Words by Abraham Lincoln

https://theconversation.com/malcolm-fraser-2012-gough-whitlam-oration-7524

 

In June 2012 Malcolm Fraser was asked to give the 2012 Gough Whitlam Oration and he said:

“I am honoured to be asked to make this speech.”

During his speech, Malcolm Fraser said:

“I am reminded of some words of Abraham Lincoln:

I am not bound to win,

but I am bound to be true,

I am not bound to succeed,

but I am bound to live up to what light I have.

I must stand with anybody that stands right,

stand with him while he is right,

and part with him when he goes wrong.”

 

I think maybe some of our politicians would do good to think a bit about these words by Abraham Lincoln.

Gough Whitlam praised by Noel Pearson, 5th Nov 2014

http://www.smh.com.au/federal-politics/political-news/noel-pearsons-eulogy-for-gough-whitlam-praised-as-one-for-the-ages-20141105-11h7vm.html

 

Gough Whitlam ‘Australia’s greatest white elder’

Aboriginal leader Noel Pearson speaks at the memorial service for Gough Whitlam, describing the former prime minister as ‘a friend without peer of the original Australians’.

Indigenous leader Noel Pearson’s powerful eulogy for Gough Whitlam at his state memorial service is being hailed on social media as a one of the best political speeches of our time.

The chairman of the Cape York Group paid tribute to “this old man” Whitlam, praising his foresight and moral vision in striving for universal opportunity in Australia.

He even channelled Monty Python as he listed Whitlam’s achievements, saying: “And what did the Romans ever do for us anyway?”, to laughter and clapping from the audience. He then answered his own question, reeling off a great list of Whitlam’s achievements, including Medibank, the abolition of conscription, the introduction of student financial assistance and Aboriginal land rights.

Noel Pearson received rave reviews for his tribute to Gough Whitlam. Noel Pearson received rave reviews for his tribute to Gough Whitlam. Photo: Peter Rae

Mr Pearson said as a person born into poverty and discrimination, he spoke of “this old man’s legacy with no partisan brief”.

“Only those born bereft truly know the power of opportunity,” Mr Pearson said.

“We salute this old man for his great love and dedication to his country and to the Australian people.

“When he breathed he truly was Australia’s greatest white elder and friend without peer to the original Australians.”

Thousands of those gathered outside Sydney’s Town Hall sang along to From Little Things, Big Things Grow, about the Indigenous struggle for land rights and recognition in Australia.

Within minutes of his speech, #noelpearson was trending on Twitter in Australia and his oration was being heaped in praise.

Read more: http://www.smh.com.au/federal-politics/political-news/noel-pearsons-eulogy-for-gough-whitlam-praised-as-one-for-the-ages-20141105-11h7vm.html#ixzz3IA5pcRse

 

Gough Whitlam memorial: Tony Abbott, former PMs and dignitaries farewell titan of Australian politics

Updated 53 minutes agoWed 5 Nov 2014, 3:45pm

Gough Whitlam, Australia’s 21st prime minister, has been lauded at a memorial service in Sydney as a giant of politics and a man who devoted his talents to public service.

Sydney’s Town Hall and many of the streets surrounding it overflowed with people wanting to be a part of the memorial service for Mr Whitlam, who died at the age of 98 on October 21.

There were cheers, and some jeers, for the six former prime ministers and current leader Tony Abbott as they filed into the hall to join the capacity crowd of almost 2,000.

“Gough chose this venue,” said master of ceremonies Kerry O’Brien. “Of course he did. The people’s hall. But it wasn’t his first choice. His first choice was to have a funeral pyre in the Senate.

“Big man, big heart, big vision, big hurdles, big flaws, big outcomes, a big life dedicated to public service.”

The service was also beamed live into Melbourne’s Federation Square and to Cabramatta in Mr Whitlam’s former western Sydney electorate.

There were cheers as Indigenous leader Noel Pearson listed Mr Whitlam’s achievements while in office.

“My single honour today, on behalf of more people than I could ever know, is to express out immense gratitude for the public service of this old man,” Mr Pearson said.

“We were at last free from those discriminations that humiliated and estranged our people.”

Other speakers included Academy Award-winning actor Cate Blanchett, Mr Whitlam’s speechwriter Graham Freudenberg, Labor senator John Faulkner and Antony Whitlam QC, Mr Whitlam’s eldest son.

“He touches us in our day-to-day lives, in the way we think about Australia, in the way we see the world,” Mr Freudenberg said.

