|
AN
AUSTRALIAN REPUBLIC
The way forward
Speech
by the Prime Minister, The Hon P.J. Keating, MP
to the House of Representatives
7 June 1995 |
It is
the Government's view that Australia's Head of State
should be an Australian - that Australia should become
a republic by the year 2001. Tonight I shall describe
the means by which we believe this ought to be done.
Honourable members will recall that to fulfil an undertaking
given during the last election campaign, on April 28 1993
the Government established a Republic Advisory Committee
to prepare an options paper which would describe the minimum
constitutional changes necessary to create a federal republic
of Australia.
The Republic Advisory Committee was chaired by Mr Malcolm
Turnbull and comprised Dr Glyn Davis, Miss Namoi Dougall,
the Hon Nick Greiner, Dr John Hirst, Ms Mary Kostakidis,
Miss Lois O'Donoghue, the Hon Susan Ryan and Professor George
Winterton.
I take this opportunity to thank them. They consulted widely
throughout Australia, carried out their work with dedication
and energy and delivered to the Government and to posterity
a most valuable document.
In the eighteen months which have passed since the release
of the Report, the idea of an Australian republic has come
to occupy a central place in our national political debate:
not only in this Parliament but within the political parties,
in major representative and community bodies, in schools
and universities, communities at large and, I daresay, around
countless Australian dinner tables.
In the process many Australians have come to favour a Republic.
Just as many, perhaps, now believe it is inevitable.
Many may regret the prospect of change and be unsure about
the means by which it can be achieved, but recognise that
sooner or later we must have an Australian as our Head of
State. That one small step would make Australia a republic.
Governments can wait for opinion to force their hand, or
they can lead. They can wait for the world to change and
respond as necessity demands, or they can see the way the
world is going and point the way.
We are approaching the 21st century and the centenary of
our nationhood. As never before we are making our own way
in our region and the world. For us the world is going -
and we are going - in a way which makes our having the British
monarch as our Head of State increasingly anomalous.
The fact is that if the plans for our nationhood were being
drawn up now, by this generation of Australians and not
those of a century ago, it is beyond question that we would
make our Head of State an Australian. Any suggestion that
the British monarch should fill the role would not be entertained.
This is not because our generation lacks respect for the
British monarchy, or the British people, or our British
heritage, or the British institutions we have made our own,
or our long friendship with the British in peace and war.
On the contrary, Australians everywhere respect them, as
they respect The Queen. But they are not Australian. It
is so obvious, that if we were just now drawing up our constitution,
we probably would not even feel the need to say that the
Australian Head of State will be Australian - it would go
without saying.
That it does not go without saying today is an accident
of history. We are attached to Great Britain by long threads
of kinship and affection which, to a considerable extent,
are embodied in the warmth of our regard for Queen Elizabeth.
Many Australians may well feel that to substitute an Australian
for the monarchy constitutes in some way a rejection of
these ties. I think all of us can understand these feelings.
But the creation of an Australian republic is not an act
of rejection. It is one of recognition: in making the change
we will recognise that our deepest respect is for our Australian
heritage, our deepest affection is for Australia, and our
deepest responsibility is to Australia's future.
Nothing in the creation of an Australian republic will alter
the facts of our heritage and our affections. Indeed our
relationship with Britain may well become the more thoroughly
"modern relationship" which the British Prime Minister expressed
a desire for two years ago. The development of a mature
and modern relationship will certainly not be inhibited
by recognition of the truth. We are friends with separate
destinies to carve out in the world. We are not as we once
were, in a parent-child relationship.
The people of modern Australia are drawn from virtually
every country in the world. It is no reflection on the loyalty
of a great many of them to say that the British monarchy
is a remote and inadequate symbol of their affections for
Australia. And we can be equally sure that in the 21st century
the British monarchy will become even more remote from even
more Australians.
