John Winston Howard,
AC (born 26 July 1939) was the 25th
Prime Minister of
Australia from 11 March 1996 to 3 December 2007. He
is the second-longest serving Australian Prime Minister after
Sir Robert Menzies.
Howard was
a member of the Australian House of
Representatives from 1974 to 2007, representing the
Division of Bennelong,
New South
Wales
. He served as
Treasurer in the government of
Malcolm Fraser from 1977 to 1983. He
was Leader of the Liberal Party and
Coalition Opposition from 1985 to
1989, which included the
1987 federal election
against
Bob Hawke. He was re-elected as
Leader of the Opposition in 1995.
Howard led the
Liberal-
National Coalition to victory at the
1996 federal election,
defeating
Paul Keating's
Labor government and ending a record
thirteen years of
Coalition
opposition. Howard was sworn
in as Prime Minister on 11 March 1996. Howard's government was
re-elected at the
1998,
2001 and
2004 elections, presiding
over a period of strong economic growth and prosperity. Major
issues for the
Howard Government
included taxation, industrial relations, immigration, the Iraq war,
and aboriginal relations. Howard's coalition government was
defeated at the
2007
election, by the
Australian
Labor Party led by
Kevin Rudd. Howard
also lost his electoral
division
of Bennelong to Labor's
Maxine
McKew, making him the second Australian Prime Minister, after
Stanley Bruce in 1929, to lose his own
seat.
Early life

John Howard as a boy
John Howard is the fourth son of
Lyall
Howard and Mona (
née Kell). His parents were married
in 1925. His eldest brother Stanley was born in 1926, followed by
Walter in 1929, and Robert (Bob) in 1936. Lyall Howard was an
admirer of
Winston Churchill, and
a sympathiser with the
New Guard.
Howard
grew up in the Sydney
suburb of
Earlwood
in a Methodist
family. His mother had been an office worker until her
marriage. His father and his paternal grandfather, Walter Howard,
were both veterans of the
First AIF in World War I.
They also
ran two Dulwich Hill
petrol stations where John Howard worked as a
boy.Lyall Howard died in 1955 when John was sixteen, leaving
his mother to take care of John (or "Jack" as he was also
known).
Howard suffered a hearing impairment in his youth, leaving him with
a slight
speech impediment, and he
continues to wear a hearing aid. It also influenced him in subtle
ways, limiting his early academic performance; encouraging a
reliance on an excellent memory; and in his mind ruling out
becoming a
barrister as a likely
career.
Howard
attended the publicly funded state
schools Earlwood Primary School and Canterbury Boys'
High School
.Howard won a citizenship prize in his final
year at Earlwood (presented by local politician
Eric Willis), and subsequently represented his
secondary school at debating as well as
cricket and
rugby.
Cricket remained a life-long hobby. In his final year at school he
took part in a radio show hosted by
Jack
Davey,
Give It a Go broadcast on the commercial radio
station,
2GB, and a recording of the show
survives. After gaining his Leaving Certificate, he studied law at
the
University of Sydney,
graduating in 1961, and subsequently practising as a solicitor for
twelve years.
Howard married fellow Liberal Party member
Janette Parker in 1971, with whom he had
three children: Melanie (1974), Tim (1977) and Richard
(1980).
Early political career
Howard joined the
Liberal
Party in 1957.
He held office in the New South Wales
Liberal Party on the State Executive and served as
President of the Young
Liberals (1962–64), the party youth organisation. Howard
supported
Australia's
involvement in the
Vietnam War,
although has since said there were "aspects of it that could have
been handled and explained differently".
At the
1963 federal
election, Howard acted as campaign manager in his local seat of
Parkes for the
successful candidacy of
Tom Hughes who defeated
the 20 year Labor incumbent.
In 1967 with the support of party power brokers,
John Carrick and
Eric Willis, he was endorsed as
candidate for the marginal suburban state seat of
Drummoyne, held by the
ALP.
