The Dismissal

Clip 1: Fraser has the numbers

2 min 53 sec ( skip to teachers’ notes)

Taken from the TV program The Dismissal (1983)

Original title classification PG – this clip chosen to be PG

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Curator’s clip description

Malcolm Fraser (John Stanton) is being interviewed by journalist Stuart Littlemore (playing himself). The Liberal leader will not be drawn on his party’s plans for the Supply Bill in the Senate. His desire to block Supply is assisted when a Labor Senator from Queensland dies and is replaced by a conservative Jo Bjelke Petersen appointee, Albert Field. This flies in the face of convention that dictates that a parliamentarian who dies in office be replaced by a person from the same political party. All the ingredients are now in place for a crisis in Australia’s political history, which will place the Governor-General at the centre of events.

Curator’s notes

Who would have thought the behind the scenes machinations of the party room and the media interview would make such compelling drama? The tension mounts as we find ourselves first with the Liberals and then with Labor so the audience knows exactly what is at stake at each stage. John Stanton as Fraser is masterly – his square jawed face and that smirk sometimes make you forget this is an actor, not the man himself,

Janet Bell, curator

Teachers’ notes

provided by The Le@rning Federation

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This clip, from the television miniseries The Dismissal, shows the then Liberal Opposition leader, Malcolm Fraser, played by John Stanton, being interviewed on television in 1975 by Stuart Littlemore, playing himself. Littlemore asks Fraser a number of questions related to his political intentions. In a cutaway to The Lodge, Sir John Kerr (John Meillon) watches the interview then starts to write a letter on the matter to the Queen. The scene cuts to an aerial shot of Brisbane. A voice-over announces the death of a Queensland Labor senator in office. A newsreader then announces that Queensland’s conservative premier, Joh Bjelke-Petersen, has appointed his own nominee, Albert Field, to fill the vacant Senate seat, thus breaking the tradition that in such situations replacement senators are chosen from the same party from which the previous occupant came.

Educational value points

  • The clip, from the television miniseries The Dismissal, shows a dramatic re-enactment of one of the key moments leading up to what was probably the most controversial constitutional crisis in Australian history – the dismissal of the Whitlam government in 1975. The filmic technique used is a dramatic re-creation of an interview between Stuart Littlemore and Malcolm Fraser, including both verbatim quotes and an off-camera exchange, that probably took place on the ABC program This Day Tonight. The effect of this technique is that viewers, with the benefit of hindsight, listen to and hear the words spoken in a new and differently informed context.
  • The clip demonstrates how politicians can use language to obfuscate or hide their intentions when they do not want to answer a question directly. Malcolm Fraser’s use of phrases such as ‘at the present moment’ and ‘at this stage it would be our intention’ allowed him to side-step questions he did not want to answer directly. In this clip, Littlemore’s off-camera interaction with Fraser confirms the fact that Fraser had no intention of answering his question directly.
  • The clip focuses on the political events immediately preceding the dismissal of the democratically elected Whitlam Labor government in 1975. The Australian Senate has the power to bring down a government by blocking or deferring a Supply Bill. Supply is the revenue raised from taxation, which the government of the day uses to fund the execution of its policies and to pay the public service. In Australia it is a political convention that if a government no longer has access to Supply it must either resign or be dismissed. In 1975, the Opposition, led by Malcolm Fraser, used its numbers in the Senate to defer Supply, which created the political crisis that saw the dismissal of the Whitlam Labor government by the governor-general, Sir John Kerr.
  • The repeated deferment of the Appropriation Bills in the Senate was the event that triggered the dismissal of the Whitlam government. All Australian Government legislation must be passed by both the House of Representatives and the Senate before becoming law. The political party that has the majority of members in the House of Representatives forms the Australian Government. The Senate is a house of review and can amend Bills introduced by the House of Representatives as well as reject any Bill.
  • John Malcolm Fraser (1930–) was the twenty-second prime minister of Australia. He was leader of the Liberal Party and was known as being right wing. He had been Minister for the Army and Minister for Education and Science in previous Liberal governments. In 1975 he successfully challenged Billy Snedden and became leader of the Liberal Party. He came to power as a result of the dismissal of the Labor government in 1975 and remained prime minister until 1983 when he was defeated at the general election by Labor’s Bob Hawke. Since retirement he has headed a number of foreign aid organisations such as CARE Australia and has become deeply involved in humanitarian issues.
  • John Stanton (1944–), who plays Malcolm Fraser in this clip, is one of Australia’s most experienced actors in television, film, voice-overs for radio and television, and on stage. His depiction captures Fraser’s mannerisms and expressions with great artistic skill. His first ongoing television role was in Bellbird in 1972, and he appeared in Homicide (1964–75) from 1973 to 1974 as Detective Pat Kelly. He has also appeared in the television series Stingers (1998–2004) and Halifax FP (1994–2001). He was the English-language announcer for the Sydney 2000 Olympics opening ceremony.
  • The governor-general of Australia is the official representative of the British monarchy in Australia. The office of governor-general was established in 1901 when Australia became a federation. Originally appointed by the British Government, following a crisis over the appointment of Sir Isaac Isaacs in 1929 the governor-general is now appointed by the prime minister of the day. The governor-general’s role is largely ceremonial except for the ‘reserve powers’, which have been used four times, including for the dismissal of the Labor government by Sir John Kerr.
  • Sir Joh Bjelke-Petersen (1911–2005) was the Country Party premier of Qld in 1975 when his appointment of an anti-Whitlam senator (Albert Patrick Field) precipitated a political crisis that ultimately brought down the federal Labor government. He held strongly right-wing views both economically and socially and won six consecutive elections, not least because of his manipulation of constituencies so that country votes counted for more than city votes. He won the 1972 election with only 20 per cent of the vote. He resigned in 1987 after the Fitzgerald Inquiry found that there was widespread corruption in the state police force and the National (formerly Country) Party.
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