- Michael Ahern (Australian politician)
Infobox_President | name =Mike Ahern
nationality =Australian
order =32ndPremier of Queensland
term_start =1 December 1987
term_end =22 September 1989
deputy =
predecessor =Joh Bjelke-Petersen
successor =Russell Cooper
birth_date =Birth date and age|1942|6|2|df=y
birth_place =
death_date =
death_place =
constituency =Landsborough
party =National Party of Australia
spouse =
profession =
religion =
footnotes =|Michael John Ahern AO (born
2 June 1942 ) is a formerQueensland National Party politician who wasPremier of Queensland from December 1987 to September 1989. After a long career in the government of SirJoh Bjelke-Petersen , Ahern became his successor amidst the controversy caused by theFitzgerald Inquiry into official corruption. Ahern's consensus style and political moderation contrasted strongly with Bjelke-Petersen's leadership, but he could not escape the division and strife caused by his predecessor's downfall.Early life
In common with most National Party politicians, Ahern had a rural background. His father
Jack Ahern was active in the Country Party (the former name for the National Party), in Landsborough and was campaign manager for Premier SirFrank Nicklin . From 1964 to 1967 Jack Ahern was President of the Country Party.The younger Ahern went to a
Toowoomba boarding school and then studiedAgricultural science at theUniversity of Queensland , afterwards became active in the Young Country Party. He was state president of the Young Country Party in 1967 and national president in 1968, as well as junior vice-president of the Country Party. He took Nicklin as his political mentor, and when Nicklin retired in 1966, Ahern nominated to succeed him in his Landsborough electorate. He was elected into theQueensland Legislative Assembly in 1968, being the youngest member of the Country Party in Parliament by nearly twenty years.Parliamentary career
When
Jack Pizzey , Nicklin's successor, died, Ahern's prospects suffered a setback when the wily conservativeJoh Bjelke-Petersen was elected as the Country Party's new leader. Bjelke-Petersen viewed Ahern with unconcealed mistrust. This was founded partly on Ahern's closeness to Nicklin, whom Bjelke-Petersen had resented; partly on Ahern's youth and intellect; and partly on Ahern'sRoman Catholicism , unpalatable to Bjelke-Petersen as the son of aLutheran preacher. Bjelke-Petersen was determined to stymie Ahern's ambitions to be inCabinet . Ahern was passed over for promotion twice during the 1970s.Ahern was chosen as National Party whip in 1972. He lobbied for Queensland to establish a system of parliamentary
committee s on the model of theCanadian parliament . Facing Bjelke-Petersen's opposition to such a system, he was successful in seeing established a Subordinate Legislation Committee and a Privileges Committee, the latter of which he became chair.Ahern once again found himself at odds with Bjelke-Petersen in his role as chair of the Select Committee on Education. The Queensland Department of Education proposed two new additions to the social science curriculum, resisted by fundamentalist lobbyists as promoting
secular humanism . Bjelke-Petersen immediately banned the two courses but faced a backlash from theQueensland Teachers Union and State School organisations. The government appointed the Parliamentary Select Committee with Ahern as chair to investigate. Ahern supported the recommendation thatsex education be incorporated into the curriculum but was predictably vetoed by Bjelke-Petersen. Nevertheless, the Committee's final report was eventually endorsed by the National Party and became policy.In 1980, Ahern nominated for the vacancy in the Deputy Leadership of the National Party as a way of securing his entry into Cabinet. Fearful of having Ahern as his deputy and rival, Bjelke-Petersen decided to placate him by offering the portfolio of Minister for Mines while successfully running his own preferred candidate,
Vic Sullivan , for Deputy Leader. Other portfolios held by Ahern over the course of his ministerial career were Minister for Primary Industries, Minister for Industry, Small Business and Technology, and Minister for Health and Environment. Ahern and was significantly younger than most of his Cabinet colleagues, and was the only member of cabinet with tertiary qualifications.By the late 1980s Sir Joh Bjelke-Petersen's (knighted in 1984) standing as Premier had begun to be compromised by the failure of the disastrous "
Joh for Canberra " campaign in 1987 and the establishment, against Bjelke-Petersen's will in 1987, of the Inquiry into Police Corruption and Other Matters led byTony Fitzgerald QC. Facing internal pressure to resign, in October 1987 Sir Joh announced he would step down in 1988 after hostingExpo '88 .Shortly afterwards, Sir Joh threw his support behind a proposal to have the
world's tallest building built near Brisbane Central Station, objected to by theBrisbane City Council and many sectors of the public. Facing objections also voiced within his own partyroom, Sir Joh met Sir Walter Campbell theGovernor of Queensland in November, with a request to allow him to purge dissenters from his Cabinet. Eventually Campbell agreed on24 November to allow him to sack Ahern and two other ministers.Sir Joh refused to call a party meeting to allow his opponents to request a leadership spill, so the Management Committee of the National Party called one for
26 November . Sir Joh boycotted this meeting, which elected Ahern as leader of the National Party, and refused to resign as Premier for a week, before finally stepping down on1 December .Premier
As Premier, Ahern faced a National Party that was increasingly riven between Bjelke-Petersen supporters and opponents, and a Fitzgerald Inquiry that was steadily provoking new revelations of official corruption at the very highest level during Bjelke-Petersen's tenure. Police commissioner Terry Lewis and several former cabinet Ministers were forced from their posts and convicted of criminal charges. Ahern, in a signature phrase, promised to implement the Inquiry's recommendations "lock, stock and barrel". Bjelke-Petersen worked actively to destabilise the government from outside of Parliament.
Ahern announced plans to reform the public service and the parliament but resisted calls to abolish the
gerrymander ed electoral system that favoured the National Party. Ahern also brought in legislation relating todomestic violence and established theSouthbank Corporation to redevelop the site ofExpo '88 (now South Bank Parklands). Ahern oversaw the parliamentary dismissal of aSupreme Court of Queensland judge,Angelo Vasta , who had been adversely implicated in some findings of the Fitzgerald Inquiry.The publication of the results of the Fitzgerald Inquiry in 1989 were seriously damaging to the Nationals, and although Ahern was not implicated in any form of corruption, hardline Bjelke-Petersen supporters blamed him for his alleged weakness and vacillation in allowing the crisis to engulf the National Party. On
25 September 1989 Russell Cooper , a National Party traditionalist, successfully challenged Ahern for the leadership. Ahern resigned from Parliament and proceeded to a successful business career. The Nationals lost the election just two months later, ending 32 years of continuous National Party government.Further reading
*Reynolds, Paul L. Michael John Ahern: The Conservative Reformer. In Murphy D, Joyce R, Cribb M, and Wear, R (Ed.), "The Premiers of Queensland" pp. 337-356. Brisbane: University of Queensland Press. ISBN 0-7022-3173-8.
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