Australia occupies a unique place in the world and makes
a unique contribution to it. Our destiny is in no-one else's
hands but our own: we alone bear the responsibility for
deciding what the nature of our government and society will
be, what advantage we will take of our human and material
resources, what kind of place our children will inherit.
It is not a radical undertaking that we propose.
In proposing that our Head of State should be an Australian
we are proposing nothing more than the obvious. Our Head
of State should embody and represent Australia's values
and traditions, Australia's experience and aspirations.
We need not apologise for the nationalism in these sentiments,
but in truth they contain as much commonsense as patriotism.
This is a point worth making: this republican initiative
is not an exercise in jingoism; it is not accompanied by
the beat of drums - or chests. It asserts nothing more than
our unique identity. It expresses nothing more than our
desire to have a Head of State who is truly one of us. It
changes nothing more than what is required to make clear
and unambiguous our independence and responsibility for
our own affairs.
It is a small step, but a highly significant one. The government
believes that at this stage of our history it is a logical
and essential one. And it can reflect that stage in our
history. An Australian Head of State can embody our modern
aspirations - our cultural diversity, our evolving partnerships
with Asia and the Pacific, our quest for reconciliation
with Aboriginal Australians, our ambition to create a society
in which women have equal opportunity, equal representation
and equal rights. In this decade we have a chance which
few other countries have; in declaring ourselves for an
Australian republic, we can give expression to both our
best traditions and our current sensibilities and ambitions.
At present, under the Constitution, Australia's Head of
State is The Queen and her "heirs and successors in the
sovereignty of the United Kingdom". Anyone reading the Australian
Constitution who is unfamiliar with the practical realities
of Australian government would assume that the role of the
monarch was central.
In fact, the involvement of the British monarch in Australia's
affairs is now very limited. The Queen's role as Head of
State is in most respects carried out by the Governor-General.
Of the responsibilities The Queen retains, the most notable
is her appointment of the Governor-General which, by convention,
she does on the advice of the Prime Minister.
We are not quite alone among the countries of the world
in having as our Head of State someone who is not one of
our own citizens, but we are in a very small minority -
and a majority of the countries in the Commonwealth of Nations
are republics with their own Head of State. Of the 185 members
of the United Nations, only 15 do not have their own Heads
of State - and 14 of those 15 are former British Dominions.
The Queen of Australia is also Queen of the United Kingdom
and 14 other countries in the United Nations.
Notwithstanding that The Queen is Australia's Head of State
and fulfils that duty conscientiously, when she travels
overseas she represents only the United Kingdom. Her visits
abroad often tend to promote British trade and British interests
- they do not promote Australia's trade and interests.
This is, of course, right and proper for the Head of State
of the United Kingdom. But it is not right for Australia.
The right Head of State for Australia is one of us, embodying
the things for which we stand, reminding us of those things
at home and representing them abroad. We number among those
things fairness, tolerance and love of this country. It
is a role only an Australian can fill.
Each and every Australian should be able to aspire to be
our Head of State. Every Australian should know that the
office will always be filled by a citizen of high standing
who has made an outstanding contribution to Australia and
who, in making it, has enlarged our view of what it is to
be Australian.
In these and other ways, the creation of an Australian republic
can actually deliver a heightened sense of unity, it can
enliven our national spirit and, in our own minds and those
of our neighbours, answer beyond doubt the perennial question
of Australian identity - the question of who we are and
what we stand for. The answer is not what having a foreign
Head of State suggests. We are not a political or cultural
appendage to another country's past. We are simply and unambiguously
Australian.
If only by a small degree an Australian republic fulfilled
these ideals it would be worth it.
Measured against other stages of our development it is a
relatively simple and modest undertaking. A hundred years
ago, despite their rivalries and the enormous distances
which separated them, the Australian colonies came together
and created a nation. In the course of a century we have
evolved from a collection of British colonies; to a single
nation of limited independence; to a Dominion in the British
Empire; to a sovereign nation in all respects bar one. In
the same century we have come through great trials of our
collective courage and ingenuity.
