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Gough Whitlam
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==Early political career, 1952β1967== ===Member of Parliament, 1952β1960=== [[File:Gough Whitlam 1950s.png|thumb|left|upright|Whitlam as a newly elected MP, circa 1952]] [[File:Whitlam family.jpg|thumb|upright|Whitlam with his wife Margaret and their four children in 1954]] With his war service loan, Whitlam built a house in seaside [[Cronulla, New South Wales|Cronulla]].{{sfn|Lloyd|2008|p=331}} He also bought the block of land next door, using the prize money (Β£1,000 in security bonds) he received for winning the [[Australian Quiz Champion|Australian National Quiz Championship]] in 1948 and 1949 (he was runner-up in 1950).<ref name="Before Office" /> He sought to make a career in the ALP there, but local Labor supporters were sceptical of Whitlam's loyalties, given his privileged background.{{sfn|Lloyd|2008|p=331}} In the postwar years, he practised law, concentrating on landlord/tenant matters, and sought to build his bona fides in the party. He ran twice{{snd}}unsuccessfully{{snd}}for the local council, once (also unsuccessfully) for the [[New South Wales Legislative Assembly]], and campaigned for other candidates.{{sfn|Oakes|Solomon|1973|p=50}} In 1951, [[Bert Lazzarini]], the Labor member for the Federal electorate of [[Division of Werriwa|Werriwa]], announced that he would stand down at the next election. Whitlam won the [[preselection]] as ALP candidate. Lazzarini died in 1952 before completing his term and Whitlam was elected to the [[Australian House of Representatives|House of Representatives]] in the ensuing [[1952 Werriwa by-election|by-election on 29 November 1952]]. Whitlam trebled Lazzarini's majority in a 12 per cent swing to Labor.{{sfn|Lloyd|2008|p=331}} Whitlam joined the ALP minority in the House of Representatives. His [[maiden speech]] provoked an interruption by a future prime minister, [[John McEwen]], who was then told by the [[Speaker of the Australian House of Representatives|Speaker]] that maiden speeches are traditionally heard in silence. Whitlam responded to McEwen by saying [[Benjamin Disraeli]] had been heckled in his maiden speech and had responded, "The time will come when you shall hear me." He told McEwen, "The time will come when you may interrupt me." According to early Whitlam biographers [[Laurie Oakes]] and David Solomon, this cool response put the Coalition government on notice that he would be a force to be reckoned with.{{sfn|Oakes|Solomon|1973|p=54}} In the rough and tumble debate in the House of Representatives, Whitlam called fellow MHR [[Bill Bourke (politician)|Bill Bourke]] "this grizzling [[Quisling]]", [[Garfield Barwick]] (who, as High Court Chief Justice, played a role in Whitlam's downfall) a "bumptious bastard", and he said [[Bill Wentworth]] exhibited a "hereditary streak of insanity".{{sfn|Hocking|2008|p=172}} After calling future prime minister [[William McMahon]] a "[[quean]]", he apologised.{{sfn|Hocking|2008|p=172}} [[File:Gough Whitlam 1959.jpg|thumb|upright|Whitlam in 1959]] The ALP had been out of office since the [[Ben Chifley|Chifley]] Government's defeat in 1949 and, since 1951, had been under the leadership of [[H. V. Evatt|Bert Evatt]], whom Whitlam greatly admired. In 1954, the ALP seemed likely to return to power. The Prime Minister, [[Robert Menzies]], adroitly used the [[Petrov Affair|defection of a Soviet official]] to his advantage, and [[Coalition (Australia)|his coalition]] of the Liberal and [[National Party of Australia|Country]] parties was returned in the [[1954 Australian federal election|1954 election]] with a seven-seat majority. After the election, Evatt attempted to purge the party of [[Industrial Groups|industrial groupers]], who had long dissented from party policy, and who were predominantly Catholic and anti-communist. The ensuing division in the ALP, which came to be known as "[[Australian Labor Party split of 1955|The Split]]", sparked the birth of the [[Democratic Labor Party (Australia, 1955)|Democratic Labor Party]] (DLP). The conflict helped to keep Labor out of power for a generation, since DLP supporters chose the Liberal Party in [[Instant-runoff voting|preferential voting]]. Whitlam supported Evatt throughout this period.