Nigh on a hundred years ago, just before the
battle of Fromelles, that great chronicler of Australia's wartime experience,
Charles Bean, noted something inspiring about his fellow correspondent, Keith
Murdoch — even beyond the fact Keith had just been acknowledged as the
prime mover the year before in saving the lives of thousands of his fellow
Australians by taking on the British establishment, and
"insisting" they be evacuated out of Gallipoli, intact.
"He is wholly Australian," Bean had noted in his diary,
"and nothing except Australian. I never realised the qualities of this type
before but there's a great deal more in it than I was wont to give Murdoch
credit for. These young Australians aren't afraid of any other creed and
they'll go a long way . . . They think the world would be better for being
Australian and they tell it so whenever they can."
Bingo!
Bean had
spotted the most wonderful phenomenon. While the Australians had marched away
to the war as the loyal sons of the British Empire – ready "to fight for
Great Britain to the last man, and the last shilling", as the man who
would be Prime Minister, Andrew Fisher, had put it – here was a new nationalism
arising, a revelatory notion that we were an entirely different breed from the
Brits, our own people. It was a notion, Bean said, that Murdoch – in the very
vanguard of this new Australian-ness – "makes a religion of".
100 years on, of course, no-one doubts our separateness. The problem remains
however, we Australians remain subjects to the top tier of
"British" government. In an historical anachronism, even though
Australia is a separate nation which prides itself on its egalitarianism, on
its embrace of the fair go, we still draw our hereditary Head of State from the
most elite family on the planet; living 25,000 kilometres away in a palace in
London. No Australian child will ever be good enough to fill that
role because they are not born to that family.
I am, you
are, we are Australian and we must call that for what it is – not right, and
simply not fair.
Last Monday,
I became the Chair of the Australian Republic Movement – The
"ARM Chair", as one of the twitterati dubbed it. We have
just one goal. We want to find a way forward, where we can gently, and
respectfully, extricate ourselves from the ties that bind, so that we can
become a free-standing Republic beneath the Southern Cross.
We know it
will be difficult, that there will be many naysayers but for what it's
worth, here is our plea.
On this
issue, can we just make an exception to our usual, recent way of doing things?
John Howard used to say that "the things that unite us Australians are far
greater than the things that divide us". In recent times, however, the
things that divide us seem myriad, as we break up into Liberal and Labor
supporters, Fairfax and Murdoch readers, Muslim and Christian believer, Warmists
and Denialists, Clive Palmer and Everyone . . .
Couldn't we
just get together on this one thing? Find a way forward, where we turn to each
other, not on each other? Yes, I've been far from gentle on the subject in the
past, but from now on I'm going to try to follow my wife's advice, I'm
going to try – to use her considered phrase – to "not be a loud
dickhead about it".
The way
forward the ARM proposes is this. Some time in the next five years the
government must put a simple question in front of the Australian people:
"Are you in favour of having an Australian as our Head of State?" If
that comes back at over 50 per cent, we then move to a yet to be determined
form of democratic engagement – a Constitutional Convention – to choose a preferred
model. And then we go back to the people, for a referendum, asking them to
choose between the old model and the new model.
We believe
we can get there. It requires only bipartisan support, and given that my friend
Tony Abbott is likely to be our last Monarchist Prime Minister, the next
electoral cycle will see that ultimately delivered. With a Prime Minister and
Opposition Leader supporting it, declining to score political points on it,
with the rest of us going gently, we can do this! And what a legacy it would be
for that PM and Opposition Leader to be a part of.
Yes, there
are those who say we will be disrespecting our "history" to do such a
thing. But, seriously, how wonderful would it be to instead be a part of
"making" history, of doing something that is so long overdue.
If not us,
who? If not now, when?
And it is
possible to come together. For the first time, ever, this one oped piece you
are reading right now is being published simultaneously in the Fairfax and
Murdoch press across this great country.
For, of
course, 100 years on, we really are, thank you Keith Murdoch, "wholly
Australian and nothing except Australian." Let's at last, have a system of
government that reflects that.
And then
let's belt the Poms in the Ashes.
Peter FitzSimons chairs the Australian
Republican Movement.
I hope to live long enough to see Australia as a Republic. I cannot accept that we as Australians should be obliged to any other power and I also do not accept that others born to privilege should govern over us. Yes, others may be born superior in intelligence and physical superiority but surely, in this modern age we should not be accepting the archaic existence of kings and queens. REPUBLIC AUSTRALIA NOW!
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