As Australian democracy and society have evolved and developed,
the practical character of Australian government has dramatically
changed. For example, in the 1930s the Governor-General
ceased to be the representative of the British government
in Australia and became the representative of the British
monarch alone. In the same decade it was accepted that the
British monarch would act solely on the advice of the Australian
government - not the British government - in relation to
Australian matters; and Australia assumed responsibility
for its own external affairs which had been previously the
responsibility of the British government. In 1930 for the
first time, an Australian became Governor-General.
With the abolition of all remaining rights of appeal to
the Privy Council in London, in the 1980s Australian courts
became the ultimate arbiters of Australian law. Also with
the passage of the Australia Act, the Parliament of the
United Kingdom relinquished the last vestiges of its power
to make laws applying to Australia.
In every instance, there was controversy. Today it is hard
to imagine why the changes were opposed.
And we are better for the changes. In the 1990s we are stronger,
richer and better placed in the world than ever before.
At every stage in our development there have been hesitations,
but in the end we have always recognised necessity and where
our interests lie. If at times we have been cautious about
taking large steps forward, it cannot be said that we have
taken any backwards.
That is what we seek with the republic: a small but important
step forward - the last step in a process which began one
hundred years ago. We think it is time to embrace the necessary
change.
We therefore intend to ask the Australian people if they
want an Australian republic with an Australian Head of State.
The change we propose has very limited implications for
the design of Australia's democracy. It is the so-called
"minimalist" option. All the essential Constitutional principles
and practices which have worked well and evolved constructively
over the last hundred years will remain in place.
I stress that these proposals represent the Government's
preferred position. We do not suggest that it is the only
position and not open to change. But it is a position reached
after careful consideration of the Advisory Committee's
report, and we believe it to be a wise position that will
stand the test of time.
"Commonwealth"
is a word of ancient lineage which reflects both our
popular tradition and our Federal system, and we propose
that the Australian republic retain the name "Commonwealth
of Australia".
Under the proposals the role of the House of Representatives
and the Senate will remain unchanged, as will the role and
powers of the States. We will still be a Federation. In
virtually every respect, our governmental arrangements will
be exactly the same as they are now: the day to day handling
of national government will remain with Ministers led by
the Prime Minister; the Cabinet will continue to deal with
the major issues; and Ministers will continue to be responsible
to Parliament and the Australian people.
Our membership of the Commonwealth of Nations headed by
The Queen will not be affected.
None of these things will change, but we will have an Australian
as our Head of State, and we propose that he or she be described
by the term "President of the Commonwealth of Australia".
The President will perform essentially the same functions
as the Governor-General. As with the Governor-General, except
in the most exceptional circumstances, these functions will
be carried out on the advice of the Government of the day.
A former Australian Governor-General, Sir Zelman Cowen,
made some remarks last week which I think bear repeating.
They echoed those of a predecessor of his, Sir Paul Hasluck;
and in fact I should think they contain a sentiment common
to every Governor-General since Federation. Sir Zelman described
the Governor-General's role as "the highest single expression
in the Australian governmental structure of the idea that
all Australians from all parties and all walks of life belong
to the same nation".
An Australian Head of State would perform precisely this
unifying role; and, it follows, would need to be of the
same stature and integrity as we seek in our Governors-General.
A significant element of the Head of State's role is symbolic;
performing ceremonial duties around the nation and abroad.
This is the public aspect of the office: the means by which
the Head of State represents Australia and, by his or her
example and encouragement, provides national leadership.
The Head of State will also continue to perform the formal
administrative duties given to the Governor-General by legislation
and which are undertaken on the advice of the Federal Executive
Council. The Head of State's duties here include formalising
government regulations and appointing public officials.
The Head of State will assume the Governor-General's constitutional
duties, most of which are, by convention, performed in accordance
with the advice of the government of the day. These include
summoning and dissolving the House of Representatives and
the Parliament as a whole and issuing writs for Federal
elections. The Head of State will also take over the Governor-General's
role as titular Commander-in-Chief of the armed forces.