“He touches, still, the millions who share his vision for a more equal Australia, a more independent, inclusive, generous and tolerant Australia, a nation confident of its future in our region and the world.”

Blanchett said Mr Whitlam’s reforms, including free tertiary education and health care, helped her pursue a career as an actor.

“I was but three when he passed by, but I shall be grateful till the day I die,” she said.

“The effect on the geo-cultural political map of Australia made by Gough Whitlam is so vast that wherever you stick a pin in you get a wealth of Gough’s legacy.”

The Sydney Philharmonic Choir and the Sydney Symphony Orchestra provided music throughout the service, while Paul Kelly and Kev Carmody performed From Little Things Big Things Grow, a song that tells the story of Gurindji man and Aboriginal rights activist Vincent Lingari and the creation of the Aboriginal Land Rights Act in 1976.

The Gurindji people have never forgotten the man they call Kulum Whitlam, who returned their traditional lands in what became known as the Wave Hill hand-back.

A group of Gurindji people travelled to Sydney from their traditional home, about 800 kilometres south of Darwin, for the service.

Groups gathered outside the hall and watched the broadcast of the service at other locations, including Cabramatta, in Mr Whitlam’s former seat of Werriwa in Sydney’s west.

Mr Whitlam was the member for Werriwa for 26 years, after serving in the Royal Australian Air Force during World War II.

One mourner outside the hall wore a T-shirt with Whitlam’s famous slogan from the 1972 federal election campaign, “It’s Time”.

Mr Whitlam left a legacy of unprecedented and unmatched change in Australian politics, but he is perhaps most remembered for his part in the constitutional crisis of 1975 known as The Dismissal.

Mourner Chris Foran said he attended to pay tribute to Mr Whitlam’s legacy.

“I don’t think we’ll see another person like that, as a leader of this country, he was just one in a million,” he said.

More than 100 people also gathered at Old Parliament House in Canberra to pay their respects.

There was laughter, applause and some tears as the group watched a live broadcast of the national service.

Christopher Chenoweth reflected on the significance of watching the service at Old Parliament House, near the halls of power during Mr Whitlam’s time as prime minister.

“He made changes that could never be turned back, he made mistakes, he had some extraordinary characters in his ministry, but it was a revolutionary time in Australia I believe,” he said.

‘A great man with a great legacy’

Authorities struggled to accommodate the crowds that gathered for the service.

About 6,000 people registered to attend, but there were only 1,000 general public seats, which were allocated on a first-come, first-served basis.

Max McCleod, from Corrimal in northern Wollongong, became emotional after being told he could not get into the service.

“I got out of bed at five o’clock this morning, where I live at Corrimal,” he said.

“I caught the six o’clock bus and I’ve come all the way in here and I can’t see the man I know.”

Ahead of the memorial, Mr Shorten told Channel Seven that Mr Whitlam was a great man with a great legacy.

“It’s sad because a great Australian has left us,” Mr Shorten said.

“But it’s also a happy day because we recognise that he was a politician, unlike many others, who not only served the nation, but he changed Australia for the better,” he said.

John Pilger writes about the forgotten Coup

The forgotten coup – how America and Britain crushed the government of their ‘ally’, Australia

23 October 2014

whitlam1.jpg

Across the political and media elite in Australia, a silence has descended on the memory of the great, reforming prime minister Gough Whitlam, who has died. His achievements are recognised, if grudgingly, his mistakes noted in false sorrow. But a critical reason for his extraordinary political demise will, they hope, be buried with him.

 

Australia briefly became an independent state during the Whitlam years, 1972-75. An American commentator wrote that no country had “reversed its posture in international affairs so totally without going through a domestic revolution”. Whitlam ended his nation’s colonial servility. He abolished Royal patronage, moved Australia towards the Non-Aligned Movement, supported “zones of peace” and opposed nuclear weapons testing.

 

Although not regarded as on the left of the Labor Party, Whitlam was a maverick social democrat of principle, pride and propriety. He believed that a foreign power should not control his country’s resources and dictate its economic and foreign policies. He proposed to “buy back the farm”. In drafting the first Aboriginal lands rights legislation, his government raised the ghost of the greatest land grab in human history, Britain’s colonisation of Australia, and the question of who owned the island-continent’s vast natural wealth.

 

Latin Americans will recognise the audacity and danger of this “breaking free” in a country whose establishment was welded to great, external power. Australians had served every British imperial adventure since the Boxer rebellion was crushed in China. In the 1960s, Australia pleaded to join the US in its invasion of Vietnam, then provided “black teams” to be run by the CIA. US diplomatic cables published last year by WikiLeaks disclose the names of leading figures in both main parties, including a future prime minister and foreign minister, as Washington’s informants during the Whitlam years.

