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Contemporary politics,local and international current affairs, science, music and extracts from the Queensland Newspaper "THE WORKER" documenting the proud history of the Labour Movement. MAHATMA GANDHI ~ Truth never damages a cause that is just.

Tuesday, 14 July 2020

Palace letters to be released 45 years after Australian government sensationally dismissed.

Extract from The Guardian

Australian politics

‘Dramatic revelations’ expected from 200 exchanges between the Queen, her private secretary and governor general
Christopher Knaus
@knausc
Mon 13 Jul 2020 19.06 AEST Last modified on Mon 13 Jul 2020 19.37 AEST

Queen Elizabeth and Sir John Kerr
Queen Elizabeth and Sir John Kerr: The ‘palace letters’, linked to the dismissal of the Whitlam government, will be released on Tuesday morning. Photograph: Central Press/Getty Images

The imminent release of secret royal correspondence linked to the dismissal of prime minister Gough Whitlam will again call the role of the monarchy in modern Australia into question, experts say.
Australia’s national archives will on Tuesday morning release the much-anticipated “palace letters”, a series of more than 200 exchanges between the Queen, her private secretary, Martin Charteris, and Sir John Kerr, Australia’s then-governor general, in the critical period leading up to Kerr’s hugely controversial dismissal of Gough Whitlam’s Labor government in November 1975.
Kerr’s move to force Whitlam’s reforming leftwing government from office, after the conservative opposition had blocked appropriation bills in the upper house of parliament, remains the most sensational moment in modern Australian politics, leading to years of rancour.
Despite the importance of the letters to Australian history, they have remained hidden from public view on the faulty rationale that they were “personal” records, and therefore exempt from the usual 30-year access rule and under the potentially indefinite embargo of the Queen.
Historian Jenny Hocking’s landmark case in the high court, after a four-year legal battle, led to the rejection of that argument and forced the archives to reconsider her request for public access.
Speaking ahead of the release of the letters, Hocking said it was impossible to imagine they would contain anything other than “dramatic revelations”.
“We know that there are over 1,000 pages, we know that there are over 200 letters, they are going to be inevitably a series of really dramatic revelations, it’s impossible to imagine otherwise,” Hocking told the Guardian. “They are going to tell us how much detail Kerr gave to the Queen about what he was expecting to do.”
She said other records kept by Kerr – including his 1980 journal – had already pointed to the import of the documents.
The sheer volume of the letters was not known until Hocking took the archives to court to secure their release.
“We had no idea how many letters there were except that it came out as part of the court case, that there are hundreds of these letters, there are 1,200 pages in total in the material we’ll be looking at,” Hocking told the Guardian.
“So an extraordinarily significant, vast holding, I would say the single most important set of documents about the dismissal of the Whitlam government to have been released in the last decade.”
The archives will release the letters at 11am on Tuesday (2am in the UK). The release is expected to comprise six files, made up of 212 letters, including attachments such as “newspaper clippings, reports, and copies of letters related to meetings and events attended by Sir John Kerr during his tenure as governor general”.
The Whitlam dismissal is one of the most contentious episodes in Australia’s political history.
Kerr dismissed without warning an elected government that held a clear parliamentary majority and appointed Malcolm Fraser, the Liberal leader.
Hocking believes the palace letters could reveal what the Queen said, through her secretary, and whether she influenced Kerr’s actions.


“I’m just thrilled, really, that the archives has agreed to open all of the letters in full,” she said.
The Worker at 6:10:00 am
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The Worker
I was inspired to start this when I discovered old editions of "The Worker". "The Worker" was first published in March 1890, it was the Journal of the Associated Workers of Queensland. It was a Political Newspaper for the Labour Movement. The first Editor was William "Billy" Lane who strongly supported the iconic Shearers' Strike in 1891. He planted the seed of New Unionism in Queensland with the motto “that men should organise for the good they can do and not the benefits they hope to obtain,” he also started a Socialist colony in Paraguay. Because of the right-wing bias in some sections of the Australian media, I feel compelled to counter their negative and one-sided version of events. The disgraceful conduct of the Murdoch owned Newspapers in the 2013 Federal Election towards the Labor Party shows how unrepresentative some of the Australian media has become.
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