Prime_Ministers_of_Australia Prime_Ministers_of_Australia

Prime Ministers of Australia - Definition

The current (25th) Prime Minister of Australia, John Howard (sitting, fifth from left), with his Cabinet, 1999
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The current (25th) Prime Minister of Australia, John Howard (sitting, fifth from left), with his Cabinet, 1999

The office of Prime Minister is in practice the most powerful political office in the Commonwealth of Australia. He or she is appointed by the Governor-General but, by convention, is the leader of the party with the most seats in the House of Representatives. The Prime Minister's official residence is the Lodge in Canberra. Since 1996 the office-holder has been John Howard of the Liberal Party

Contents

Appointment

By convention, the Prime Minister is the leader of the party or coalition which can command a plurality of seats in the lower house of the Federal Parliament, the House of Representatives. In times of constitutional crisis, however, this convention can be broken if necessary; this has occurred twice. At the time of Federation, no parliament had yet been established, so Edmund Barton was temporarily appointed as Prime Minister until elections were held. More controversially, during the 1975 constitutional crisis, Malcolm Fraser was appointed to replace Gough Whitlam. The Governor-General also appoints the remaining members of the Cabinet and, theoretically 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.

Powers

The formal holder of executive power in the Commonwealth is the Governor-General. However, by convention the Governor-General can only act on the Prime Minister's advice. The Prime Minister chairs the Cabinet, a council of ministers where executive decision-making occurs. Like the Prime Minister, the Cabinet is nowhere explicitly provided for in the Australian constitution. The intention nonetheless was for it always to exist, again following the Westminster model.

The power of the Prime Minister is subject to a number of limitations. A Prime Minister may be removed as leader of his party and thus lose the support of the lower house. If this occurs, he 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). While the Prime Minister normally will have a majority in the House of Representatives, attaining the support of the Senate can be more difficult, since there the Government will often be in a minority.

So, while the Prime Minister's formal powers are minimal, his practical powers as chief spokesperson for the government and leader of the strongest party in parliament in the relatively rigid Australian party system are very considerable.

History

The first Prime Minister of Australia, Edmund Barton (sitting second from left), with his Cabinet, 1901
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The first Prime Minister of Australia, Edmund Barton (sitting second from left), with his Cabinet, 1901

The office of Prime Minister is nowhere mentioned in the Australian constitution, although it does provide for the Governor-General to be advised by ministers. However, 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.

List of Prime Ministers

Main article: List of Prime Ministers of Australia by important facts

The political parties shown are those to which the Prime Ministers belonged at the time they held office. Several Prime Ministers belonged during their life times to parties other than those of which they were members while occupying the office of Prime Minister.

No.NamePartyAssumed officeLeft office
1 Edmund BartonProtectionist 1 January 190124 September 1903
2 Alfred DeakinProtectionist24 September 190327 April 1904
3 Chris WatsonLabor27 April 190418 August 1904
4 Sir George ReidFree Trade18 August 19045 July 1905
- Alfred Deakin (2nd time)Comwlth. Liberal5 July 190513 November 1908
5 Andrew FisherLabor13 November 19082 June 1909
- Alfred Deakin (3rd time)Comwlth. Liberal 2 June 1909 29 April 1910
- Andrew Fisher (2nd time)Labor29 April 191024 June 1913
6 Joseph Cook Comwlth. Liberal24 June 191317 September 1914
- Andrew Fisher (3rd time)Labor17 September 191427 October 1915
7 Billy HughesLabor27 October 191514 November 1916
- Billy Hughes (2nd time)National Labor14 November 191617 February 1917
- Billy Hughes (3rd time)Nationalist17 February 19179 February 1923
8 Stanley BruceNationalist9 February 192322 October 1929
9 James Scullin Labor22 October 19296 January 1932
10 Joseph Lyons United Australia6 January 19327 April 1939
11 Sir Earle PageCountry7 April 193926 April 1939
12 Robert MenziesUnited Australia26 April 193928 August 1941
13 Arthur FaddenCountry28 August 19417 October 1941
14 John CurtinLabor7 October 19415 July 1945
15 Frank FordeLabor6 July 194513 July 1945
16 Ben ChifleyLabor13 July 194519 December 1949
- Sir Robert Menzies (2nd time)Liberal19 December 194926 January 1966
17 Harold HoltLiberal26 January 196619 December 1967
18 John McEwenCountry19 December 196710 January 1968
19 John GortonLiberal10 January 196810 March 1971
20 William McMahonLiberal10 March 19715 December 1972
21 Gough WhitlamLabor5 December 197211 November 1975
22 Malcolm FraserLiberal11 November 197511 March 1983
23 Bob Hawke Labor11 March 198320 December 1991
24 Paul KeatingLabor20 December 199111 March 1996
25 John HowardLiberal11 March 1996(incumbent)

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