Howard's mother sold
the family home in Earlwood
and rented a house with him at Five
Dock
, a suburb within the electorate. At the
election in February 1968, in which the incumbent state Liberal
government was returned to office, Howard failed to defeat the
sitting member, despite campaigning vigorously. Howard and his
mother subsequently returned to Earlwood, moving to a house on the
same street where he grew up.
At the
1974 federal
election, Howard successfully contested the Sydney suburban
seat of
Bennelong and became a
Member of Parliament in the
House of Representatives
during the
Gough Whitlam-led Labor
Government. Howard backed
Malcolm
Fraser for the leadership of the Liberal Party against
Billy Snedden's following the 1974 election.
When Fraser won office in December 1975, Howard was appointed
Minister for
Business and Consumer Affairs, a position in which he served
until 1977. At this stage, he followed the
protectionist and pro-regulation stance of
Fraser and the Liberal Party.
Federal Treasurer (1977–1983)
In December 1977, at the age of 38, Howard was appointed
Treasurer. During his five years in
the position, he became an adherent of
free-market economics, which was
challenging economic orthodoxies in place for most of the century.
He came to favour tax reform including broad-based taxation (later
the
GST), a freer
industrial system including the dismantling of the centralised
wage-fixing system, the abolition of compulsory
trade unionism, privatisation and
deregulation.
In 1978, the Fraser government instigated a committee of inquiry,
the Campbell Committee, to investigate financial system reforms.
The impetus for the commission came, not from Howard, but from the
Department of Prime Minister and Cabinet. Howard supported the
Campbell report, but adopted an incremental approach with Cabinet,
as there was wide opposition to deregulation within the government
and the treasury. The process of reform began before the committee
reported 2½ years later, with the introduction of the tender system
for the sale of Treasury notes in 1979, and Treasury bonds in 1982.
Ian Macfarlane (Governor of the Reserve Bank of Australia,
1996-2006) described these reforms as "second only in importance to
the float of the Australian dollar in 1983." In 1981 he proposed a
broad-based indirect tax with compensatory cuts in personal rates;
however, cabinet rejected it citing both inflationary and political
reasons.After the free-marketeers or "drys" of the Liberals
challenged the protectionist policies of
Minister
for Industry and Commerce Phillip
Lynch, they shifted their loyalties to Howard. Following an
unsuccessful leadership challenge by
Andrew Peacock to unseat Fraser as prime
minister, Howard was elected deputy leader of the Liberal Party in
April 1982. His election depended largely on the support of the
"drys", and he became the champion of the growing free-market lobby
in the party.
Fraser's negotiations with the ACTU saw him lose control of a wages
explosion in 1982 just as the mining boom had ended. The economic
crises of the early 1980s brought Howard into conflict with the
economically conservative Fraser. As the economy headed towards the
worst recession since the 1930s,
Keynesian
Fraser pushed an expansionary fiscal position much to Howard's and
Treasury's horror. With his authority as treasurer being flouted,
Howard considered resigning in July 1982, but, after discussions
with his wife and senior advisor
John
Hewson (Liberal Party leader himself from 1990 to 1994), he
decided to "tough it out". The 1982 wages explosion—wages rose 16
per cent across the country—resulted in
stagflation; unemployment touched double-digits
and inflation peaked at 12.5% (official interest rates peaked at
21%).
The Fraser Government with Howard as Treasurer lost the
1983 election to the Labor
Party led by
Bob Hawke. Over the course of
the 1980s, the Liberal party came to accept the free-market
policies that Fraser had resisted and Howard had espoused; namely
low protection, decentralisation of wage fixation, financial
deregulation, a broadly-based indirect tax, and the rejection of
counter-cyclical fiscal policy.
