Media - The John Button Prize /about-the-prize/media 2010-09-04T00:00:00Z johnbuttonprize.org.au Peter Sutton winner of 2010 John Button Prize /about-the-prize/media/post/peter-sutton-winner-of-2010-john-button-prize/ 2010-09-04T00:00:00Z sarah <p>Anthropologist and linguist Peter Sutton has won the 2010 John Button Prize for his most recent book, The Politics of Suffering: Indigenous Australia and the end of the Liberal Consensus. Peter won from a short list of four that comprised March of Patriots by Paul Kelly, Tensions escalate over Rudd’s kitchen cabinet by Laura Tingle and Noel Pearson&rsquo;s Quarterly Essay, Radical Hope.</p> <p>In this groundbreaking book, Sutton asks why, after three decades of liberal thinking, has the suffering and grief in so many Aboriginal communities become worse? The picture Sutton presents is tragic. He marshals shocking evidence against the failures of the past, and argues provocatively that three decades of liberal consensus on Aboriginal issues has collapsed. He combines clear-eyed, original observation with deep emotional engagement. The Politics of Suffering cuts through the cant and offers fresh insight and hope for a new era in Indigenous politics.</p> <p>Nobel literature laureate JM Coetzee, one of the judges for the prize said the book was a &ldquo;trenchant attack on welfare dependency and a penetrating loook at the 1970s when the last generation fully in command of Aboriginal culture was dying and the management of Aboriginal affairs was taken over by bureaucrats&rdquo;.</p> <p>Sutton has lived and worked closely with Aboriginal communities since 1969. He speaks three Cape York languages and as an expert on Aboriginal land ownership he has assisted with fifty land rights cases. He has authored or edited twelve books, including Native Title in Australia: an Ethnographic Perspective, regarded as the most authoritative work in its field. He is a Fellow of the Academy of the Social Sciences in Australia, a Fellow of the Australian Anthropological Society, and Honorary Research Fellow, Institute of Archaeology, University College London.</p> Noel Pearson to deliver 2010 John Button Oration at Melbourne Writers Festival /about-the-prize/media/post/noel-pearson-to-deliver-2010-john-button-oration-at-melbourne-writers-festival/ 2010-08-23T00:00:00Z sarah <p>This year&rsquo;s John Button Oration, hosted by the Melbourne Writers Festival, will take place at the RMIT Capitol Theatre, 113 Swanston St Melbourne at 8pm on Friday 3rd September. Noel Pearson will deliver the 2010 Oration &ndash; and at this event the winner of the 2010 John Button Prize will be announced. For more information about the Oration and how to get tickets, go to <a href="http://www.mwf.com.au">www.mwf.com.au</a>.</p> SHORTLIST IN JOHN BUTTON PRIZE ANNOUNCED /about-the-prize/media/post/shortlist-in-john-button-prize-announced/ 2010-07-22T00:00:00Z sarah <p>2010 Shortlist (in alphabetical order)</p> <p>Paul Kelly, March of Patriots<br/> Noel Pearson, Radical Hope<br/> Peter Sutton, The Politics of Suffering<br/> Laura Tingle, Tensions escalate over Rudd&rsquo;s kitchen cabinet</p> <p>Writing on Indigenous politics and society has for the second year running dominated the shortlist of the John Button Prize for writing on politics and public policy, announced today.</p> <p>Aboriginal leader Noel Pearson&rsquo;s Quarterly Essay, Radical Hope, and anthropologist Peter Sutton&rsquo;s book, The Politics of Suffering, are among the four works shortlisted for the Prize, which awards $20,000 to the best piece of writing on politics and public policy in Australia in the previous year.</p> <p>The others are the book, March of Patriots, by Paul Kelly of The Australian newspaper, and the article, Tensions escalate over Rudd&rsquo;s kitchen cabinet, by Laura Tingle of The Australian Financial Review.</p> <p>Last year&rsquo;s shortlist for the inaugural Prize featured three works on Indigenous subjects and was won by Chloe Hooper for her book on the death of Palm Islander Cameron Doomadgee.</p> <p>The winner of the Prize, created in memory of former Australian Industry minister and writer John Button, will be announced at the Melbourne Writers Festival on September 3.</p> <p>Chairman of the judging panel, Morag Fraser, said it was no surprise that Indigenous subjects featured so strongly as they represented &ldquo;the great unresolved issue of Australian society.&rdquo;</p> <p>One of the judges, 7.30 Report presenter Kerry O'Brien, said it was no surprise that Indigenous subjects featured so strongly as they represented &ldquo;the single most intractable policy problem Australia faces.&rdquo;</p> <p>For the second year in a row, judges noted the absence of high-quality writing on climate change.</p> <p>The six-person judging panel included former NSW Premier Bob Carr and Nobel Prize-winning novelist John Coetzee.</p> <p>For more information contact: Morag Fraser 0404 034 054 or James Button (John Button Foundation) 0447 380 812</p> Long list announced in 2010 John Button Prize. /about-the-prize/media/post/long-list-announced-in-2010-john-button-prize/ 2010-05-20T00:00:00Z sarah <p>Long list announced in 2010 John Button Prize.</p> <p>Nineteen works have been chosen as the 2010 long list for the $20,000 John Button Prize for writing on politics and public policy. The list comprises eight books, two Quarterly Essays, and nine pieces of journalism. The subjects of the works are diverse, ranging from Indigenous politics and climate change &mdash; which also featured strongly in last year&rsquo;s list &mdash; to immigration policy, Australia&rsquo;s relations with China and Kevin Rudd&rsquo;s governing style, among other subjects. The short list and winner of the Prize, which is in its second year, will be announced in August.</p> <p>Abbott, Tony &mdash; Battlelines &mdash; Book</p> <p>Aly, Waleed &mdash; What&rsquo;s right? The future of conservatism in Australia &mdash; Quarterly Essay &mdash; Essay</p> <p>Conley, Tom &mdash; The vulnerable country: Australia and the global economy &mdash; UNSW Press &mdash; Book</p> <p>Ewart, Jacqui &mdash; Haneef: a question of character &mdash; Halstead &mdash;Book</p> <p>Markus, Andrew, James Jupp and Peter McDonald<br/> &mdash; Australia&rsquo;s immigration revolution &mdash; A &amp; U &mdash; Book</p> <p>Kelly, Paul &mdash; The march of the patriots: the struggle for modern Australia &mdash; MUP &mdash; Book</p> <p>Langton, Marcia &mdash; The resource curse &mdash; Griffith REVIEW &mdash; Essay</p> <p>Manne, Robert &mdash; Why we weren&rsquo;t warned: the Victorian bushfires and the Royal Commission &mdash; The Monthly &mdash; Essay</p> <p>Mares, Peter &mdash; Three essays on migration issues: 1.The permanent shift to temporary migration; 2. A blockage in the skilled migration pipeline; 3. The fifth ripple: Australia&rsquo;s place in the global refugee crisis &mdash; Inside Story: Current Affairs and Culture (website) &mdash; Essays</p> <p>Megalogenis, George &mdash; Slip, slop, slap &mdash; The Weekend Australian &mdash;Article</p> <p>Patmore, Glenn &mdash; Choosing the republic &mdash; UNSW Press &mdash; Book</p> <p>Pearse, Guy &mdash; On borrowed time and borrowed carbon in <em>Goodbye to all that? On the failure of Neo-liberalism and the urgency of change </em>&mdash; Black Inc &mdash; Chapter</p> <p>Pearson, Noel &mdash; Radical hope: education and equality in Australia &mdash;Quarterly Essay &mdash; Essay</p> <p>Mandy, Sayer&mdash;The wild frontier&mdash; The Monthly&mdash;Essay</p> <p>Soutphommasane, Tim &mdash; Reclaiming patriotism: Nation-building for Australian Progressives &mdash; Cambridge University Press &mdash; Book</p> <p>Stewart, Cameron &mdash; Command and Control: Is Kevin Rudd the most powerful PM in Australian history? &mdash; The Weekend Australian &mdash; Article</p> <p>Sutton, Peter &mdash; The politics of suffering &mdash; MUP &mdash; Book</p> <p>Tingle, Laura &mdash; Tensions escalate over Rudd&rsquo;s kitchen cabinet &mdash; Financial Review &mdash; Article</p> <p>Wesley, Michael &mdash; Made in China &mdash; Griffith REVIEW &mdash; Essay</p> We welcome Sally Warhaft and Julian Leeser to our panel of judges. /about-the-prize/media/post/we-welcome-sally-warhaft-and-julian-leeser-to-our-panel-of-judges/ 2010-02-28T00:00:00Z sarah <p>We are pleased to announce the addition of Sally Warhaft and Julian Leeser to our judging panel for the 2010 John Button Prize. Sally is a Melbourne-based anthropologist and edited The Monthly magazine until mid-2009, and Julian Leeser is the Executive Director of the Canberra based Menzies Research Centre.</p> Melbourne author wins first John Button Prize /about-the-prize/media/post/melbourne-author-wins-first-john-button-prize/ 2009-08-30T00:00:00Z Unknown author <div class="captioned medCaptioned"><img alt="Photo by Monty Coles" class="med" src="http://johnbuttonprize.org.au:80/static/files/assets/f5c5b619/chloe.jpg" title="Image" /><blockquote><p>Photo by Monty Coles</p></blockquote></div> <p>Melbourne author Chloe Hooper has won the first John Button Prize for her book, The Tall Man.