PM Transcripts

Transcripts from the Prime Ministers of Australia

Howard, John

Period of Service: 11/03/1996 - 03/12/2007
Release Date:
03/07/1999
Release Type:
Speech
Transcript ID:
11414
Released by:
  • Howard, John Winston
TRANSCRIPT OF THE PRIME MINISTER THE HON JOHN HOWARD MP TRIBUTE ADDRESS TO SIR JOHN GORTON AT LIBERAL PARTY FEDERAL COUNCIL GALA DINNER HYATT HOTEL, CANBERRA

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

Tony Staley, Sir John and Lady Gorton, Shane Stone, the Federal President

elect, Richard Court and John Olsen, the Premiers of Western Australia

and South Australia, Kate Carnell, the Chief Minister of the Australian

Capital Territory, Peter Costello, Deputy Federal Parliamentary Leader,

other colleagues and friends, ladies and gentlemen.

The present member for Higgins and Federal Treasurer has a very good

line in Parliament when he rightly talks about the success that this

Government has had in reducing interest rates. He says that interest

rates haven't been as low in Australia since man first walked

on the moon. Now, of course, when man first walked on the moon the

former member for Higgins, John Grey Gorton, was Prime Minister of

Australia.

And tonight we gather to honour the contribution of John Grey Gorton

to the serve first and foremost of his country. And we saw in that

marvelous little video the great sacrifice and gallantry that he demonstrated.

And we were reminded that this place, a generation ago, was overwhelmingly

filled with men who had gone through that experience on both sides.

Now, of course, a generation or more on, naturally things are different.

But on an occasion like this we reflect on a man who connects us with

those gallant years. We reflect on a man who connects us with a time

that was convulsed by the controversy of the Vietnam War, a time which

in economic terms we are now reminded of because of the great strength

of the Australian economy. I won't dwell on that tonight, that

will come tomorrow. But also a time that connects us with the history

and the heritage of our Party.

And John Gorton was elected to Federal Parliament almost 50 years

ago. When he was Prime Minister of Australia - I reminded myself of

this the other day – I think he was re-elected in 1969 and that

was a year in which Richmond won the VFL flag, Balmain won the JJ

Gilterton Shield that was then the symbol of rugby league supremacy

in Sydney and, of course, Ian Chappell had just become Captain of

the Australian Cricket Team. But it is a wonderful experience, I think,

for a Party and particularly for the younger members of our Party

to be reminded of the contribution of John Gorton to his country.

John Gorton was one of the first politicians, I believe, at the national

political level in Australia to really understand the power of personal

communication on television. It is my belief that John Gorton would

not have won the leadership of the Liberal Party after the tragic

death of Harold Holt in 1967 if he hadn't been able to communicate

so directly and passionately and in such a personal fashion in the

interviews that he conducted on television immediately after Harold

Holt's death.

He also, of course, knew a thing or two about drama when it came to

Party Room ballots. Now, there's a few of who know a thing or

two about drama in Party Room ballots. I've been through a few

of those myself. I've got to say I've never been in a tie.

I either was resoundingly defeated or got drafted but never in a tie.

And it must have been quite an exquisite moment and as I look around

the room and I see some of the former colleagues who are gathered

here. But he played a major role in a number of things that continue

to be very important to the Liberal Party's political base today.

A little remark thing about John Gorton's ministerial career

was that he played a very big role in cementing the changed political

allegiances that followed the Menzies Government embrace of State

aid to independent schools in 1963 and that continue to be an enduringly

important thing in the dynamic of Australian politics.

He was, in every sense of the word, the genuine article as far as

a dinkum Australian was concerned. He was direct. He was laconic.

He had at all times a clear and passionate view of what the Australian

national interest was. He argued like, I guess, all Prime Ministers

do from time to time with the Premiers of the States. He had some

celebrated arguments with Sir Henry Bolte and Sir Robert Askin during

the time of his prime ministership.

On all occasions John Gorton was a man who had a clear eyed view of

the Australian national interest and he was a passionate nationalist

above everything else. And that's not a bad example for any Prime

Minister be it in 1969, 1979 or indeed 1999 because the enduring commitment

to the national interest is something for which I believe he will

be remembered.

I think political parties should treasure their history. I think political

parties should honour their past warriors and their past contributors.

And tonight is an opportunity for us to do that and I'm immensely

proud that I've had the chance, as the current Liberal Prime

Minister of Australia, to honour John Gorton. To have John and Nancy

with us and a number of their former colleagues and former colleagues

of mine who have come here tonight, I think it's a wonderful

opportunity for us to pay tribute to a great Australian, a great leader,

a great Prime Minister, a Liberal to his boot straps and a man whose

contribution to Australia is properly honoured and properly remembered.

[ends]

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