The Honourable Rob Lucas, Opposition Leader Mike Rann, my
distinguished panel colleagues, members of the Centenary of Federation
Committee and Hawke Institute, Family, Friends, colleagues and the
legendary Charles Kingston in absentia.
Thank you for the invitation to speak at such a significant Federation
gathering. Just sometimes like tonight I wonder to myself what a nice
working class girl like me is doing on a platform like this, especially
when I think back 30 years ago. It is 30 years since as a parent /
school activist I sitting across the table from then Minister Malcolm
Fraser lobbying for school funding according to need. Now as former
Premier of Victoria I am sharing this platform with him on equal terms.
Let’s hope that’s an inspiration for women here tonight.
My I begin by thanking Lewis O’Brien for his welcome to country and pay
my respects to the Kaurna nation, their elders and the local aboriginal
communities of Adelaide.
I hope that the welcome ceremony augurs well for a discussion tonight
which enhances our respect for country and for the peoples of this
nation and the world.
Our discussion is taking place at a time when many people in this nation
and across the world are troubled, even fearful, about our security and
our future. Sadly for the people in many other countries this is the
norm, but for many Australians, especially young Australians, these are
is new and very challenging times.
In today’s fearful new world, we all face a central challenge. How do we
as a nation strengthen democracy at home and abroad at the same time as
we enhance and empower humanity rather than destroy, impoverish, or
divide our people and the people of the world.
Today, in Australia, we are all faced with the question, “what are the
fundamental values that underpin our vision for our nation.”
Paul Kelly of “The Australian” newspaper, put it well recently on the
ABC Sunday Insider Program:
So I want to begin my “Visions for Our Nation” with a plea to all in
this gathering and beyond to shape our nation according to our human
values as a nation: not according to the perceived political demands of
the moment.
As a first step, we must be clear that a secure Australia, a strong
Australia, is one which Professor Kenneth Gailbraith describes as:
To advance that kind of society in Australia I wish to emphasise tonight
the need for a vision which embraces:
First let me address briefly from a non-indigenous persons point of
view, as we don’t have an indigenous person on the platform, a key
element for Australia’s future. The need for an agreement between
Australia’s indigenous and non-indigenous people on our past and our
future.
In my view, one of the reasons that the major Centenary of Federation
celebration in the Melbourne Exhibition Building, though impressive,
failed to resonate with the people, was the failure of our nation’s
leaders on the day to commit to two symbolic and nation building acts
for Australia in the 21st century - reconciliation and a republic.
Public policy and community marches in all Capital Cities indicated
broad community support for reconciliation, though disagreement on the
specifics. But recent deliberative polling across Australia done by
Adelaide academic Dr Pamela Ryan and her Issues Deliberation team have
demonstrated that community discussion, when it is on-going, well
informed and interactive, can bring indigenous and non-indigenous people
closer together on this crucial issue for human dignity and national
progress.
According to the Final Report of the Deliberations group, through this
process of in-depth information and consultation between all parties
there were high levels of support for reconciliation being part of our
vision for the nation.
There was agreement on the need for:
I believe this deliberative process and the results clearly indicate
the potential for the agreement I and others advocate.
And what is the alternative? The alternative is what we have now. In the
words of Australia’s Nelson Mandela, Patrick Dodson:
Like Patrick Dodson, I want the Australian people to continue their work
on an agreement so that we don’t:
The second element in my vision is the achievement of social, economic
and political equity for and by the women of Australia.
Recently I had the pleasure of the being house guest of Australasia’s
second woman Prime Minister, the Prime Minister of New Zealand, Helen
Clark. An impressive, gutsy and no-nonsense woman and political leader.
Strangely, I am still waiting for a similar invitation from an
Australian Prime Minister! Perhaps I’ll have to wait for the sisterhood
to be installed in Kirribilli. We’d like to see that!
In New Zealand you couldn’t help but be impressed with their ongoing
achievements in gender and racial equity. It is the first Country in the
world where women won the right to vote. It has achieved the Waitangi
Treaty between Maori and pakeha New Zealanders and it has effective,
progressive women in the key top jobs of Prime Minister,
Governor-General, Chief Justice and Head of Telstra, as well as women
making up 30% of the their national Parliament. What I wouldn’t give for
political leaders in Australia who would, like Helen Clark, say and mean
the following words:
Part of my vision for gender equity in our nation is to achieve the
critical mass of women in the Parliament who are necessary to emulate
and surpass New Zealand’s achievements.
We have some of the basic ingredients in place. More women are now
completing secondary and tertiary education than men but limitations in
post-graduate monetary rewards, career diversification and promotion
still undermine equity.
We have also made great strides in more equal parliamentary
representation for women. It took some 40 years for the first woman
Senators to be elected and some 60 years for the first woman to be
elected to the House of Representatives. But since 1994, the number of
women in Parliaments across Australia has almost doubled (from 125 to
214). Moreover, due to the effective introduction and successful
implementation of Labor’s Affirmative Action target, the number of Labor
women is now double that of Liberal women. (128/67).
And in the last two elections (Western Australia and Northern Territory)
I am pleased to say that the first two Indigenous women, Carol Martin MP
(Kimberley WA) and Marion Scrymgour MLA (NT) have been elected to
Parliaments in Australia. Both won with the strong financial, mentoring
and training support of women across Australia through our new women’s
political support network EMILY's List.
But we must not rest content. There remain at least three more
challenges in my vision of gender equity in politics:
But gender equity means more than political equity. As Vera Brittain, an eminent British writer and feminist wrote in 1931:
Economic equality is the second element of my vision for the nation. As
a nation we pride ourselves on the “Fair Go”, but I can assure you that
as a nation we have a long way to go to achieve economic equity for
women. Let me share with you the disturbing facts on Australia’s failure
to deliver pay justice to women in both salary and working conditions.
About 70 per cent of women employees in Australia have no paid
maternity leave rights. When New Zealand passes its paid maternity leave
laws in April 2003, Australia and the USA will be the only two “Western”
countries without government funded paid maternity leave: the average is
12-14 weeks;
To ensure that Australia underpins its future by harnessing fully the
talents of women and men, my vision for the nation embraces a 10 point -
economic equity action plan for women. The plan includes:
The third element of my vision, which I haven’t got time to enlarge
on this evening is the need for creating strong partnerships in
community building.
The principles on which I based the creation of Victoria’s Land Care in
1985-86, which Bob Hawke then translated to National LandCare, are in my
view the principles and practice for attaining community participation
in the major questions that shape our nation’s future.
If, the implementation of all our vision’s for this nation we embrace
the principles and practice of:
If we adopt these principles in our practice, we will generate a
sense of pride and ownership that is essential to building strong
communities and a strong nation.
Let me finish with two anecdotes.
First, my Late Show leather-jacketed performance of the Joan Jett song
“I Love Rock and Roll.” It wasn’t the best rock ‘n roll performance
you’ve seen in your life, but it was one of the best things I did
politically. It had an extraordinary impact on the community. Why?
Suddenly I connected with the community as a human being. I had embraced
my own humanity.
My second anecdote is from a conversation I had as the then Chair of the
National Committee of the Centenary of Federation by Lillian Holt, a
leading Aboriginal academic, formerly from the Aboriginal Community
College in South Australia. Lillian said,
I am hope that at the end of tonight we will all share a vision that
both enhances our humanity and our nation.