<br/> </p> <p>Ms Hooper, 36, told an audience of more than 300 at the Melbourne Writers' Festival on Friday, August 28, that it was ``such an honor'' to win the Prize, which was created in memory of former Industry Minister, Victorian Senator and writer, John Button.<br/> </p> <p>Check here to see the <a href="http://www.theage.com.au/articles/2009/08/28/1251394592293.html">The Age </a>coverage of Ms Hooper's win and the the John Button Oration.</p> <p>Ms Hooper won from a short list of five that also comprised the books Blind Conscience by Margot O'Neill and The Statute of Liberty by Geoffrey Robertson, and the articles Big Bunga Politics by Marcia Langton and Tradition, Truth and Tomorrow by Galarrwuy Yunupingu.<br/> </p> <p>As part of winning the Prize, she will give a talk about her book later in coming months. This website will publish details when they are available.<br/> </p> <p>Ms Hooper was awarded the Prize before the first John Button Oration was delivered by Bill Kelty, former Secretary of the Australian Council of Trade Unions.<br/> </p> "Romance in Politics - the Public Good" - Bill Kelty's inaugural John Button Oration /about-the-prize/media/post/-romance-in-politics-the-public-good-bill-kelty-s-inaugural-john-button-oration/ 2009-08-28T00:00:00Z sarah <p>Romance in Politics – the Public Good</p> <p>When Paul Keating encouraged me to accept your kind invitation, he told me, “They are a romantic lot, most of them are old lefties, their hearts are still in search of a better world”. He reminded me that Mahler was a social democrat at heart.</p> <p>I can recall from my youth that our literary and artistic giants had a slight political bent – Frank Hardy, Katherine Susannah Pritchard, Mary Gilmore, Robbie Burns, Paul Robeson, Henry Lawson, Charles Dickens, John Steinbeck.</p> <p>However, as the Romantics might have their politics – so politics has its Romantics.</p> <p>It is a great pleasure to give this lecture – the John Button Oration.</p> <p>The essential case I seek to make out is the case for the Romantic in politics. There is no better banner to do so than under the name of John Button. The Romantic here is defined in the sense that it is applied to Keats, Byron and Shelley of “a belief in some positive ideal of good”. It was said of Keats that “He had the power of putting a spirit into life so that the world is not dead or so dull.”</p> <p>In making out the case for the Romantic I would like to draw on the political life of John Button and the unfinished contribution of Laurie Carmichael and Paul Keating. John Button – the Labor Party Independent who became a Senator and Minister; Laurie Carmichael, the Communist who led one of the toughest unions, the Amalgamated Engineering Union, and later became Assistant Secretary of the ACTU; and Paul Keating, the Treasurer, Prime Minister, and the source of one of Australia’s most brilliant home grown musicals – Keating the Musical.</p> <p>Each of these three people in turn could be described as part of the Romantic faction of Australian politics over the past forty plus years; although Paul Keating and John Button were never in the same faction in the ALP and Laurie Carmichael was not even in the ALP. The Romantic faction is, of course, not limited to the ALP, or for that matter, the Communist Party. There are members in most political parties, unions, churches, businesses, universities, the community and the media. It is part of the DNA of this nation. There are plenty about – a smattering in all political parties, and in society in general.</p> <p>However, there are conditions of entry, as Ralph Waldo Emerson outlined in his lecture, “Man the Reformer”, to the Mechanics Apprentices’ Library Association in 1841. He made the following points:</p> <p>“Reformers tend to Idealism.”</p> <p>"They “fly to refuge to the world of ideas and aim to recruit and replenish from that source.”</p> <p>“The very great and community moment in the annals of the world is the triumph of some enthusiasm.”</p> <p>“They must be lovers of life, and at once the impossible becomes possible.”</p> <p>Idealism, ideas, enthusiasm and passion are the keystones of the Romantic. Each factor by itself is not sufficient. Attila the Hun could be described as enthusiastic, the Conservative Movement no less passionate. The defining feature must, therefore, be in its totality: the comprehensive nature of the objective of kindness to all and belief in all – that people are not left behind.</p> <p>This is not a monopoly of the ALP.</p> <p>• Malcolm Fraser’s stand on apartheid, his support for refugees and his acknowledgement of internationalism are Romantic traits which should not be ignored or balanced against some less Romantic acts.</p> <p>• Ian Macphee’s support for effective minimum wages, consultation and respect, were as important in establishing the new wage system as anybody else’s in this nation.</p> <p>• Jeff Kennett’s support for people who suffer from depression should be remembered, along with his energy in driving the construction of Federation Square.</p> <p>• Ian Sinclair’s genuine support for regional Australia.</p> <p>• Rupert Hamer’s commitment to the Arts.</p> <p>In a multi-dimensional world, Romantic acts are not the preserve of one political party, or even one faction.</p> <p>Indeed, Australia is not a nation divided into extreme political positions.</p> <p>I met Tony Blair with Kim Beazley and Paul Keating on two occasions and he talked of New Labor in a new world. His thesis was that the political wheels had collapsed on Communism and therefore a convergence to a broader based centre was inevitable.</p> <p>The reality, of course, is that Australia had that debate in the1890’s – it shaped our Federation - and after that the extremes of both left and right were largely ignored. We decided then to go to the middle ground.</p> <p>It was for that reason we had early minimum wages, pensions, child endowment and the recognition of unions.</p> <p>This was not the United States where until recently they were seeking to protect Roosevelt’s reforms of the thirties!</p> <p>Lenin was right in his observations about unions, and Australian unions in particular. He said that Australia was in a non revolutionary state because of the positions of the political parties and institutions like unions.</p> <p>If Lenin thought this was an unstable position - he was wrong. Our democracy has been stable for a hundred years.</p> <p>Australia’s challenge over the past quarter century was not to become NEW LABOR; it was to prevent the New Liberals overturning the century of political equilibrium that had been broadly established and maintained here.</p> <p>I believe that Labor Governments have a special responsibility as reformers and catalysts for change. Labor Governments must be the great investors in the social democratic model. They must also be the great protectors.</p> <p>There are many people who have been lifelong members of the Romantic union in Australian politics, including Gough Whitlam, Bob Hawke, Nugget Coombs, Barry Jones, the Creans, the Beazleys, Joan Kirner, etc, who have helped frame, sustain and enrich its contribution. There have been its champions, like Phillip Adams, who have been a conscience and a chronicler. Phillip could even have been the shop steward.</p> <p>This is not a relative test of the importance of each person’s contribution but about three people whom I have known quite well.</p> <p>John Button</p> <p>Let me first turn to John Button, who I first met in late 1965 or early 1966, after I joined the ALP in 1965 as a 16 year old.</p> <p>He was in a group of people called the Participants, mainly lawyers, including John Cain and Bob Holt, who were urging a new structure upon the ALP, a modernism and an objective that the ALP should aim to actually win elections!</p> <p>• Younger people here tonight might find this unremarkable, but for the ALP in Victoria in 1965 and 1966, such a view was not universally popular.</p> <p>• I remember at a Branch meeting of the ALP Gough Whitlam being pilloried as a political opportunist, more interested in winning the election than he should be!</p> <p>John Button spoke eloquently of the reasons why the ALP should win elections.</p> <p>There was a reform agenda in 1965. It was to:</p> <p>• end Australia’s participation in the Vietnam war; • achieve equal pay for women; • improve the pension; • give unions the right to strike; • recognise indigenous land rights; • campaign for peace/disarmament; • improve the environment;</p> <p>• Apartheid was wrong and Nelson Mandela was a hero not a terrorist; • our health care system and our hospitals were inadequate; and • educational opportunities for lower income students were limited.</p> <p>This was a good agenda, yet the ALP had not been in power federally since 1949.</p> <p>Don Dunstan, as a Labor Premier in South Australia, was adding Arts and Lifestyle to a States Agenda. As Attorney-General, Dunstan had delivered land rights to the indigenous people of South Australia in 1965.</p> <p>Gough Whitlam was arguing for a new sense of Nationalism.