[Home]History of Paul Keating

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Revision 8 . . November 19, 2001 10:52 am by (logged).9.128.xxx [more info - needs more on his time in the Hawke government]
Revision 7 . . (edit) September 30, 2001 11:29 am by Jimbo Wales [Not really an edit, just testing the software.]
  

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Changed: 2c2,6
. He was Treasurer under the Hawke government, when he challenged Hawke for leadership of the Labor Party. He won, and hence became Prime Minister.
. He was Treasurer under the Hawke government, when he challenged Hawke for leadership of the Labor Party. He won, and hence became Prime Minister. He led the Labor party to an unexpected election victory in 1993, where it is generally agreed that the attack on the Liberal Party's economic policies (including the electoral poison of a new value-added tax) he led was decisive.

As Prime Minister, Keating's interests and public perception from the narrowly focussed technocrat he seemed to be as Treasurer. His agenda included items such as severing Australia's ties with the British monarchy, reconciliation with Australia's indigenous population, and further engagement with Asia. These issues, which came to be known as Keating's "big picture" approach, was highly popular with the tertiary-educated middle class, but failed to capture the aspirations of rural and outer-suburban voters who swung to the Liberal Party in the 1996 election.

Since his election loss in 1996, Keating has mostly kept a low profile as a director of various companies.

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