ARM Media Statement - 26 October 1999
The Prime Minister's statement on the republic fails to address
the Big Lie, which is central to the No Case.
The chairman of the Australian Republican Movement released
the following statement in response to the Prime Minister's statement
today about his support for a No vote on November 6. Mr Howard's
statement mostly repeats the mantra of the official No case advocates:
The Prime Minister states he understands why direct election republicans
are voting No. But the basis of the promise being made by the No
Campaign is that if Australians vote No they will get a directly
elected President. The Prime Minister has repeated his longstanding
opposition to directly electing the President. Mr Howard said at
the Constitutional Convention on February 2, 1998:
"The published opinion polls tell us that there is overwhelming
support for the popular election of a president. That may well
be so. It is likely that it is due to the mistaken belief on the
part of many people that the popular election of a president would
deliver an impeccably neutral, non-party-political head of state
who would impartially soar above the whole political firmament.
Nothing could be further from reality."
"An elected presidency seems to me to be a sure way of
politicising the office and creating unparalleled tensions."
Will there be another Referendum if the No vote wins?
Yet his allies in the monarchist cause, including Kerry Jones
at the Deliberative Poll in Canberra on Sunday, are contending that
Mr Howard would be prepared to put a direct election referendum
to the people.
The question the Prime Minister must answer is: If the referendum
is defeated, will he put a second republic referendum incorporating
direct election of the President?
Unless he is prepared to tell the truth, which is that he has
no such intention of ever proposing a direct election model to the
people, he will be completely complicit in the Big Lie which is
the keystone of the monarchist campaign.
Public Nomination is not a sham
It is also disappointing that Mr Howard has such complete contempt
for the Australian people that he has described the public nomination
process in the republic on offer - which gives every Australian
entitled to vote, the opportunity to nominate candidates for president
- as something which can be ignored.
Mr Howard recently lectured his Party Room on the need for political
leaders to show humility. And yet here he is saying that legislation,
prepared and sponsored by his Government, which allows public nominations
for the office of president, would be ignored by him. In fact, he
would treat the public's choice with contempt.
The Republic will deliver excellent presidents
He also states that the republic to be voted on in 11 days will
not produce good candidates. Here he contradicts former Governor
General Sir Zelman Cowen, and former Chief Justices Sir Anthony
Mason and Sir Gerard Brennan. Indeed, these are exactly the calibre
of Australian whom could well be president under the proposed republic.
Also ot odds on dismissal powers
Mr Howard's views on dismissal powers are a personal one. They
are at odds with two individuals who know a little about the existing
dismissal powers and those proposed - former prime ministers Malcolm
Fraser and Gough Whitlam, who were at the centre of Australia's
one major constitutional crisis in 1975. Both endorse the republic
on offer and state that if it had been in place in 1975, the constitutional
crisis would have not occurred.
Mr Howard's real motives are plain
He wants the Australian people to have no say whatsoever in who
our Head of State should be. He wants to maintain his absolute right
to appoint anyone he likes as the next Governor General.
The republic model clearly offends him because it requires the
Prime Minister to have regard to the wishes of the people, and share
the power of appointment with all sides of politics and with representatives
of the people. It may also offend him that an Australian, nominated
and selected by Australians is proudly the face of Australia to
our own citizens, and to the world.
Authorised by Malcolm Turnbull,
Australian Republican Movement, 60 Park Street, Sydney NSW 2000
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