Gough Whitlam: The Man Who Changed Modern Australia
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19,35 |
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20,19 |
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20,19 |
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Beschrijving
Bol
Gough Whitlam changed Australia in less than three years.Elected in 1972 after twenty-three years of conservative rule, Whitlam entered office with the force of a delayed national future. His campaign slogan, "It's Time", captured a country ready for movement after decades of caution, deference, and political fatigue.His government ended conscription, recognised the People's Republic of China, abolished university fees, created the foundations of universal health care, expanded legal aid, supported the arts, advanced multiculturalism, pushed Aboriginal land rights into national politics, and gave the Commonwealth a larger role in education, health, cities, culture, and citizenship.But the same urgency that made Whitlam transformative also made his government vulnerable.Economic pressure, inflation, ministerial scandal, administrative disorder, hostile states, Senate obstruction, and the Loans Affair weakened public trust. By 1975, reform had become resistance, resistance had become crisis, and crisis had become a constitutional confrontation unlike anything Australia had seen.On 11 November 1975, Governor-General Sir John Kerr dismissed Whitlam as prime minister, despite Whitlam still holding confidence in the House of Representatives. Malcolm Fraser was appointed caretaker prime minister, supply was passed, Parliament was dissolved, and Australia was sent to the polls. Whitlam's famous call to "maintain your rage and enthusiasm" entered national memory, but the election that followed delivered Labor a devastating defeat.This book examines Gough Whitlam as reformer, moderniser, party leader, constitutional casualty, and flawed prime minister. His government failed to survive, but the Australia that followed could not return to the country it had been before him.He was visionary. He was divisive. He was impatient. He changed modern Australia.
Gough Whitlam changed Australia in less than three years.Elected in 1972 after twenty-three years of conservative rule, Whitlam entered office with the force of a delayed national future. His campaign slogan, "It's Time", captured a country ready for movement after decades of caution, deference, and political fatigue.His government ended conscription, recognised the People's Republic of China, abolished university fees, created the foundations of universal health care, expanded legal aid, supported the arts, advanced multiculturalism, pushed Aboriginal land rights into national politics, and gave the Commonwealth a larger role in education, health, cities, culture, and citizenship.But the same urgency that made Whitlam transformative also made his government vulnerable.Economic pressure, inflation, ministerial scandal, administrative disorder, hostile states, Senate obstruction, and the Loans Affair weakened public trust. By 1975, reform had become resistance, resistance had become crisis, and crisis had become a constitutional confrontation unlike anything Australia had seen.On 11 November 1975, Governor-General Sir John Kerr dismissed Whitlam as prime minister, despite Whitlam still holding confidence in the House of Representatives. Malcolm Fraser was appointed caretaker prime minister, supply was passed, Parliament was dissolved, and Australia was sent to the polls. Whitlam's famous call to "maintain your rage and enthusiasm" entered national memory, but the election that followed delivered Labor a devastating defeat.This book examines Gough Whitlam as reformer, moderniser, party leader, constitutional casualty, and flawed prime minister. His government failed to survive, but the Australia that followed could not return to the country it had been before him.He was visionary. He was divisive. He was impatient. He changed modern Australia.
AmazonPagina's: 321, Paperback, Independently published
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