction in the political world to say,
well, you were right but the people didn't understand that. But in the long
run that does mean something. Because in the long run being in office is
not about having a white car and having the privilege of being the Premier
or the Prime Minister and sort of getting welcomed and people saying nice
things about you. In the long run being in government is about trying to
do good things for the country or trying to do good things for your State.
And what Tony Rundle did at the last election was to say what had to be
said. And what he said in the last election campaign was true then and it's
even more true a year on. Because every country, every State, every municipality
is, in the end, master of its own destiny and that implies both privileges
as well as responsibilities. And Tony was prepared to discharge the ultimate
responsibility of somebody holding a position of authority and that was
to tell people what was needed to secure their future even though part of
the message was not immediately accepted and not immensely palatable. And
in the long run when the history of this period of Tasmanian politics is
written people will say that Rundle was right in what he said about the
State's debt and the he had the courage to state it. I wish you well. I
wish both you and Carolyn every happiness in the future. I count you as
a friend and colleague of the highest order and I think you've done a great
thing by the Tasmanian people and by the Liberal Party here in your State.
A gathering like this, friends, is an occasion to reflect as well as project
forward. This is the last Tasmanian State Council of this century, this
millennium. And it's an occasion, therefore, to reflect on the heritage
of the Liberal Party. It will be 50 years in December since Robert Gordon
Menzies and Arthur Fadden led the Coalition to power in 1949. And over that
50 years there's a lot about the Liberal heritage of which we should be
immensely proud. We should understand the character of our party. We, in
the term that I've coined somewhat, we are a broad church. Unlike centre
right parties in other parts of the world the Liberal Party of Australia
is the custodian of both the classical Liberal tradition in our society
as well as the conservative tradition. We are neither a conservative party
exclusively nor are we a small 'l' Liberal Party exclusively. We are a mix
of the two. There are things about Australia's history and our past that
I believe continue to serve us well and should be preserved. There are things
about our past and there are things about what we do now that need to be
changed and reformed to provide us a stronger and better future. And the
art of good statecraft is to choose from the past, from the heritage, from
the history, those things that are of continuing and enduring value but
also to recognise that change and reform in other areas is necessary to
secure stability and to secure progress. And the Liberal Party has always
been about trying to balance those things. The Liberal Party has always
been about the liberty of the individual.
One of the proudest things that I was able to say at the Wentworth Hotel
on the 2nd of March 1996 when I formally accepted the immense
privilege that had been conferred upon me and my party at the election,
at the ballot box that day was that the Liberal Party of Australia was owned
by no one section of the Australian community.
We are sympathetic to business. But we are not beholden to business. We
understand the importance of profit and capitalism but we recognise the
potential for abuse and excesses that can occur. We recognise that the Government
has a limited role but nonetheless a strategic role within our community.
We are not for the government withdrawing from all areas of activity, but
we are for the government focussing on those areas that properly belong
to government and that does not normally include commercial activity.
We're a Party that does not believe in privilege or class. We are a Party
that honours and respects tradition but also prides itself in sharing the
great egalitarian tradition of the Australian people. We are increasingly
a party that represents people who might in another time and another era
have regarded themselves as traditional supporters of the Labor Party. I
was immensely satisfied and pleased that in 1996 one of the great features
of the Coalition's victory on that occasion, was that many of the great
industrial centers of our country, and the great mining centres of our country,
historically associated with the Australian Labor Party were in fact returned
federal members representing the Coalition.
The city of Broken Hill is represented in the federal parliament by a member
of the National Party. The city of Mt Isa is represented in the federal
parliament by a coalition member. The cities of Whyalla and Port Pirie in
South Australia are represented in the national parliament by a Liberal
member. And so the list can go on. And I think it is very important that
as we move into the next millennium, for all of us to understand that we're
living in a different political world. It's a less ideological political
world.
The Australian community, particularly those under 30 are not as beholden
to ideology as were their parents. They don't see themselves being involved
in an angry struggle about ideology the way in which their parents may have
in the 1960s. They are however people who look for positive outcomes. They
are interested in a political party that delivers results. That can do things
to make their lives more secure. And I think as we move into the next millennium
we will see politics shaped less by rigid ideology but nonetheless shaped
very strongly by basic values and there is a difference.
Ideology to me has always been something rather rigid imposed from above.
Whereas values are things that come from the community and in a sense are
ageless. The instincts of candour and honesty and civil behavior and respect
for the rights of the individual and the acceptance that in any decent society
along with rights and privileges go responsibilities and obligations. They
are values which are quite ageless in my view and embeddable. They will
be expressed in different ways in different times and political parties
have a responsibility to respond to those different circumstances.
