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Politics

The making of a new Labor martyr

by Joel Deane
September 2014, no. 364

Gravity: Inside the PM’s office during her last year and final days by Mary Delahunty

Hardie Grant Books, $29.95 pb, 270 pp

Rudd, Gillard and Beyond by Troy Bramston

Penguin, $9.99 pb, 165 pp

ABR receives a commission on items purchased through this link. All ABR reviews are fully independent.

Gough Whitlam may not have been one of the Australian Labor Party’s greatest prime ministers, but, since his defenestration by Governor-General John Kerr in 1975, he has been embraced as one of the ALP’s great martyrs. Kerr’s dismissal of the Whitlam Government galvanised the Labor movement. To Labor eyes, Kerr was Pontius Pilate and Whitlam the slain Messiah. New followers – many of them, like Whitlam, university-educated progressives – joined the ALP. New ideas were aired through policy think-tanks such as the Labor Resource Centre, headed by Jenny Macklin, a future federal deputy leader. Out of that angst and rage, a new ALP was forged. Labor was no longer a troglodyte party ruled by factional warlords and sectarian hatreds. It was a modern progressive movement hell-bent on winning and wielding power. After all, as Whitlam famously said to an ALP State Conference in Melbourne in 1967, ‘Only the impotent are pure.’

 


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Gravity: Inside the PM’s office during her last year and final days by Mary Delahunty

Hardie Grant Books, $29.95 pb, 270 pp

Rudd, Gillard and Beyond

Rudd, Gillard and Beyond by Troy Bramston

Penguin, $9.99 pb, 165 pp

ABR receives a commission on items purchased through this link. All ABR reviews are fully independent.


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