Opposition years (1983–1996)
Following the
1983
defeat of the Fraser government and
Fraser's subsequent resignation from
parliament, Howard contested the Liberal leadership but was
defeated by
Andrew Peacock. Remaining
Deputy Leader of the parliamentary party, Howard became Deputy
Leader of the
Opposition and
the Liberal Party were defeated by
Hawke
and Labor at the
1984
election. In 1985, as Labor's position in opinion polls
improved, Peacock's popularity sank, and Howard's profile rose,
leadership speculation persisted. Peacock said he would no longer
accept Howard as deputy unless he offered assurances that he would
not challenge for the leadership. Following Howard's refusal to
offer such an assurance, Peacock sought, in September 1985, to
replace him with John Moore as Deputy Leader. The party room
re-elected Howard as Deputy on 5 September (38 votes to 31), and,
believing his position untenable, Peacock immediately resigned the
leadership. With Peacock not contesting the ensuing Liberal Party
leadership ballot, Howard defeated
Jim
Carlton 57 votes to 6, and became Leader of the
Opposition.
- Leader of the opposition and new economic policy
Howard was in effect the Liberal party's first pro-market leader in
the conservative coalition and spent the next two years working to
revise Liberal policy away from that of Fraser's. In his own words
he was an "economic radical" and a
social conservative. Referring to the
pro-market liberalism of the 1980s, Howard, famously said in July
1986 that "The times will suit me". That year the economy was seen
to be in crisis with a 40% devaluation of the Australian dollar, a
marked increase in the current account deficit and the loss of the
Federal Government's triple A rating. In response to the economic
circumstances, Howard persistently attacked the Labor government
and offered his free-market reform agenda. Despite the economic
news, support for the Labor Party and Hawke strengthened in 1985
and 1986. Howard's approval ratings dropped in the face of
infighting between Howard and Peacock supporters, a "public
manifestation of disunity" over policy positions, and questions
over Howard's leadership.
To capitalise on Coalition disunity, Hawke called the
1987 election six months
early. In addition to the Howard–Peacock rivalry, Queensland
National Party criticism of the federal Liberal and National
leadership led to a split in the Coalition whereby Nationals ran
against Liberals, and culminated in the "
Joh for Canberra" campaign. Keating
successfully campaigned against John Howard's proposed tax changes
forcing Howard to admit a
double-counting in the
proposal, and emphasising to the electorate that the package would
mean at that stage undisclosed cuts to government services. The
Hawke Government was re-elected with an increased majority.
- Howard's social agenda
As part of a new social agenda to accompany his economic agenda
(later documented in the "Future Directions" manifesto), Howard
promoted the traditional family and was antipathetic to the
promotion of
multiculturalism at
the expense of a shared Australian identity. The new agenda's
immigration policy,
One
Australia, outlined a vision of "one nation and one
future" and opposed multiculturalism. In a radio interview
discussing multiculturalism Howard suggested that to support
"social cohesion" the rate of Asian immigration be "slowed down a
little". The comments divided opinion within the Coalition, and
undermined Howard's standing amongst Liberal party figures
including federal and state Ministers, intellectual opinion makers,
business leaders, and within the Asia Pacific. Prime Minister Hawke
moved a motion to affirm that race or ethnicity would not be used
as immigrant selection criteria to which three Liberal MPs crossed
the floor and two abstained. Many Liberals later nominated the
issue as instrumental in Howard subsequently losing the leadership
in 1989.
Later in 1988, Howard elaborated his opposition to multiculturalism
by saying "To me, multiculturalism suggests that we can't make up
our minds who we are or what we believe in." In line with "One
Australia's" rejection of Aboriginal land rights, Howard said the
idea of an Aboriginal treaty was
"repugnant to the ideals of
One Australia" and commented
"I don't think it is wrong,
racist, immoral or anything, for a country to say 'we will decide
what the cultural identity and the cultural destiny of this country
will be and nobody else."
- Loss of the leadership
As the country's economic position worsened in 1989, public opinion
moved away from Labor, but Howard was unable to translate this into
a firm opinion poll lead for himself and the Coalition. In
February, Liberal Party president and prominent businessman,
John Elliott, said
confidentially to Andrew Peacock that he would support him in a
leadership challenge against Howard. Following months of plotting
by Elliot, Peacock and supporters, in May a surprise leadership
coup was launched, ousting Howard as Liberal leader. When asked
that day whether he could become Liberal leader again, Howard
famously likened it to
"Lazarus with a triple bypass". The
loss of the Liberal Party leadership to Peacock deeply affected
Howard, who admitted he would occasionally drink too much.