So it is important on an occasion like this that we think about what our
party has achieved. Not only have we been in office for 34 of the last 50
years, but many of the great breakthroughs that have occurred, the great
breakthroughs in terms of tolerance and human values and a quality of opportunity
have occurred under Federal Liberal governments. It was after a federal
Liberal government that really opened up opportunities for the entire Australian
population for a university education. And the reforms carried out in that
area by the Menzies government in the 1950s remained one of the great contributions
to the expansion of education to the Australian people.
It was under a coalition government that the white Australia policy was
ended under the Prime Ministership of Harold Holt. It was under the leadership
of the Fraser government that was accepted into our country over 150,000
Indochinese refugees. In fact we took more Indochinese refugees in the 1970s
on a per capita basis than any country on earth and that was Australia being
an open hearted, decent spirited country offering a haven to people whose
lives have been devastated by a long and costly war. It was under a Coalition
government that we ended one of the great sectarian divides in this country
when we provided assistance to independent schools and recognised a cornerstone
of education policy in this country. And that is that every Australian parent
has the right to choose the form of education that his or her child should
receive. And that principle was re-endorsed only two or three months ago
when we announced long-term plans to provide even more choice to Australian
parents in relation to the education of their children.
A Coalition government has been responsible for many of the great [tape
break] and coming up to date we now have a Coalition government presiding
over and having made a great contribution towards achieving the strongest
economic conditions that this country has had for more than 30 years. And
there are many statistics that I could regale you with this morning about
the strength of our economy. The one that in a persona sense is the most
heart-warming of all is that in the three-and-a-quarter that we have been
in government since March of 1996 we have seen a 5.8 percentage point decline
in the number of young Australians looking for work. And that is the best
figure of all because in the end a good economy exists to provide good living
standards and rising job opportunities.
Our unemployment rate is still too high. It's seven percent nationally.
It's much higher in Tasmania. It's lower in other parts of Australia. It's
uneven, it's lumpy. And we still have a long way to go but it's better than
it's been for the last 10 years. And we've created almost 500,000 jobs in
the last three and a bit years. And if we can continue our current rate
of economic growth and, better still, if we can persuade the Senate to pass
our laws entrenching youth wages and dealing with the unfair burden on small
business of the unfair dismissal laws then we can hope to drive that unemployment
rate even lower. And it will be one of the goals of the Government to keep
doing that. Because the economic strength we have now must be translated
increasingly in the years ahead towards providing more job opportunities
for our young people. And those job opportunities will essentially be found
in private business and the private sector. The strength of the business
community and the business sector is still the foundation of job generation
in this country. And that is why the security that the Federal Government,
the Howard Government and the Rundle Government brought to the timber industry
in this State was so important because it's a major employer in Tasmania.
And that is why, as I said to you last night, I'm distributed at the import
of the amendments that are being proposed in Canberra by our Federal opponents.
Although, I make it plain to you, there's no way those amendments will be
accepted by the Government. But the very fact that they're being proposed
show an indifference towards the long-term economic security of this State.
At long last I think there in Tasmania we've got a balance between the maintenance
of a strong industry but also a proper concern for the environmental values
of the State. And I want that balance preserved, I want it protected and
I want it secured. And I can assure you on behalf of the Federal Government
that we'll make absolutely certain that nothing is done to undermine, disturb
or qualify the agreement that I signed with Tony Rundle covering regional
forest arrangements in Tasmania and the investment that has been made by
the industry will be fully honoured and fully protected and the jobs that
have been created and secured as a consequence of that investment will also
be fully honoured and fully protected.
As we survey both the past and the present political scene at this State
Council gathering we also throw forward naturally to the next millennium.
What Australia has been able to do over the last three years has been to
win a new respect, a new admiration around the world. We have important
goals both nationally and internationally. We seek to build our reputation
as a 'can do' country, as a country that can convert our inventive capacity
to commercial benefit and commercial return. A country that has the capacity
to become not only a regional financial centre but a world financial centre.
Because the generic assets we have at the moment, a stable government, a
stable economy, clear laws of corporate behaviour, an incorruptible judiciary,
well regulated and supervised banks, Australians having a great capacity
to speak the languages of the region with considerable skill and dexterity,
all of those things make Australia an increasingly attractive place in which
to invest and to establish regional service and financial activities. And
we have great opportunities as we go into the next century to achieve those
goals.
