House debates
Thursday, 9 August 2007
Questions without Notice
International Security
3:06 pm
Dave Tollner (Solomon, Country Liberal Party) Share this | Link to this | Hansard source
My question is addressed to the Minister for Foreign Affairs. Will the minister update the House on Australia’s international security policies?
Alexander Downer (Mayo, Liberal Party, Minister for Foreign Affairs) Share this | Link to this | Hansard source
I would like to thank the member for Solomon for his question and his interest. He is a great supporter of the Australian Defence Force. I know that Defence Force personnel in Solomon appreciate very much the work he does for them. I explained in a speech last night the importance that Australia places on our relations with the Pacific and the energetic and activist approach we take in promoting improvement in a region which obviously has real problems with stability. When I got back to my office, I noticed that the Leader of the Opposition had also made a speech on strategic policy. That is a speech which deserves a little bit of scrutiny. I flicked through it early in the evening, and it interested me for a couple of reasons. First of all, I was reflecting on what happened when Labor were in government. During the last five years of the Hawke-Keating government, they reduced defence personnel by 10,000. They closed down two army battalions. They cut defence spending by about four per cent in the last two years of the Keating government.
When we became the government, our Defence Force did not have the capability to do the outstanding work it does today, contributing to regional and international security. In the Leader of the Opposition’s speech last night, I noticed that he would commit to the forward outlays—that is, a three per cent real increase per annum in defence expenditure up to 2016. He would commit to forward outlays of the present government.
He said, very interestingly, that the ‘US alliance sits squarely in the centre of our strategic vision’. When he was the opposition spokesman on foreign affairs and, indeed, before his time, when others were spokesmen on foreign affairs, the Labor Party—all the people sitting in this chamber to the left of the Speaker—argued that this government was too close to the United States. They always argued that we were too close to the Americans and now they say that the ‘US alliance sits squarely in the centre of our strategic vision’. By the way, Mr Speaker, I think members on this side need to know that the Leader of the Opposition claims the American alliance was formed by John Curtin. Actually, the alliance was formally formed during the Menzies’ years, but informally it was formed back in the First World War. I know that those on the other side of the House never mention Billy Hughes. He was a good man, Billy Hughes. He was a great Labor leader—the last decent Labor leader. It was Billy Hughes who formed the American alliance.
Regardless of that, I make this point: the opposition leader has yet again said: ‘I agree with the Prime Minister. I agree with John Howard.’ The fact is that the opposition leader either agrees with John Howard or agrees with the trade union leadership. He has no ideas of his own. What is worse, if he became the Prime Minister, he would have no ideas of his own. He could, of course, still ring up the trade unions and ask them what to do. But what would he do when it came to economic policy? Ring up Peter Costello down in Melbourne and say: ‘What should I do next? I don’t know what to do.’ Ring up John Howard and ask what to do about security policy—
David Hawker (Speaker) Share this | Link to this | Hansard source
Order! The minister will refer to people by their title.
John Howard (Bennelong, Liberal Party, Prime Minister) Share this | Link to this | Hansard source
I would just be John Howard then.
Alexander Downer (Mayo, Liberal Party, Minister for Foreign Affairs) Share this | Link to this | Hansard source
The Prime Minister would be John Howard then. The point is that he would ring him up and ask him what to do about good security policy or he would ring up the member for Wentworth and ask him what to do about environment policy. The fact is that, if the Leader of the Opposition wins the election, we will of course be gone and he will have no-one left to copy. He will be on his own, and the only people he will be able to go to will be the ACTU. It is a pathetic thing that the Leader of the Opposition in this country has no ideas or policies but instead just a series of stunts.
We had the T-shirt competition this week, the Kevin07, cribbed almost literally from the Obama ‘08 website, as the Herald Sun pointed out, under the headline: ‘Copycat Kevin takes his cue from the US’. At least there is somebody making policy for the Leader of the Opposition at the moment, and that is the government. God forbid that we would lose the election and he would have no-one to guide him.