Paul John 1
ALREVIEW 43
Paul John I
Paul Keating Prime Minister, by
Edna Carew (Allen and Unwin,
1992). Reviewed by Craig Mc
Gregor.
There he is: Prime Minister of
A u stralia (at la st), w ritten
ab ou t,
in terv iew ed
and
watched every day—and still an
enigma. He is even an enigma to
Edna Carew, despite a profes
sionally researched and written
biography by someone who has
established herself as a leading
finance writer and has the back
ground to tackle Keating in
precisely the arena where he ex
cels: economic policy.
I had read Carew's earlier version of
this book, then titled Keating: A Biog
raphy, and enjoyed it—though I was a
bit put off by the heavy concentration
on Keating's financial views; it was as
though it were a book about Keating
the Treasurer, rather than Keating the
Man. This new edition is essentially
an updating of the earlier one to take
advantage of Keating's accession to
the prime ministership, and it has all
the virtues and flaws of the original.
In other words, it brings the Keating
saga through to 1992 without really
offering any new insights into the man
or revising the style and tone of what
was already a successful biography.
First, the virtues. This is an accessible
and easily read book which follows
Keating's career in classic chronologi
cal order (first sentence: "Paul John
Keating was born on 18 January 1944
in the suburb of Bankstown...") and is
mercifully free of economic jargon. It
has the succinct clarity of mainstream
feature journalism of the sort one has
come to expect in the quality financial
press in Australia, with lots of direct
quotes, comments from other jour
nalists, clips from contemporary
newspaper reports and some useful
scene-setting about what was happen
ing in the politics of the nation at large
as well as Keating's role in it.
Carew gives a good deal of emphasis,
rightly, to K eating's working
class/Irish/Catholic background,
though without investigating very far
just how much of this Keating has kept
and how much he has discarded—a
fascinating question, and one which,
if she had been able to answer it, might
have given her a more conclusive or at
least central theme to wrestle with in
the course of her narrative. She deals,
briefly, with Keating's wealth, his pur
suit of style and good taste, his
friendships with people like property
developer Warren Anderson ("I like
stars"). But it is all very circumspect,
as though she felt she had to cover the
ground without expecting to reveal
anything insightful about Keating's
character.
It's left to Keating's own statements
about his allegiances, especially in the
later part of the book, to get across the
commitment to his background which
he still seems to feel so strongly—so
much so that John Hewson accused
him in parliament recently of "sound
ing like Jack Lang" (not realising that
it might have been the greatest com
pliment he could pay his opponent).
Carew's quick description of Jack
Lang reads uncannily like a descrip
tion of Keating himself:
Bom the son of a watchmaker, and
forced to supplement the family in
come as a child by selling
newspapers, Lang was determined
to shake free of working class pover
ty. He became a successful account
ant and a wealthy real-estate agent,
and later a newspaper publisher. His
entrepreneurial streak and profitable
business interests...
Since becoming PM Keating has let
some of that personal ideology come
through;
his
old-fashioned
Bankstown
nationalism ,
his
republicanism, his Irish suspicion of
the Brits. The book brings out, too, the
personal elan and vivacity which
charms even hardbitten Canberra
press gallery commentators like Alan
Ramsey.
Carew is good at charting Keating's
ambition, his rise from Young Labor
A L R : SEPTEMBER 1992
star to a three-week minister in the
dying days of the Whitlam govern
ment, to Hawke's Treasurer to, even
tually, Prime Minister ("He's a fixer,
he's always been a fixer"—CRA chief
economist John McLeod). The chap
ters on his years as Treasurer are
detailed and illuminating, with the
successive policy crises and changes
documented with extracts from
speeches, press conferences and
newspaper columnists. There is also a
chapter on "Old clocks and four-letter
words" which lumps together a lot of
human interest material about Keat
ing, from his interest in French Empire
antiques to his explosive verbal abuse
to his one-eyed belief that you must be
utterly for him or utterly against him.
For Keating, the world is a jungle
peopled by friends and enemies—
nothing in between.
And yet, at the end, Keating the man
seems as much a mystery as ever. It's
as though Edna Carew has recounted
the outline of Keating's character
without ever trying to understand
what the man is really like, what
makes him run, what is bravura and
what is real passion, what the hell he
is doing it all for. This is no
psychological portrait. There is vir
tually no attempt at interpretation.
Even Keating's economic policies are
simply reported, without any attempt
to link them with Keating's persona or
the political/personal/ideological
changes which may have prompted
them. I was disappointed that Carew
didn't even draw on her own exper
tise to 'place' her subject in the context
of the economic debates which have
dominated the political agenda in
Australia for the last decade. Keating
is clearly not just a pragmatist, but this
biography reads as though that's all
he is.
So what is he? A technocrat? A moder
niser? What's his agenda—apart from
the most difficult one of all, winning
the next election and keeping John
Hewson out of office? He's certainly
an activist, having pushed through
the deregulation of the financial sys
tem and a series of tax reforms which
typically combine progressive (capital
44
M R E V IE W
gains and fringe benefits) and regres
sive (lower taxes for high income
earners) features. He's won the ad
miration of good, solid Left ministers
such as Brian Howe.
Biography is a difficult art, and Edna
Carew's is the best one of Keating we
have. Her task has been made doubly
difficult by having someone as com
plex and elusive as Paul John to deal
with. She doesn't seem to have had
much direct access to the man himself.
What we are left with is a cautious,
impersonal report—at a distance, as it
were—of one of the most dazzling
figures in contemporary Australian
politics. Whether he is as capable of
dazzling the Australian electorate as
he has the media we will know next
year.
CRAIG McGREGOR's Headliners is
published by University of
Queensland Press.
Ole Man History
The End of History and the Last
Man, by Francis Fukuyama (Lon
don, 1992, H am ish Hamilton).
Reviewed by Brett Evans.
Are we witnessing a "world
wide liberal revolution"? Are
we living in the "old age of
mankind"? Indeed, has History
with a capital 'H' really ended?
Francis Fukuyama thinks so—
but, in the words of Mandy
Rice-Davies, "H e would say
that, wouldn't he".
Educated at the University of Chicago
where one of his professors was Allan
Bloom, author of The Closing (...truncated)