‘Better to wear some criticism than to never take responsibility for what should be done.'
'After all, what does a democracy mean if not the right, the privilege, the chance to take responsibility?’
Paul Keating was elected to the Australian Federal Parliament in 1969. When Labor (under Bob Hawke) was elected to government in March 1983, Paul Keating was appointed Treasurer. Paul Keating was Prime Minister from December 1991 until 1996.
‘After Words’ is a collection of Paul Keating’s post-prime ministerial speeches: thirteen years of collected speeches (55 in total) on a variety of topics. The topics include Australian politics; architecture; friendship and privacy; native title; art; history; music; economics; Australia’s role in Asia and international relations; financial systems; and thoughts on nationhood. Oh, and on John Howard as well.
Paul Keating is known to many of us for his famous turn of phrase and his rapier wit. He is remembered kindly by many for his reform of Australia’s financial system and less kindly by those who suffered through high interest rates and ‘the recession that we had to have’. And many of us were concerned about his warning (in 1986) that ‘Australia was in danger of becoming a banana republic’. But whether you liked or loathed Paul Keating, you always had a sense of what he stood for and that his actions were usually motivated by a sense of a bigger picture rather than political expedience.
To see Paul Keating in action – especially during Question Time) (there are plenty of clips on YouTube, for those interested) is to witness a particular form of performance art. Few politicians are in his league. His searing insults have remained in our collective memory, and a successful satirical musical called ‘Keating!’ has been very successful.
But there is more to Paul Keating than this, and this book of speeches provides a more complete view. These speeches are drawn from book launches, conversations, editorials, eulogies and event openings and include:
(On the arts)
Building a Masterpiece: the Sydney Opera House
Film and Art in the Australia of Nationalism and Cynicism
Introduction to Mahler’s Symphony No 2
Eulogy on the Death of Geoffrey Tozer
(From book launches)
The Launch of ‘The Longest Decade’
The Launch of ’The History Wars’
The Launch of ‘Churchill and Australia’
(On Social Policy)
A Time for Reflection: Political Values in the Age of Distraction
Obsession: Australia and the Challenge of Asia
The Privacy Imperative in the Information Age ‘free-for-all’
(On International Relations and Foreign Policy)
Peace and Prosperity: The Spiritual Challenge
John Curtin’s World and Ours
Eliminating Nuclear Weapons: A Survival Guide for the 21st Century
I’m tempted to quote from the book, but I’m concerned that without appropriate context any quotes would lose their meaning. Except, perhaps, this from 2001:
‘Out here, on the edge of Asia, a long way from major markets and natural groupings, ideas are all that Australia has to garner a position in the scheme of things and to shield it from the harsher winds of globalisation. Not military might, or a large population, or unique resources; simply ideas.’
This is not a book to read in one (or two) sittings. It is a book to dip into, and to think about. For me, two of the most moving speeches are Paul Keating’s eulogies for Bill Bradshaw and Geoffrey Tozer.
Jennifer Cameron-Smith