That's all you've got?
Rather than posting links to hagiographies, how about your own opinion?
I'm grateful to Fraser's foresight and visionary leadership every time I eat pho or banh minh in Melbourne
Who introduced non-discriminatory immigration? It wasn't Fraser. The Liberal governments he was a central part of in the 1960s and early 1970s did very little in this area.
That wasn't a result of "non discriminatory immigration" policy - that was a result of a massive refugee intake programme that Whitlam and the Labor Party largely opposed.
My point is that Fraser would not have been able to admit Vietnamese without the reforms of Whitlam, and I'm far from convinced that he would have moved to change immigration laws if Whitlam hadn't.
And as for "look what he did after being PM", of no great significance in my view. It's like praising a failed test cricketer for getting a few runs at grade level. He had his shot when in the big job, and comprehensively failed. Even the claim that he "fixed up Whitlam's mess" doesn't stand investigation. The deficit increased under his watch, and inflation and unemployment stayed high, while economic growth (and we had a mining boom during his years) was stagnant. The job was beyond him.
At last! Somebody posting about the real Malcolm Fraser.Not only will I never forgive him for 1975, I will never forget his do-nothing prime ministership. He could easily have commenced the reform process so successfully implemented by Hawke and Keating. He lacked the guts and intellectual capacity to do so. No crocodile tears from me.
That's not very postmodern of you.At last! Somebody posting about the real Malcolm Fraser.
That's all you've got?
Rather than posting links to hagiographies, how about your own opinion?
I well remember that day on the 11/11/75. It was a gut wrenching day.Not only will I never forgive him for 1975, I will never forget his do-nothing prime ministership. He could easily have commenced the reform process so successfully implemented by Hawke and Keating. He lacked the guts and intellectual capacity to do so. No crocodile tears from me.
I guess all this just happened by accident then.
http://www.theguardian.com/australi...chievements-of-australias-22nd-prime-minister
Postmodern? According to some, I'm not even modern.That's not very postmodern of you.
Postmodern? According to some, I'm not even modern.
Lionking has already listed some of the Fraser negatives but the list is longer than that. He set a record for abandoning pre-election commitments - often within days of winning an election. He spoke like a conservative but was a raging socialist. He preached small government but increased the size of government. He spoke of fiscal responsibility but ran record (for the time) budget deficits. To all outward appearances, he was more interested in making a name for himself on the international stage over human rights issues than he was in his fellow Australians.
Many still "maintain the rage" for his blocking supply in 1975. This is understandable since he got to be opposition leader by promising that any party that had a majority in the House of Representatives had the right to govern. He could hardly wait to forget that one. However, for me it was his cynical double dissolution call in 1982 that was his lowest act. It was designed to capitalize on Bill Hayden's resignation as opposition leader.
Fortunately, by that time, nobody believed a single word that Fraser said and his plan backfired badly. The voters said "goodbye and good riddance". At least Malcolm Fraser had the integrity to immediately take full responsibility for that election.
To be fair, he still made a better PM than Tony Abbott.As much as I detested Howard, he was a far, far better PM than Fraser.
To be fair, he still made a better PM than Tony Abbott.