In line with actual practice, we propose that the Constitution
be amended to make clear that the Head of State will exercise
these constitutional duties on the advice of the government
of the day.
Finally, the Head of State will retain those very few powers
now held by the Governor-General which, in the most exceptional
circumstances, may be exercised without, or possibly contrary
to, Ministerial advice.
These are the so-called reserve powers. The Republic Advisory
Committee identified these powers as: the power to appoint
the Prime Minister; the power to dismiss the Prime Minister
and therefore the government; and the power to refuse a
request by the Prime Minister to dissolve one or both Houses
of the Parliament.
The Committee made the point that there are a number of
principles or conventions underpinning our Westminster style
of government and the practical operation of our Constitution.
These principles, which are not currently set out in the
Constitution, determine whether the circumstances exist
for the Governor-General to exercise a reserve power and
what action would be appropriate.
Theoretically, it would be possible to fully codify or write
down these conventions, assuming one could foresee all the
contingencies they might be required to meet. I have no
doubt that a great many people would like to see the Head
of State's discretionary, or reserve, powers tightly defined
- as they are, for example, in the Irish Constitution -
so as to oblige the Head of State to act in accordance with
express rules in the Constitution, or Ministerial advice,
in all circumstances.
The question is, then: should the reserve powers - which
are imprecise and governed by precedent and convention -
be codified? Should they be delineated, cut down or specified
precisely in our Constitution, or should they remain as
they apply now, by unwritten convention?
The advantage of codifying the conventions, whether in whole
or in part, would be to bring a degree of clarity and certainty
to the options open to a Head of State in different situations.
However, after careful consideration, the Government has
formed the view that it is probably impossible to write
down or codify these powers in a way that would both find
general community acceptance and cover every possible contingency.
As the system evolves there needs to be some capacity to
respond to circumstances quite unforeseen today. Tightly
defined rules can themselves have unforeseen consequences.
Were we to try, by Constitutional amendment, to set down
precisely how the reserve powers should be exercised by
the Head of State, those amendments, even if intended to
be otherwise, could well become justiciable - that is capable
of being adjudicated by the High Court of Australia and
required to be adjudicated by the High Court.
Hence, codification would be likely to result in fundamental
change to our system of government and alter the status
of the High Court in relation to the Executive and the Parliament.
Over time, Justices of the Court could well be drawn into
arbitrating purely political disputes whose resolution should
ultimately be in the hands of the electorate. The Court
would thus be exposed to public pressure and, in the inevitable
event that a party to a dispute was unhappy with its resolution,
the standing and impartiality of the Court could be called
into question.
For these reasons the Government believes that, on balance,
whatever the immediate attraction of this course might be,
it would not be desirable to attempt to codify the reserve
powers; and that the design, processes and conventions at
present governing their exercise by the Governor-General
should be transferred to the Australian Head of State without
alteration.
We are aware that with this option, there is a risk that
Australian governments may occasionally find themselves
in conflict with a Head of State who exercises political
judgment without regard to the conventions. We are also,
of course, conscious of the possibility of a repetition
of the events of 1975, when a government possessing the
confidence of the House of Representatives was denied supply
by the Senate. But the question of the Senate's powers over
supply is a very different issue from that of establishing
an Australian Head of State. It is an issue that deserves
to be addressed, but it doesn't need to be addressed at
the same time.
If these reserve powers are to be given to a new Head of
State, it is critically important that the authority and
source of the Head of State's power is consistent with the
national interest and the continued effective operation
of our political system.
There has been considerable debate in the community about
how the Head of State should be chosen. As things now stand,
the Governor-General is appointed by The Queen acting on
the sole advice of the Prime Minister.
It is clear that most people believe the Prime Minister
should not have such exclusive power in appointing an Australian
Head of State. The debate is principally between those who
support popular election and those who favour election by
the Parliament.