Declining Peacock's offer of Shadow Education, Howard went to the
backbench and a new period of party disunity ensued. Howard served
as Shadow Minister for Industry, Technology and Communications,
Shadow Minister Assisting the Leader on the Public Service,
Chairman of the Manpower and Labour Market Reform Group, Shadow
Minister for Industrial Relations and Manager of Opposition
Business in the House.
Following the Coalition's
1990 election loss,
Peacock was replaced with former Howard staffer
Dr. John Hewson. Howard was a supporter of
Hewson's economic program, with a
Goods and Services Tax
(GST) as its centrepiece. After Hewson lost the "unloseable"
1993 election to
Paul Keating, Howard unsuccessfully
challenged Hewson for the leadership. In 1994, he was again passed
over for the leadership, which went to
Alexander Downer. In a 7 January 1995
newspaper article (and in 2002 as Prime Minister), Howard recanted
his 1988 remarks on curbing Asian immigration.
- Opposition leader again
In January 1995, leaked internal Liberal Party polling showed that
with gaffe-prone Downer as leader, the Coalition had slim chance of
holding its marginal seats, let alone of winning government. Media
speculation of a leadership spill ended when on, 26 January 1995
Downer resigned as Liberal Leader, and Howard was elected unopposed
to replace him. As Opposition Leader for the second time, Howard
revised his earlier statements against
Medicare and Asian immigration.
During the
campaign Howard outlined his vision of Australia in 2000 to the
ABC
:
Following Howard's election to
Opposition Leader, the
Coalition opened a large lead over
Labor in most opinion polls,
and Howard overtook his old nemesis
Paul
Keating as preferred Prime Minister. Having said as leader in
1985 that it was "better to be right than popular", the second time
around, Howard pursued what was described as a "small target"
approach to campaigning and policy.
Prime Minister
Election win and first term
With the support of many traditionally Labor voters—dubbed
"
Howard battlers"—Howard led the
Liberal-National party Coalition to win the
1996 election, achieving
the second-largest swing against an incumbent government since
Federation. With a 45-seat majority, the size of the Coalition
victory gave John Howard great power within the Liberal party and
he said he came to the office "with very clear views on where I
wanted to take the country". At the age of 56, he was sworn in as
Prime Minister on 11 March 1996, ending a record 13 years of
Coalition opposition.
Howard
departed with tradition and made his primary residence Kirribilli
House
rather than The Lodge
.
Early in
the term Howard had championed significant new restrictions on gun
ownership following the Port Arthur massacre
in which 35 people had been shot dead.
Achieving agreement in the face of immense opposition from within
the Coalition and some State governments, was credited with
significantly elevating John Howard’s stature as Prime Minister
despite a backlash from core Coalition rural constituents.
Howard's initial silence on the views of
Pauline Hanson—a disendorsed Liberal Party
candidate and later independent MP—was criticised in the press as
an endorsement of her views. Howard said that she was entitled to
express her opinion, that many others would share it, and that to
denounce her would "elevate it". Howard repudiated her views seven
months after Hanson's controversial maiden parliamentary
speech.
Following the
Wik Decision
of the High Court in 1996, John Howard's government moved swiftly
to legislate limitations on its possible implications through the
so-called
Ten-Point
Plan.
From 1997, Howard spear-headed the Coalition push to introduce a
Goods and Services
Tax (GST) at the 1998 election. Before winning the Prime
Ministership, Howard had said it would "never ever" be part of
Coalition policy. A long held conviction of Howard’s, his tax
reform package was credited with "breaking the circuit" of party
morale—boosting his confidence and direction, which had appeared to
wane early in the Government’s second term. The 1998 election was
dubbed a "referendum on the GST", and the tax changes—including the
GST—were implemented in the government's second term after
amendments to the legislation were negotiated with the
Australian Democrats to ensure its
passage through the Senate.