{{sfn|Lloyd|2008|pp=332β333}} In 1955, a redistribution divided Whitlam's electorate of Werriwa in two, with his Cronulla home located in the new electorate of [[Division of Hughes|Hughes]]. Although Whitlam would have received ALP support in either division, he chose to continue standing for Werriwa and moved from Cronulla to [[Cabramatta, New South Wales|Cabramatta]]. This meant even longer journeys for his older children to attend school, since neither electorate had a high school at the time; they attended school in Sydney.{{sfn|Hocking|2008|pp=177β179}} Whitlam was appointed to the Parliamentary Joint Committee on Constitutional Review in 1956. Biographer [[Jenny Hocking]] calls his service on the committee, which included members from all parties in both chambers of Parliament, one of the "great influences in his political development".{{sfn|Hocking|2008|p=181}} According to Hocking, service on the committee caused Whitlam to focus not on internal conflicts consuming the ALP, but on Labor goals which were possible and worthwhile in the constitutional framework. Many Labor goals, such as nationalisation, ran contrary to the Constitution. Whitlam came to believe the Constitution{{snd}}and especially Section 96 (which allowed the federal government to make grants to the states){{snd}}could be used to advance a worthwhile Labor programme.{{sfn|Hocking|2008|pp=181β186}} ===Deputy Leader, 1960β1967=== By the late 1950s Whitlam was seen as a leadership contender once the existing Labor leaders exited the scene. Most of the party's major figures, including Evatt, Deputy Leader [[Arthur Calwell]], [[Eddie Ward]], and [[Reg Pollard (politician)|Reg Pollard]], were in their sixties, twenty years older than Whitlam.{{sfn|Lloyd|2008|p=333}} In 1960, after losing three elections, Evatt resigned and was replaced by Calwell, with Whitlam defeating Ward for deputy leader.{{sfn|Lloyd|2008|pp=333β334}} Calwell came within a handful of votes of winning the cliffhanger [[1961 Australian federal election|1961 election]]. He had not wanted Whitlam as deputy leader, and believed Labor would have won if Ward had been in the position.{{sfn|Hocking|2008|pp=218β219}} Soon after the 1961 election, events began to turn against Labor. When President [[Sukarno]] of Indonesia announced that he intended to take over [[West New Guinea]] as the colonial Dutch departed, Calwell responded by declaring that Indonesia must be stopped by force. Calwell's statement was called "crazy and irresponsible" by Prime Minister Menzies, and the incident reduced public support for the ALP.{{sfn|Hocking|2008|pp=219β220}} At that time, the Federal Conference of the Labor Party, which dictated policy to parliamentary members, consisted of six members from each state, but not Calwell or Whitlam. In early 1963 a special conference met in a Canberra hotel to determine Labor policy regarding a proposed US base in northern Australia; Calwell and Whitlam were photographed by ''[[The Daily Telegraph (Sydney)|The Daily Telegraph]]'' peering in through the doors, waiting for the verdict. In an accompanying story, [[Alan Reid (journalist)|Alan Reid]] of the ''Telegraph'' wrote that Labor was ruled by "36 [[faceless men]]". The Liberals seized on it, issuing a leaflet called "Mr Calwell and the Faceless Men" which accused Calwell and Whitlam of taking direction from "36 unknown men, not elected to Parliament nor responsible to the people".<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.nla.gov.au/apps/cdview?pi=nla.aus-vn2247771-1 |title=Digital Collections β Books β Item 1: Mr. Calwell and the Faceless Men |via=National Library of Australia |date=n.d. |access-date=26 February 2012}}</ref> Menzies manipulated the Opposition on issues that bitterly divided it, such as direct aid to the states for private schools, and the proposed base. He called an [[1963 Australian federal election|early election]] for November 1963, standing in support of those two issues. The Prime Minister performed better than Calwell on television and received an unexpected boost after the assassination of US President [[John F. Kennedy]]. As a result, the Coalition easily defeated Labor on a 10-seat swing. Whitlam had hoped Calwell would step down after 1963, but he remained, reasoning that Evatt had been given three opportunities to win, and that he should be allowed a third try.