The
eldest son of Irish born parents, John Joseph Ambrose Curtin, born
in 1885, endured
a diminished formal education, due largely
in part to his parents frequent moves in search of employment.
Yet despite these apparent limitations, Curtin went on to become
one
of Australia’s greatest Prime Ministers. Although he died
only six weeks before the end of the Second World War, during his
political
career he presided over a notable shift in the Australian perception
of the monarchy and as such, the British Empire.
From
the beginning of white settlement in Australia, the monarchy served
two distinct
purposes among the largely British population.
It symbolised power: of the Empire, arms, commerce, language and
culture. And it was also thought of as the guarantor of common
freedom. Australia was both an extension of British society and
a departure
from it. Colonists were able to produce a distinctive culture,
more open and tolerant than the one at “Home”. These new circumstances
allowed Australia to implement a number of British ideals long before
Britain did – the vote for the common man, parliamentarian
remuneration, and women suffrage.
Along
with his father, Curtin attended meetings during the Commonwealth
federation campaigns, and it was
here where his political interests
were first sparked. When John was 15 he witnessed the birth of
Federation. That same year Australia sent another contingent of
troops to South
Africa to bolster the men already engaged in fighting the Boer
War. While the conflict had nothing to do with Australia directly,
it
did present the new nation with an opportunity to show Britain
her willingness to defend the Empire.
“Australia’s great luck was that the British people colonised
its lands. This meant that at Federation Australia belonged to the
worlds greatest Empire and its strongest navy. Australia did not
speak to the world in its own right; it spoke as part of a mighty
Empire – a considerable advantage. In 1901 Britain was not
just a friend; it was family”
100 Years: The Australian Story p.207
Britain
was Australia’s
protector. Australians viewed the British as vital to their long-term
survival. Defence was a major reason
behind the formation of the nation. This new nation was bonded to
Britain both strategically and emotionally. After Federation Britain
continued to be responsible for Australia’s naval defence,
foreign policy and international trade. Australia saw the world through
British eyes and the world saw Australia through Britain.
The
ideals of a united Empire helped shape Australia. With Britain
by her side,
Australia did not have to constantly look over her shoulder.
British protection allowed Australia to feel safe, to explore,
and to expand it’s own potential and capabilities. Australia was
a new world society that drew strength from its old world heritage.
“Britain retained their loyalty and affection by progressively conceding
their demands for greater freedom and autonomy over a period of more
than a century. This was a discreet statesmanship that fitted with
free-trade imperialism and some indifference to the formal Empire.”
The Oxford Companion to Australian History p.90
During
the early years of the 20th century, Curtin developed a friendship
with Frank Anstey, a notable socialist and proponent for the working
class. Anstey was Curtin’s mentor and played a significant
role in his life. Curtin was to say, “of all the men who have
influenced me, he influenced me the most. He introduced me to the
Labor movement.”
As
an avid reader Curtin was an assiduous member of the Victorian
Public Library. In 1906 his interest turned to writing
as well. His
first article was published in the “Socialist”, the new
journal of the Victorian Socialist Party. It was the start of a long
career in journalism. In 1911 he became Secretary of the Timber Workers
Union. Within two years Curtin had coordinated a loose alliance of
local groups into a tight and effective union. He was relentless
in his campaign for adequate compensation, and improved working and
living conditions. Curtain was instrumental in the introduction of
a Workers’ Compensation Act in Victoria.
The
outbreak of the First World War in 1914, brought to the fore the
controversy of militarism
and conscription for the Labor Party. Curtin was a
staunch anti-conscriptionist; because of his beliefs he would spend
a period of time behind bars. In 1916 he was appointed secretary
of the National Executive of the Anti-Conscription Campaign. However,
it was a difficult time for Curtin, and despair and alcoholism
overcame him. His friend and mentor, Frank Anstey, intervened to
support Curtin’s
nomination for the position of editor of the “Westralian
Worker”,
a Labor journal, so in 1917 Curtin moved to Perth.
Curtin’s
interest in the Labor movement and politics continued. The 1928 elections
saw Curtin stand as the candidate for Fremantle.
When he won, Labor regained a seat it had not held for fifteen years.
Curtin went to Canberra as a member of the Labor government, however,
his term was cut short when he lost his seat and his party was defeated
in 1931. The following three years saw Curtin fill in his time with
freelance writing for various newspapers, as well being a Perth publicity
officer, and chairman of the advisory council preparing Western Australia’s
case before the Commonwealth Grants Commission, until he regained
the seat of Fremantle.
When
Scullin resigned as leader of the Labor Party in October 1935,
Curtin was elected to the position, narrowly
winning over firm favourite,
Frank Forde, by one vote. As Labor Leader Curtin faced several
difficulties. His immediate task was to build unity. Curtin had
to struggle to
find compromise policies among the isolationists, communists, socialists,
opportunists, and Catholics who made up the Labor movement.