</p> <p>I also remember John Button being relatively gentle with the Conservatives. He said that their greatest fault was their Conservatism, when Conservatism would no longer do.</p> <p>I did not join the Participants, or for that matter any faction – but was impressed by the pragmatic reality of the trade unions.</p> <p>When I first worked for the Federated Storemen &amp; Packers’ Union I did so at 17-25 Lygon Street, Carlton. That small building contained the Australian Council of Trade Unions, Maurice Blackburn &amp; Company, the Vehicle Builders Employees’ Federation and the Federal Office of the Federated Storemen &amp; Packers’ Union. The real office of the union movement after 3.00 pm became the John Curtin Hotel next door. This was the geographical centre of union politics in Australia.</p> <p>John Button worked in the front office on the left and I worked in the back office on the right on the first floor.</p> <p>Bob Hawke had just begun his presidency at the ACTU. He was working with the person he narrowly beat – Harold Souter.</p> <p>John Button was very kind to me – he offered advice and support. When Maurice Blackburn left the building he still kept in contact.</p> <p>He had a sense of humour and a sense of duty. As President of the Professional Divers’ Association (a small union), he worked for nothing. The best payment he ever received was having his house painted. “The Professional Divers were better at diving than painting, but nonetheless, far better than [me] him at painting.”</p> <p>However, it was much later – in late 1982 and early 1983 - in the contest for leadership between Bob Hawke and Bill Hayden that he displayed his most enigmatic and practical character.</p> <p>Bob Hawke said to me – that as I liked John Button I should talk to him about the leadership. So I did on two or three occasions.</p> <p>Always in the most inexpensive of places, like Genevieve in Carlton.</p> <p>John was a great admirer of Bill Hayden and respected his qualities and integrity. The last discussion I had with him about the leadership was agonising. He debated with himself more than with me. He reiterated the 1965 speech of why we need Labor Governments; that the next Labor Government would need to understand and work with unions and Hawke was from the unions, that the risk of losing was greater with Bill Hayden, and that they would need a longer period than three years.</p> <p>At the end he said – “I will support Bob, but don’t tell him. I want to tell Bill Hayden first.”</p> <p>There was a tear in his eye, and in my line of work I did not see many tears.</p> <p>After Labor was elected in 1983, as Minister for Industry, John Button was an agent for change and modernisation. The Steel, Vehicle and Clothing Industries were reformed, restructured and rationalised. The manufacturing wealth of the nation had to be protected and nurtured, but they could not survive without adapting to the rest of the world.</p> <p>He worked with industry leaders, unions and the bureaucrats to achieve these results. The process of involvement and leadership was an educative process in itself of lasting significance.</p> <p>John Button was humorous, gentle, tough and determined. He loved to write, draw, think and communicate.</p> <p>After leaving Parliament John continued to contribute as a thinker, mentor and talker, and was also a significant writer.</p> <p>Laurie Carmichael</p> <p>I had read a lot about Laurie Carmichael before I first met him.</p> <p>Unlike John Button and Paul Keating, he was not in the ALP but in the Communist Party.</p> <p>Laurie Carmichael brought an intellect to the union movement that was almost unparalleled.</p> <p>Laurie Carmichael was, and still is a Marxist. Yet, simultaneously, he was a great contributor to the Social Democrat model of the Australian Labor Party.</p> <p>I asked him on the odd occasion about this. His explanation was clear enough:</p> <p>• First, Marx and Lenin were both right in saying that unions, Keynesianism and Social Democratic Governments did create conditions which would defer the inevitable crisis between the bourgeoisie and the proletariat. However, Australia was not the place to test Marxism; it would find its truth in the societies where there was no third way as entrenched as our own. When that happened we would find it hard to avoid. • Second, Marx would sometimes say of himself when faced with practical outcomes that even he was not a Marxist. • Thirdly, revolution may take different forms than that which were expected. • Fourthly, in any event people had to operate within the objective conditions that existed.</p> <p>He seemed to belie reality – the most feared person in the country, causing or leading strike actions, a communist, but in a union of tradespeople, many of whom were relatively well paid. He won union election after union election. He was a great supporter of union democracy.</p> <p>He was the antithesis of the media image that that was constructed around him. He talked quietly, logically, listened and inquired. He was a modernist about technological change but had a classical bent in music. He was about practical industrial outcomes but believed in the bigger picture of change in society. There was an ideological framework of reference for all his industrial and political strategy.</p> <p>The first opportunity I had to see him at work was during the Oil Industry negotiations of 1971. The Storemen &amp; Packers’ Union had a strategy – a minimum wage with bargaining on top. Laurie Carmichael had an ideology. I wondered why a person would place himself under so much pressure year in and year out. There were a myriad of unions involved in the negotiations, but he was the natural leader of the multi-union negotiations.</p> <p>He outlined the claims, the priorities, the expected counter response by the employers and the unions’ response. It was tactical – an industrial game of chess put with a twist of politics. He was certain of only one thing; that there would be a major dispute. He wanted an outcome in which a reduced number of hours would be worked to give impetus to the campaign for shorter working hours, which he had encouraged at the recent ACTU Congress.<br/> </p> <p>When the Oil Companies made it a condition of the negotiations that there would be no discussions about hours of work, the game he had mapped out was in play. When I asked why he was certain that there would be a dispute, he quietly said, “This is what the McMahon Government wants, in order to save themselves.”</p> <p>I said, “If we were playing into their hands then why did we want a dispute?” He replied, “Because the dispute will be in our hands and not theirs.” History shows the Oil Companies got their dispute, the Government relished it for a short time, but it was settled before the election. The McMahon Government lost and the oil workers won the 9 day fortnight/19 day month claim.</p> <p>The Oil Industry became the second bench mark in the claim for a shorter working week; a campaign which had been taken up by Laurie Carmichael, then spread throughout the workforce and established as a national condition - the 38 hour week.</p> <p>Laurie Carmichael was not merely the great enemy of the Conservative Government; he was made a scapegoat target of an embattled Labor Government during 1975. I stood next to Laurie Carmichael at the ACTU Congress in 1975 when Gough Whitlam spoke. If anybody had reason to be miffed, Laurie did – the pre-Congress attack on him by the then Minister for Labour, Jim McClelland, was personal, contrived and unjustified. But Laurie’s response to Gough’s speech was a little unexpected. “We have not given him a fair go.”</p> <p>Laurie said, ‘A reformist Government needs more time.” It was a sad occasion to see one of the last great speeches by one of Australia’s great Prime Ministers whereby defeat was conceded, the lesson learnt and the future already being planned. Laurie was thinking ahead. Not for the conflict with the next government, but how the next ALP Government could be given the best chance.</p> <p>Years later, the Accord could not have been achieved without Laurie Carmichael; the ALP could not so easily have won government in 1983, and it could not have governed so effectively without him.</p> <p>The years of the Accord extracted a price for union leadership, but also laid a basis for substantial improvement for those most in need.</p> <p>Laurie Carmichael did have a class view of life – his class view was that a militant elite would provide the leadership, but the benefit had to be spread to the class of workers.</p> <p>He supported the initial wage restraint under the Accord because:</p> <p>• First, we inherited an economy in bad shape. • Second, overall restraint was consistent with the view that some sections of the workforce should be given the opportunity to catch up on pay and conditions. • Trading wages to achieve Medicare was of great benefit; and • Finally, we had a plan for an unusual exit from the restraint – the extension of superannuation.