Through much of its first term, opinion polling was disappointing
for the government and its members at times feared being a
"one-term wonder". The popularity of Pauline Hanson, and the new
restrictions on gun ownership drew many traditionally Coalition
voters away from the Howard government. Also unpopular with voters
were large spending cuts aimed at eliminating the budget deficit
(and Howard's distinction between "core" and "non-core" election
promises when cutting spending commitments),
industrial changes and the
1998 waterfront
dispute, the partial sale of government telecommunications
company
Telstra, and the Government's
commitment to a GST. In October 1998, Howard led the Government to
win a second term.
Actually achieving a smaller two-party preferred vote than Labor's,
the Coalition's March 1996 majority of 45 seats was reduced to
12.
Second term
In 1998, Howard convened a
Constitutional
Convention which decided in principle that Australia should
become a Republic. At the
convention Howard confirmed himself as a monarchist, and said that
of the Republican options, he preferred the minimalist model.
Despite opinion polls suggesting Australians favoured a republic, a
1999 referendum rejected the model chosen by the convention.
Although new
Indonesian
President B.J. Habibie had some months earlier agreed to grant
special autonomy to Indonesian-occupied
East
Timor
, his subsequent snap decision for a referendum on
the territory's independence was triggered by a Howard and Downer
orchestrated shift in Australian policy. In September 1999,
Howard organised an Australian-led international peace-keeping
force to East Timor (
INTERFET), after
pro-Indonesia militia launched
a violent "scorched-earth" campaign in retaliation to the
referendum's overwhelming vote in favour of independence. The
successful mission was widely supported by Australian voters, but
the government was criticised for "foreign policy failure"
following the violence and collapse of diplomatic relations with
Indonesia.
By Howard's fourth term, relations with
Indonesia had recovered to include counter-terrorism cooperation
and Australia's $1bn Boxing Day Tsunami
relief efforts, and were assisted by good relations
between Howard and Indonesian
President Susilo Bambang
Yudhoyono.
Throughout his prime-ministership, Howard was resolute in his
refusal to provide a parliamentary "apology" to
Indigenous Australians as recommended
by the 1997 “
Bringing Them Home”
Report. Howard argued this was inappropriate, because "Australians
of this generation should not be required to accept guilt and blame
for past actions and policies." Howard did offer this personal
apology before the release of the Report: "I feel deep sorrow for
those of my fellow Australians who suffered injustices under the
practices of past generations towards indigenous people. Equally, I
am sorry for the hurt and trauma many here today may continue to
feel, as a consequence of these practices”
[273478].
In 1999 Howard negotiated a "
Motion of Reconciliation" with
Aboriginal Senator
Aden Ridgeway.
Eschewing use of the word "sorry", the motion recognised
mis-treatment of Aborigines as the "most blemished chapter" in
Australia's history; offered "deep and sincere
regret" for
past injustices
[273479]. Following his 2007 loss of the Prime
Minister-ship, Howard was the only living former Prime Minister who
declined to attend the February 2008 apology made by
Kevin Rudd with bi-partisan support.
Howard did not commit to serving a full term if he won the next
election; on his 61st birthday in July 2000 he said he would
consider the question of retirement when he turned 64. This was
interpreted as boosting Costello’s leadership aspirations, and the
enmity over leadership and succession resurfaced publicly when
Howard did not retire at the age of 64. In the first half of 2001,
rising petrol prices, voter enmity over the implementation of the
GST, a spike in inflation and economic slowdown led to bad opinion
polls and predictions the Government would lose office in the
election later that year. With Howard telling Cabinet he was
"not going to be sacrificed on the pyre of ideological
purity", the government announced a serious of policy
reversals and softenings which boosted the government's fortunes,
as did news that the economy had avoided recession. Following the
Liberal Party win at the Aston by-election, Howard said that the
Coalition was
“back in the game”. The government's
position on "border protection", in particular the
Tampa affair where Howard refused the landing
of asylum seekers rescued by a Norwegian freighter, consolidated
the improving polls for the government, as did the
September 11, 2001 attacks.
