Today marks the 50th anniversary of The Dismissal, where the Governor General (the Queen’s representative in Australia), Sir John Kerr, exercised the little known Reserve Powers to sack the democratically elected government of Gough Whitlam.

Whitlam’s Government is now more broadly remembered by the general population for its long list of reforms over the three years they were in government more than the manner of its ending. Those reforms rocketed Australia from a particularly sleepy and inward looking nation in the 1950s and 1960s toward a more outward looking and progressive nation in the 1970s.

I have tooted and retooted numerous articles about The Dismissal in the last week, so I will not be discussing all the details again.

Instead, I will keep it really simple.

What will people be thinking of the Albanese Government in 50 years from now? A government with an absolutely stonking majority, an almost certain third term and no effective opposition other than a rag tag bunch of independents.

I posit that the Albanese Government will likely be remembered as a government that pissed a great opportunity up against the wall, a government that was too scared of its own reflection to make any meaningful change. A government that purported to be progressive and reformist while doing none of those things. A government with tremendous opportunity to make meaningful and lasting change that addressed systemic problems which are holding Australia back. And a government that squibbed its responsibility to the future.

I won’t be around in 50 years … so I won’t be able to reflect back on the Albanese Government. But I ask you to think about this:

What would Whitlam have achieved with a majority half the size of the majority held by the Albanese Government and with a near certainty of a third term from the outset of their second term?

#auspol #Whitlam #TheDismissal #50Years #Albanese

@Devorppa

There is so much reform needed, we need another Whitlam, or at least someone willing to act, rather than Albanese

@HardBeingGreen

Perhaps Charmers (who knows), but his run at the top job is not as clear as most people think.

@Devorppa there are others carrying the leadership batton as well although I think Chalmers is next in line

He studied Keating so will hopefully carry some of the same drive for reform

@HardBeingGreen @Devorppa

Agreed — Chalmers feels like the only one with a hint of reformist ambition left in Labor. He studied Keating closely, and maybe, just maybe, he’ll prove to be the next Keating — our last real hope for a bolder Australia.

#auspol #chalmers #keating #labor #paulkeating

@DropBear @HardBeingGreen @Devorppa

Keating may not have been Whitlam, but with one more term Australia would be in a far stronger place today. He built superannuation, championed reconciliation, turned our gaze to Asia and gave Australia a modern sense of self. Murdoch had other plans, and he has prospered handsomely from his fossil fuel interests, at the expense of greater Australia.
#auspol #keating #murdoch #reform