</p> <p>However, there was an issue much bigger in Laurie Carmichael’s view, and that was the role of education. It was about lifting the standards of trade education and recognition for the contribution of workers’ skills. It went further to broadening workers’ skills, adjusting for the technological revolution and increasing workers’ opportunities. He became the great advocate for education.</p> <p>In any event I always thought that Laurie was concerned in some sense about finding a pathway to achieve the Nirvana that was envisaged by the great revolutionaries. His was the long term, where workers had interesting times - at work and at play – education, workers’ involvement and control, leisure and the arts.</p> <p>Paul Keating</p> <p>Now, let me turn finally to Paul Keating.</p> <p>My first exchange with Paul Keating in 1975 was blunt enough. He said why should unions be concerned about import parity prices when the ALP had no chance of winning the next election? “You should be talking to Fraser not us”, he said.</p> <p>The next occasion on which we met was in early 1983 when he walked into the Waterside Workers’ Federation meeting room to finalise the Accord negotiations. His position was plain enough.</p> <p>The Accord was not of his making, he was doubtful if it had a snowball’s change of lasting, why would the Labor Government trust us when we did so much damage last time, the unions would not keep to their commitments, and in any event, he did not expect to be Treasurer anyway.</p> <p>This was not the best start for a long friendship.</p> <p>However, he became the greatest supporter of the Accord – an Accord warrior.</p> <p>His confidence in us [unions] grew gradually.</p> <p>• The currency was floated without any negative implications.</p> <p>• The unions kept our commitments to achieve Medicare.</p> <p>• He knew we had a plan to exit from the wages pause – through superannuation.</p> <p>He became the most regular visitor to the ACTU and the greatest supporter on superannuation, minimum rates of pay, union bargaining rights, and along with Bob Hawke, Medicare. These were not things to negotiate. He wanted to do them.</p> <p>However, along with Bob Hawke, he was also the most challenging. He chased us remorselessly, from union demarcation disputes, to internationalisation of the economy, increased competition, improving productivity, privatisation, reduced government expenditures, and restraint. All the big picture economic issues.</p> <p>It is easy to list the achievements of the Hawke-Keating Government.</p> <p>However, the real test of their legacy is the test of time.</p> <p>After the 1996 election as we pondered the defeat of the Labor Government, I can recall telling Paul that whilst he could regret not having another few years of government, there must come a time when your beliefs and contributions have to be tested against the opposing forces. The greater their value, the greater their durability.</p> <p>Paul Krugman, the noted US economist, recently wrote a book called “The Conscience of a Liberal”. He explains how the defeat of Barry Goldwater in the 1964 elections became the catalyst for the gradual domination of what he terms the Conservative Movement, whose mission was to undo the multi-generational impact of Franklin Delano Roosevelt (FDR).</p> <p>Krugman describes the relative success of that Conservative movement in the USA and the costs. Krugman paints a picture of the USA since the early sixties, its economy growing rapidly, productivity expanding and wealth being created. However, simultaneously minimum wage adjustments were frozen for long periods, tax cuts were distributed to the rich, health costs burgeoned and executive salaries boomed. To fund the increasing living standards, the nation went on a gigantic binge – deficits at household, corporate and government levels kept the growth purring along. The rest of the world funded the wars, the credit cards, the cosmetic surgery, the gas guzzlers and the debt.</p> <p>But it ended in tears – with the great Global Credit Crisis.</p> <p>You can almost hear Karl Marx from his grave at Highgate Cemetery in London saying, “I told you so.”</p> <p>Many of the features that Krugman describes are common to Australia’s experience – high levels of economic growth, of productivity, executive salary surges, and increasing overseas debt to fund our growth. Credit grew at more than 10% compound per annum over the past 30 years, with Australia sucking in billions from overseas to fund our growth.</p> <p>Over the long run, productivity growth is determined by knowledge and technological change. It is where increases in real living standards come from. Since 1992 Australian productivity growth (measured as GDP per head) is up 35% compared with 33% in the USA. Both countries increased productivity at about the same rate.</p> <p>The similarities should not be ignored, but the differences are even more interesting.<br/> </p> <p>Let us compare Australia with the USA since 1992 – since the recession of the early nineties - on six broad economic and social criteria.</p> <ol> <li>International Trade</li> </ol> <p>As a share of the economy, Australian foreign trade rose from 25% in 1992 to 40% in 2008. The United States’ share rose from around 20% to 30% over the same period</p> <p>Foreign trade raises incomes, as well as the range and quality of things we can buy. It gives economies of scale in production and consumption. Australia’s is a more open economy. Our principal trading partners have become the emerging nations of Asia, particularly China. We reduced tariffs. We have a much more flexible exchange rate. We have lower inflation</p> <ol> <li>Wages and Jobs</li> </ol> <p>In the sixteen years from 1992 to 2008 there were 15 increases in Australian minimum wages, compared to 4 in the USA.</p> <p>The United States federal minimum wage was frozen from 1997 to 2006.</p> <p>The real increase in the minimum wage over the period has been 8% in Australia and 4% in the United States. However, the latter figure disguises the dramatic fall in the real value of the minimum wage of 14.8% from 1996 to 2006.</p> <p>The minimum wage is more relevant here. Australia’s federal minimum wage is currently 45% of the average wage; in the United States it is 25%. Around 15% of Australian workers rely on minimum wages compared to 3% in the US. And, in Australia, the minimum wage is supplemented by superannuation, better annual leave, better family leave and better sick leave.</p> <p>For workers who do not rely on minimum wages, collective bargaining delivers better wages than individual contracts. Australian unions embarked on bargaining in the early nineties and are the catalyst for most collective agreements, with increases in the range 3% to 5% over the long haul, spreading real wage increases efficiently in the market place.</p> <p>This can be starkly seen in the case of a shop assistant, who in Australia received $15.64 per hour in 2008 compared to US $6.55 in the United States. (Using average 2007/08 exchange rate $7.24. Using the lowest exchange rate of 62¢, it is still only $10.56.)</p> <p>As Pisano and Shih note in the most recent Harvard Business Review, “Average weekly real wages have remained essentially flat since 1980, meaning that the United States’ economy has been unable to provide a rising living standard for the majority of its people.”</p> <p>The unemployment rate in Australia is 5.9%, up from 3.9% before the global financial crisis. The United States’ unemployment rate is 9.5%, up from 4.6%</p> <p>Australian employment grew by 2.2% per year from 1992 to 2008, compared to 1.3% in the USA.</p> <p>And our participation rate – the share of the population aged 16 – 65 in work and looking for work – rose from 44.2% to 50.2%, whereas the United States increased from 46.9% to 48.3%</p> <ol> <li>Health</li> </ol> <p>Health care costs are currently 9% of Australia’s GDP, up from 7.4% in 1995. This compares with 16% currently in the USA, up from 13.3% in 1995. Health costs have risen in both countries, but by more in the US.</p> <p>The United States private system leaves a large minority of its population without any health insurance at all, whereas Medicare here delivers good baseline health care to all. Government expenditure on health in the United States is 45.3% of the total, compared to 65.8% here.</p> <p>Life expectancy in 1990 was 75 years in the US and 77 here. Today it is up 3 years to 78 in the US and up 5 to 82 years here.</p> <p>The adult mortality rate - the probability of dying between age 15 and age 60 - is expressed as the number of deaths per 1,000 of the population. In 1990 it was 132 for the United States and 96 in Australia. By 2006 it had fallen to 109 in the United States and 65 in Australia</p> <ol> <li>Superannuation and Pensions</li> </ol> <p>Australia progressively introduced a national superannuation system; national savings were allocated to the Future Fund and the Liberal Government simplified and extended the end benefit. In Australia, superannuation increased from 3% of wages to 9%.</p> <p>The United States has substantially had a corporate pension system funded on the basis of defined benefit.