on 18-01-2015 09:34 AM
She achieved so much and even though wasn't the most eloquent speaker or a great seller of policies (in my opinion) she was one of the best. I'm sure there must be a tally somewhere comparing her achievements against Tony Abbott's fails somewhere?
Solved! Go to Solution.
on 18-01-2015 11:57 AM
Tripling the tax free threshold just takes the cake though I reckon. For the average Australian worker that is just such a bonus. I gained more respect for her after that.
on 18-01-2015 12:05 PM
Yes, a positive for all taxpayers, especially for low income earners.
on 18-01-2015 12:08 PM
....Julia Gillard was the force behind getting rid of LNP insidious WorkChoices too, I know
on 18-01-2015 12:12 PM
@idlewhile wrote:So now that some time has passed the left are now game to come out in support of what a fantastic PM Miss Gillard was.
It's what the left does, they have no memory of actual events, they don't care to remember the catastophe, that doesn't stop the myth making.
A bit like the sickening myth making at Whitlams funeral. Free education? gave women the vote?.
Gough Whitlam left a long list of achievements
Gough Whitlam is perhaps best known for the manner in which he prematurely exited from power rather than how he chose to wield it
But wield it he did. Whitlam's short three-year shelf life as prime minister is generally recognised as one of Australia's most reforming governments.
Conservative government has been the norm in Australian politics since federation and the preference is for reform by increment rather than by rush. Consequently, much of what Gough Whitlam built – such as a free university education – has been torn down by successive governments on both sides of the political spectrum.
But what remains continues to shape Australia's national life like a guardian angel. Here is some of the Whitlam legacy:
● His government extricated Australia from the Vietnam War and abolished conscription. Australia had been fighting in South Vietnam since 1962. Two years later conscription was introduced but the first wave of baby boomers rebelled and eventually they, and their elders, took to the streets in moratorium nationwide marches that saw mass civil disobedience reflect the prevailing view. Labor's anti-war policy became one of Whitlam's most powerful election campaign assets.
● Whitlam took the demonology out of foreign policy, recognising China after the Coalition had refused contact with Beijing for 24 years. Whitlam ripped the rug from beneath Bill McMahon when he led a Labor delegation to China in July 1971 and the Coalition prime minister accused him of being a Communist pawn only to see United States President Richard Nixon announce his proposed visit to China a week later. Whitlam also attempted to redefine the alliance with the US.
● Medibank, the precursor to Medicare, was established.
● Social welfare reforms included the supporting mother's benefit and welfare payment for homeless people. Before 1973 only widows were entitled to pension payments, so other women who were raising children alone faced invidious choices. But the pension payment gave single mothers choices and options around the raising of their children. It also helped remove old stigmas around single mothers.
● Equal pay for women: One of the first acts of the Whitlam government was to reopen the National Wage and Equal Pay cases at the Commonwealth Conciliation and Arbitration Commission. The 1972 Equal Pay case meant that Australian women doing work similar to that done by men should be paid an equal wage. Two years later the commission extended the adult minimum wage to include women workers for the first time.
● The Postmaster-General's Department was replaced by the twin-headed Telecom and Australia Post.
● The Australian Legal Office and Australian Law Reform Commission were set up.
● The death penalty for Commonwealth offences was abolished. Melbourne escapee Ronald Ryan was the last man executed in Australia on February 3, 1967, for shooting a prison guard. Victoria and some state governments (not NSW which abolished capital punishment for murder in 1955) remained proponents of the death penalty. Whitlam's reforms led to the 2010 federal legislation prohibiting the reinstatement of capital punishment in all Australian states and territories.
● The Family Law Act providing for a national Family Court was enacted, and simplified, non-punitive divorce laws were introduced.
● The Whitlam government also established needs-based funding for schools after appointing Peter Karmel to head a committee examining the position of government and non-government primary and secondary schools throughout Australia. Karmel's report identified many inequities in the funding system, which for the first time led to the federal government providing funding to state schools.
● A free university education was briefly available to all Australians. In Whitlam's three years of government, participation in higher education increased by 25 per cent, to 276,559 enrolments. The main beneficiaries were women.
● Amid widespread business and union opposition, in 1973 the Australian economy was opened to the world by a 25 per cent cut in tariffs across the board. An early forerunner of the Productivity Commission was established as was the Trade Practices Act and a predecessor of the Australian Competition and Consumer Commission.
● The Australian Assistance Plan to fund regional councils and employment projects continues in the concepts of "social planning" and "community development".
