Chifley Government

Chifley Government
The Right Honourable
Ben Chifley
16th Prime Minister of Australia
Elections: 1946, 1949, 1951
In office
13 July 1945 – 19 December 1949
Monarch George VI
Governor General Prince Henry, Duke of Gloucester
William McKell
Preceded by Frank Forde
Succeeded by Robert Menzies

The Chifley Government refers to the federal Executive Government of Australia led by Prime Minister Ben Chifley. It was made up of members of the Australian Labor Party in the Australian Parliament from 1945 to 1949.

Contents

Background

When Labor Prime Minister John Curtin died towards the end of the Second World War in July 1945, Frank Forde served as Prime Minister from 6–13 July, before the party elected Ben Chifley as Curtin's successor.[1]

In office

Following his 1946 election as leader of the Australian Labor Party after the death of John Curtin, Chifley, a former railway engine driver, became Australia’s 16th Prime Minister on 13 July 1945.[2] The Second World War ended with the defeat of Japan in the Pacific just four weeks later. Chifley served as Prime Minister and Treasurer. To combat inflationary pressures, Chifley proposed to a continuation of wartime price and import controls, and rationing of scarce commodities.[3]

Chifley went on to win the 1946 election. Labor won 43 House of Representatives seats, with 15 won by the newly formed Liberal Party of Australia led by Robert Menzies, and 11 by their coalition partner, the Country Party (a further 4 seats went to splinter parties). In the Senate, Labor won 16 seats and the Liberal–Country Party coalition won 3 seats.[4]

H V Evatt (left) and Ben Chifley (middle) with Clement Attlee (right) at the Dominion and British Leaders Conference, London, 1946

Labor had sought to secure power over the supply of money and credit – amidst opposition from the private banks. A ruling found Labor’s 1945 banking legislation to be invalid and in mid-1947 Chifley tried to require local authorities and State governments to bank with the Commonwealth Bank. The Melbourne City Council appealed the legislation in the High Court of Australia, which ruled against the government. In repsonse Chifley proposed the nationalisation of the banks. The move alarmed conservatives and Menzies said it foretold of a ‘coming dictatorship in Australia’. Chifley told parliament the legislation would guard against both depression and inflation. Country Party leader Earle Page described the plan as a ‘communist ramp’. The High Court declared the law unconstitutional and an appeal to the Privy Council upheld the ruling. Chifley nevertheless refused to repeal the law, and it remained a controversial issue at the 1949 election.[3]

In the pursuit of centralist economic policy, the Chifley Government also made the Commonwealth the collector of income tax. Major national projects were also institured, including the Snowy Mountains Scheme and an assisted immigration program. Despite demobilisation of Australian forces following war's end, Australia faced a Labor shortage and Minister for Immigration Arthur Calwell launched the post war migration program – intended to bring out mainly British migrants to augment the Australian population.[3]

In foreign policy, attorney-general and minister for external affairs H V Evatt was active in the formation of the United Nations. Australia played a significant mediatory role in the early years of the United Nations, successfully lobbying for an increased role for smaller and middle-ranking nations and a stronger commitment to employment rights into the U.N. Charter. Evatt was elected president of the third session of the United Nations General Assembly (September 1948 to May 1949).[5] Internationally, the rise of Communism was a developing concern for many in Australia. Chifley sought to oppose the re-establishment of Dutch control of Indonesia and refused help to British efforts to quell the developing insurgency in Malaya. The Catholic Movement meanwhile campaigned heavily to drive Communists out of trade unions, prefiguring a coming split in the labor movement over the issue.[3]

At the conference of the New South Wales Labor Party in June 1949, Chifely sought to define the labour movement as having:[3]

[A] great objective – the light on the hill – which we aim to reach by working for the betterment of mankind... [Labor would] bring something better to the people, better standards of living, greater happiness to the mass of the people’.

With an increasingly uncertain economic outlook, after his attempt to nationalise the banks and a strike by the Communist-dominated Miners Federation, Chifley lost office at the 1949 federal election to Robert Menzies' Liberal-National Coalition.[6] The Liberal Party won 55 seats and the Country Party 19 in the House of Representatives to Labor’s 47 seatsand Labor commenced a 23 year period in opposition.[4]

See also

References


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