</p> <p>Ours is a system that has been funded by productivity growth.</p> <p>There are three aspects of superannuation which need recognition and understanding.</p> <p>First, in Australia, superannuation assets are now over 100% of GDP. In the USA, the ratio of super assets to GDP is 75%, the United Kingdom is 84%, New Zealand 12% and Canada 54%.</p> <p>Second, relative to the rest of the world, Australia’s equity risk premium has trended downwards since 2001. This, in turn, reduces the cost of capital and encourages investment.</p> <p>Higher savings mean interest rates are lower than they would have otherwise been.</p> <p>Third, no Australian company has been made bankrupt by Australia’s superannuation system.</p> <p>h5. Taxation and Government Spending</p> <p>Over the past decade and a half, Australia has run budget surpluses in the good times and deficits when economic growth halted, and our public debt is tiny by world standards.</p> <p>The United States has run increasingly larger fiscal deficits because of its exorbitant income tax cuts to high income earners and its pursuit of a series of wars. The United States public debt is large and rising.</p> <ol> <li>The Financial System</li> </ol> <p>The Four Pillars Policy, the lending policies, the controls and regulations and lower rate of leveraging have contributed to a more stable financial system. Overall, Australia has had a better managed financial system.</p> <p>For example, no bank in Australia had a leverage rate that could compare with the Bank of America’s 73.7:1 leverage ratio; ie a capital of 1.4% of its assets.</p> <p>If you added the off-balance sheet it was 134.1. (Bridgewater)</p> <p>These changes, before the initiatives of the Rudd Government, placed Australia in a better position than most. The Rudd changes have preserved, and indeed, promoted that advantage.</p> <p>We can ask the same question that Krugman asks - where did the productivity increases go? In Australia, low and middle income families received a share through wages and social services. In the United States, the lions took the lions’ share</p> <p>We have lower levels of toxic debt because of higher living standards for those most in need.</p> <p>We have less recourse to debt because of a better health care system and real wage improvements for the majority.</p> <p>The middle class is better off because of unions.</p> <p>Superannuation savings have provided ballast to the system.</p> <p>It has worked because the big changes – exchange rate, wealth valuation, interest rates and fiscal policies – have been the adjustment factors.</p> <p>Australia is better placed with the Asian growth markets. We didn’t do better simply because Australian Governments have been better managers or even visionary investors – it is because companies invested and workers adjusted to change. Real wealth was created.</p> <p>However, it is reasonable to say that in the past generation the economy has been satisfactorily managed. The great structural decisions of the Hawke and Keating Governments have been vital in establishing our current position.</p> <p>More importantly, the Social Democratic framework remains in place. It has to be repaired in places, but the essential elements stood the test of time. In a sense, that framework and the distribution which it encourages, contributes to stability.</p> <p>It is a model which can be called lots of things, but it reflects most of all the philosophies associated with Paul Keating:  Increasing acceptance of internationalisation.  Distribution to all – so that education, retirement, health and access to information are universal rights.  Increased competition.</p> <p>So that there can be no misunderstanding, let me state clearly that long periods of Conservative Government did come at a price:  The weakening of unions is no good thing.  The implicit and explicit racism encouraged and nurtured by John Howard is a matter of national shame.  The failure to become a republic.  The development of the shortage of skills foreseen by Laurie Carmichael, but not ameliorated by government action.  The treatment of refugees.  The inadequacy of the health system.  The attack on minimum wages.  The delay in reacting to the needs of the environment.  Australia would be better off with 15% superannuation.  We have accrued an enormous foreign debt. The massive growth of Australia’s liabilities abroad - $193 billion to $610 billion between 1996 to 2007.</p> <p>Australia paid a price, but when Work Choices was defeated it was a resounding vote for the Australian Social Democratic model in the same way that Stanley Melbourne Bruce’s defeat in 1929 represented a beacon of resistance to conservative social vandalism.</p> <p>The commonality between John, Laurie and Paul</p> <p>Button, Carmichael and Keating had many differences, but there was a commonality of purpose.</p> <p>They thought and acted as generational players. They occupied the stage over a generation, learnt from winning and losing, and made decisions for the ensuing generations.</p> <p>Their predilection was always to assist the poor.</p> <p>They were warriors – they were lovers - but willing fighters for their cause.</p> <p>They believed in practical outcomes – they were driven by philosophies, but wanted real outcomes.</p> <p>They understood and promoted a standard of living that was not just about wages – but about other things such as music, books and theatre – an inner life.</p> <p>They were essential democrats – putting their views and opinions and arguing for them. In a sense, more importantly, they believed in people – they wanted them to have more than a say. They wanted their involvement.</p> <p>They liked and respected one another.</p> <p>In their political life they were the Generals of the Romantics. They painted pictures of a better life - not for some, but for all.</p> <p>The Future</p> <p>This is not a speech of regret, lost causes or excuses. Australia has done better than most countries and is in a position to do better again. We are well placed. However, we do know one thing, that the future is not ours to make - in essence it belongs to those who will own it.</p> <p>The Rudd Government is at an historical juncture in its early years. After a hesitant start, it should be recognised for its bravery in the fiscal stimulus it initiated to the global crisis, the changes that it will create for Australia’s universities and the proposed Broadband investment. If cemented and handled well, it will take well deserved credit for economic management. The repairs to the wage system and the dilapidated school system were timely and necessary. The Labor task is to build a higher platform for social democracy for the next generation.</p> <p>The young, characterised as Generation X or Y, have been cast as individualistic and self-interested. However, I cannot reconcile it with these facts:  Young people in Australia voted overwhelmingly for the Greens and the ALP.  Young Americans went out to work and vote for Barack Obama.  The young hated Work Choices.  They start paying for their retirement from the first day in the workforce through their superannuation.  They substantially pay for their university education over their lifetimes.  They share family responsibilities more than ever.  They are less involved in racial extremism.  They are greater supporters of environmental solutions.  They subsidise the health care for the aged.</p> <p>In short, without the young, the basic foundation of the Romantics within all the parties would be weakened. It is the young who are giving sustenance to the Romantics.</p> <p>However, there is a world of fighting to do for the next generation to make the same advances as the last.</p> <p>We know this:  The health care budget will increase as the population ages and seeks better health care. To maintain costs at the current proportion of GDP is unrealistic. A 2% - 3% increase represents an increase of $20 billion. As GDP rises, so will the amount.  Governments may set the age of the pension, but they do not set the age of retirement. That is a decision for the employer and the employee.  Retirement planning is not extending the age of entitlement of the pension. Retirement opportunities currently begin between 55 to 60 years of age for a great number of Australians. The maintenance of this opportunity, and for a pension able to sustain a living standard, will require a contribution of between 12% to 15% of wages.</p> <p>Unions are important in ensuring a fairer distribution of resources. Krugman has illustrated the impact of weakening the bargaining capacity of unions. Unions must always endeavour to be useful to their members and lead campaigns for them.</p> <p>Unions must continue to pursue improvements in living standards, broadly consistent with the underlying rate of inflation and the trend increase in productivity.</p> <p>There is a need to broaden the agenda to include superannuation, legislating for new national long service leave standards, study leave and training obligations and rights at work.