School of Historical and Philosophical Studies - Theses

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    Some aspects of the federal political career of Andrew Fisher
    Humphreys, Edward William ( 2005)
    Andrew Fisher was prime minister of Australia three times. During his second ministry (1910-1913) he headed a government that was, until the 1940s, Australia's most reformist government. Fisher's second government controlled both Houses; it was the first effective Labor administration in the history of the Commonwealth. In the three years, 113 Acts were placed on the statute books changing the future pattern of the Commonwealth. Despite the volume of legislation and changes in the political life of Australia during his ministry, there is no definitive full-scale biographical published work on Andrew Fisher. There are only limited articles upon his federal political career. Until the 1960s most historians considered Fisher a bit-player, a second ranker whose main quality was his moderating influence upon the Caucus and Labor ministry. Few historians have discussed Fisher's role in the Dreadnought scare of 1909, nor the background to his attempts to change the Constitution in order to correct the considered deficiencies in the original drafting. This thesis will attempt to redress these omissions from historical scholarship. Firstly, it investigates Fisher's reaction to the Dreadnought scare in 1909 and the reasons for his refusal to agree to the financing of the Australian navy by overseas borrowing. It will consider the proposition that Andrew Fisher, while wanting an Australian Navy, was not prepared to go to foreign lenders for finance, believing that, overall, Australia was rich enough to pay for her defence without burdening future generations with debt. Secondly it enquires into his attempts in his second ministry of 1910-1913 to correct the Constitution, by referenda, in the areas of trade, commerce, and labour in order to be able to carry out the fighting platform of the Labor Party.