Francais | English | Espanõl

Prime Minister of Australia

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Jump to: navigation, search
Australia
Image:Australian coat of arms 1912 edit.png

This article is part of the series:
Politics and government of
Australia


Federal Government

Executive

Legislative

1993 - 1996 - 1998 - 2001 - 2004 - 2007 -

Judicial


State and territory governments

Executive

Legislative

ACT - NSW - NT - Qld. -
SA - Tas. - Vic. - WA


Local government


Political parties


Foreign relations


Republicanism


Other countries • Politics Portal

view  talk  edit</div>

The office of Prime Minister is in practice the most powerful political office in the Commonwealth of Australia. The Prime Minister is head of government for Australia and holds office on commission from the Governor-General.

Barring exceptional circumstances, the Prime Minister is always the leader of the political party with majority support in the House of Representatives.

John Howard is the current Prime Minister and was sworn in on March 11 1996. He is the 25th Prime Minister since Federation and leads the Liberal Party of Australia.

The Prime Minister's official residence is the The Lodge in Canberra, however Mr Howard has made Kirribilli House in Sydney his primary residence since taking up the office of Prime Minister. Kirribilli House was intended to be used only when the Prime Minister was in Sydney on official business.

Contents

[edit] Appointment

The Prime Minister is appointed by the Governor-General under section 64 of the Australian Constitution. Section 64 of the Constitution empowers the Governor-General to appoint Ministers of State, and requires such Ministers to be members of the House of Representatives or the Senate. These Ministers are ex officio members of the Federal Executive Council and constitute the Cabinet. The Prime Minister in practice is the leader of the Cabinet. By convention, he or she will always be a Member of the House of Representatives.

The Prime Minister is, like other ministers, normally sworn in by the Governor General and then presented with the Commission (Letter patent) of office. When defeated in an election, or on resigning, the Prime Minister is said to "hand in the commission" and actually does so by returning it to the Governor General.

Despite the importance of the office of Prime Minister, the Constitution does not mention the office by name. The conventions of the Westminster system were thought to be sufficiently entrenched in Australia by the authors of the constitution that it was deemed unnecessary to detail them.

In rare circumstances, the Governor-General may appoint someone other than the leader of the majority party in the House of Representatives to be Prime Minister. At the time of Federation, no parliament had yet been established, so Sir William Lyne was asked to take office as Australia's first Prime Minister, although his colleagues forced him to resign in favour of Edmund Barton, who led a caretaker government until elections were held. Following the death or resignation of the Prime Minister, the Governor-General will appoint as Prime Minister the person most likely to have majority support in the House of Representatives - in most circumstances, the Deputy Prime Minister. More controversially, during the 1975 constitutional crisis, Malcolm Fraser was appointed as Caretaker Prime Minister to replace Gough Whitlam. Theoretically the Governor-General can dismiss the Prime Minister or any other Minister at any time, but his or her power to do so is heavily circumscribed by convention.

[edit] Powers

Most of the Prime Minister's powers derive from his or her position as the head of the Cabinet, and through their leadership of the party (or coalition of parties) in the majority in the lower house. In practice, the Federal Executive Council will act to ratify all decisions made by the Cabinet, and in practice, decisions of the Cabinet will always require the support of the Prime Minister.
The current (25th) Prime Minister of Australia, John Howard (sitting, fifth from left), with his Cabinet, 1999
The powers of the Governor-General - to assent to legislation, to dissolve and prorogue Parliament, to call elections, and to make appointments - are exercised only on the advice of the Prime Minister.

The power of the Prime Minister is subject to a number of limitations. If the Prime Minister is removed as leader of his or her party, or if he or she loses a vote of no-confidence in the House of Representatives, he or she must resign the office or be dismissed by the Governor-General. The Prime Minister must receive the support of both houses of Parliament to pass any legislation (though secondary legislation, called Regulations, can be made by ministerial decree). The Prime Minister's party normally will have a majority in the House of Representatives, and party discipline is exceptionally strong in Australian politics, so getting legislation through the House is usually a formality. Attaining the support of the Senate can be more difficult, since there the Government will often be in a minority.

[edit] Prime Ministerial salary and benefits

[edit] Salary

Prime Ministerial pay history
Date established Salary
June 2, 1999 $289,270
September 6, 2006 $309,270

The Prime Minister is the highest-paid member of parliament. A raise was approved by Parliament in 2006 because salaries paid to other officials that had annual cost-of-living increases (e.g. the Treasurer) were approaching the Prime Minister's salary; the Prime Minister's salary therefore needed to be increased to allow for further increases to officials' salaries.[citation needed]

By comparison, average yearly earnings for full-time workers in Australia are about $55,000 <ref>http://www.abs.gov.au/AUSSTATS/abs@.nsf/Latestproducts/BC0A90789766E573CA2570DE0007AC8D?opendocument</ref>. However, the Prime Minister's wage is far lower than that of the CEO's of Australia's major corporations, such as the $3 million base salary of Telstra chief executive Sol Trujillo<ref>http://www.smh.com.au/news/business/trujillos-platinum-us-egg-revealed/2006/08/04/1154198327893.html</ref>

[edit] Travel

While traveling, the Prime Minister is able to conduct all the functions of the office aboard a plane when he or she are in and out of the country. The Prime Minister also utilises a motorcade, in which the Prime Minister himself rides in a Prime Ministerial limousine.

