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Prime Minister of Australia

The prime minister of Australia is the head of government of the Commonwealth of Australia. The prime minister heads the executive branch of the federal government of Australia and is also accountable to federal parliament under the principles of responsible government. The current prime minister is Anthony Albanese of the Australian Labor Party, who became prime minister on 23 May 2022.[6][7]

Prime Minister of Australia
Incumbent
Anthony Albanese
since 23 May 2022
Australian Government
Style
StatusHead of government
Member of
Reports toHouse of Representatives
Residence
SeatCanberra
AppointerGovernor-General[4]
Term lengthAt the Governor-General's pleasure[3]
Formation1 January 1901; 122 years ago (1901-01-01)[4]
First holderEdmund Barton[4]
DeputyDeputy Prime Minister
SalaryA$564,360 annually (2022)[5]
Websitepm.gov.au

Formally appointed by the governor-general, the role and duties of the prime minister are not described by the Australian constitution but rather defined by constitutional convention deriving from the Westminster system. To become prime minister, a politician should be able to command the confidence of the House of Representatives. As such, the prime minister is typically the leader of the majority party or coalition. Prime ministers do not have a set duration or number of terms, but an individual's term generally ends when their political party loses a federal election, or they lose or relinquish the leadership of their party.

Executive power is formally vested in the monarch and exercised by the governor-general on advice from government ministers, who are nominated by the prime minister and form the Federal Executive Council. The most senior ministers form the federal cabinet, which the prime minister chairs. The prime minister also heads the National Cabinet and the National Security Committee. Administrative support is provided by the Department of the Prime Minister and Cabinet. The prime minister has two official residences: The Lodge in Canberra and Kirribilli House in Sydney, as well as an office at Parliament House.

Thirty-one people have served as prime minister, the first of whom was Edmund Barton taking office on 1 January 1901 following federation of the British colonies in Australia. The longest-serving prime minister was Robert Menzies, who served over 18 years, and the shortest-serving was Frank Forde, who served one week. There is no legislated line of succession, however convention determines that the governor-general shall commission the deputy prime minister on a caretaker basis in the event of a vacancy.

Constitutional basis and appointment

 
Australia's first prime minister, Edmund Barton, at the central table in the House of Representatives in 1901.

The prime minister of Australia is appointed by the governor-general of Australia under Section 64 of the Australian Constitution, which empowers the governor-general to appoint ministers of state (the office of prime minister is not mentioned) on the advice of the Federal Executive Council, and requires them to be members of the House of Representatives or the Senate, or become members within three months of the appointment. The prime minister and treasurer are traditionally members of the House, but the Constitution does not have such a requirement.[8] Before being sworn in as a minister of state, a person must first be sworn in as a member of the Federal Executive Council if they are not already a member. Membership of the Federal Executive Council entitles the member to the style of The Honourable (usually abbreviated to The Hon) for life, barring exceptional circumstances. The senior members of the Executive Council constitute the Cabinet of Australia.

The prime minister is, like other ministers, normally sworn in by the governor-general and then presented with the commission (letters patent) of office. When defeated in an election, or on resigning, the prime minister is said to "hand in the commission" and actually does so by returning it to the governor-general. In the event of a prime minister dying in office, or becoming incapacitated, or for other reasons, the governor-general can terminate the commission. Ministers hold office "during the pleasure of the governor-general" (s. 64 of the Constitution of Australia), so in practice, the governor-general can dismiss a minister at any time, by notifying them in writing of the termination of their commission; however, their power to do so except on the advice of the prime minister is heavily circumscribed by convention.

 
John Gorton being sworn in as the 19th Prime Minister on 10 January 1968. To date, Gorton is the only Senator to have served as Prime Minister, though he would swiftly move to the House of Representatives as the member for Higgins.

According to convention, the prime minister is the leader of the majority party or largest party in a coalition of parties in the House of Representatives which holds the confidence of the House. The governor-general may also dismiss a prime minister who is unable to pass the government's supply bill through both houses of parliament, including the Australian Senate, where the government doesn't normally command the majority, as happened in the 1975 constitutional crisis.[9] Other commentators argue that the governor-general acted improperly in 1975 as Whitlam still retained the confidence of the House of Representatives, and there are no generally accepted conventions to guide the use of the governor-general's reserve powers in this circumstance.[10] However, there is no constitutional requirement that the prime minister sit in the House of Representatives, or even be a member of the federal parliament (subject to a constitutionally prescribed limit of three months), though by convention this is always the case. The only case where a member of the Senate was appointed prime minister was John Gorton, who subsequently resigned his Senate position and was elected as the member for Higgins in the House of Representatives.

