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Gough Whitlam

Personal data
Date of birth11 July 1916(age 97)
Place of birthKew, Melbourne, Australia
Birth nameEdward Gough Whitlam
Political partyAustralian Labor Party
SpouseMargaret Whitlam (1942-)
ChildrenTony Whitlam, Nicholas Whitlam, Stephen Whitlam, Catherine Dovey
ResidenceElizabeth Bay, NSW
Alma materUniversity of Sydney
ProfessionBarrister
Military service
AllegianceCommonwealth of Australia
Service/branchRoyal Australian Air Force
Years of service1941 � 1945
RankFlight Lieutenant
UnitNo. 13 Squadron RAAF
Battles/warsWorld War II
21st Prime Minister of Australia
Elections: 1972, 1974
In office5 December 1972 - 11 November 1975
MonarchElizabeth II
Governor generalPaul Hasluck
John Kerr
DeputyLance Barnard (1972 � 1974)
Jim Cairns (1974 � 1975)
Frank Crean (1975)
ConstituencyWerriwa (New South Wales)
Succeeded byMalcolm Fraser
Preceded byWilliam McMahon

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Edward Gough Whitlam, AC, QC (born 11 July 1916), known as Gough Whitlam (c-eniconˈɡɒf_ˈhwɪtləm ), served as the 21st Prime Minister of Australia. Whitlam led the Australian Labor Party (ALP) to power at the 1972 election and retained government at the 1974 election, before being dismissed by Governor-General Sir John Kerr at the climax of the 1975 Australian constitutional crisis. Whitlam remains the only Prime Minister to have his commission terminated in that manner.

Whitlam entered Parliament in 1952, as an ALP member of the House of Representatives. In 1960 he was elected deputy leader of the ALP and in 1967, after party leader Arthur Calwell retired, he assumed the leadership and became Leader of the Opposition. After narrowly losing the 1969 election, Whitlam led Labor to victory at the 1972 election after 23 years of Liberal-Country Coalition government.

In his time in office, Whitlam and his government implemented a large number of new programs and policy changes, including the elimination of military conscription and criminal execution, institution of universal health care and fee-free tertiary schooling (university), and the implementation of legal aid programs. He won the 1974 election with a reduced majority. Subsequently, the Opposition, which controlled the Senate, was emboldened by government scandals and a flagging economy to challenge Whitlam. In late 1975, there was a weeks-long deadlock over the passage of appropriation bills, which was resolved by Kerr's dismissal of Whitlam and commissioning of Opposition leader Malcolm Fraser as caretaker Prime Minister. Labor lost the subsequent 1975 election in a landslide.

Whitlam resigned from the leadership after the ALP lost again at the 1977 election, and left Parliament in 1978. Over a third of a century after he left office, Whitlam continues to comment on political affairs. The circumstances of his dismissal, and the legacy of his government, remain part of Australian political discourse.

Gough Whitlam Video

This is the first time that this near impossible moment occured on Australian Millionaire and possibly the world. (Note that Trevor Sauer, a then future big-...
3.37 min. | 4.36 user rating
Paul Keating comments on Tony Abbott as a leader ....
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After 20+ years of same government how refreshing would this be.......In the clip I can spot Bert Newton, Terry norris and Jack Thompson.
2.08 min. | 4.66 user rating
Most wont like this.
3.27 min. | 4.91 user rating
Most wont like this.
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The days when the 6.30 shows actually meant something. Not the crap that is on now.
1.75 min. | 4.88 user rating
This is an ABC broadcast of gough whitlams dismissal speech on the steps of parliament house.
5.23 min. | 4.71 user rating
'Ol' Silver' as Paul Keating referrred to him is a legend! Streets ahead of todays poll driven spin doctoring short sighted election driven jokers! Features ...
3.17 min. | 4.62 user rating
http://abc.net.au/tv | An ABC News summary of the events leading up to and including the 1975 dismissal of Gough Whitlam's Labor Government.
4.53 min. | 4.63 user rating
1980s television movie on the 1975 dismissal of Gough Whitlam by Sir John Kerr.
2.62 min. | 4.38 user rating

