| Is Malcolm Turnbull about to leave politics and push republicanism? |
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| Written by Professor David Flint AM | |
| Sunday, 09 September 2012 | |
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Slammed in the media for behaving like a "spoilt child", has Malcolm Turnbull decided – once again - to leave politics? If so, constitutional monarchists will ask will he do what he did in 2009? Having lost the Liberal leadership then, he indicated then to a surprised nation his wish to bring republicanism out of the deep, deep slumber into which it had fallen.
Readers may savour what hundreds of thousands of listeners across eastern Australia heard by clicking here.
...we didn’t win, but we didn’t lose... Not only did Mr. Turnbull offer his ruling that “the“ science was settled to a degree which echoed and must have delighted Minister Penny Wong, he presented a history of the 1999 republican referendum which will astound those actually involved.
No such promise was ever given. Indeed, apart from one detailed statement, Prime Minister Howard, the only person who could give such a promise, maintained a low profile and made no such promise. Another referendum was and is always possible, but there was never any such guarantee. Indeed, it was obvious then that no such guarantee could have been made with any credibility given that most republican politicians were strongly opposed to it. The suggestion of such a promise is an unjustified rewriting of history. Since the referendum, two republican prime ministers have held office. In the negotiations to form the 2010 government, the ultra-republican Greens Party Bob Brown could have had anything he wanted about a republic. It is yet another rewriting of history to claim that the constitutional monarchists were responsible for republican divisions or that we cynically exploited this. As Cardinal Pell said when he moved that the ARM’s Republican model be the subject of the referendum , monarchists had voted “with discipline, integrity and honour....their virtue brought its own reward. Republican disarray yesterday was our own doing. The republicans know well that to divide is to rule even when the division is self-inflicted.” Mr. Turnbull should remember that republican divisions were indeed self inflicted. And he and his ARM, and not the monarchists, were responsible for much of this. They began by suggesting during the convention election that their minds were open to direct election. But as soon as the convention assembled, their minds slammed shut. it became clear that the ARM would not tolerate any model based on the direct election president, and they would use bluster and every procedural device to destroy this. At this point it is relevant to recall that the monarchist delegations at the convention were substantial, with the ACM’s being the second largest delegation after the ARM’s. The republicans claim John Howard manipulated the convention. If he did he did not do it well. Both the chairman and deputy chairman were avowed republicans as were most of the delegates he nominated. So it was considered appropriate that only one of the 10 seats on the politburo, the powerful resolutions committee, would go to monarchist Lloyd Waddy. After he pointed out that monarchists might see this as unfair, Kerry Jones was added, but so was one more republican. In any event the two monarchists were to become embarrassed witnesses rather than participants in the increasingly bitter disputes in the politburo. These were between Gareth Evans and Malcolm Turnbull on the one side and the direct elect republicans, Pat O’Shane and Moira Rayner, on the other. As deputy chairman Barry Jones commented at the conclusion – “ There’s a book to be written on this.” Kerry Jones declared that she had never in her life had she been in a group where “more argument, petty contest, personal agendas and vendettas were exposed.”This became so intolerable that the direct elect republicans decided to walk out of the convention. Fortunately for the republicans, Lloyd Waddy QC was prepared to play the role of a mediator and persuade the direct elect republicans to remain. A Machiavellian monarchist would have encouraged such a walk out which would have been extremely damaging to the republican cause. So rather than practising “deceit” and “trickery”, the monarchists acted as Cardinal Pell declared, “with discipline integrity and honour”. ....monarchists and direct elect republicans... Malcolm Turnbull forgets that monarchists and direct elect republicans did not form an alliance but were thrown together when the government appointed the 10 person Vote Yes and Vote No Committees to campaign and administer the two advertising budgets. The government decided the only fair way was to fill these was according to votes won the convention elections. The ARM dominated the Vote Yes committee; the Vote No Committee was to be made up of two direct election republicans who opposed the ARM model, and the remainder eight were to from ACM which had won 72.8% of the monarchist vote. The Vote No committee worked in a business like way, more effectively than the Vote Yes Committee. Apart from Clem Jones, direct election lacked an organisational structure. ...the people won... The essential barrier to change was not some non-existent passion for an elective presidency but the common sense of the majority of Australians. They knew there was nothing wrong with the Crown, and rightly suspected the agenda of the political class and their media acolytes in attempting to ram through a questionable constitutional model which would have substantially increased their power and influence. As ACM argued, this would have been the only republic in history where it would be easier for the prime minister to sack the president than his or her driver – without notice, without grounds and without appeal. This was a victory of rank and file Australians over an establishment epitomised to a great degree by the present member for Wentworth. He should face up to this and not so obviously try to rewrite history. |
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