The desire for a popular election stems from the democratic
sentiment which all Australians - including all of us in
this place - share. However, the Government has come to
the view that if a new Australian Head of State were to
be elected by popular mandate, he or she would inherit a
basis of power that would prove to be fundamentally at odds
with our Westminster-style system of government.
It should be recognised that a Head of State, whose powers
derived from a general election, would be the only person
in the political system so elected. His or her powers would
be nominally much greater than those of all other Commonwealth
office holders, including the Prime Minister and the Cabinet,
who are, without exception, indirectly elected via large
elected parties. With a popularly elected President, potential
would exist for the representative and democratically elected
parliamentary chambers, the repositories of the diffuse
power of Australian democracy, to be gradually diminished,
while the embodiment of the nation and great powers were
vested in one person. That would constitute a very dramatic
- and undesirable - change to a system which all of us agree
has served us well.
Whatever differences of opinion may presently exist about
the most desirable mode of his or her election, I think
there is a consensus that the Head of State should be, in
some sense, "above politics".
With this the Government agrees. The Head of State should
be an eminent Australian, a widely respected figure who
can represent the nation as a whole. This in fact has been
the character of the role of the Governor-General and it
should be protected and retained in the role of a Head of
State.
Popular election guarantees that the Head of State will
not be above politics - indeed it guarantees that the Head
of State will be a politician. As Sir Zelman Cowen pointed
out in his speech last week, a "direct election of a President
would ensure political outcomes"; and he went on to say
that people like himself and another former Governor-General,
Sir Ninian Stephen, "would not have the resources or inclination
to contest such an election". We cannot have a Head of State
who is "above politics" if we subject candidates to popular
elections - we will get instead politicians, political parties
and political campaigns. And we will get a Head of State
with an authority unheard of in our political system and
discordant with some of the basic principles on which that
system rests.
We therefore propose, as the Republic Advisory Committee
suggested, that the Head of State be elected by a two-thirds
majority vote in a joint sitting of both Houses of the Commonwealth
Parliament on the nomination of the Prime Minister and the
Cabinet. Such a joint sitting would be a unique occasion,
bringing together all the political parties, and both Houses
of the Parliament, in a spirit of bi-partisanship and cooperation.
Obviously, before the vote was taken the non-government
parties would have to be consulted to ensure that the candidate
had their support.
It would be impossible for any government to dictate the
outcome of this process. A two-thirds majority vote of both
Houses would require bi-partisan support and ensure that
the Head of State had the blessing of all the major parties.
The RAC report makes the point that a two-thirds majority
in the present parliament would require the votes of 40
more members than the Government presently has. In fact,
no government since World War II has enjoyed a two-thirds
majority.
A Head of State appointed by both Houses would be subject
to removal by both Houses if it was the opinion of a two-thirds
majority that his or her conduct was inappropriate. This
is why, given the difficulties of codification I have described,
and given that we believe the conventions governing the
reserve powers will in large measure need to remain with
the Head of State, it is imperative that his or her mandate
does not flow from popular election, but from the representative
power of the House of Representatives and the proportional
power of the Senate.
The other brake on any wilful or misguided behaviour by
a Head of State is that the process of removal should not
be contingent on a specified set of facts or circumstances
or conditions. The joint sitting would be unconstrained
in its actions or in its decision by being able to consider
squarely the behaviour of any incumbent.
A further inhibition to misguided or inappropriate behaviour
is the proposal that either House may, by simple majority,
initiate a joint sitting to remove or censure a Head of
State.
The Government believes that, taken together - the authority
and source of the Head of State's powers coming from the
Parliament, removal by the same means as appointment, and
the capacity to censure - these elements provide effective
counter-weights to the substantial authority vested in the
Head of State through the reserve powers.
In addition, in the light of the events of 1975, any Head
of State determined upon a controversial course of action
would do so in the knowledge that he or she would be confronted
with the weight of public opprobrium, and will be at pains
to ensure that every course of action is both warranted
and capable of being defended.