</p> <p> There is a Republic to be established.</p> <p> Arts to invest in.</p> <p> A national treaty with indigenous Australians to be made.</p> <p> Education opportunities to be established.</p> <p> Regions to be sustained.</p> <p> Cities to be rebuilt.</p> <p> Infrastructure of roads and rail to be funded – priced at the most effective public price and not the private price – and achieved by partnership with the private sector.</p> <p> Housing for the poor to be provided.</p> <p> Communications to be afforded to all.</p> <p> Wars to exit from.</p> <p> Universal protection to be established for all those who are disabled, irrespective of the cause.</p> <p> Climate change to be addressed.</p> <p>We cannot be complacent about the foreign debt. We could afford to be complacent about the foreign debt when there was a capital surfeit, but those times are gone.</p> <p>It is true the world does balance its debt and obligations, but we need to:  grow our own savings so as not to amplify that dependence; and  be prepared to embrace equity and debt from those nations that we trade with.</p> <p>We could borrow from the rest of the world to fund our homes and factories, but we need to provide more of our own capital.</p> <p>If Australia goes to 15% superannuation, we will by the mid-2020’s have between 4 - 5 times the GDP in superannuation assets. This will not only provide the capacity for the retirement needs of future generations, including their additional health care costs, but also a level of savings in a competitive trading world that will give us the greatest protection for a generation.</p> <p>There are lessons from the past which are relevant for the future.</p> <p>The Australian Social Democratic model works well.</p> <p>Whilst it needs management and tendering, it regularly needs to be filled by enthusiasts with flair.</p> <p>However, it is not filled by hot air and rhetoric.</p> <p>The economy must produce real wealth, more efficiently, and over time share that growth equitably amongst all in society and between the competing claims for short and long term improvement.</p> <p>That is how we funded superannuation, and that is how we can fund the next stage, health savings and income protection over time.</p> <p>We do it best by being a positive nation in the world of economic growth, as the tectonic shifts of power continue unabated.</p> <p>We will do best as a nation that saves for its own future, particularly in view of the uncertainty that exists.</p> <p>Whilst Australia has every right to be more optimistic than most, we should not underestimate the problems in the United States’ economy and the flow-on impact on the rest of the world.</p> <p>Obama faces a mountain to climb by comparison to the hill we have to contemplate in Australia. The deficit will go to 12% of GDP. It is vital that he wins on Medicare.</p> <p>The USA is vibrant, resilient and dynamic. However, if the fundamental restructuring does not occur, then those in charge will be seduced by the soft option of inflation.</p> <p>The world will be a lot less stable as the inflation genie is let out of the bottle.</p> <p>Conclusion</p> <p>Overall Australia has been well served by the political process, not just by Governments, but by Oppositions.</p> <p>There have been some inexcusable lapses, some bad judgements, some bad mistakes, things that make your heart burn and eyes sting, but on balance they have been outweighed by a combination of good management and brave investment.</p> <p>But history shows that defeat often follows euphoria and rejoicing.</p> <p>The case for Romantics and Romanticism in politics is no less substantial than it ever was.</p> <p>There is a humanity to save from itself – its wars and its nuclear armoury.</p> <p>There is a planet to save from the very impact of humanity.</p> <p>It was said of the Romantics that they broke the polite rules and breached the conventional restraints, and in doing so “exalted passion, energy and imagination”.</p> <p>We are indebted to them.<br/> </p> <p>After the eating, talking, drinking and the heart stops beating, what is left is the soul of creativity - the paintings, the buildings, the poems, the plays, the movies; the accretion of values both good and bad – the ideas, the laws, the philosophy and the ideals.<br/> </p> <p>It has been a great pleasure and privilege to have given the inaugural John Button Oration. For a person of great values – a true Romantic.</p> <p>He helped make the political world “not so dull and dead”.</p> Short list announced /about-the-prize/media/post/short-list-announced/ 2009-08-19T00:00:00Z sarah <p>Yesterday the shortlist was chosen in the first John Button Prize for writing on politics and public policy.</p> <p>The shortlist in alphabetical order is:</p> <p>Chloe Hooper: The Tall Man -- Death and Life on Palm Island (Penguin)<br/> Marcia Langton: The end of `big men' politics (Griffith Review)<br/> Margot O'Neill: Blind Conscience (UNSW Press)<br/> Geoffrey Robertson: The Statute of Liberty -- How Australians can take back their rights (Vintage Books)<br/> Galarrwuy Yunupingu: Tradition, Truth and Tomorrow (The Monthly)</p> <p>Three pieces of writing on Indigenous subjects are among the shortlist of five, chosen from among nearly 100 entries. The winner of the $20,000 Prize will be announced on Friday August 28 at the Melbourne Writers Festival.</p> <p>Morag Fraser, chair of the judging panel, said the entries represented a wide range of subjects and of often contested views about Australian politics, but the judges chose the shortlist based on the quality and appeal of the writing rather than the representativeness of the subjects.</p> <p> ``In a Prize created to remember the public life and writing of John Button you would expect that the voices of the shortlisted entries would be distinctive and deft -- and they were,'' she said.<br/> </p> <p>The Prize judges were former NSW Premier Bob Carr, Nobel-Prize winning novelist J.M. Coetzee, 7.30 Report Presenter Kerry O'Brien, Miles Franklin judge and former Eureka Street editor Morag Fraser and political scientist Judith Brett.</p> Long list chosen in John Button Prize /about-the-prize/media/post/long-list-chosen-in-john-button-prize/ 2009-07-09T00:00:00Z sarah <p>Thirty-one entries have been chosen to go before the judges in the $20,000 John Button Prize for Australia’s best piece of writing on politics and public policy in the past year.</p> <p>The successful entries, listed below, were chosen from nearly 100 pieces of writing – including books, essays, journalism articles, academic research and a speech – that were submitted for the inaugural Prize.</p> <p>The work covers a wide range of subjects, although Indigenous issues, climate change, the end of the Howard Government and the election of Barack Obama, seen from an Australian perspective, featured strongly.</p> <p>The main Prize judges -- former New South Wales Premier Bob Carr, 7.30 Report Presenter Kerry O'Brien, former Eureka Street editor Morag Fraser, political scientist Professor Judith Brett and the Nobel-Prize winning novelist, J.M. Coetzee – will meet at the end of July to choose a short list of six, followed by a winner.</p> <p>The winner will be announced at the inaugural John Button Lecture at the Melbourne Writers Festival on August 28th.</p> <p>The John Button Prize is supported by the Victorian Government, by Toyota and CSL, among other companies, and by individuals.</p> <p>More information about the Prize and the John Button Literary Foundation is available at www.johnbuttonprize.org.au<br/> </p> <p><strong>LONG LIST JOHN BUTTON PRIZE 2009</strong></p> <p><strong>Articles and Essays</strong></p> <p>Robyn Archer - Industry that pays, and art that doesn’t<br/> </p> <p>Don Watson - Once upon a time in America<br/> </p> <p>Galarrwuy Yunupingu - Tradition, truth and tomorrow</p> <p>Geoff Russell - J’acccuse…. CSIRO</p> <p>Marcia Langton - The end of big men politics</p> <p>Michael Fullilove Hope or glory? - The Presidential election, foreign policy and Australia</p> <p>Laura Tingle - On our selection</p> <p>David Heatherington - Reimagining the Australian settlement</p> <p>Annabel Crabb - Stop at nothing: The life and adventures of Malcolm Turnbull</p> <p>Kate Jennings - American revolution</p> <p>Tim Flannery - Now or never</p> <p>Paul Toohey - Last drinks</p> <p>Guy Pearse - Quarry vision</p> <p><strong>Books</strong></p> <p>Peter Hartcher - To the bitter end</p> <p>Peter Van Onselen and Philip Senior - Howard’s end: The unravelling of a government</p> <p>Sarah Maddison - Black politics</p> <p>Geoffrey Robertson - The statue of liberty</p> <p>Paula Shaw - Seven seasons in Aurukun</p> <p>Chloe Hooper - The tall man</p> <p>Peter Singer - The life you can save</p> <p>Michelle Schwarz - A question of power</p> <p>Quentin Beresford - The godfather</p> <p>Mark Davis - The land of plenty</p> <p>Greg Buckman - Tasmania’s wilderness battles</p> <p>David Marr - The Henson case</p> <p>Ben McNeil - The clean industrial revolution</p> <p>Geoff Boucher and Matthew Sharpe - The times will suit them</p> <p>Andrew Scott - Politics, parties and issues in Australia: An introduction</p> <p>Gideon Haigh - The Racket: how abortion became illegal in Australia</p> <p>Margot O’Neil - Blind Conscience</p> <p>Tony Taylor - Denial</p> State Government backs John Button Prize /about-the-prize/media/post/state-government-backs-john-button-prize/ 2009-06-12T00:00:00Z sarah <p><strong>State Government backs John Button Prize</strong></p> <p>The State Government has donated $20,000 to support the inaugural John Button Prize.