Howard led the government to victory in the
2001 federal election with
an increased majority.
Third term
Howard had first met
US
President George W. Bush in the days before the September 11
terrorist attacks and was in Washington the morning of the
attacks.. In response to the attacks, Howard invoked the
ANZUS Treaty and said that the invocation of
the treaty
"demonstrates Australia's steadfast commitment to
work with the United States.” In October, he committed
Australian military personnel to the war in Afghanistan. Howard
developed a strong personal relationship with the president, and
they shared often similar ideological positions - including on the
role of the United States in world affairs and their approach to
the "
War on Terror".
In May, 2003, Howard
made an overnight stay at Bush's Prairie Chapel Ranch
in Texas
, after which
Bush said that Howard "...is not only a man of steel, he's showed
the world he's a man of heart."
Howard
responded to the 2002 Bali bombing
, in which 88 Australian citizens were killed, by
calling on Australians to "wrap their arms around the people of
Indonesia" and said that, while affected, Australia remained
"strong and free and open and tolerant" [273480]. Howard re-dedicated his government to
the "
War on Terror", saying the Bali
bombing was proof that no country was "immune" to the effects of
terrorism.
In March 2003, Australia joined the US-led "
Multinational force in Iraq" in
sending
2,000 troops and naval units to support in the
invasion of Iraq. Howard said that the
invasion to "disarm Iraq...is right, it is lawful, and it is in
Australia’s national interest." He later said that the decision to
go into Iraq was the most difficult he made as Prime Minister. In
response to the Australian participation in the invasion, there
were large protests in Australian cities during March 2003, and
Prime Minister Howard was heckled from the public gallery of
Parliament House. While opinion polls showed that opposition to the
war without UN backing was between 48 and 92 per cent, Howard
remained preferred prime-minister over opposition leader,
Simon Crean, and his approval dropped compared
to before the war.
Throughout 2002 and 2003 Howard had increased his opinion poll lead
over Labor leader,
Simon Crean. In
December 2003, Crean resigned after losing party support and
Mark Latham was elected leader. Howard
called
an election for
9 October 2004. While the government was behind Labor in the
opinion polls, Howard himself had a large lead over Latham as
preferred Prime Minister. In the lead up to the election, Howard
again did not commit to serving a full term. Howard campaigned on
the theme of trust, asking: "Who do you trust to keep the economy
strong, and protect family living standards?
Who do you trust to
keep interest rates low?"Howard attacked Latham's economic record
as Mayor of Liverpool
City Council
and attacked Labor's economic history saying: "It
is an historic fact that interest rates have always gone up under
Labor governments over the last 30 years, because Labor governments
spend more than they collect and drive budgets into
deficit ... So it will be with a Latham Labor
government... I will guarantee that interest rates are always
going to be lower under a Coalition government." The
election resulted in an increased Coalition majority in the House
of Representatives and the first, albeit slim, government majority
in the Senate since 1981. For the second time since becoming Prime
Minister, Howard had to go to preferences in order to win another
term in his own seat winning 53.3 percent of the two-party
preferred vote. On 21 December 2004, Howard became the
second-longest serving Australian Prime Minister after
Sir Robert Menzies.
Fourth term
In 2006, with the government now controlling both houses of
parliament for the first time since the
Fraser government, industrial relations
changes were enacted. Named “
WorkChoices” and championed by Howard, they were
intended to fundamentally change the employer-employee
relationship. The changes were opposed by an effective trade union
campaign and antipathy within the electorate. WorkChoices was
subsequently seen as a major factor in the government’s 2007
election loss.