The Government proposes that, consistent with the convention
for Governors-General, the term of office for the Head of
State be five years, and that Heads of State be permitted
to serve one term only.
To prevent any attempt to influence Heads of State by offers
of subsequent employment, we propose that outgoing Heads
of State not be permitted to accept remuneration from the
Commonwealth in addition to their pension until five years
have passed since their departure from the office.
As an additional step to ensure that the office of Head
of State is not politicised, the Government proposes that
serving and former parliamentarians - Commonwealth, State
and Territory - be excluded from candidature until five
years have passed since their departure from parliament.
There are other detailed issues that will also need to be
addressed. For example, arrangements for unexpected vacancies
would broadly mirror those currently in place.
It is not our intention that the Government's proposals
should affect the Constitutions of the Australian States.
It would be up to each State to decide how in future they
would appoint their respective Heads of State. It is reasonable
to expect that if the Australian people opt for an Australian
Head of State, the States would follow suit. But the question
would be for each State to decide.
In this regard, we were interested that a committee commissioned
to examine the issue by the West Australian government concluded
that, if the minimalist approach proposed by the Republic
Advisory Committee were to be adopted, the position of the
States within the federation would not be substantially
affected.
The Government is ready to have senior Commonwealth Ministers
brief State governments on the proposals and we sincerely
hope that all State Premiers will make constructive contributions
to the public debate.
The Government puts forward these proposals to provide a
basis for considered public discussion. The Australian Constitution
cannot be changed in any way without a referendum, and to
succeed at a referendum a proposed change must win the agreement
of a majority of voters in a majority of States and a majority
of voters overall.
The Government proposes to put the question of a republic
to the Australian people some time in 1998 or 1999. Acceptance
at the referendum will mean that Australia can be a republic
by the year of the centenary of Federation, 2001.
Before the referendum, there will be extensive consultation
with the people of Australia. But it should be clearly understood
that nothing we can devise in addition to the due democratic
processes will match those processes in the information
they provide, the debate they stimulate or the power they
give the people. The passage of the Referendum Bill through
both Houses of the Commonwealth Parliament will be followed
by an extensive campaign in which arguments for and against
a republic will be put. And the people's vote - and the
people's vote alone - will decide the issue.
In short, the Constitution requires that the Parliament,
the nation's representative and deliberative body, alone
can formally determine the proposals to be put to the people
in a referendum. I stress this point. The Parliament alone
can formally decide what is put in a referendum. At most,
any suggested convention can only be a consultative device
and, in obvious ways, an elitist one.
There have been calls for a constitutional convention, but
the limitations of that procedure should be understood.
There were six Constitutional Conventions between 1973 and
1985 followed by a Constitutional Commission. It is not
unfair to say that they were unproductive. And any future
convention not limited to the issue of the republic and
the Head of State, would be a convention going over the
same old ground as all the others before it.
Some people have drawn comparisons with the consititutional
conventions of the 1890s, but there is an essential difference
between those and any current proposals. Here, we are attempting
a modest change to the Constitution - in the 1890s they
were attempting to write it. And among the things they wrote
was the requirement that any change to the Constitution
must be submitted to a referendum. That is the democratic
obligation we are under today.
The 1890s conventions were proponents of change - they were
concerned with one question - how to create from the separate
Australian colonies one indissoluble Commonwealth of Australia.
So would any convention on the republic need to be a proponent
of the republic, and concerned only with one issue - the
best means by which the people of the Commonwealth of Australia
can have an Australian as their Head of State.
The detail of the changes we propose may at first glance
obscure the meaning of them.
The meaning is simple and, we believe, irresistible - as
simple and irresistible as the idea of a Commonwealth of
Australia was to the Australians of a century ago.
The meaning then was a nation united in common cause for
the common good. A nation which gave expression to the lives
we lead together on this continent, the experience and hopes
we share as Australians.
The meaning now is still a product of that founding
sentiment - it is that we are all Australians. We
share a continent. We share a past, a present and
a future. And our Head of State should be one of us.