{{sfn|Lloyd|2008|p=334}} Calwell dismissed proposals that the ALP leader and deputy leader should be entitled to membership of the party's conference (or on its governing 12-person Federal Executive, which had two representatives from each state), and instead ran successfully for one of the conference's Victoria seats.{{sfn|Hocking|2008|pp=232β233}} Labor did badly in a 1964 by-election in the Tasmanian [[Division of Denison|electorate of Denison]], and lost seats in the 1964 half-Senate election. The party was also defeated in the state elections in the most populous state, New South Wales, surrendering control of the state government for the first time since 1941.{{sfn|Hocking|2008|pp=235β236}} Whitlam's relationship with Calwell, never good, deteriorated further after publication of a 1965 article in ''[[The Australian]]'' reporting off-the-record comments Whitlam had made that his leader was "too old and weak" to win office, and that the party might be gravely damaged by an "old-fashioned" 70-year-old Calwell seeking his first term as prime minister.{{sfn|Hocking|2008|pp=240β241}} Later that year, at Whitlam's and [[Don Dunstan]]'s urging, and over Calwell's objection, the biennial party conference made major changes to the party's platform: deleting support for the [[White Australia policy]] and making the ALP's leader and deputy leader ''ex officio'' members of the conference and executive, along with the party's leader and deputy leader in the Senate. As Whitlam considered the Senate unrepresentative, he opposed the admission of its ALP leaders to the party's governing bodies.{{sfn|Hocking|2008|pp=244β248}} Menzies retired in January 1966, and was succeeded as prime minister by the new Liberal Party leader, [[Harold Holt]].{{sfn|Hocking|2008|p=248}} After years of politics being dominated by the elderly Menzies and Calwell, the younger Holt was seen as a breath of fresh air, and attracted public interest and support in the run-up to the [[1966 Australian federal election|November election]].{{sfn|Hocking|2008|p=248}} In early 1966, the 36-member conference, with Calwell's assent, banned any ALP parliamentarian from supporting federal assistance to the states for spending on both government and private schools, commonly called "state aid". Whitlam broke with the party on the issue, and was charged with gross disloyalty by the executive, an offence which carried the penalty of expulsion from the party. Before the matter could be heard, Whitlam left for [[Queensland]], where he campaigned intensively for the ALP candidate [[Rex Patterson]] in the [[1966 Dawson by-election|Dawson by-election]]. The ALP won, dealing the government its first by-election defeat since 1952. Whitlam survived the expulsion vote by a margin of only two, gaining both Queensland votes.{{sfn|Hocking|2008|pp=250β256}} At the end of April, Whitlam [[1966 Australian Labor Party leadership spill|challenged]] Calwell for the leadership; though Calwell received two-thirds of the vote, he announced that if the party lost the upcoming election, he would not stand again for the leadership.{{sfn|Hocking|2008|pp=257β258}} Holt called an election for November 1966, in which Australia's involvement in the [[Vietnam War]] was a major issue. Calwell called for an "immediate and unconditional withdrawal" of Australian troops from Vietnam. Whitlam, however, said this would deprive Australia of any voice in a settlement, and that regular troops, rather than conscripts, should remain under some circumstances.{{sfn|Oakes|Solomon|1973|p=59}} Calwell considered Whitlam's remark disastrous, disputing the party line just five days before the election. The ALP suffered a crushing defeat; the party was reduced to 41 seats in the House of Representatives. Shortly after the election, Whitlam faced another expulsion vote for his stance on Vietnam, and survived.<ref>Hancock, Ian. [http://www.naa.gov.au/collection/explore/cabinet/by-year/1966-events-issues.aspx Events and issues that made the news in 1966] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20141109155359/http://www.naa.gov.au/collection/explore/cabinet/by-year/1966-events-issues.aspx |date=9 November 2014}}. [[National Archives of Australia]]. Retrieved 2 November 2014.</ref> True to his word, Calwell resigned two months after the election. At the [[Australian Labor Party Caucus|caucus]] meeting on 8{{spaces}}February 1967, Whitlam was elected party leader, defeating leading left-wing candidate [[Jim Cairns]].{{sfn|Hocking|2008|p=271}}
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