In April 2006, the government announced it had completely paid off
the last of $96 billion of Commonwealth net debt inherited when it
came to power in 1996. Economists generally welcomed the news,
while cautioning that some level of debt was not necessarily bad,
and that some of the debt had been transferred to the private
sector. By 2007, Howard had been in office for 11 of the 15 years
of consecutive annual growth enjoyed by the Australian economy.
Unemployment had fallen from 8.1%. at the start of his term to 4.1%
in 2007, and average weekly earnings grew 24.4% in real terms.
Howard often cited economic management as a strong point of the
government, and during his Prime Ministership, opinion polling
consistently showed that a majority of the electorate thought his
government were better to handle the economy than the
Opposition.
In August 2007, the Howard government announced the
Northern
Territory National Emergency Response.
This package of
revisions to welfare
provisions, law enforcement and other measures was advanced as a
plan for addressing child abuse in Aboriginal Northern
Territory
communities that had been highlighted in the June
2007 "Little Children are
Sacred" report. The plan was criticised by the
report's authors for not incorporating any of the report's
recommendations. Some aboriginal activists such as
Noel Pearson provided
qualified support for the intervention.
In
February 2007, referring to the US presidential contest, Howard
claimed that Democratic nomination
candidate Barack Obama's stance on the
war would encourage terrorism in Iraq
.
In July 2006, it was alleged that a deal had been struck with Peter
Costello in 1994 with
Ian McLachlan
present, that if the Liberal party were to win the next election,
Howard would serve one and a half terms of office and then allow
Costello to take over. Howard denied that this constituted a deal,
yet Costello and McLachlan insisted it did; and there were calls
for Costello to either challenge or quit. Citing strong party room
support for him as leader, Howard stated later that month that he
would remain to contest the 2007 election. Six weeks before the
election, Howard said that, if elected, he would stand down during
the next term, and anointed Costello as his successor.
Peter Costello commented, in 2007 whilst
still government that "The Howard treasurership was not a success
in terms of interest rates and inflation... he had not been a great
reformer," and questioned Howard's account of his conflicts with
the Prime Minister Fraser.
The Coalition trailed Labor in opinion polls from mid-2006 onward,
but Howard still consistently led Labor leader
Kim Beazley on the question of preferred Prime
Minister—and was even described as a "revolutionary" in his
opposition to unionism. In December 2006, after
Kevin Rudd became Labor leader, the two-party
preferred deficit widened even further and Rudd swiftly overtook
Howard as preferred Prime Minister. Howard chaired
APEC Australia 2007, culminating in the
APEC Economic
Leaders Meeting in Sydney during September. The meeting was at
times overshadowed by further leadership speculation following
further poor poll results.
2007 election defeat
Leading up to the
24
November election, the Coalition trailed Labor in the polls
since the Labor party elected
Kevin Rudd
as party leader in late 2006. Howard and his Coalition government
were defeated in the election, suffering a 23-seat swing to Labor.
Howard lost his seat of Bennelong to former journalist
Maxine McKew by 44,685 votes (51.4 percent) to
Howard's 42,251 (48.6 percent). Howard told a former colleague that
losing Bennelong was a "
silver lining
in the thunder cloud of defeat" as it spared him the ignominy of
opposition. He remained in office as caretaker Prime Minister until
the formal swearing in of Rudd's government on 3 December. Howard
is the second Australian Prime Minister, after
Stanley Bruce, to lose his seat in an
election.
After the election loss, Costello declined to accept the role of
leader of the opposition, and
Brendan
Nelson was elected as leader of the parliamentary Liberal
Party.
Federal Liberal Party director Brian Loughnane said "it was the
failure of
Kim Beazley's leadership that
had masked voter concerns about Howard". Media analysis of The
Australian Election Study, a postal survey of 1873 voters during
the 2007 poll, found that although respondents respected Howard and
thought he had won the 6-week election campaign, Howard was
considered "at odds with public opinion on cut-through issues", his
opponent had achieved the highest "likeability" rating in the
survey's 20-year history, and a majority had decided their voting
intention prior to the election campaign.