● The National Sewerage Program connected suburban homes to sewerage. The government spent $330 million on the program before it was cancelled by the Fraser government but in Sydney the backlog of unsewered properties fell from 158,884 in 1973 to 95,505 in 1978. Similarly, in Melbourne, the backlog was reduced from 160,000 in 1972-73, to 88,000 in 1978-79.
● The Whitlam government reduced the voting age to 18 and provided the Northern Territory and Australian Capital Territory with representation in the Senate.
● It replaced God Save the Queen with Advance Australia Fair as the national anthem.
● Queen Elizabeth became Queen of Australia when she signed her assent to The Royal Style and Titles Act 1973. The legislation also deleted the traditional reference to the Queen as Head of the Church of England by removing "Defender of the Faith" from her Australian titles
● An Order of Australia replaced the British Honours system.
● The Racial Discrimination Act 1975 conferred rights to equality before the law and bound the Commonwealth and the states to the International Convention on the Elimination of all Forms of Racial Discrimination.
● The Department of Aboriginal Affairs was set up and the first Commonwealth legislation to grant land rights to indigenous people was drafted. The subsequent Malcolm Fraser government passed the legislation.
● Land title deeds were handed to some Gurindji traditional lands owners in the Northern Territory in 1975, a real and symbolic gesture that became a touchstone for the land rights movement.
● The Whitlam government also established the National Gallery of Australia, the Australia Council for the Arts, the Australian Heritage Commission. It introduced FM radio, pushed for the setting up of 2JJ, a radio established to support Australian music and connect with young Australians. It set up multicultural radio services – 2EA Sydney and 3EA in Melbourne – and issued licences to community radio stations for the first time.
● The Australian film industry flowered and the Australian Film and Television School, an idea of a previous Coalition prime minister, John Gorton, was opened.
● The reorganisation and modernisation of Labor's policy platform saved the ALP from its past.
● Papua New Guinea became independent on September 16, 1975, after being administered from Australia since the First World War.
on 18-01-2015 12:15 PM
How many of the above reforms have already been ditched, and how many more will be?
on 18-01-2015 12:21 PM
With thanks to pct001wine
Gillard government achievements
· NBN (the real one) – total cost $37.4b (Government contribution: $30.4b)
· BER 7,920 schools: 10,475 projects. (completed at less than 3% dissatisfaction rate)
· Gonski – Education funding reform
· NDIS/DisabilityCare
· MRRT & aligned PRRT
· Won seat at the UN
· Signed Kyoto
· Signatory to Bali Process & Regional Framework
· Eradicated WorkChoices
· Established Fair Work Australia
· Established Carbon Pricing/ETS (7% reduction in emissions since July last year)
· Established National Network of Reserves and Parks
· Created world’s largest Marine Park Network
· Introduced Reef Rescue Program
· National Apology
· Sorry to the Stolen Generation
· Increased Superannuation from 9 to 12%
· Changed 85 laws to remove discrimination against same sex couples
· Introduced National Plan to reduce violence against women and children
· Improvements to Sex Discrimination Act
· Introduced Plain packaging
· Legislated Equal pay (social & community workers up to 45% pay increases)
· Legislated Australia’s first Paid parental leave scheme
· Established $10b Renewable energy fund
· Legislated Murray/Darling Basin plan (the first in a hundred years of trying.)
· Increased Education funding by 50%
· Established direct electoral enrollment
· Created 190,000 more University places
· Achieved 1:1 ratio, computers for year 9-12 students
· Established My School
· Established National Curriculum
· Established NAPLAN
· Increased Health funding by 50%
· Legislated Aged care package
· Legislated Mental health package
· Legislated Dental Care package
· Created 90 Headspace sites
· Created Medicare Locals Program
· Created Aussie Jobs package
· Created Kick-Start Initiative (apprentices)
· Funded New Car plan (industry support)
· Created Infrastructure Australia
· Established Nation Building Program (350 major projects)
· Doubled Federal Roads budget ($36b) (7,000kms of roads)
· Rebuilding 1/3 of interstate rail freight network
· Committed more to urban passenger rail than any government since Federation
· Developed National Ports Strategy
· Developed National Land Freight Strategy
· Created the nations first ever Aviation White Paper
· Revitalized Australian Shipping
· Reduced transport regulators from 23 to 3 (saving $30b over 20years)
· Introduced NICS – infrastructure schedule
· Australia has moved from 20th in 2007 to 2nd on OECD infrastructure ranking
· Awarded International Infrastructure Minister of the Year (2012 Albanese)
· Awarded International Treasurer of the Year (2011 Swan)
· Introduced Anti-dumping and countervailing system reforms
· Legislated Household Assistance Package
· Introduced School Kids Bonus
· Increased Childcare rebate (to 50%)
· Allocated $6b to Social Housing (20,000 homes)
· Provided $5b to Support for Homelessness
· Established National Rental Affordability Scheme ($4.5b)
· Introduced Closing the Gap
· Supports Act of Recognition for constitutional change
· Provided the highest pension increase in 100 years
· Created 900,000 new jobs
· Established National Jobs Board
· Allocated $9b for skills and training over 5 years
· Established Enterprise Connect (small business)
· Appointed Australia’s first Small Business Commissioner
· Introduced immediate write-off of assets costing less than $6,500 for Sm/Bus
· Introduced $5,000 immediate write-off for Small Business vehicles over $6,500
· Introduced Small business $1m loss carryback for tax rebate from previous year
· Legislated Australian Consumer law
· Introduced a national levy to assist Queensland with reconstruction
· Standardized national definition of flood for Insurance purposes.
