Universalism in Australian Republicanism

The Menzies government sought to define Australia in terms of a pre-WWII identity. It looked to Britain as the Empire, race and foundation of Australian nationalism. By the time Menzies retired and younger politicians such as Harold Holt and John Gorton took over, it was obvious that was no longer a description which could tie the polity together. It was in this environment that Donald Horne and Geoffrey Hutton wrote their arguments for an Australian Republic. Their call was fairly limited, and argued very little in change. It was mainly remove the Queen and Britain as the centre of Australian politics and nationalism. The Australian Republican Movement has adopted this same philosophy, but Republicanism is built on universal values of liberty and governance. The Dutton/Horne view of a Republic is too small for the Australian people to accept.

Single Issue Republicanism

Mark McKenna writes of the Republicanism of the 1960s;

... when Geoffrey Dutton and Donald Horne raised the question of a republic in 1963-64, the parameters of the modern republican debate were already evident. What Dutton and Horne said in the early 1960s did not differ greatly from what republicans would say in the 1990s.

That style of republicanism rested on;

Mark McKenna also added the final point that republicans of the 60s and 90s agreed that; " The Australian Republic was inevitable ". Those points mimic exactly the message that the Australian Republican Movement took to the people prior to 1999 referendum. This is a pretty small view of Republicanism, and ignores much of the intellectual ground work done in Australia by Republicans such as Dunmore-Lang, Deniehy, Harpur, Vosper etc. It also ignores much of the development of Republicanism by international figures such as James Madison and Thomas Jefferson. The ARM view of Republicanism suffers a poverty.

Universalism

Republicanism, both Australian and international, carries universal values. The most obvious of these is the absence of political and social privilege under government. A monarchy has no place in a Republic as it entrenches constitutionally the privilege of political and social position. The position of King or Queen is achieved without merit, or periodic popular vote. The main claim to a monarch's position is accident of birth.

With the entrenchment of political and social privilege often comes entitlement, impunity and soon after, tyranny. When Dan Deniehy fought against the bunyip aristocracy and squattocracy he was fighting for universalism, egalitarianism and merit. When Charles Harpur wrote his preface to the Tree of Liberty he was arguing for the universalism of individual virtue and how an unmeritorious political system filled with privilege can pollute that virtue.

Universalism is an Australian Republican value, for after all, Republicans are Democrats too. This principle has often guided the discussions on South Sea Republic. For instance; Avocadia's Bill of Rights does not discriminate on the basis of gender, race, sexuality, or more importantly; citizenship. Individuals under the jurisdiction of a government have universal rights that are a result of their being an individual. There is no privilege attached to being a member of a majority or minority. This is an intrinsic value .

Suffrage is another universal Republican value. I have edited the Electoral Act in a previous article to ensure Universal Enfranchisement . We are both an immigrant nation and diasporic people at the same time. Migrants are constantly coming to Australia and remaining, while at the same time Australians are leaving our shores in ever-increasing numbers to work and live overseas. Neither group should be denied suffrage due to geographic circumstances of birth, or present location.

Other Australian Republicans have argued for a more universal approach; Wayne Hudson argued for Planetary Republicanism while Peter Botsman wrote in the Great Constitutional Swindle that;

... it is important for Australia to make the leap towards a broader concept of citizenship. The global citizen must have roaming rights. He or she must be entitled to certain indivisible rights wherever they may be in the world: a vote of equal value, the right to stand for political office and to advocate a cause or a positions, the right to liberty, free speech, freedom of association and the right to basic social, economic and cultural living standards. If multiculturalism has a positive endpoint it is this one.

I disagree with this final rights to, they are better expressed in liberty, rather than a right to. For instance, you have the liberty to pursue your own social, economic and cultural interests. Rather than guaranteeing a living standard. But other than this, Botsman approaches the issues of the universality of an individual under any government in typical Australian Republican terms.

Head of State

Dunmore-Lang and numerous other Republicans railed against the divine-appointment with a monarch as Head of State. The Australian Head of State poses an issue because of the poor separation of powers in the Australian parliamentary system. Separation of powers is a strong Republican value which saw it expressed in utilitarian form by James Madison in the American Republic.

The Westminster style of embedding the Executive in the Legislature is hack, or a patch, to route around the Executive power of the monarch while maintaining their ceremonial power. It is entirely unnecessary in the Australian system to maintain the monarch, but some fluidity between the constitutional monarchy and republic will need to remain. The Australian Parliamentary system has also proved fairly stable. It would be unwise to throw it all away in a revolutionary moment, far more prudent to adopt an evolutionary approach.

Australians want to elect the Governor-General, but an individual appointed to that position by direct election might clash with the Prime Minister over who has ultimate Executive authority. Currently the Prime Minister advises the Governor-General, but this can lead to what software developers call a race condition. This was seen in 1975 when the Governor-General gazumped the Prime Minister and democratically elected government.

