ARM
Media Statement - 17 August 1999
Republicans
call for the real Bill Hayden to stand up in the No
referendum case
The Australian Republican Movement today called on
former Governor General, Bill Hayden, to clarify why
he really wants King Charles III and not an Australian
President to be the nation's next Head of State.
Mr Hayden, who will tomorrow join the No side campaigning
against an Australian President replacing the British
monarch as Australia's Head of State, has claimed
he is opposing any change because he only supports
direct election.
Despite the fact that many republicans supporting
direct election are constructively asking Australians
to vote YES as the next step in the nation's progress
to ensure an Australian becomes Head of State, Mr
Hayden is still advocating a No vote. And his real
position is very unclear.
Today he says he is against the republic because he
is a strong supporter of direct election. But recently,
he said a direct election system would create friction
and was undesirable. In his very own autobiography,
Mr Hayden wrote:
"...
a presidential system based on a national election
to the office of head of state will result in more
not less friction than our system of political government.
It is reasonable to anticipate that this would happen
more frequently in a presidential system, especially
where a strong national campaign was successfully
mobilised behind a charismatic presidential candidate
by one party while strong local campaigns gave control
of the houses of parliament to an opposing party."
Kerry Jones from Australians for a Constitutional
Monarchy's stated today that Mr Hayden's utterings
on the republic are likely to "... be recorded in
Australian history as vital to achieving a resounding
No vote... "
But before this history changing even can occur the
Australian people have a right to know from Mr Hayden
if he is a direct electionist or not, or whether his
support for the Queen remaining Head of State instead
of an Australian President is in fact based on support
for the monarchy, or indeed, will his position today
be his position tomorrow, or are the words he wrote
in his autobiography, which was his position yesterday,
really be his position today, or even tomorrow?
Or should Australians simply wait for another confusing
position on this issue from Mr Hayden?
Authorised by Malcolm Turnbull, Australian
Republican Movement, 60 Park Street, Sydney NSW 2000