 

Whitlam knew the risk he was taking. The day after his election, he ordered that his staff should not be “vetted or harassed” by the Australian security organisation, ASIO – then, as now, tied to Anglo-American intelligence. When his ministers publicly condemned the US bombing of Vietnam as “corrupt and barbaric”, a CIA station officer in Saigon said: “We were told the Australians might as well be regarded as North Vietnamese collaborators.”

 

Whitlam demanded to know if and why the CIA was running a spy base at Pine Gap near Alice Springs, a giant vacuum cleaner which, as Edward Snowden revealed recently, allows the US to spy on everyone. “Try to screw us or bounce us,” the prime minister warned the US ambassador, “[and Pine Gap] will become a matter of contention”.

 

Victor Marchetti, the CIA officer who had helped set up Pine Gap, later told me, “This threat to close Pine Gap caused apoplexy in the White House… a kind of Chile [coup] was set in motion.”

 

Pine Gap’s top-secret messages were de-coded by a CIA contractor, TRW. One of the de-coders was Christopher Boyce, a young man troubled by the “deception and betrayal of an ally”. Boyce revealed that the CIA had infiltrated the Australian political and trade union elite and referred to the Governor-General of Australia, Sir John Kerr, as “our man Kerr”.

 

Kerr was not only the Queen’s man, he had long-standing ties to Anglo-American intelligence. He was an enthusiastic member of the Australian Association for Cultural Freedom, described by Jonathan Kwitny of the Wall Street Journal in his book, ‘The Crimes of Patriots’, as, “an elite, invitation-only group… exposed in Congress as being founded, funded and generally run by the CIA”. The CIA “paid for Kerr’s travel, built his prestige… Kerr continued to go to the CIA for money”.

 

When Whitlam was re-elected for a second term, in 1974, the White House sent Marshall Green to Canberra as ambassador. Green was an imperious, sinister figure who worked in the shadows of America’s “deep state”. Known as the “coupmaster”, he had played a central role in the 1965 coup against President Sukarno in Indonesia – which cost up to a million lives. One of his first speeches in Australia was to the Australian Institute of Directors – described by an alarmed member of the audience as “an incitement to the country’s business leaders to rise against the government”.

 

The Americans and British worked together. In 1975, Whitlam discovered that Britain’s MI6 was operating against his government. “The Brits were actually decoding secret messages coming into my foreign affairs office,” he said later. One of his ministers, Clyde Cameron, told me, “We knew MI6 was bugging Cabinet meetings for the Americans.” In the 1980s, senior CIA officers revealed that the “Whitlam problem” had been discussed “with urgency” by the CIA’s director, William Colby, and the head of MI6, Sir Maurice Oldfield. A deputy director of the CIA said: “Kerr did what he was told to do.”

 

On 10 November, 1975, Whitlam was shown a top secret telex message sourced to Theodore Shackley, the notorious head of the CIA’s East Asia Division, who had helped run the coup against Salvador Allende in Chile two years earlier.

 

Shackley’s message was read to Whitlam. It said that the prime minister of Australia was a security risk in his own country. The day before, Kerr had visited the headquarters of the Defence Signals Directorate, Australia’s NSA where he was briefed on the “security crisis”.

 

On 11 November – the day Whitlam was to inform Parliament about the secret CIA presence in Australia – he was summoned by Kerr. Invoking archaic vice-regal “reserve powers”, Kerr sacked the democratically elected prime minister. The “Whitlam problem” was solved, and Australian politics never recovered, nor the nation its true independence.

 

Follow John Pilger on Twitter @johnpilger and Facebook – www.facebook.com/pilgerwebsite

Whitlam played by the Rules . . . .

Whitlam: a loyal servant of a system which failed him

Posted Mon at 3:08pmMon 27 Oct 2014, 3:08pm

Gough Whitlam played by the rules and was smashed – leaving his office to his enemies, but with his consistency, conviction and integrity untarnished, writes Mungo MacCallum.

As numerous eye-glazing speeches could attest, Gough Whitlam had a great love for the constitution and the Parliament. Like his friend and sparring partner James Killen, Whitlam had a respect bordering on reverence for the forms and practices of the Australian version of Westminster.

This did not mean that he believed them to be unchangeable, set in stone; indeed, much of his working life was spent in trying to modify and reform them when he felt it necessary.