And in relation to Tasmania I want to assure you again that the Government
I lead will continue to have a particular concern for the special requirements
and the special circumstances of Tasmania. We have, after all, a very good
record. We gave Tasmania such fundamental programmes as the freight equalisation
scheme. We've always understood the disabilities of an island State regarding
transport costs. I don't think anybody can contest the fact that Tasmania
has been fairly treated out of the Natural Heritage Trust and all the other
programmes that have come from the sale of the various tranches of Telstra.
And we'll continue to ensure that Tasmania gets her fair share and gets
a fair deal. But as I said last night and I repeat this morning, that there
remains a long-term cloud over the economic future of Tasmania and that
is the debt of this State which is four times the State average. And until
the bullet is bitten and something is done about that debt here in Tasmania
your economic growth will continue to be constrained. And that is why I
remain compassionately of the view that something must be done about the
privatisation of the Hydro. I know that's unpopular in some circles in Tasmania.
I know I will be condemned for saying it. But just as Tony Rundle spoke
the truth a year ago, I speak the truth this morning when I reassert its
necessity. Every other State in Australia and nationally is tackling the
debt problem.
The South Australian Government struggled to get its electricity authority's
privatisation legislation the Parliament and succeeded. The Victorian Government
has massively reduced the debt of that State and lifted the hopes and the
living standards of Victorians by the action that it's taken. If we can
secure the sale of the rest of Telstra by the year 2002 we will free Australia
of net Commonwealth Government debt and that will lay the foundation of
good circumstances for interest rates in the early years of the next century
and also provide us the flexibility in time for further reductions in taxation.
Because if you can rid yourself of the burden of debt the money you otherwise
use to pay off the debt can be used for either the provision of new services
or reductions in taxation. And that is why eliminating debt is so tremendously
important. And just as we had to take action at a national level to achieve
that outcome and just as the Victorians did it and the South Australians
have done it and others have done it so it is necessary also for Tasmania
to do it. I don't say that in any hectoring or insensitive or hard-hearted
sense. It is a statement of reality. And each must make a contribution to
solving their own difficulty and their own problem. And I think it remains
extremely important that that be done.
The last thing that I want to say to you ladies and gentlemen of a policy
character is to remind you, as we should always as Liberal's remind ourselves
that we don't exist just to get the economy right. We don't exist just to
achieve business and material wellbeing for our community, important though
that is, because it provides jobs which is a basis of family security. But
we also exist to achieve great social goals and we've achieved many of those
over the last three and a quarter years. No audience in Australia would
know better than you do of the traumatic impact of the Port Arthur tragedy
which occurred in April of 1996. But we were able to achieve then through
national gun control legislation is one of the great social achievements
of the last ten or twenty years.
I know it was unpopular in some areas, but its long term contribution to
the security of people is immense and we only have to see the almost daily
demonstration of the terrifying impact of unlimited access to weapons in
the United States to realise what an important measure that was borne out
of the most awful and traumatic tragedy.
So it is equally that we remain very committed to the ongoing fight against
the drug menace. We may argue in our community about the margin, about this
or that approach to fighting the drug problem, but most of us agree as to
95 percent of what needs to be done. We need to educate young people against
starting on drugs. We need to remind them of the link between so-called
soft drugs and hard drugs. That the one leads to the other. And this absurd
notion that marawana can be consumed without any long-term harm is not only
clinically implausible and ridiculous, but has been constantly disproved
by individual experience.
We need to provide more resources for law enforcement. We need to make it
very clear that there is no mercy, sympathy or compassion in our community
for people who traffic out of the human misery of others, which is what
drug dealers do.
And finally, of course, we must be compassionate and caring and understanding
for those people who want to break the drug habit. And I've talked to a
lot of people who are trying to break the drug habit. I've talked to the
parents who've lost their children through drug overdoses. And there is
no more I guess arresting, sobering experience for a person in public life
to do than to sit down at length to people who've gone through that tragedy
and it's important that we do that, it's important that we understand it.
It's very important that we also have in this country a support mechanism
so that if somebody wants to give up the habit then they get help immediately
and they don't have to wait a month or two before they get that assistance.
And at a federal level we have responded. We've put an extra $500 million
into our Tough On Drugs Strategy. And I wish to public debate focussed on
all the positive things that the government's of Australia are trying to
do together - labor and Liberal alike - rather than focus on the fact that
we may disagree about whether you have a safe injecting room which I don't
support or whether you have heroine trials which I don't support either.
