James Scullin
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Rt Hon James Scullin | |
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In office 22 October 1929 – 6 January 1932 |
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Preceded by | Stanley Bruce |
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Succeeded by | Joseph Lyons |
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Born | 18 September 1876 Trawalla, Victoria, Australia |
Died | 28 January 1953 |
Political party | Labor |
James Henry Scullin (September 18, 1876 – January 28, 1953), Australian politician and ninth Prime Minister of Australia, was born in the small town of Trawalla in western Victoria, the son of John Scullin a railway worker, and Ann (née Logan) both of Irish Catholic descent from Derry. He was educated at state primary schools and then worked as a grocer in Ballarat while studying at night school and privately in public libraries and honing his public speaking skills in local debating clubs. He joined the Labor Party in 1903 and became an organiser for the Australian Workers' Union, then editor of a Labor newspaper in Ballarat, the Evening Echo. He was a devout Catholic, a teetotaller and a non-smoker all his life.
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[edit] Political career
Scullin was the 9th Prime Minister of Australia. He stood for the House of Representatives seat of Division of Ballarat,in 1906 against Alfred Deakin, but lost. In 1910 he was elected to the House for the country seat of Corangamite, but he was defeated in 1913 and went back to editing the Evening Echo. He established a reputation as one of Labor's leading public speakers and experts on finance, and was a strong opponent of conscription. After World War I he came close to outright pacifism. In 1922 he won a by-election for the safe Labor seat of Yarra in inner Melbourne, and in 1928 he was elected Labor leader following the resignation of Matthew Charlton.
In 1929 the conservative government of Stanley Bruce fell when its industrial relations bill was defeated in the House of Representatives. In the subsequent elections Scullin campaigned as the defender of the industrial arbitration system and won a landslide victory, becoming Australia's first Catholic Prime Minister. The conservatives, however, retained control of the Senate. Two days after Scullin took office on 22 October 1929, the New York stockmarket crashed and Australia became caught up in the worldwide Great Depression.
The Depression hit Australia hard in 1930, with the collapse in export markets for Australia's agricultural products causing mass unemployment. The Scullin government, guided by orthodox economic advice, was unable to cope, and the Labor Party was rent by internal conflict over how to respond. The Treasurer (finance minister), Ted Theodore, was an early advocate of John Maynard Keynes' Keynesian economic ideas, and advocated deficit financing as a means of reflating the economy, but his Cabinet colleagues Joseph Lyons and James Fenton strongly supported traditional deflationary economic policies.
In June 1930 the government suffered a heavy loss when Theodore was forced to resign after he was criticised by a Queensland Royal Commission inquiring into a scandal (the Mungana affair) dating back to Theodore's time as Premier of Queensland. Scullin took over the Treasury portfolio. Matters were made worse by Scullin's decision to travel to London to seek an emergency loan and to attend the Imperial Conference. While in London Scullin succeeded in gaining loans for Australia at reduced interest. He also succeeded in having King George V appoint Sir Isaac Isaacs as the first Australian-born Governor-General, despite the King's reluctance and the furious response of the conservative opposition in Australia, who attacked the appointment as tantamount to republicanism.
With Scullin out of the country for the whole second half of 1930, Fenton (as Acting Prime Minister) and Lyons (as Acting Treasurer) were left in charge and insisted on pursuing deflationary policies, arousing great opposition in the Labor caucus. In contact with Fenton and Lyons in London through the awkward means of regular cables, Scullin felt he had no choice but to agree to the recommendations of advisers from the Bank of England, supported by Lyons and Fenton, that government spending be heavily cut, despite the suffering this caused. These decisions led to furious infighting in the government and destroyed any semblance of party unity.
[edit] Decline and defeat
During 1931 the Scullin government disintegrated. In January Scullin returned to Australia and decided to reinstate Theodore as Treasurer. Lyons, Fenton and their supporters resigned from the ministry in protest and soon joined up with the Nationalist Opposition to form the United Australia Party, led by Lyons. Meanwhile the Labor Premier of New South Wales, Jack Lang was campaigning for economic policies much more left-wing than Theodore's, calling for Australia to repudiate its foreign debt and take other radical measures. In March Lang's supporters in the federal Parliament had split from the Labor Party, forming a "Lang Labor" group, which, combined with the defections of Lyons and his supporters, had deprived the Scullin Government of its majority in the House of Representatives. However, the Government limped on until November, due to the reluctance of the Langite MPs to vote it down. Finally, however, on 25 November 1931, the Langite MPs, attacking the government with accusations of impropriety, voted with the Opposition to pass a motion of no confidence, forcing an early election.
Labor was defeated in a massive landslide 1931. The official Labor Party, which had won 47 seats out of 75 in the House of Representatives in 1929, was reduced to a mere 14 (Lang Labor won another 4), and Lyons became Prime Minister. Scullin felt traumatised by the experience of presiding over such a disastrous period, but stayed on as Labor leader. After losing another election in 1934, he resigned the leadership. He remained in Parliament and became a trusted adviser to later Labor Prime Ministers John Curtin and Ben Chifley. He retired in 1949 and died in Melbourne in 1953 at the age of 76. Historians have judged him as a conscientious, well-meaning politician who was simply overwhelmed by events.
[edit] See also
[edit] References
[edit] External links
- James Scullin - Australia's Prime Ministers / National Archives of Australia
Parliament of Australia | ||
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Preceded by Albert Gardiner |
Deputy Leader of the Labor Party 1927 – 1928 |
Succeeded by Arthur Blakeley |
Preceded by Mathew Charlton |
Leader of the Labor Party 1928 – 1935 |
Succeeded by John Curtin |
Leader of the Opposition 1928-1930 |
Succeeded by John Latham |
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Preceded by Stanley Bruce |
Prime Minister of Australia 1929 – 1931 |
Succeeded by Joseph Lyons |
Preceded by E G Theodore |
Treasurer of Australia 1930 – 1931 |
Succeeded by E G Theodore |
Preceded by Joseph Lyons |
Leader of the Opposition 1931-1935 |
Succeeded by John Curtin |
Prime Ministers of Australia | |
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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 |
Leaders of the Australian Labor Party | |
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Watson | Fisher | Hughes | Tudor | Charlton | Scullin | Curtin | Chifley | Evatt | Calwell | Whitlam | Hayden | Hawke | Keating | Beazley | Crean | Latham | Beazley | Rudd |
Categories: Articles lacking sources from January 2007 | All articles lacking sources | Prime Ministers of Australia | Treasurers of Australia | Australian politicians | Australian Labor Party politicians | Members of the Australian House of Representatives | Members of the Cabinet of Australia | Roman Catholic politicians | Australian Roman Catholics | Irish Australians | People from Ballarat | 1876 births | 1953 deaths