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How the Perverse Became the Norm - theTrumpet.com Tweet this news
theTrumpet.com--Canberra in the '70s was a heady environment, an atmosphere made especially volatile by the sudden fall of the socialist government of Prime Minister -Gough Whitlam-, and his replacement by his conservative political enemy, Malcolm Fr - Date : Tue, 09 Aug 2011 21:31:07 GMT+00:00
50 most powerful - Sydney Morning Herald Tweet this news
Sydney Morning Herald---Gough Whitlam- remains Carr's great example of power exercised through compelling advocacy. "Whitlam will go up in historic estimation, given how the Labor Party's capacity to advocate and urge change has fallen. - Date : Fri, 22 Jul 2011 14:29:03 GMT+00:00
Gough Whitlam wanted Hills rail link in 1974 - Cumberland Courier Newspapers Tweet this news
Cumberland Courier Newspapers--THE Hills might have had its desperately needed rail link in the 1970s if former prime minister -Gough Whitlam- had his way. Handwritten notes for election speeches, delivered by Mr Whitlam more than 30 years ago, are about - Date : Wed, 20 Apr 2011 01:26:16 GMT+00:00
Children of the Whitlam education revolution - The Australian Tweet this news
The Australian---...- Technology chancellor and member of the Bradley review of higher education) and Peter Tannock (former chairman of the National Catholic Education Commission and of the National Schools Commission established by -Gough Whitlam- to all - Date : Fri, 15 Apr 2011 14:03:43 GMT+00:00
Down and out in Centrelink and NewStart - ABC Online Tweet this news
ABC Online--Later, Prime Minister -Gough Whitlam- relieved my parents of the need to pay my university fees. Simultaneously, Premier Rupert Hamer paid me a generous living allowance in return for my indentured employment with the Department of Education. - Date : Thu, 14 Apr 2011 22:40:55 GMT+00:00
Going public with death threats a risky move - Sydney Morning Herald Tweet this news
Sydney Morning Herald--On the other hand some of today's politicians ought to study the likes of Fred Daly, -Gough Whitlam- and Paul Keating for pointers on the art of deriding your opponent whilst at the same time entertaining the mob and hurting no - Date : Wed, 13 Apr 2011 02:21:15 GMT+00:00
Gillard bites the Green hand she needs to help her - Sydney Morning Herald Tweet this news
Sydney Morning Herald--In her -Gough Whitlam- oration in Sydney on Thursday, Gillard dismissed ''existential angst'' within Labor about its identity as ''bunkum''. She said she was ''absolutely clear' - Date : Sat, 02 Apr 2011 12:58:34 GMT+00:00
Prime Minister Julia Gillard tells Gough Whitlam Oration Labor will never ... - Herald Sun Tweet this news
Herald Sun--The Prime Minister used the inaugural -Gough Whitlam- Oration to pledge she would advance Labor policy and maintain the "Labor vision". And she pledged that as Labor leader she would define Labor's role, a clear sign the - Date : Thu, 31 Mar 2011 10:06:16 GMT+00:00
Bob Brown returns fire on 'obnoxious' Julia Gillard - The Australian Tweet this news
The Australian--He said her comments, whilst delivering the -Gough Whitlam- Oration, had been a "huge mistake" and accused her of "very clearly turning both barrels on her supporters in government". "The tone o - Date : Mon, 04 Apr 2011 15:19:00 GMT+00:00
Greek Festival Moonlight Cinema at Undercliffe - Canterbury-Bankstown Express Tweet this news
Canterbury-Bankstown Express---Gough Whitlam- Park at Undercliffe will host the Greek Festival Moonlight Cinema, showing box-office hit Nissos. The film is about the picturesque island of Sifnos, which holds a lot of secrets including scandalous affairs, - Date : Fri, 01 Apr 2011 19:02:20 GMT+00:00

Parliament of Australia
Preceded by
Hubert Lazzarini
Member for Werriwa
1952 - 1978
Succeeded by
John Kerin
Party political offices
Preceded by
Arthur Calwell
Deputy Leader of the Australian Labor Party
1960 - 1967
Succeeded by
Lance Barnard
Leader of the Australian Labor Party
1967 - 1977
Succeeded by
Bill Hayden
Political offices
Preceded by
Arthur Calwell
Leader of the Opposition of Australia
1967 - 1972
Succeeded by
Billy Snedden
Preceded by
Malcolm Fraser
Leader of the Opposition of Australia
1975 - 1978
Succeeded by
Bill Hayden
Preceded by
William McMahon
Prime Minister of Australia
1972 - 1975
Succeeded by
Malcolm Fraser
Preceded by
Nigel Bowen
Minister for Foreign Affairs
1972 - 1973
Succeeded by
Don Willesee
Preceded by
Billy Snedden
Treasurer of Australia
1972
Succeeded by
Frank Crean
Preceded by
Ivor Greenwood
Attorney-General of Australia
1972
Succeeded by
Lionel Murphy
Preceded by
Don Chipp
Minister for Customs and Excise
1972
Preceded by
Doug Anthony
Minister for Trade and Industry
1972
Succeeded by
Jim Cairns
Preceded by
Peter Nixon
Minister for Shipping and Transport
1972
Succeeded by
Charles Jones
Preceded by
Malcolm Fraser
Minister for Education and Science
1972
Succeeded by
Kim Beazley (Education)
Bill Morrison (Science)
Preceded by
Bob Cotton
Minister for Civil Aviation
1972
Succeeded by
Charles Jones
Preceded by
Kevin Cairns
Minister for Housing
1972
Succeeded by
Les Johnson
Preceded by
Reg Wright
Minister for Works
1972
Succeeded by
Jim Cavanagh
Preceded by
Andrew Peacock
Minister for External Territories
1972
Succeeded by
Bill Morrison
Preceded by
Peter Howson
Minister for Environment, Aborigines and the Arts
1972
Succeeded by
Moss Cass
Preceded by
Jim Cairns
Minister for the Environment
1975
Succeeded by
Joe Berinson

Prime Ministers of Australia

Barton * Deakin * Watson * Reid * Deakin * Fisher * Deakin * Fisher * Cook * Fisher * Hughes * Bruce * Scullin * Lyons * Page * Menzies * Fadden * Curtin * Forde * Chifley * Menzies * Holt * McEwen * Gorton * McMahon * Whitlam * Fraser * Hawke * Keating * Howard * Rudd * Gillard |

Federal Parliamentary Leaders of the Australian Labor Party

Watson * Fisher * Hughes * Tudor * Charlton * Scullin * Curtin * Chifley * Evatt * Calwell * Whitlam * Hayden * Hawke * Keating * Beazley * Crean * Latham * Beazley * Rudd * Gillard |



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