Quarterly Essay 19 Relaxed and Comfortable

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Quarterly Essay 19 Relaxed and Comfortable

The Liberal Party's Australia

Right-of-centre democratic ideologies

Author: Judith Brett

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Collection: Quarterly Essay

Language: English

Published by: Quarterly Essay

Published on: 1st August 2005

Format: LCP-protected ePub

Size: 275 Kb

ISBN: 9781921825187


What is the Liberal Party's core appeal to Australian voters?

Has John Howard made a dramatic break with the past, or has he ingeniously modernised the strategies of his party's founder, Sir Robert Menzies?

For Judith Brett, the government of John Howard has done what successful Liberal governments have always done: it has made its stand firmly at the centre and presented itself as the true guardian of the national interest. In doing this, John Howard has taken over the national traditions of the Australian Legend that Labor once considered its own.

Brett offers a lucid short history of the Liberals as well as an original account of the Prime Minister, arguing that, above all, he is a man obsessed with the fight against Labor. She explores both his inventiveness in practising the politics of unity and his great ruthlessness in practising the politics of division.

She incorporates fascinating interview material with Liberal voters, shedding light on some of the different ways in which the Liberals appeal as the natural party of government. Full of provocative ideas, Relaxed and Comfortable will change the way Australians see the last decade of national politics.

Where Keating spoke to the nation, Howard spoke from it

straight from the heart of its shared beliefs and commonsense understandings of itself.

Judith Brett, Relaxed and Comfortable

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