On
defence Curtin allied himself with the few Army pacifists who knew
that the
Fortress of Singapore was a myth. He carried his party
on a policy of self-sufficiency, based especially on development
of air power, which had been an idea of his prior to the First
World War. Curtin also realised that Australia’s main threat came
from Japan.
In
1939, as war with Germany broke out Curtin, as leader of the Federal
Opposition, read a statement of Labor policy drawn up
at a party
meeting:
“…In this crisis, facing the reality of war, the Labor Party stands
for its platform. That platform is clear. We stand for the maintenance
of Australia as an integral part of the British Commonwealth of Nations.
The party will do all that is possible to safeguard Australia and
at the same time, having regard to its platform, will do its utmost
to maintain the integrity of the British Commonwealth.”
Out of Empire: The British Dominion of Australia p.70
Curtin
restored the ALP to prominence and nearly won the 1940 election. When the
Menzies war government collapsed, Curtin became Prime Minister
in October 1941, just two months before the bombing of Pearl Harbor.
Holding out against pressure to form a cooperative government with
Menzies, Curtin instead waited for the right moment when two Independent
members gave Labor a majority.
The
great topic in the crisis of early 1942, when Japanese invasion
seemed almost certain, was the recalling
from the Middle East of
the AIF. While his political opponents wanted to follow Imperial
orders, Curtin insisted on the immediate return of the 6th and
7th Divisions. Curtin made his well-known statement on 27 December
1941,
calling on America for support:
“The Australian Government therefore regards the Pacific struggle
as primarily one in which the United States and Australia must have
the fullest say in the direction of the democracies’ fighting
plan. Without any inhibitions of any kind, I make it quite clear
that Australia looks to America, free of any pangs as to our traditional
links or kinship with the United Kingdom. We know the problems that
the United Kingdom faces, we know the constant threat of invasion,
we know the dangers of dispersal of strength, but we know, too, that
Australia can go and Britain can still hold on.”
Out of Empire: The British
Dominion of Australia p.71
This
statement was taken from an otherwise routine article in which
Curtin appealed
to all Australians to support the war effort, however
his comments were seen by Churchill as one that would “cause
resentment throughout the empire”. Roosevelt remarked that
it “tasted of panic and disloyalty”, yet newspapers across
Australia supported Curtin’s declaration.
Curtin’s statement
is regarded by many as a turning point in Australia’s emergence
as an independent nation. Yet while his party would finally ratify
the Westminster act in 1942, eleven years
after it was passed in Britain, Curtin remained a man of the Empire.
Whereas Curtin’s predecessor James Scullin established the
right of the Australian Prime Minister to advise the monarchy on
the appointment of the Governor-General, Curtin opted for a Britain
as the Kings’ representative. Indeed, for a period of time
during the war the King’s brother, the Duke of Gloucester,
served as Governor-General. Curtin’s actions could hardly be
seen as those of a radical republican yet, as expected, the leaders
of the United Australia and Country parties publicly expressed their
outrage at his disloyalty to Britain.
By
agreement, the 6th and 7th Divisions AIF were sent to the Far East
sector and were making for
Java and Sumatra. But Rabaul had
fallen to the Japanese, Singapore fell on February 15 and the 8th
Division was imprisoned. Darwin was bombed on February 19. General
Sturdee, chief of the General Staff, forcefully advised Curtin
to bring the divisions home and threatened his resignation to the
War
Cabinet if his advice was not followed. Curtin’s chief public
service adviser Frederick Shedden firmly agreed. However, considerable
pressure was brought to bear on Curtin by that great British apologist
Robert Menzies, as well Stanley Bruce, Earle Page, and other non-Labor
members of the Advisory War Council. The Council advised him to follow
Churchill in their long-conditioned belief that the Imperial interest
of Great Britain should be supported against Australia’s own
interests.
Curtin
refused the advice put forward by the War Cabinet. A bitter cable
exchange ensured between Curtin and British Prime
Minister
Churchill. The United States President Roosevelt also brought pressure
to bear on the Australian Prime Minister. The last straw was Churchill
ordering the 7th Division to turn north for Burma, but he finally
gave way after no fewer than four firm Australian protests. Curtin
played a pivotal role in changing Australia from a nation with
an inward bias which regarded itself as a colonial satellite of
Great
Britain that sided automatically with the Mother country, to a
nation with a more international outlook capable and prepared to
make its
own judgments. By standing up to Churchill, Curtin guaranteed that
Britain did not override Australia’s interests.
History
judges Curtin’s decision as correct. Had the 7th Division,
with no air support and no weapons, (the arms were in ships trailing
behind), reached Rangoon they would have been comprehensively routed.