</p> <p>The gift follows the successful public launch of the Prize Prime Minister Kevin Rudd, Victorian Premier John Brumby and Victorian Minister for Public Transport and the Arts, Lynne Kosky, at Queens Hall in the State Parliament on April 30.</p> <p>Mr Rudd told the audience that the $20,000 annual prize for the best piece of writing on politics or public policy was ``long overdue recognition of the importance of critical, thoughtful, political discourse beyond the Kibuki play that often passes for political debate in this country.''</p> <p>He said he hoped the Prize would ``throw a spotlight on the best emerging talent among writers. And in an age when we can more easily treat ourselves to the best of international journalism, I hope it can nurture a distinctly Australian voice.''</p> <p>Premier John Brumby said that Victoria, ``as the centre of literature and creativity in Australia,'' was proud to be the home of the John Button Prize.</p> <p>The State Government's generous donation represents a substantial boost to funding for the Prize, which is seeking to raise money through government, corporate and individual donations, in order to maintain the Prize in perpetuity, and to ensure that the Prize becomes a landmark of Australian intellectual life.</p> <p>The Chairman of the John Button Literary Foundation, Dr John Miller, said he was delighted with the Government’s pledge and looked forward to a long connection between the Victorian Government and the Prize.</p> Prime Minister Kevin Rudd's launch speech /about-the-prize/media/post/prime-minister-kevin-rudd-s-launch-speech/ 2009-05-01T00:00:00Z Unknown author <div class="captioned medCaptioned"><img alt="Prime Minister Kevin Rudd" class="med" src="http://johnbuttonprize.org.au:80/static/files/assets/e0bc7aed/kevin.jpg" title="Image" /><blockquote><p>Prime Minister Kevin Rudd</p></blockquote></div> <p>I acknowledge the First Australians on whose lands we meet, and whose cultures we celebrate as the oldest continuing cultures in human history.</p> <p>It is an honour to launch officially the John Button Prize tonight.</p> <p>It is equally an honour to serve as a patron of the John Button Foundation.</p> <p>This will be the most lucrative prize in the nation for political writing.</p> <p>And it’s long overdue recognition of the importance of critical, thoughtful, political discourse beyond the Kibuki play that often passes for political debate in this country.</p> <p>A healthy, vibrant democracy needs nourishment from healthy, vibrant political discourse.</p> <p>Separating wheat from chaff.</p> <p>Separating substance from sound bite.</p> <p>Separating good policy from pure politics.</p> <p>This Prize is about encouraging such public discourse for Australia.</p> <p>It is also about saying that Australians value good writing and good public intellectual debate is important.</p> <p>It’s about saying that while the daily news is important, the deep trends of the decade past and the deeper trajectory for the decades ahead is even more important.</p> <p>Put simply, it is saying that ideas matter, and that they matter profoundly, including Australia’s response to the great global events that now confront the nation.</p> <p>The Prize will award $20,000 to the best piece of writing on politics or public policy in Australia in the past 12 months.</p> <p>The Foundation also hopes to be able to make a separate award to the best piece of public policy research, and, funds permitting, award a scholarship to an Indigenous student working in political science or public policy.</p> <p>I strongly applaud each of these goals for the Foundation.</p> <h3>
John Button</h3> <p>I am also pleased to see an award that will honour the life of John Button, a proud son of the Labor Party, a proud son of Victoria, and a proud son of Australia.</p> <p>John Button was an remarkable Industry Minister; almost certainly the most effective minister ever to serve in that portfolio in Australian history.</p> <p>He was an integral part of a government that played a critical role in transforming the Australian economy, from the closed, almost sclerotic economy of McEwenism in the past to the open economy of the future.</p> <p>He and his colleagues were audacious, adventurous thinkers, not afraid to take hard decisions in the pursuit of long-term reform.</p> <p>And the end point of their agenda: to advance opportunity for all, to reward individual hard work, achievement and success while always protecting the weak.</p> <h3>The good society.</h3> <p>As others have called it, the Great Society.</p> <p>A public purpose well beyond the mere aggregation of individual greed – an exercise in aggregation that neo-liberals afford the gallant term “a philosophy”.</p> <p>Some may describe unrestrained greed as a philosophy.</p> <p>Others more accurately, an ideology.</p> <p>Others again, neither philosophy nor ideology, simply a malady.</p> <p>But John Button’s contribution to Australia therefore goes beyond his role in internationalising the Australian economy and the transformation of Australian industry during the 1980s and 1990s.</p> <p>John always understood that it was ideas that changed politics, that changed economies and that changed societies.</p> <p>He understood that as a minister.</p> <p>And he understood it when he left politics to write three books about his experience and his outstanding Quarterly Essay on the future of Labor, Beyond Belief, that won the Victorian Premiers Literary Award in 2003.</p> <p>As John Cain said at his funeral last year, John Button was never a one-dimensional politician. Some would say he was a great writer whose talent was lost on politics.</p> <p>Others might say he was a great politician whose talents were wasted on writing.</p> <p>I’d say he loved both politics and writing – and he made an outstanding, unique, contribution to both.</p> <p>John Button’s life offers inspiration for us all engaged in public life – that there is a land to occupy between the sterile world of political apparatchiks on the one hand and dreamy almost other-wordly intellectuals on the other.</p> <p>Some might describe this as normal-land, be it of the left or of the right.</p> <p>I call it a real political life, driven by ideas for the future but enjoyed equally in the brutal praxis of the present.</p> <p>John was a big fan of George Orwell as a writer, and Ben Chifley as a politician.</p> <p>He liked people who said it the way they thought it.</p> <p>And that view informed his life as a politician and as a writer.</p> <p>In his autobiography, As It Happened, he wrote about his early ambitions: 
“I wanted to be a writer. Other things happened. My life went in different directions, including a long spell in politics."</p> <p>Well, we in the Labor Party – and all Australians – are much the better for that.</p> <p>His spirit has helped shape the soul of the modern Labor Party.</p> <p>And political debate in Australia today is the lesser for John having left us.</p> <h3>
Australian political writing</h3> <p>The establishment of the John Button Prize comes at a time of great political and intellectual change in Australia.</p> <p>The most obvious observation one can make is of course the threat to traditional media from technological change.</p> <p>Business models are changing as old revenue streams dwindle and readers switch online. So too, the nightly news bulletins face much heavier competition from round-the-clock news services and online publications.</p> <p>Media organisations are also in the front line of those affected by the global recession because of their sensitivity to changes in advertising and marketing spending.</p> <p>The result seems to be that fewer resources will be stretched further.</p> <p>Yet at the same time, we see new voices emerging both in traditional media and online.</p> <p>There has perhaps never in our lifetimes been such a range of publishers and small magazines, producing such thoughtful explorations of Australian politics and culture.</p> <p>Melbourne is home to many of them.</p> <p>Indeed, the innovation experts would tell us that the cluster of small publishing houses in Melbourne represent something of an “innovation hub”.</p> <p>Although I am cautious about such pronouncements - as the Premier can attest, when you hear such statements with an interesting adjective attached to the word “hub”, they are usually to a plea for public funds.</p> <p>Among magazines we would think of Quarterly Essay and The Monthly among others – which have both seen some outstanding contributions.</p> <p>They’ve also seen some very lengthy but nonetheless outstanding contributions – like a certain 7,700 word essay on the global financial crisis.</p> <p>I doubt that particular contribution will get any nominations for the brevity division of the John Button Prize.</p> <p>Haiku it is not.</p> <p>We might also think of titles such as Meanjin and Overland – both of them great Australian titles that have been reinvigorated in recent years.</p> <p>As well as Heat in Sydney and Griffith Review in Brisbane.</p> <p>Among publishers, there is Penguin, a great publishing house that in recent years has renewed its focus on Australian culture with the publication of some great non-fiction books; there is also Text, Black Inc, Scribe and Melbourne University Press in Melbourne; while prominent names in Sydney include Allen and Unwin, Random House, Harper Collins and University of New South Wales Press; and then in Brisbane, the Queensland University Press.</p> <p>In short, at a time when we are all crying ‘time poor’, when the digital revolution is said to be atomising our attention spans, when some accuse the mainstream media of sensationalising the news, the truth is we are witnessing a welcome enlargement of our national intellectual life. And allow me to say something quite revolutionary against the norms advanced by my predecessor – this is a good thing, not a bad thing.</p> <h3>
