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Alfred Deakin (3 August 1856 – 7 October 1919), Australian politician, was a leader of the movement for Australian federation and later the second Prime Minister of Australia. In the last quarter of the nineteenth century, Deakin was a major contributor to the establishment of liberal reforms in the colony of Victoria, including the protection of rights at work. He also played a major part in establishing irrigation in Australia. It is likely that he could have been Premier of Victoria, but he chose to devote his energy to federation. Throughout
the 1890s Deakin was a participant in conferences of representatives of
the Australian colonies that were established to draft a constitution for the proposed federation.
He played an important role in ensuring that the draft was liberal and
democratic and in achieving compromises to enable its eventual success.
Between conferences, he worked to popularise the concept of federation
and campaigned for its acceptance in colonial referenda. He then fought
hard to ensure acceptance of the proposed constitution by the Government of the United Kingdom. As Prime Minister, Deakin completed a vast legislative program that makes him, with Labor's Andrew Fisher, the founder of an effective Commonwealth government. He expanded the High Court, provided major funding for the purchase of ships — leading to the establishment of the Royal Australian Navy as a significant force under the Fisher government — and established Australian control of Papua. Confronted by the rising Australian Labor Party in 1909, he merged his Protectionist Party with Joseph Cook's Anti-Socialist Party to create the Commonwealth Liberal Party (known commonly as the Fusion), the main ancestor of the modern Liberal Party of Australia. The Deakin-led Liberal Party government lost to Fisher Labor at the 1910 election,
which saw the first time a federal political party had been elected
with a majority in either house in Federal Parliament. Deakin resigned
from Parliament prior to the 1913 election, with Joseph Cook winning the Liberal Party leadership ballot. Alfred Deakin was the second child of English immigrants, William Deakin and his wife Sarah Bill, daughter of a Shropshire farmer, who had migrated to Australia in 1850 and settled in the Melbourne suburb of Collingwood in
1853. William Deakin worked as a storekeeper, water carter and general
carrier and then became a partner in a coaching business and later
manager of Cobb and Co in Victoria. Deakin was born at 90 George Street, Fitzroy, Melbourne, and began his education at the age of four in a boarding school that was initially located at Kyneton, but later moved to the Melbourne suburb of South Yarra. In 1864 he became a day pupil at Melbourne Grammar School, but did not study seriously until his later school years, when he came
under the influence of J.H. Thompson and the school's headmaster, John Edward Bromby, whose oratorical style Deakin admired and later partly adopted. In 1871 he matriculated with good passes in history, algebra and Euclid and basic passes in English and Latin. He began evening classes in law at the University of Melbourne, while working as a schoolteacher and private tutor. He also spoke frequently at the University Debating Club founded by Charles Henry Pearson in 1874, read widely, dabbled in writing and became a lifelong spiritualist, holding the office of President of the Victorian Spiritualists' Union. Deakin graduated in 1877 and began practising as a barrister, but had difficulty in obtaining briefs. In May 1878, he met David Syme, the owner of the Melbourne daily The Age, who paid him to contribute reviews, leaders and articles on politics and literature. In 1880, he became editor of The Leader, The Age's weekly. During this period Syme converted him from supporting free trade to protectionism. He became active in the Australian Natives Association and began to practise vegetarianism. Deakin stood for the largely rural seat of West Bourke in the Victorian Legislative Assembly in February 1879, as a supporter of Legislative Council reform,
protection to encourage manufacturing and the introduction of a land
tax to break up the big agricultural estates, and won by 79 votes. Due
to a number of voters being disenfranchised by a shortage of voting
papers, he resigned and lost the subsequent by-election by 15 votes,
narrowly lost the seat in the February 1880 general election, but won
it in yet another early general election in July 1880. The radical Premier, Graham Berry, offered him the position of Attorney-General in August, but Deakin turned him down. In
1882, Deakin married Elizabeth Martha Anne ("Pattie") Browne, daughter
of a well-known spiritualist. They lived with Deakin's parents until
1887, when they moved to "Llanarth", in Walsh Street, South Yarra. They
had three daughters, Ivy, Stella and Vera by 1891. In
1883 Deakin became Commissioner for Public Works and Water Supply, and
in 1884 he became Solicitor-General and Minister of Public Works. In
1885 Deakin secured the passage of the colony's pioneering Factories
and Shops Act, enforcing regulation of employment conditions and hours
of work. In December 1884 he went to the United States to investigate irrigation, and presented a report in June 1885, Irrigation in Western America. Percival Serle described
this report as "... a remarkable piece of accurate observation,
and was immediately reprinted by the United States government". In
June 1886, he introduced legislation to nationalise water rights and
provide state-aid for irrigation works that helped establish irrigation in Australia. In
1885, Deakin became Chief Secretary and Commissioner for Water Supply
and from 1890 Minister for Health and, briefly, Solicitor-General. In
1887 he led Victoria's delegation to the Imperial Conference in London,
where he argued forcibly for reduced colonial payments for the defence
provided by the British Navy and for improved consultation in relation to the New Hebrides. In 1889, he became the member for the Melbourne seat of Essendon and Flemington. In 1890 the government was brought down over its use of the militia to protect non-union labour during the maritime strike.