[edit] Other benefits

The official residences are fully staffed and catered for both for the Prime Minster and his family, and the considerable amount of official entertaining expected. Prime Ministers also receive the opportunity to attend many significant cultural and sporting events from prime viewing positions.

[edit] Post-Prime Ministership

Prime Ministers continue to have benefits after leaving office such as, free office space, the right to hold a Life Gold Pass and budgets for office help and staff assistance. Life Gold Pass entitles eligible former Prime Ministers to travel within Australia for "non-commercial" purposes at government expense.

Former Prime Ministers continue to be important national figures, and in some cases go on to successful post-prime ministerial careers. Some notable examples have included Edmund Barton as Judge of the High Court; George Reid was High Commissioner to the United Kingdom and Fadden becoming Treasurer under another Prime Minister.

As of 2006, there are four living former Prime Ministers: Gough Whitlam, Malcolm Fraser, Bob Hawke and Paul Keating. The most recently deceased Prime Minister is John Gorton, who died on 19 May 2002. Gough Whitlam is currently the oldest living Australian Prime Minister.

[edit] History

The first Prime Minister of Australia, Edmund Barton (sitting second from left), with his Cabinet, 1901 Since the framers of the Australian constitution from the beginning intended it to largely follow the Westminster system, the office of Prime Minister has existed since the inauguration of the Commonwealth.

[edit] List of Prime Ministers

No. Name Party Assumed office Left office
1 Edmund Barton Protectionist 1 January 1901 24 September 1903
2 Alfred Deakin Protectionist 24 September 1903 27 April 1904
3 Chris Watson Labor 27 April 1904 18 August 1904
4 Sir George Reid Free Trade 18 August 1904 5 July 1905
- Alfred Deakin (2nd time) Comwlth. Liberal 5 July 1905 13 November 1908
5 Andrew Fisher Labor 13 November 1908 2 June 1909
- Alfred Deakin (3rd time) Comwlth. Liberal 2 June 1909 29 April 1910
- Andrew Fisher (2nd time) Labor 29 April 1910 24 June 1913
6 Joseph Cook Comwlth. Liberal 24 June 1913 17 September 1914
- Andrew Fisher (3rd time) Labor 17 September 1914 27 October 1915
7 Billy Hughes Labor 27 October 1915 14 November 1916
- Billy Hughes (2nd time) National Labor 14 November 1916 17 February 1917
- Billy Hughes (3rd time) Nationalist 17 February 1917 9 February 1923
8 Stanley Bruce Nationalist 9 February 1923 22 October 1929
9 James Scullin Labor 22 October 1929 6 January 1932
10 Joseph Lyons United Australia 6 January 1932 7 April 1939
11 Sir Earle Page Country 7 April 1939 26 April 1939
12 Robert Menzies United Australia 26 April 1939 28 August 1941
13 Arthur Fadden Country 28 August 1941 7 October 1941
14 John Curtin Labor 7 October 1941 5 July 1945
15 Frank Forde Labor 6 July 1945 13 July 1945
16 Ben Chifley Labor 13 July 1945 19 December 1949
- Sir Robert Menzies (2nd time) Liberal 19 December 1949 26 January 1966
17 Harold Holt Liberal 26 January 1966 19 December 1967
18 John McEwen Country 19 December 1967 10 January 1968
19 John Gorton Liberal 10 January 1968 10 March 1971
20 William McMahon Liberal 10 March 1971 5 December 1972
21 Gough Whitlam Labor 5 December 1972 11 November 1975
22 Malcolm Fraser Liberal 11 November 1975 11 March 1983
23 Bob Hawke Labor 11 March 1983 20 December 1991
24 Paul Keating Labor 20 December 1991 11 March 1996
25 John Howard Liberal 11 March 1996 Incumbent

[edit] Graphical timeline

<timeline> ImageSize = width:720 height:730 PlotArea = left:0 right:0 bottom:65 top:10 Legend = columns:4 left:205 top:55 columnwidth:150 AlignBars = justify