After politics
In January 2008, John Howard signed with a prominent speaking
agency called the Washington Speakers Bureau, joining
Tony Blair,
Colin
Powell,
Madeleine Albright,
and others. He will be available for two speeches,
Leadership
in the New Century and
The Global Economic
Future.
Honours
- Recognised as Australian Father of the
Year in 1997.
- Awarded the Centenary Medal on 1
January 2001.
- Awarded the Star of the
Solomon Islands together with Prime Minister of New Zealand
Helen Clark on 15 June 2005 for their
respective roles in restoring law and order in the Solomon Islands.
This award allows him to use the post-nominal letters "SSI".
- Received the Woodrow Wilson Award from the Woodrow
Wilson Center
of the U.S. Smithsonian Institution on 22
August 2005 in Sydney.
- B'nai B'rith International bestowed its Presidential Gold Medal on Howard in May
2006.
- Irving Kristol Award, the
highest award of the American Enterprise Institute,
5 March 2008
- Common
Wealth Award of Distinguished Service in Government, 6 April
2008
- Appointed a Companion of the Order of Australia in the 2008 Queen's
Birthday Honours list "for distinguished service to the Parliament
of Australia, particularly as Prime Minister and through
contributions to economic and social policy reform, fostering and
promoting Australia's interests internationally, and the
development of significant philanthropic links between the business
sector, arts and charitable organisations."
- Received honorary doctorate from the
Hebrew
University of Jerusalem
in December 2008 for "outstanding statesmanship and
leading role on the world stage in promoting democracy and
combating international terrorism" and his "remarkable
understanding of, and exceptional support for, the State of Israel
and his deep friendship with the Australian Jewish
community".
- Awarded the United States Presidential Medal of Freedom
on 13 January 2009 by President George W. Bush.
- Honorary doctorate from Bond
University
, 14 February
2009
See also
Notes
- John Stone, Growth, Jobs, and Prosperity, Quadrant.
January-February 2009
- Birnbauer, Bill, "Rise Of A Common Man", The Age, 4
March 1996
- Kelly (1994), p. 101.
- Kelly (1994), pp. 101-103.
- Kelly (1994), p. 102.
- Kelly (1994), pp. 50-53.
- Boyer Lecture 3: Reform and Deregulation26
November 2006
- Kelly (1994), p. 49.
- Kelly (1994), pp. 49-50.
- Kelly (1994), pp. 50-53.
- Kelly (1994), p. 232.
- Kelly (1994), p. 192.
- ;
- Kelly (1994), pp. 419.
- Kelly (1994), pp. 427-428.
- Kelly (1994), p. 470.
- PM hires out Kirribilli House
- ; ; nma.gov.au;
- The Howard Years - Chronology, Australian Broadcasting
Corporation
- ;
- A look back at Howard's ten years
- .
- ; ;
- [1]; [2]
- ;
- ; ;
- Howard accepts Presidential Medal of Freedom, AM
program transcript, ABC Radio
- When it was reported that that Iraq did not possess weapons of
mass destruction, 70% of Australians believed John Howard misled
them, although most believed he did so unintentionally.
-
http://psephos.adam-carr.net/countries/a/australia/2004/2004repsnsw.txt
- ; ;
- Australian Bureau of Statistics
- Australia Bureau of Statistics
- John Stone, Growth, Jobs, and Prosperity, Quadrant.
January-February 2009
- Newspoll (various 2000-2007)
- ; ;
- ; ;
- ;
- ;
- Howard signs up to talk the talk | The
Australian
- Medals of the World - Solomon Islands: Star of the Solomon
Islands. Retrieved on 24 September 2006
- Presidential Gold Medal
- Australia's John Howard Receives 2008 Irving
Kristol Award AEI press release 3
January 2008
- Howard wins $54,000 for good PM-ing | The
Australian
- It's an Honour: AC
- Howard: Mumbai attacks a message to Obama
- Howard to receive US presidential award
Bibliography
Further reading
- Publications
- Websites
External links