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20 - Prime ministerial government in Australia

from Part V - Inside the Australian State

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 June 2012

Rodney Smith
Affiliation:
University of Sydney
Ariadne Vromen
Affiliation:
University of Sydney
Ian Cook
Affiliation:
Murdoch University, Western Australia
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Summary

The emergence of prime ministerial dominance is an important phenomenon for institutionalists (Chapter 2), not merely because it affects the ways in which Australian political institutions operate but also because it indicates the decline of parliamentary, Cabinet and other processes that otherwise would restrict a leader’s power. Leaders’ patterns of behaviour have long been an important focus of behaviouralist studies (Chapter 3), as well as a cause for concern among those who promote democracy (Chapter 1). The fact that Julia Gillard became the first female prime minister is unlikely to mollify feminist critics of patriarchal power (Chapter 4), or to indicate that the dominant discourses around Australian politics no longer privilege masculinity (Chapter 5).

The press commentary occasioned by the second anniversary of Kevin Rudd’s Labor federal government crystallised a theme about the government’s modus operandi that had been developing from its earliest days: the unparalleled centralisation of power in Rudd’s hands. In her analysis, Michelle Grattan (2009b) wondered whether Australia’s 26th prime minister ‘might be the most controlling … in Australian history’. A feature article in The Australian, which was based on interviews with ‘numerous insiders’, including past and present ministers, chiefs of staff, and current and former members of Rudd’s private office, speculated that he had ‘become the most powerful Australian prime minister since Federation’ (C Stewart 2009a, p. 14).

Type
Chapter
Information
Contemporary Politics in Australia
Theories, Practices and Issues
, pp. 226 - 236
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2012

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References

Poguntke, T Webb, P 2005 The Presidentialization of politics: a comparative study of modern democracies Oxford University Press Oxford
Walter, J Strangio, P 2007 No, Prime Minister: reclaiming politics from leaders UNSW Press Sydney
Weller, P 2007 Cabinet government in Australia, 1901–2006: practice, principles, performance UNSW Press Sydney

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