Despite the importance of the office of prime minister, the Constitution does not mention the office by name. The conventions of the Westminster system were thought to be sufficiently entrenched in Australia by the authors of the Constitution that it was deemed unnecessary to detail these.[11] Indeed, prior to Federation in 1901 the terms "premier" and "prime minister" were used interchangeably for the head of government in a colony.[12]

If a government cannot get its appropriation (budget) legislation passed by the House of Representatives, or the House passes a vote of "no confidence" in the government, the prime minister is bound by convention to either resign or immediately advise the governor-general to dissolve the House of Representatives and hold a fresh election.[citation needed]

Following a resignation in other circumstances or the death of a prime minister, the governor-general generally appoints the deputy prime minister as the new prime minister, until or if such time as the governing party or senior coalition party elects an alternative party leader. This has resulted in the party leaders from the Country Party (now named National Party) being appointed as prime minister, despite being the smaller party of their coalition. This occurred when Earle Page became caretaker prime minister following the death of Joseph Lyons in 1939, and when John McEwen became caretaker prime minister following the disappearance of Harold Holt in 1967. However, in 1941, Arthur Fadden became the leader of the Coalition and subsequently prime minister by the agreement of both coalition parties, despite being the leader of the smaller party in coalition, following the resignation of UAP leader Robert Menzies.

Excluding the brief transition periods during changes of government or leadership elections, there have only been a handful of cases where someone other than the leader of the majority party in the House of Representatives was prime minister:

  • Federation occurred on 1 January 1901, but elections for the first parliament were not scheduled until late March. In the interim, an unelected caretaker government was necessary. In what is now known as the Hopetoun Blunder, the governor-general, Lord Hopetoun, invited Sir William Lyne, the premier of the most populous state, New South Wales, to form a government. Lyne was unable to do so and returned his commission in favour of Edmund Barton, who became the first prime minister and led the inaugural government into and beyond the election.
  • During the second parliament, three parties (Free Trade, Protectionist and Labor) had roughly equal representation in the House of Representatives. The leaders of the three parties, Alfred Deakin, George Reid and Chris Watson each served as prime minister before losing a vote of confidence.
  • As a result of the Labor Party's split over conscription, Billy Hughes and his supporters were expelled from the Labor Party in November 1916. He subsequently continued on as prime minister at the head of the new National Labor Party, which had only 14 members out of a total of 75 in the House of Representatives. The Commonwealth Liberal Party – despite still forming the official Opposition – provided confidence and supply until February 1917, when the two parties agreed to merge and formed the Nationalist Party.
  • During the 1975 constitutional crisis, on 11 November 1975, the governor-general, Sir John Kerr, dismissed the Labor Party's Gough Whitlam as prime minister. Despite Labor holding a majority in the House of Representatives, Kerr appointed the Leader of the Opposition, Liberal leader Malcolm Fraser as caretaker prime minister, conditional on the passage of the Whitlam government's Supply bills through the Senate and the calling of an election for both houses of parliament. Fraser accepted these terms and immediately advised a double dissolution. An election was called for 13 December, which the Liberal Party won in its own right (although the Liberals governed in a coalition with the Country Party).

Compared to other Westminster systems such as those of Canada's federal and provincial governments, the transition from an outgoing prime minister to an incoming prime minister has been brief in Australia since the 1970s. Prior to that, in accordance with longstanding Australian constitutional practice, convention held that an outgoing prime minister would stay on as a caretaker until the full election results were tallied. Starting with the 1972 Australian federal election on 2 December 1972, Gough Whitlam and his deputy were sworn in on 5 December 1972 to form an interim government for two weeks, as the vote was being finalized and the full ministry makeup was being determined. Recently Anthony Albanese became prime minister on 23 May 2022 which was two days after the 2022 Australian federal election where his party won a decisive victory, with Albanese and four senior cabinet ministers received an interim swearing-in, while the entire ministry is to be set by 30 May 2022.[13]

Powers and role

 
The first prime minister of Australia, Edmund Barton (sitting second from left), with his Cabinet, 1901.

Most of the prime minister's power derives from being the head of government.[14] In practice, the Federal Executive Council acts to ratify all executive decisions made by the government and requires the support of the prime minister. The powers of the prime minister are to direct the governor-general through advice to grant royal assent to legislation, to dissolve and prorogue parliament, to call elections and to make government appointments, which the governor-general follows according to convention.

The Constitution divides power between the federal government and the states, and the prime minister is constrained by this.[15]

The formal power to appoint the governor-general lies with the king of Australia, on the advice of the prime minister, whereby convention holds that the king is bound to follow the advice. The prime minister can also advise the monarch to dismiss the governor-general, though it remains unclear how quickly the monarch would act on such advice in a constitutional crisis. This uncertainty, and the possibility of a "race" between the governor-general and prime minister to dismiss the other, was a key question in the 1975 constitutional crisis. Prime ministers whose government loses a vote of no-confidence in the House of Representatives, are expected to advise the governor-general to dissolve parliament and hold an election, if an alternative government cannot be formed. If they fail to do this, the governor-general may by convention dissolve parliament or appoint an alternative government.[9]

The prime minister is also the responsible minister for the Department of the Prime Minister and Cabinet, which is tasked with supporting the policy agendas of the prime minister and Cabinet through policy advice and the coordination of the implementation of key government programs, to manage Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander policy and programs and to promote reconciliation, to provide leadership for the Australian Public Service alongside the Australian Public Service Commission, to oversee the honours and symbols of the Commonwealth, to provide support to ceremonies and official visits, to set whole of government service delivery policy, and to coordinate national security, cyber, counter-terrorism, regulatory reform, cities, population, data, and women's policy.[16] Since 1992, the prime minister also acts as the chair of the Council of Australian Governments (COAG), an intergovernmental forum between the federal government and the state governments in which the prime minister, the state premiers and chief ministers, and a representative of local governments meet annually.[17]