In addition, Deakin lost his fortune and his father's fortune in the
property crash of 1893, and had to return to the bar to restore his
finances. In 1892, he unsuccessfully defended the mass murderer Frederick Bailey Deeming and assisted the defence in the 1893–94 libel trial of David Syme. After
1890, Deakin refused all offers of cabinet posts and devoted his
attention to the movement for federation. He was Victoria's delegate to the Australasian Federal Conference, convened by Sir Henry Parkes in
Melbourne in 1890, which agreed to hold an intercolonial convention to
draft a federal constitution. He was a leading negotiator at the
Federal Conventions of 1891, which produced a draft constitution that
contained much of the Constitution of Australia,
as finally enacted in 1900. Deakin was also a delegate to the second
Australasian Federal Convention, which opened in Adelaide in March 1897
and concluded in Melbourne in January 1898. He opposed conservative
plans for the indirect election of senators, attempted to weaken the
powers of the Senate — and
in particular sought to prevent it from being able to defeat money
bills — and supported wide taxation powers for the federal government. Deakin
often had to reconcile differences and find ways out of apparently
impossible difficulties. Between and after these meetings, he travelled
through the country addressing public meetings and he was partly
responsible for the large majority in Victoria at each referendum. In 1900 Deakin travelled to London with Edmund Barton and Charles Kingston to oversee the passage of the federation bill through the Imperial Parliament, and took part in the negotiations with Joseph Chamberlain, the Colonial Secretary, who insisted on the right of appeal from the High Court to the Privy Council. Eventually a compromise was reached, under which constitutional (inter se) matters could be finalised in the High Court, but other matters could be appealed to the Privy Council. Deakin defined himself as an "independent Australian Briton," favouring a self-governing Australia but loyal to the British Empire.
He certainly did not see federation as marking Australia's independence
from Britain. On the contrary, Deakin was a supporter of closer empire
unity, serving as president of the Victorian branch of the Imperial Federation League, a cause he believed to be a stepping stone to a more spiritual world unity.
In 1901 Deakin was elected to the first federal Parliament as MP for Ballaarat, and became Attorney-General in the ministry headed by Edmund Barton.
He was active, especially in drafting bills for the Public Service,
arbitration and the High Court. His second reading speech on the
Immigration Restriction Bill to implement the White Australia Policy was
notable in avoiding blatant racism by arguing that it was necessary to
exclude the Japanese because of their good qualities, which would place
them at an advantage over European Australians. His March 1902 speech
in favour of the bill establishing the High Court of Australia, helped overcome significant opposition to its establishment.
When
Barton retired to become one of the founding justices of the High
Court, Deakin succeeded him as Prime Minister on 24 September 1903. His Protectionist Party did not have a majority in either House, and he held office only by courtesy of the Labor Party,
which insisted on legislation more radical than Deakin was willing to
accept. In April 1904 he resigned without having passed any
legislation. The Labor leader Chris Watson and the Free Trade leader George Reid succeeded him, but neither could form a stable ministry. Deakin
resumed office in mid 1905, and retained it for three years. During
this, the longest and most successful of his terms as Prime Minister,
his government was responsible for much policy and legislation giving
shape to the Commonwealth during its first decade, including bills to
create an Australian currency. The Copyright Act was passed in 1905, the Bureau of Census and Statistics was established in 1906, Bureau of Meteorology was established in 1908 and the Quarantine Act was passed in 1908. In 1906 Deakin's government amended the Judiciary Act to increase the size of the High Court to five judges, as envisaged in the constitution, and appointed Isaac Isaacs and H.B. Higgins to
fill the two additional seats. The first protective Federal tariff, the
Australian Industries Protection Act was passed. This "New Protection"
measure attempted to force companies to pay fair wages by setting
conditions for tariff protection, although the Commonwealth had no
powers over wages and prices. The Papua Act of 1905 established an Australian administration for the former British New Guinea and Deakin appointed Hubert Murray as Lieutenant Governor of Papua in
1908, who ruled it for a 32 year period as a benevolent paternalist.
