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Paul Keating
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{{otheruses}}
{{Infobox PM
| name=The Hon. Paul John Keating
| country=Australia
| image=Pkeating.jpg
| term=
20 December 1991–
11 March 1996
| before=
Bob Hawke
| after=
John Howard
| date_birth=
18 January 1944
| place_birth=
Sydney,
Australia
| party=
Australian Labor Party Labor
}}
'''Paul John Keating''' (born
18 January 1944),
Australian politician and 24th
Prime Minister of Australia, came to prominence first as the reforming
Treasurer of Australia Treasurer in the
Bob Hawke Hawke government, then as the Prime Minister who pulled off an upset victory in the "unwinnable" election of
Australian legislative election, 1993 1993. In his second term, however, his "big picture" failed to impress an electorate increasingly concerned about economic issues, and he was defeated in
Australian legislative election, 1996 1996.
Rising star
Keating grew up in
Bankstown, New South Wales Bankstown, a working-class suburb of
Sydney. He was one of four children of Matt Keating, a boilermaker and trade union representative of Irish-Catholic descent. Keating was educated at Catholic schools; he was the first practising Catholic
Australian Labor Party Labor Prime Minister since
James Scullin left office in
1932. Leaving school at 14, Keating worked as a clerk and then as a research assistant for a trade union. He joined the Labor Party as soon as he was eligible.
Through the unions and the NSW Young Labor Council Keating met other Labor luminaries such as
Laurie Brereton,
Graham Richardson and
Bob Carr (Australian politician) Bob Carr, and also developed a friendship with former
New South Wales Labor Premier
Jack Lang (Australia) Jack Lang, then in his 90s. Keating met Lang to discuss politics on a weekly basis for some time, and in
1972 succeeded in having Lang's Labor Party membership restored. Using his extensive contacts, Keating gained Labor endorsement for the seat of
Division of Blaxland Blaxland in the western suburbs of Sydney, and was elected to the House of Representatives at the
1969 election, at the age of 25.
Keating was a backbencher for most of the
Gough Whitlam Whitlam Labor government, but briefly became Minister for Northern Australia in
1975, one of the youngest ministers in Australian history. In the same year, he married
Annita van Iersal, a Dutch flight attendant for
Alitalia. The Keatings had four children, who spent some of their teenage years in
The Lodge, the Prime Minister's official residence in
Canberra.
After Labor's defeat in
1975, Keating became an opposition frontbencher, and in
1981 he became president of the
New South Wales branch of the party and thus leader of the dominant
Labor Right right-wing faction. As opposition spokesperson on energy, his parliamentary style was that of an aggressive debater. He initially supported
Bill Hayden against
Bob Hawke's leadership challenges, partly because he hoped to succeed Hayden himself, but by the end of
1982 he accepted that Hawke would become leader.
Reforming Treasurer
When Hawke won the March
1983 elections, Keating became Treasurer, a post which he held until
1991. After a shaky start Keating mastered economic policy and was soon acknowledged as the driving political force behind many of the macroeconomic reforms of the Hawke government, including floating the Australian dollar, substantial cuts in tariffs, and some taxation reforms. In
1985, Keating proposed a
value-added tax (known in Australia as in New Zealand and Canada whence it was directly copied as the
Goods and Services Tax (Australia) Goods and Services Tax or GST), an option seriously debated before being dropped by Hawke, in the belief that the idea would be highly unpopular in the electorate.
Keating and Hawke provided a study in contrasts. Hawke was a
Rhodes Scholar; Keating left
high school early. Hawke's enthusiasms were
cigars,
horse racing,
women and all forms of
sport; Keating preferred
classical architecture and collecting
antique clocks. Hawke was consensus-driven; Keating revelled in aggressive debate. Hawke was a lapsed Protestant; Keating was a practising Catholic. Despite, or because of, their differences, the two formed an effective political partnership.
The Hawke-Keating partnership was strongest during the first two terms of the government, (
1983-
1987 87), with Hawke playing the statesman and populist leader while Keating was the political attack dog. His range of parliamentary invective was legendary, and successive
Liberal Party of Australia Liberal Opposition leaders
Andrew Peacock and
John Howard were unable to get the better of him. After the
1987 election, however, Keating began to feel that it was time for Hawke to make way for him. The deregulated economy led to increasing levels of foreign debt and unemployment as job security was reduced. The beginnings of a
recession saw a resurgence in support for the Liberal party, which Keating used in his push for leadership.
In
1988, in a famous meeting at
Kirribilli House, Hawke and Keating secretly discussed the handover of the leadership to Keating. Hawke agreed in front of witnesses that after the
1990 election he would resign in Keating's favour. In
1991, when Hawke intimated to Keating that he planned to renege on the deal on the basis that Keating had been publicly disloyal and moreover was less popular than Hawke, Keating challenged him for the leadership. He lost, resigned as Treasurer, and publicly declared his leadership ambitions ended (a declaration which few believed and which he never intended to honour). Throughout the rest of
1991, the position of the Hawke government deteriorated under pressure from the poor economy, attacks from the Opposition and constant sniping from Keating and his supporters. In December
1991 Keating defeated Hawke in a second leadership challenge, and became Prime Minister.
Prime Minister
Hawke's undoing had been the policy package unveiled by the new Liberal leader,
John Hewson Dr John Hewson. Known as "
Fightback!", it was centred around a GST and included massive industrial relations reforms, sweeping cuts in personal income tax and cuts to government spending, particularly in areas of health and education. Hawke and his new Treasurer,
John Kerin, had been unable to counter the renewed energy of the opposition, which was invigorated by a policy package it perceived as a vote winner. Keating, however, severely damaged Hewson's credibility in a series of set-piece parliamentary encounters.