But he always did so within the accepted boundaries: Whitlam, while he could be a radical when it came to policy, was always a gradualist – a Fabian – when it came to process. He believed in referendum, not revolution. He assiduously followed the rules, both in the letter and the spirit.

But his opponents were not so scrupulous, and that was what ultimately destroyed him and his government. From the moment the Labor administration was elected, the conservatives determined to do whatever it would take to bring it down. After 23 years, they regarded their rejection as an affront, an aberration; the natural law – their law – must be restored.

And any excuse would do; if Whitlam employed tactics and strategy to achieve his aims, the coalition leaders cried foul and went feral. Thus in 1974, Whitlam and his colleagues devised a scheme to take control of the Senate by persuading a sitting DLP senator, Vince Gair, to resign and take up a diplomatic post.

This was certainly unusual, even sneaky, but it was entirely legitimate. However, the then Liberal leader Billy Snedden took the unprecedented step of forcing an election by using his Senate numbers to block the budget. Of course, budget measures were and are regularly postponed and rejected, as the current administration knows all too well. But this was not a routine measure: the coalition withheld what is known as the supply bills, the money appropriated for the day-to-day working of government especially in paying the public service.

This was seen an outrageous breach of convention, never before seriously contemplated, let alone implemented. In 1967, the Labor Senate leader Lionel Murphy had mooted the idea to Whitlam, who summarily dismissed it as unthinkable. But the coalition took the plunge not once but twice: in 1975 Malcolm Fraser devised an encore.

He was only able to do so by another egregious breach. When the Queensland Labor senator Bert Millner died in office, testate premier Joh Bjelke-Petersen replaced him not with another Labor nominee, but with an opponent, the risible Patrick Albert Field. Once again, this had not happened since Federation; replacements within the same party had always been automatic, and indeed have now become so by law.

But Field, with instructions to oppose Labor without question or hesitation, gave Fraser the numbers he needed. His trigger was the sacking of a senior minister, Rex Connor, over what was known as the Loans Affair. This had entailed an attempt to build massive infrastructure by securing petro dollar funds from the Arabs through unconventional sources.

Once again, this was unusual, and in the end reckless, even foolhardy; but in spite of what was later alleged, it was in no sense illegitimate. The relevant decisions, albeit in secret, were signed through the Executive Council of Cabinet. But the whole thing went wrong, and eventually Whitlam removed the commission of Connor, as Minister for Minerals and Energy, to end negotiations.

However, Connor persisted, still searching for the fairy tale millions. The Australian’s foreign editor, Greg Sheridan, in a series of graceless articles immediately after Whitlam’s death, suggested that Whitlam had in fact given Connor a wink: if the money could still be secured, all would be forgiven. At the time Sheridan was fomenting DLD conspiracies in student politics. I was on the spot in Canberra and from my first-hand knowledge can testify that this was not true: when Whitlam found out he was incandescent.

But in any case, Sheridan’s fantasy misses the point: Connor was dismissed, not for pursuing the loan, but for misleading Parliament – the same crime that had undone the hapless Jim Cairns. For Whitlam, this was the unforgiveable sin: he knew sacking Connor would bring dire political consequences, but he felt he had no choice: Parliament was supreme. To a normal observer Whitlam deserved praise for his adherence to principle, but for Fraser it was what he called an extraordinary and reprehensible circumstance, and pulled the trigger: which brings us to the governor-general, Sir John Kerr.

Whitlam was confident that Kerr would remain on side not because he was weak (which he was, as Fraser has since confirmed) but because he was bound to follow the advice of his ministers. This, after all, was the convention observed by the British monarch – Kerr’s superior — for centuries. But Kerr had already broken ranks: he had taken counsel and encouragement from the Chief Justice and former Liberal attorney-general Garfield Barwick, who was also the cousin of Fraser’s own shadow attorney, Robert Ellicott.

So Fraser was prepared: Fraser was lurking when Whitlam saw Kerr to tender his advice to call a half-Senate election, and when Kerr refused and Whitlam indignantly knocked back Kerr’s demand for an election for the House of Representatives, Kerr dismissed him. Whitlam’s immediate (and conventional) response was that he would go to the Queen: Kerr replied that he had already terminated his commission and produced the document. Rather than throw it in his face, as his feisty wife Margaret later suggested, he meekly concurred: to the last he followed the rules.

Kerr did not: when later the Speaker of the House, Gordon Scholes, went to inform him that the Parliament had voted confidence in Whitlam, Kerr refused to see him, an act of authoritarianism not seen since the days of King Charles I. This was indeed, as Whitlam called it, a coup, a putsch. But maintaining his loyalty to the system that had failed him, he stood stony faced as the viceroy’s aide-de-camp shut down Parliament and set him up for an election he knew he was doomed to lose: if Kerr, the Governor-General he had appointed, had dismissed him, the voters would believe he had done something unforgivable. They didn’t know what it was, but that didn’t matter. It was all over.