Australia would have lost half the AIF in a fortnight. However the
strain of the decision took it’s toll on Curtin who became
recumbent for several days following. In March, 1942 Curtin was instrumental
in having General MacArthur appointed supreme commander of the SouthWest
Pacific, thus ensuring American support. The two formed a solid partnership
during the war.
In
1944 Curtin made an overseas trip to attend the Prime Ministers
Conference in Great Britain and visit US President
Roosevelt. Shortly
after his return Curtin suffered a heart attack. He was able to
go back to work briefly at the beginning of 1945, but was forced
back
to bed through illness. In the end, the anguish and the long, hard
hours took a toll on his uncertain health. On July 5 1945, John
Curtin aged 60, died. The war had claimed another victim.
Curtin’s
role in the shift towards a more independently thinking Australia
was promoted not by a desire to sever English ties but
to reinforce the idea that Australia should be allowed to govern
in her own right. Decisions made by Curtin were of national importance
and showed Australia no longer had to rely on Britain to tell her
what to do. Australia would make her own way and decide who would
be allies and who would be enemies.
“The notion of the monarch as a guardian of traditional rights flourished
among large numbers of Australians even into the last decades of
the twentieth century. In a peculiar way the monarchy was thus a
means of reconciling notions of British power and of British freedom,
two things which might otherwise have seemed contradictory. The splendour
of the Crown seemed to prove monarchs had all the power they needed
in doing their duty by the people.”
The Oxford Companion to Australian History p.434
Curtin’s task in
reshaping Australia’s reliance on Britain
was made easier by the way many Australians regarded the British.
Although willing to once again defend the Mother Country, Australians
over the years had developed a cynicism towards Britain. From the
botched landing at Gallipoli and the poor leadership on the Western
Front, to the demands from British rentiers during the Great Depression,
to the Bodyline Ashes series, to the grand illusion of the Fortress
of Singapore, all highlighted the difference between imperial and
Australian interests.
“I
think the stand taken over the withdrawal of Australian
troops was a critical moment in the ongoing development of a
keen sense
of Australian nationalism. It was a forcing of a strategic
realty upon us – it wasn’t a statement that great
and powerful friends weren’t important and that relationships
with what was regarded as the Mother Country weren’t important.
You can’t
see in this an act of genesis of Australian nationalism,
because Australian nationalism really began in the nineteenth
century.
What you can see is a catalyst for something within us emerging
as an
active public policy” Kim Beazley
100 Years: The Australian Story p.260
When
the British Empire quickly broke up after the war, Australia
was already preparing
to face the world as an independent nation.
She still required “great and powerful friends” and
her defence ties with the United States of America, which began
with
Curtin and MacArthur, was strengthen with the formation of the
ANZUS treaty during the Menzies reign.
The
absence of the monarch has been the monarchy’s main characteristic
as an Australian institution. For the colonies, and later the states,
the monarchy’s role was easily filled by Governors and Governor-Generals.
However, the political community created by Federation seemed to
create an empire within an Empire. Australia with its immense landscape
and diverse communities demanded a more personal monarchy. For a
majority of the twentieth century Englishmen filled the role of King
or Queens’ representative. Prime Minister James Scullin, buoyed
by the Balfour declaration, broke the tradition with his appointment
of Isaac Isaacs as Governor-General in 1931. However, it wasn’t
until 1965 that the Governor-General was consistently sourced from
Australian stock.
Queen
Elizabeth attempted to undertake the duties of a personal monarch,
however, the majority of her visits to Australia
were always very
brief. This absence manifested itself into a main platform for
the push for an Australian republic. The movement gained considerably
support during the 1990’s via the simple but undeniable argument
that “she is not Australian”. The referendum for an Australian
republic in 1999 was defeated not because Australia desire to keep
the Queen as our head of state, but because the issue of how a President
would be elected dogged the campaign and ultimately negated the outcome.
“When
the Queen came to Australia in the first month or two of my
prime ministership I thought how inadequate it was for her to
attempt to represent
all that we were. She was here and then we had all the carry-on
with
the British press and what have you. And I was always rankled
by the flag, always rankled by the fact that we had the flag
of the
United Kingdom of Great Britain in our flag, in the corner.
I thought, you know, the time’s come to actually put this
on the political agenda. You see, the republic was an after-dinner
mints and coffee
conversation for 40 years.” Paul Keating
100 Years: The Australian
Story p.82
What
is certain is that when the question is next put to the people,
the argument for
the yes campaign will be far more cohesive and united;
and the political conditions will be far more favourable towards
a positive outcome, because by then the last vestiges of the Menzies
era should be long passed into history.
Bibliography
Arnold, Spearritt & Walker Out of Empire: The British Dominion
of Australia Mandarin, Melbourne 1993
Davison, Hirst & Macintyre The Oxford Companion to Australian
History Oxford Press, Melbourne 1999
Paul Kelly 100 Years: The Australian Story Allen & Unwin,
Sydney 2001
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