· Created Tourism 2020
· Completed Australia’s first feasibility study on high speed rail
· Established ESCAS (traceability and accountability in live animal exports)
· Established Royal Commission into Institutional Sexual Abuse
· Established National Crime Prevention Fund
· Lowered personal income taxes (Ave family now pays $3,500 less p.a. than 2007)
· Raised the tax-free threshold from $6,000 to $18,200
· Australia now the richest per capita nation on earth
· First time ever Australia has three triple A credit ratings from all three credit agencies
· Low inflation
· Lowest interest rates in 60 years (Ave mortgagee paying $5,000 less p.a. than 2007)
· Low unemployment
· Lowest debt to GDP in OECD
· Australian dollar is now fifth most traded in the world and IMF Reserve Currency
· One of the world’s best performing economies during and since the GFC
· Australia now highest ranked for low Sovereign Risk
· Overseen the largest fiscal tightening in nations history (4.4%)
· 21 years of continuous economic growth (trend running at around 3%pa)
· 11 years of continuous wages growth exceeding CPI
· Increasing Productivity
· Increasing Consumer Confidence
· Record foreign investment
· Historic levels of Chinese/Australian bilateral relations
· First female Prime Minister
· First female Governor General
· First female Attorney General
A fiscal strategy to return to budget surpluses over the economic cycle without damaging its economy with austerity measures already proven to fail. A future linked to the National Broadband Network, renewable energy and greater productivity through higher education and infrastructure investment. Improved social equality and has a larger voice on the world stage.
All this (and more) despite a hung parliament, a recalcitrant press and the most negative and asinine Opposition since Federation.
This has been one of the finest parliamentary periods in our history.
on 18-01-2015 12:44 PM
@donnashuggy wrote:She achieved so much and even though wasn't the most eloquent speaker or a great seller of policies (in my opinion) she was one of the best. I'm sure there must be a tally somewhere comparing her achievements against Tony Abbott's fails somewhere?
________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Rubbish.
on 18-01-2015 01:20 PM
Gillard and her minority govt were building a future. Their plans were constructive and they seemed to like Australia and it's people.
Abbott and his mediocre mob are running a demolition party to no where fair. Their plans are regressive and they don't seem to like Australia or it's people.
For example, when has any world leader ever had a whinge about his people, to other leaders, on a world stage, instead of saying something positive about Australia?
on 18-01-2015 04:55 PM
PSA I do wonder why people post without thought/checking especially when it is also featured in that much overplayed red rag the "AIMN" (self proclaimed "Independent).
The first of the C&P list : "· NBN (the real one) – total cost $37.4b (Government contribution: $30.4b)" This in 2013, how on earth would the total cost be known then ?
The last on the list: " First female Attorney General" True, Roxon lasted 11 months and resigned (pushed!). She had no concept of separation of powers.
This one from the C&P list caught my eye as the topic interests me : "Signed Kyoto" Gillard? what rubbish. Actually the Kyoto Protocol was signed in 1998 (Howard) and ratified under Rudd Dec 2007.
"This has been one of the finest parliamentary periods in our history."
Guffaw, the days of the Circus?, dysfunctional is the adjective that springs to mind for the knife wielding duo of Poor Me and Rudd
What is the point in blindly posting others "work", especially when a cursory glance will show that it is politically biased and is lacking in accuracy. With a list like yours PSA, all entries can be considered "flawed " when one is shown to be completely wrong, and for the author other posts will be viewed as being similar.
nɥºɾ
on 18-01-2015 05:01 PM
She was FEMALE and like her or hate her she did become a PRIME MINISTER....GR