I think it would be a good idea if we focussed on the things that we are
achieving together because there's a lot of collective determination on
the part of all the governments of Australia to try and do something about
this dreadful scurge in our community. And it's also important that we keep
a sense of perspective about Is to remind you as we should always as Liberal's
remind ourselves that we don't exist just to get the economy right. We don't
exist just to achieve business and material wellbeing for our community,
important though that is, because it provides jobs which is a basis of family
security. But we also exist to achieve great social goals and we've achieved
many of those over the last three and a quarter years. No audience in Australia
would know better than you do of the traumatic impact of the Port Arthur
tragedy which occurred in April of 1996. But we were able to achieve then
through national gun control legislation is one of the great social achievements
of the last ten or twenty years.
I know it was unpopular in some areas, but its long term contribution to
the security of people is immense and we only have to see the almost daily
demonstration of the terrifying impact of unlimited access to weapons in
the United States to realise what an important measure that was borne out
of the most awful and traumatic tragedy.
So it is equally that we remain very committed to the ongoing fight against
the drug menace. We may argue in our community about the margin, about this
or that approach to fighting the drug problem, but most of us agree as to
95 percent of what needs to be done. We need to educate young people against
starting on drugs. We need to remind them of the link between so-called
soft drugs and hard drugs. That the one leads to the other. And this absurd
notion that marawana can be consumed without any long-term harm is not only
clinically implausible and ridiculous, but has been constantly disproved
by individual experience.
We need to provide more resources for law enforcement. We need to make it
very clear that there is no mercy, sympathy or compassion in our community
for people who traffic out of the human misery of others, which is what
drug dealers do.
And finally, of course, we must be compassionate and caring and understanding
for those people who want to break the drug habit. And I've talked to a
lot of people who are trying to break the drug habit. I've talked to the
parents who've lost their children through drug overdoses. And there is
no more I guess arresting, sobering experience for a person in public life
to do than to sit down at length to people who've gone through that tragedy
and it's important that we do that, it's important that we understand it.
It's very important that we also have in this country a support mechanism
so that if somebody wants to give up the habit then they get help immediately
and they don't have to wait a month or two before they get that assistance.
And at a federal level we have responded. We've put an extra $500 million
into our Tough On Drugs Strategy. And I wish to public debate focussed on
all the positive things that the government's of Australia are trying to
do together - labor and Liberal alike - rather than focus on the fact that
we may disagree about whether you have a safe injecting room which I don't
support or whether you have heroine trials which I don't support either.
I think it would be a good idea if we focussed on the things that we are
achieving together because there's a lot of collective determination on
the part of all the governments of Australia to try and do something about
this dreadful scurge in our community. And it's also important that we keep
a sense of perspective about it and understand that a percentage of the
population we're dealing with, although it is too large, is nonetheless
a minute section of the Australian population.
And finally can I echo what Shane Stone had to say and that is to express
my immense gratitude to all of you for the loyalty that you've demonstrated
to me, to Tony Rundle and, I know, that you are demonstrating to Sue. Sue
faces a big fight but it's a very winnable fight. I know what it's like
to be in Opposition - I had a lot of practise, too much practise. I have
no intention of ever going back to repeat the experience. But one thing
that you have to do, if I may respectfully say, in Opposition, be it Federal
or State, is that you have to start fairly early in marking out your territory
in telling the community about those things for which you stand.
We all know what Oppositions are against. They're against the Government,
they're agin the Government and they want to change the Government. We all
know that. But the big challenge for Oppositions is to tell the Australian
public or the Tasmanian public why it is they ought to change the Government,
to tell the public why it ought to vote for them, as well as telling them
why they should vote against the Government. Now, I know that you and your
colleagues, Sue, are starting to do that and we'll be very willing to provide
any help and assistance we can.
The Australian political scene is more volatile now than it used to be.
I don't take anything for granted. We're travelling fairly well at the present
time but that doesn't guarantee that we're going to win the next Federal
election. Nobody should think that for a moment. We'll win the next Federal
election if we work hard and we continue to deliver outcomes and people
continue to believe in us. Then we'll win it. We won't win it because people
think, oh well, the other crowd's hopeless. That doesn't work as much as
it used to because we're living in a less ideological world and we have
to work to win and achieve every vote. And so it is with the State Opposition,
policy building, policy branding, policy differentiation is tremendously
important so people know what you are for as well as what you are against.
But it is a good time to be in government because we're a great sort of
historical watershed, the turn of the century and the beginning of the third
Christian millennium. It's a remarkable time to be in government. It's a
great privilege. It's a great opportunity. And I have that privilege and
that opportunity essentially because of the loyalty and support of people
in this room and people like you all over Australia who year in and year
out, without recognition or reward but