His government passed a bill for the transfer of control of the Northern Territory from South Australia to the Commonwealth, which became effective in 1911. In
December 1907, he introduced the first bill to establish compulsory
military service, which was also strongly supported by Labor's Watson and Billy Hughes.
He had long opposed the naval agreements to fund Royal Navy protection
of Australia although Barton had agreed in 1902 that the Commonwealth
would take over such funding from the colonies. In 1906 he announced
that Australia would purchase destroyers, and in 1907 travelled to an
Imperial Conference in London to discuss the issue, without success. In
1908 he invited Theodore Roosevelt's Great White Fleet to
visit Australia, in a symbolic act of independence from Britain. The
Surplus Revenue Act of 1908 provided £250,000 for naval
expenditure, although these funds were first applied by the Andrew Fisher Labor government, creating the first independent navy in the British empire.
In 1908 Deakin was again forced from office by Labor. He then formed a coalition, the "Fusion", with his old conservative opponent George Reid,
and returned to power in May 1909 at the head of Australia's first
majority government. The Fusion was seen by many as a betrayal of
Deakin's liberal principles, and he was called a "Judas" by Sir William Lyne. He ordered the dreadnought battle cruiser Australia and
established the financial agreement of 1909, which gave the States
annual grants of 25 shillings ($2.50) per person, which was the basis
of Commonwealth - state financial arrangements until 1927. In the April 1910 election his party was soundly defeated by Labor under Andrew Fisher.
Deakin
retired from Parliament in April 1913 and withdrew from public life. He
was president of an Australian commission for the international exhibition held in San Francisco to celebrate the opening of the Panama Canal, but found his duties difficult because of severe progressive memory loss (possibly due to early-onset Alzheimer's disease). He became an invalid and died in 1919 of meningoencephalitis aged only 63. He is buried in the St. Kilda Cemetery alongside his wife in Victoria.
Deakin continued to write prolifically throughout his career. He wrote anonymous political commentaries for the London Morning Post even while he was Prime Minister. His account of the federation movement appeared as The Federal Story in
1944 and is a vital primary source for this history. His account of his
career in Victorian politics in the 1880s was published as The Crisis in Victorian Politics in 1957. His collected journalism was published as Federated Australia in 1968. Though
Alfred Deakin always took pains to obscure the spiritual dimensions of
his character from public gaze, he felt a strong sense of providence and destiny working in his career. Like Dag Hammarskjöld much
later, Deakin's sincere longing for spiritual fulfillment led him to
express a sense of unworthiness in his private diaries which mingled
with his literary aspirations as a poet. His private prayer diaries, like those of Samuel Johnson, express a profound contemplative (though more ecumenical) Christian view of the importance of humility in seeking divine assistance with his career. "A
life, the life of Christ," Deakin wrote "that is the one thing
needful - the only revelation required is there... We have but to live it." In
1888, as an example relevant to his work for Federation, Alfred Deakin
prays: "Oh God, grant me that judgment & forsight which will enable
me to serve my country - guide me and strengthen me, so that I may follow
& persuade others to follow the path which shall lead to the
elevation of national life & thought & permanence of well
earned prosperity - give me light & truth & influence for the
highest & the highest only." As Walter Murdoch pointed out "[Deakin] believed himself to be inspired, and to have a divine message and mission." Historian Manning Clark whose History of Australia cites extensively from his studies of Alfred Deakin's private diaries in the National Library of Australia wrote: "By reading the world's scriptures and mystics a
deep peace had settled far inside [Deakin]: now he felt a 'serenity at
the core of my heart.' He wanted to know whether participation in the
world's affairs would disturb that serenity ... he was tormented by the
thought that the emptiness of the man within corresponded with the
emptiness of society at large where Mammon had found a new demesne to infest." Alfred
Deakin was almost universally liked, admired and respected by his
contemporaries, who called him "Affable Alfred." He made his only real
enemies at the time of the Fusion, when not only Labor but some
liberals such as Sir William Lyne reviled him as a traitor. He
had a long and happy marriage and was survived by his wife and their
three daughters. His descendants are still active in Melbourne
political and business circles (notably his great-grandson Tom Harley), and he is regarded as a founding father by the modern Liberal Party. The Division of Deakin, Alfred Deakin High School, Deakin University, Deakin Avenue in the rural city of Mildura, Deakin House at Melbourne Grammar School and the Canberra suburb of Deakin are named after him. In 1969 Australia Post honoured him on a postage stamp bearing his portrait. |