Nevertheless, the view of most commentators was that
Australian legislative election, 1993 the 1993 election was "unwinnable" for Labor. The government had been in power for ten years, the pace of economic recovery was sluggish, the voters did not like Keating's arrogant style, and Hewson was offering a coherent economic policy. Despite all these factors, Keating succeeded in winning back the electorate with a fear campaign on Fightback, memorable for Keating's litany of "15% on this, 15% on that", and led Labor to an unexpected election victory. Many of the reforms of Fightback were later implemented under the Liberal government of
John Howard.
As Prime Minister, Keating's interests and public perception broadened from that of the narrowly focused technocrat he had seemed to be as Treasurer. His agenda included items such as making Australia a republic, achieving reconciliation with Australia's
Australian Aborigine indigenous population, and further economic and cultural engagement with Asia. These issues, which came to be known as Keating's "big picture," were highly popular with the tertiary-educated middle class, but failed to capture the aspirations of rural and outer-suburban voters. The loss of the "aspirational" traditionally working-class and Labor-voting outer suburbs has been a continuing problem for the ALP post-Keating.
Keating interpreted his
1993 election win as a mandate to pursue his "big picture" agenda, and was encouraged in this by the left-leaning intellectual classes of Sydney and Melbourne. Keating failed to notice that working-class and regional voters were more concerned about the sluggish economy, and were also reacting badly to Keating's stress on Australian involvement with Asia.
Defeat
While the Liberal Party failed to present a credible alternative Prime Minister for some time, Keating seemed secure.
Alexander Downer replaced Hewson as leader in
1994, but he failed to make any impression on Keating's standing. However, this changed when
John Howard regained the Liberal leadership in early
1995, many voters responded to his more socially conservative message. One warning signal was the loss of a
by-election in the seat of
Division of Canberra Canberra in
1995, but Keating failed to change course. When asked about his chances at the
1996 election, he quoted "we are going to bolt it home"
However, at the March
1996 election, Howard led the Liberals to a sweeping victory, ending the 13 years of the longest period of Labor government in Australia's federal history. Keating immediately resigned from Parliament, and kept a low profile in retirement as a director of various companies. He separated from his wife
Annita Keating van Iersel in late November of
1998, not long after he left politics. During the Howard years Keating has made occasional speeches bitterly criticising his successor's social policies, and disavowing perceived weaknesses in his own policies (such as those on
East Timor and the Australian economy), but stayed out of Labor Party affairs.
See also
*
First Keating Ministry
*
Second Keating Ministry
*
Keating (other famous people called Keating)
Further reading
*Edna Carew, ''Paul Keating Prime Minister'', Allen and Unwin, 1991
*Paul Keating, ''Advancing Australia'', Big Picture, 1995
*John Edwards, ''Keating: The Inside Story'', Viking, 1996
*
Don Watson, ''Recollections of a Bleeding Heart: A Portrait of Paul Keating'', Knopf, 2002
External links
{{wikiquote}}
-
Personal Website
-
Paul Keating at Saxton Speakers Bureau
-
Paul Keating Insults Archive
-
Fan Site: Prime Minister Paul Keating: a Visionary
{{start box}}
{{succession box | title=
Treasurer of Australia | before=
John Howard |
after=
Bob Hawke | years=1983–1991}}
{{succession box two to two | title1=Deputy Leader of the
Australian Labor Party .html">Lionel Bowen
after=Brian Howe | years1=1990–1991 | title2=
Deputy Prime Minister of Australia| | years2=1990–1991}}
{{succession box one to two | title1=Leader of the
Australian Labor Party .html">Bob Hawke
after1=Kim Beazley | years1=1991–1996
| title2=
Prime Minister of Australia | after2=
John Howard | years2=1991–1996}}
{{end box}}
(Note the rare symmetry: Hawke was Treasurer for one day before appointing
John Kerin; thus he preceded and followed Keating as Prime Minister and Treasurer, whereas Howard preceded and followed Keating as Treasurer and Prime Minister.)
{{AustraliaPM}}
Category:1944 births Keating, Paul
Category:Living people Keating, Paul
Category:Australian politicians Keating, Paul
Category:Australian Labor Party politicians Keating, Paul
Category:Prime Ministers of Australia Keating, Paul
Category:People of Sydney Keating, Paul
Category:Members of the Cabinet of Australia Keating, Paul
Category:New South Wales Federal politicians Keating, Paul
Category:Roman Catholic politicians Keating, Paul
Category:Roman Catholics Keating, Paul
Category:Australian Roman Catholic people Keating, Paul
de:Paul Keating
ja:ãƒ?ール・ã‚ーティング
no:Paul Keating
pl:Paul Keating
zh:�羅·基廷
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