So Whitlam played by the rules and was smashed – leaving his office to his enemies, but with his consistency, conviction and integrity untarnished. They don’t make them like that any more.

Mungo Wentworth MacCallum is a political journalist and commentator. View his full profile here.

Topics: federal-government

Edward Gough Whitlam, 1916-2014

From: PoliticOz
Date: 21 October 2014 12:58
Subject: Edward Gough Whitlam, 1916-2014

Edward Gough Whitlam, 1916-2014
Prime minister for only three years, the Whitlam legacy is legendary. Universal health insurance; multiculturalism; diplomatic relations with China; no-fault divorce and the Family Court; Aboriginal land rights; the Racial Discrimination Act; environmental and consumer protection; Blue Poles; outer-suburban sewering; and ‘Advance Australia Fair’ are still cogs in the national framework. Free education was revolutionary, but ultimately too expensive. His Royal Commission into Human Relationships was world-unique, and represented a high point in the faith in social democratic governments to solve social problems and protect the most vulnerable.

“It’s time”, the Whitlamites sang in 1972, and in the end, timing is everything. Whitlam’s social democratic “Program” coincided with a OPEC-sparked world recession and a rapid loss of faith among policymakers in the role of governments, especially big-spending ones. We credit the Hawke-Keating governments with the pro-market “modernisation” of the Australian economy, but it was the Whitlam government’s 25 per cent tariff cuts in 1973 which ushered in the new era.

After crashing through, Whitlam crashed. No government has since come to office with a “Program” of such broad reform, and Labor’s fear of being seen as “economically irresponsible” still constrains its ambitions. Paul Keating may have learned politics from Jack Lang, but his experience on Whitlam’s front bench during the loans affair helped encourage his own economic orthodoxy.

But now, nearly 40 years since the Dismissal, Australian public life is so nasty that Malcolm Fraser – formerly “Kerr’s cur” – is more Green than blue-blood, and is now politically much closer to Whitlam than he is to his former party. And just as he did during his (free) university career, Tony Abbott came to the prime ministership still railing against the Whitlam legacy. His campaign from opposition framed Rudd and Gillard as the Whitlams of their time. They weren’t, but the carbon price would have sat with the best of Whitlam’s Program.

Whitlam made tremendous errors of judgement. But in the end, Whitlam’s legacy is informed by his expansive vision for the nation. The possibility of that vision is what is most missed.

Russell Marks
Editor

Whitlam’s time

The best of the rolling coverage of the events and tributes following Gough Whitlam’s death this morning can be found at Fairfax and the Guardian.

Former Labor leaders Julia Gillard (Guardian) and Mark Latham (Australian) have penned tributes, as has Race Mathews (Guardian) and the Conversation has a number of ‘experts’ assess Whitlam’s legacy. Thea Hayes (Drum) was there when Whitlam poured soil into Vincent Lingiari’s hands at Wave Hill.

The Guardian is running an archive piece from 11 November 1975, and News.com.au has an excellent comparison of the Whitlam legacy and the Abbott government’s program. Michelle Grattan at the Conversation compares the first years of Australian prime ministers from Whitlam to Abbott.

Coalition mates on the MRT

Scott Morrison appears to have made two overtly political appointments – one a former staffer in Tony Abbott’s office, the other a one-time Liberal candidate – to the Migration Review Tribunal, the body which reviews departmental decisions to not grant protection visas to asylum seeker applicants (Guardian).

And Fairfax reports that the annual cost of Australia’s offshore detention centres has hit $1 billion.

Biffo poll

The Labor Party has received an unexpected bounce in the latest Newspoll (Guardian), though the Australian emphasises the fact that Tony Abbott’s threat to shirtfront Vladimir Putin went down well among 63 per cent of respondents.

Supermarket monsters

Barnaby Joyce’s cabinet-approved agriculture Green Paper signalled more dams and more protections for farmers in their dealings with the supermarket giants (Australian).

In the Business Spectator, Cliona O’Dowd analyses the ACCC’s pursuit of Coles.

Teachers on 457s

A Fairfax exclusive this morning reports that foreign teachers are being employed on 457 visas despite a “growing glut of unemployed Australian teaching graduates”.

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http://www.themonthly.com.au/politicoz/october/1413939797/well-may-we-say