The life of former Labor PM Bob Hawke

A look at the life of former Labor prime minister Bob Hawke, from his early years to rising through the unions before parliament, where he scored the top job.

LIFE AND TIMES OF BOB HAWKE:

EARLY LIFE

- Born December 9, 1929 in Bordertown, South Australia.

- A decade later his family moved to Perth following the death of older brother Neil.

- Attended Perth Modern School before studying law at the University of Western Australia.

- Almost died in a motorbike accident.

OXFORD UNIVERSITY

- Took up a Rhodes scholarship but was only able to after his fiancee Hazel Masterton had an abortion, as it was only open to single men.

- While his research focused on wage determination, he became better known at Oxford for making the Guinness Book of Records for downing two and a half pints of beer in 12 seconds.

UNIONS

- After returning to Australia and marrying Hazel, he joined the Australian Council of Trade Unions.

- By 1969, he was ACTU president and the nation's best known politician outside parliament.

MP TO PM

- First attempted to enter parliament in 1963, losing to Liberal Hubert Opperman.

- Elected federal president of the Labor Party in 1973 while also ACTU president.

- He was prominent in protests in Canberra after the governor-general dismissed the Labor Whitlam government in 1975.

- Entered federal parliament at the 1980 election as MP for the Victorian seat of Wills.

- Became leader of the Labor Party February 1983, less than a month before the Liberal Fraser government called the election.

- Led the ALP to victory and became prime minister with the campaign slogan Bringing Australia Together.

ACHIEVEMENTS AS PM

- Opened the economy by floating the dollar and deregulating the financial system.

- Cut tariffs and reformed the tax system.

- Established Medicare in 1984.

- Led international efforts to protect Antarctica from mining and to save Tasmania's Franklin Dam.

- Increased the old-age pension, doubled public housing funds and the number of childcare places.

- Established the Asia-Pacific Economic Corporation.

- Campaigned against apartheid in South Africa.

DOWNFALL AS PM

- In late 1998, Hawke and treasurer Paul Keating signed the Kirribilli House pact, where he promised to hand over to Mr Keating after the 1990 election.

- He reneged on the deal.

- After one failed attempt, Mr Keating toppled him in December 1991. It was the first time Labor voted out a serving prime minister.

PERSONAL LIFE

- Married Hazel Masterson in Perth in 1956 and they divorced in 1995.

- The couple had four children: Susan, Stephen, Roslyn and Robert.

- He remarried in 1995 to Blanche d'Alpuget, the author of his 1982 biography.


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3 min read
Published 17 May 2019 2:54am
Source: AAP


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