The new media environment</h3> <p>As we all know, the mainstream media is facing profound challenges.</p> <p>Newspapers all over the world are challenged by the capacity of the Internet to eat into their traditional reader base and advertiser revenues.</p> <p>And they are challenged by the changing habits of the young, who get so much of their news and entertainment on-line.</p> <p>Some pundits in the publishing world divide their readership into two groups – the “digital immigrants” and the “digital natives”.</p> <p>The digital immigrants are those over 35 who as adults have migrated to the new digital world unfolding so fast around us.</p> <p>Those under 35, by contrast, are digital natives. They live with ease in the digital world and less familiar with more traditional products such as hard copy newspapers and magazines, and even mainstream television news and current affairs.</p> <p>In this schema, I’m unashamedly an immigrant, and I carry two passports.</p> <p>An immigrant who reads a lot on his blackberry.</p> <p>But who loves going home to the thwack of the paper on the front step on the weekend, to read the news stretched out on a bold and physical canvas.</p> <p>The challenge for both our professions – politics and journalism – or, more broadly, politics and writing – or politics and the media – is to continue to preserve a public commons through which the nation can continue to have a public discourse on the nation’s present the nation’s future.</p> <p>This is not just the responsibility of public broadcasting, important as that may be. It is a wider responsibility for us all in public and private broadcasting, new and old media, in politics and in journalism.</p> <p>This challenge is made greater with the individualisation and the atomisation of debate that has been accelerated by the revolution in information technology – a process that has reduced the role of traditional media that serve as a common forum for the great debates of our age. Because what is ultimately at stake here is how our democracy itself evolves - given the traditional means through which a democracy has had much of its life, being and conversation for the last half century is undergoing radical transformation.</p> <p>This will require careful husbanding by us all.</p> <p>But the encouraging news is that both because of and despite the information revolution, public intellectual debate in Australia is alive and well.</p> <p>It’s my hope that the John Button Prize becomes a prestigious award for the best of Australian journalism and political writing.</p> <p>In particular, I hope it can throw a spotlight on the best emerging talent among writers. And in an age when we can more easily treat ourselves to the best of international journalism, I hope it can nurture a distinctly Australian voice.</p> <p>If it succeeds in so doing, it will help build a richer political culture, a stronger democracy and therefore a more humane future.</p> <p>And it comes at a time when there is a whole new public debate opening up around the world on the future of social democracy after the collapse of the prevailing neoliberal orthodoxy – a debate about the future that is more open now than at any time in the last quarter of a century.</p> <p>So with great optimism in the future of our democracy at large, and great enthusiasm for the great debate now launched on the future of our social democratic project both here and abroad, I’m delighted to launch the John Button Prize, and to pay tribute to John himself, a pioneer in this great enterprise.</p> Premier John Brumby's launch speech /about-the-prize/media/post/premier-john-brumby-s-launch-speech/ 2009-04-30T00:00:00Z Unknown author <p>I acknowledge the traditional owners of the land on which we stand – the Wurrundjeri people – and pay my respects to their Elders, past and present.</p> <p>Victoria is proud to be the home of the John Button Prize.</p> <p>After all, we are the centre of literature and creativity in Australia.</p> <p>Almost one-in-three Australian authors and book and script editors live in Victoria.</p> <p>We have the largest number of small presses and independent publishers in the country.</p> <p>And Melbourne has more bookshops per capita than any other Australian city.</p> <p>That’s why Melbourne was designated a City of Literature by UNESCO late last year – only the second city of literature in the world after Edinburgh.</p> <p>But we need to build on that love of books and ideas.</p> <p>That’s why our Government is working to make Melbourne one of the world’s creative capitals through initiatives such as</p> <p>Fostering a love of reading through the Premier’s Reading Challenge,</p> <p>Providing a new focus for literature by opening Australia’s first Centre for Books, Writing and Ideas later this year,</p> <p>Standing up for our literary culture by arguing against the wholesale lifting of parallel import restrictions on books in our submission to the Productivity Commission,</p> <p>And supporting the John Button Prize.</p> <p>Why the John Button Prize?</p> <p>Let me explain by quoting John Button:</p> <p>“Few writers about politics have defined Australian social democracy. A vision emerges in dribs and drabs. In articles, in journals and occasionally in speeches, ideas are advanced that seem to hint at a conceptual framework.”</p> <p>In other words: the greater the understanding, the stronger the democracy.</p> <p>John wrote that critique in his 2002 Quarterly Essay about the future of the Labor movement.</p> <p>That essay, Beyond Belief, went on to win the Alfred Deakin Prize as part of the Victorian Premier’s Literary Awards – which are being held for the 25th time this year.</p> <p>I suspect John’s harsh opinion – stated with typical clarity and candour – was influenced by the writing of one of his first political heroes, George Orwell.</p> <p>In his memoir, As It Happened, John quotes an Orwell line that some would say Button embodied …</p> <p>… “If liberty means anything at all, it means the right to tell people what they do not want to hear.”</p> <p>John goes on to say this of Orwell: “He wrote with an economy of style and fearless intent, but he was more than just a talented scribe. He was also a man of action.”</p> <p>Again, much the same could be said of John Button.</p> <p>As I said, Victoria is proud to be the home of the John Button Prize.</p> <p>The John Button Prize is all about rewarding those writers writing about politics with economy of style and fearless intent, and encouraging the production of work that defines our social democracy.</p> <p>The establishment of this Prize – coming on top of so many other literary prizes for essays and journalism, such as the Alfred Deakin Prize, the John Curtin Prize, the Melbourne Prize, the Quills, and the Walkleys – begs the question:</p> <p>Do we need another literary prize?</p> <p>Of course we do.</p> <p>Communities are built on ideas about democracy and culture and dissent – and those ideas need to be in constant contest.</p> <p>Without that contest of ideas, there is no democracy – there is no change – there is no creativity.<br/> </p> <p>Nothing is ventured. Nothing is gained. And, right now, in the face of unprecedented global challenges, we need to be bold.</p> <p>We need to reach for new ideas and be creative – as John Button did. And we need to be men and women of action – as John Button was.</p> <p>In conclusion, let me leave you with another John Button quote:</p> <p>“I wanted to be a writer. Other things happened. My life went in different directions.”</p> <p>Other things did happen, but John Button achieved his ambition.</p> <p>He was a great writer, as well as a great politician – and that’s why the John Button Prize as a prize for political writers is so appropriate.</p>