Universalism demands a Bill of Rights which limits government's intrusion into individual liberties is present in a Republican Constitution. Any Parliamentary based Republican system also requires a firm separation of Executive responsibilities between the Governor-General and the Prime Minister. As a result, the Governor-General should be constitutionally required to defend individuals from laws which conflict with the Bill of Rights. The Governor-General becomes a Rights Referee .

This would stop the Governor-General and Prime Minister stepping on each other's Executive toes. It would give the Australian people the reason to vote for the Governor-general based on who will ensure their rights are protected (the GG however can only veto bills which directly contradict the Bill of Rights). The Governor-General becomes an elected representation of Republican and Universal virtue. This is a very positive role model and structure for liberty.

Opposing-isms

The universal values of Republicanism bring it into direct conflict with conservatism and nationalism. Both of which seek to use the legislature to entrench privilege for majorities and minorities that fly in the face of liberty.
dlatimer: Head of State: Australians do not want to elect the Governor-General. They want to elect the Head of State, who is currently the Queen.

Some of the powers this article outlines would create a limited executive presidency, such as the situation in France. There is very little support for this. Involving the Head of State in the politics of the nation would diminish the Leader of the Opposition who\'s role it is to develop alternative policies and ready an alternative government. It would diminish the High Court who has the role and resources to protect rights and liberties.

The role of Governors is primarily in ensuring consitutional propriety. That legislation and regulation is properly enacted and that ministrial advice is appropriately converted into executive action.

Prof John Power is currently proposing a council of state, to provide assistance and assurance that governors, increasingly chosen from the general community, are undertaking their duties effectively. More on that proposal, which involves realistic and effective reform in coming months.

This is how government can organised according to actual republican values, which are real-world values, critical of leaving absolute power in one master yet equally critical of weak ineffective governent with vague lines of responsibility.

Getting back to what the people want, let us give our future Head of State the primary role of representing the Australian community in an apolitical manner. Someone who is \"above politics\" not another politican. Someone who is respected and connected with Australians everywhere. If we are listening to Australians and interested in delivering, then we must listen to it all and deliver on each point.

This can be done. This can be be achieved if our future Head of State is elected and has no more executive power than the Queen in her Australian role.

See http://www.copernican.info

Civic Ideal vs Mystique

Something for modern republicans to ponder, in This Country , Mark McKenna writes that monarchists have cast the Governor-General as being a position that represents the people, giving it republican-like legitimacy. But republicanism is more than just removing the monarchy or having an Australian head-of-state, it is a whole series of constitutional and governance principles from entrenched rights, separation of powers, checks and balances, a representative legislative, legal equality, political equality, etc etc.

McKenna writes:

While republicans continue to stress the need for an Australian head of state, monarchists seek cleverly to further entrench the crowned republic by casting the prevailing system as the property of 'the people' - a strategy which, in spite of its deceit, at least acknowledges rhetorically the degree of voter alienation from the political system. This alienation is something that the republic has been unable to address.At the moment, republicans have not found a way to communicate any urgency or passion in their cause.

McKenna argues that two people and periods in Australian history amplify that. He discusses John Dunmore-Lang in the 1850s which is one of the most interesting decades, constitutionally, in Australian history. This site tends to focus far more on Dunmore-Lang's contemporaries, Charles Harpur and Dan Deniehy. McKenna writes that Dunmore-Lang saw republicanism in all politics and every political issue. He was able to articulate republican principles through each and every political issue of the day. I think it is fair to argue that South Sea Republic sees politics in a similar manner and has used republican principles to articulate policy responses to many political issues of the last three years.

This site has not been able to transmit any urgency to a wider republican audience, but I don't think that was South Sea Republic's intention anyway; one of the purposes to go into detail into the history, philosophies and doctrines of Australian Republicanism was to give it greater grounding, so that political issues could be answered and derived from a republican framework. This, IMO, should give Australian Republicanism a solid contemporary foundation rather than the 'boo' republic of the 1990s where Australian Republican leaders said 'republic' and Australians, being a republican people, nearly agreed with them on that alone.

The other historical persona McKenna draws on is Robert Menzies who managed to cast the decentralised and independent structure of Federation inside the history of the monarchy. This is conservative view of Australia, as without the history of Britain and the monarchy the conservatives are deprived of antiquity and would be forced to embrace a liberal future. This is the problem American Conservatives face as the US Republic was created through a liberal and rationalistic leap.

McKenna argues that Australian Republicans have not offered a civic ideal of Australia that has successfully countered the mystique of the crown. In my opinion the leap will have to come through liberalism, as the rationalism - or idea for the sake of it - will be an over-riding factor. Any conservative approach to a republic inevitably gives conservatism and obstruction an advantage, and this will mean all the errors, spaghetti code and failures through omission in our present constitution will continue to live on and produce inferior political outcomes.

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