DateFormat = yyyy Period = from:1899 till:2007 TimeAxis = orientation:vertical

Colors=

 id:canvas value:gray(0.5)
 id:LIB  value:blue             legend:Liberal
 id:UAP  value:powderblue       legend:United_Australia
 id:NAL  value:skyblue          legend:National_Labor
 id:ALP  value:red              legend:Labor
 id:NAT  value:skyblue          legend:Nationalist
 id:FT   value:limegreen        legend:Free_Trade
 id:CNT  value:green            legend:Country/National
 id:PRO  value:tan1             legend:Protectionist
 id:CML  value:dullyellow       legend:Commonwealth_Liberal
 id:WAR  value:gray(0.6)

Define $left = align:right shift:(-25,-5) Define $right = align:left shift:(25,-5)

PlotData=

 mark:(line,white) fontsize:S shift:(25,-5)
 width:33  shift:(-25,-5) align:right color:War fontsize:S textcolor:war
 from:1914  till:1918 text:"World War I"  shift:(25,7) align:left
 from:1939  till:1945 text:"World War II" shift:(25,0) align:left
 width:29 color:black textcolor:black
 from:1899  till:1901 text:"1900"
 from:1999  till:2001 text:"2000"
 width:25
 
 from:1901  till:1903 color:PRO  $right text:"1901-1903_Edmund Barton"
 from:1903  till:1904 color:PRO  $left  text:"Alfred Deakin_1903-1904" shift:(,-10) 
 from:1904  till:1904 color:ALP  $right text:"1904_Chris Watson"
 from:1904  till:1905 color:FT   $left  text:"Sir George Reid_1904-1905" 
 from:1905  till:1908 color:CML  $right text:"1905-1908_Alfred Deakin (second time)"
 from:1908  till:1909 color:ALP  $left  text:"Andrew Fisher_1908-1909"
 from:1909  till:1910 color:CML  $right  text:"1909-1910_Alfred Deakin (third time)"
 from:1910  till:1913 color:ALP  $left  text:"(second time)_Andrew Fisher_1910-1913"
 from:1913  till:1914 color:CML  $right text:"1913-1914_Joseph Cook"
 from:1914  till:1915 color:ALP  $left text:"(third time)_Andrew Fisher_1914-1915"
 from:1915  till:1916 color:ALP  $right text:"1915-1916_Billy Hughes"
 from:1916  till:1917 color:NAL  $left text:"(second time)_Billy Hughes_1917-1917" # shift:(-100,-5)
 from:1917  till:1923 color:NAT  $right text:"1917-1923_Billy Hughes (third time)"
 from:1923  till:1929 color:NAT  $left text:"Stanley Bruce_1923-1929"
 from:1929  till:1932 color:ALP  $right text:"1929-1932_James Scullin"
 from:1932  till:1939 color:UAP  $left text:"Joseph Lyons_1932-1939"
 from:1939  till:1939 color:CNT  $right text:"1939_Sir Earle Page"
 from:1939  till:1941 color:UAP  $left text:"Robert Menzies_1939-1941"
 from:1941  till:1941 color:CNT  $right text:"1941_Arthur Fadden"
 from:1941  till:1945 color:ALP  $left text:"John Curtin_1941-1945" # shift:(-100,-5)
 from:1945  till:1945 color:ALP  $right text:"1945_Frank Forde"
 from:1945  till:1949 color:ALP  $left text:"Ben Chifley_1945-1949"
 from:1949  till:1966 color:LIB  $right text:"1949-1966_Sir Robert Menzies (second time)"
 from:1966  till:1967 color:LIB  $left text:"Harold Holt_1966-1967"
 from:1967  till:1968 color:CNT  $right text:"1967-1968_John McEwen"
 from:1968  till:1971 color:LIB  $left text:"John Gorton_1968-1971"
 from:1971  till:1972 color:LIB  $right text:"1971-1972_William McMahon"
 from:1972  till:1975 color:ALP  $left text:"Gough Whitlam_1972-1975"
 from:1975  till:1983 color:LIB  $right text:"1975-1983_Malcolm Fraser"
 from:1983  till:1991 color:ALP  $left text:"Bob Hawke_1983-1991"
 from:1991  till:1996 color:ALP  $right text:"1991-1996_Paul Keating"
 from:1996  till:end  color:LIB  $left text:"John Howard_1996-present"
   </timeline>

[edit] See also

[edit] External links

Prime Ministers of Australia Image:Flag of Australia.svg
Barton | Deakin | Watson | Reid | Fisher | Cook | Hughes | Bruce | Scullin | Lyons | Page | Menzies | Fadden | Curtin | Forde | Chifley | Holt | McEwen | Gorton | McMahon | Whitlam | Fraser | Hawke | Keating | Howard
de:Premierminister (Australien)

fr:Premier ministre d'Australie ga:Príomh-Aire na hAstráile gd:Priomh-Mhinisteirean Astrailianach io:Prima ministri di Australia id:Perdana Menteri Australia it:Elenco dei Primi Ministri Australiani ja:オーストラリアの首相 no:Liste over australske statsministere pl:Premierzy Australii simple:Prime Minister of Australia zh:澳大利亚总理

Personal tools