Amenities of office

Salary

Prime ministerial salary history
Effective date Salary Ref.
2 June 1999 A$289,270
6 September 2006 A$309,270
1 July 2007 A$330,356
1 October 2009 A$340,704 [18]
1 August 2010 A$354,671 [19]
1 July 2011 A$366,366
1 December 2011 A$440,000
15 March 2012 A$481,000 [20]
1 July 2012 A$495,430 [21]
1 July 2013 A$507,338 [22]
1 January 2016 A$517,504 [23]
1 July 2017 A$527,852 [24]
1 July 2018 A$538,460 [25]
1 July 2019 A$549,250 [25]

As of 1 July 2019, Australia's prime minister is paid a total salary of A$549,250. This is made up of the 'base salary' received by all Members of Parliament (A$211,250) plus a 160 percent 'additional salary' for the role of prime minister.[26] Increases in the base salary of MPs and senators are determined annually by the independent Remuneration Tribunal.[25]

Residences and transport

 
Prime ministers Curtin, Fadden, Hughes, Menzies and Governor-General The Duke of Gloucester 2nd from left, in 1945.

While in office, the prime minister has two official residences. The primary official residence is The Lodge in Canberra. Most prime ministers have chosen The Lodge as their primary residence because of its security facilities and close proximity to Parliament House. There have been some exceptions, however. James Scullin preferred to live at the Hotel Canberra (now the Hyatt Hotel) and Ben Chifley lived in the Hotel Kurrajong. More recently, John Howard used the Sydney prime ministerial residence, Kirribilli House, as his primary accommodation. On her appointment on 24 June 2010, Julia Gillard said she would not be living in The Lodge until such time as she was returned to office by popular vote at the next general election, as she became prime minister by replacing an incumbent during a parliamentary term. Tony Abbott was never able to occupy The Lodge during his term (2013–15) because it was undergoing extensive renovations, which continued into the early part of his successor Malcolm Turnbull's term.[27] Instead, Abbott resided in dedicated rooms at the Australian Federal Police College when in Canberra.

During his first term, Rudd had a staff at The Lodge consisting of a senior chef and an assistant chef, a child carer, one senior house attendant, and two junior house attendants. At Kirribilli House in Sydney, there are a full-time chef and a full-time house attendant.[28] The official residences are fully staffed and catered for both the prime minister and their family. In addition, both have extensive security facilities. These residences are regularly used for official entertaining, such as receptions for Australian of the Year finalists.

The prime minister receives a number of transport amenities for official business. The Royal Australian Air Force's Airbus A330 MRTT, or KC30-A, transports the prime minister within Australia and overseas.[29] The call-sign for the aircraft is "Envoy". For ground travel, the prime minister is transported in an armoured BMW 7 Series model. It is referred to as "C-1", or Commonwealth One, because of its number plate. It is escorted by police vehicles from state and federal authorities.[30]

After office

Politicians, including prime ministers, are usually granted certain privileges after leaving office, such as office accommodation, staff assistance, and a Life Gold Pass which entitles the holder to travel within Australia for "non-commercial" purposes at government expense. In 2017, then prime minister Malcolm Turnbull said the pass should be available only to former prime ministers, though he would not use it when he was no longer PM.[31]

Only one prime minister who had left the Federal Parliament ever returned. Stanley Bruce was defeated in his own seat in 1929 while prime minister but was re-elected to parliament in 1931. Other prime ministers were elected to parliaments other than the Australian federal parliament: Sir George Reid was elected to the UK House of Commons (after his term as High Commissioner to the UK), and Frank Forde was re-elected to the Queensland Parliament (after his term as High Commissioner to Canada, and a failed attempt to re-enter the Federal Parliament).

Acting prime ministers and succession

The deputy prime minister becomes acting prime minister if the prime minister is unable to undertake the role for a short time, for example if they are ill, overseas or on leave (and if both are unavailable, then another senior minister takes on this role).[32] The Acts Interpretation Act 1901 confers upon acting ministers "the same power and authority with respect to the absent Minister's statutory responsibilities".[33][34]

If the prime minister were to die, then the deputy prime minister would be appointed prime minister by the governor-general until the government votes for another member to be its leader.[32] This happened when Harold Holt disappeared in 1967,[32] when John McEwen was appointed prime minister.[35] On the other two occasions that the prime minister has died in office, in 1939 and 1945, Earle Page and Frank Forde, respectively, were appointed prime minister.[35]

In the early 20th century, overseas travel generally required long journeys by ship. As a result, some held the position of acting prime minister for significant periods of time, including William Watt (16 months, 1918–1919),[36] George Pearce (7 months, 1916),[37] Alfred Deakin (6 months, 1902),[38] Joseph Cook (5 months, 1921),[39] James Fenton (19 weeks, 1930–1931),[40] John Forrest (4 months, 1907),[41] and Arthur Fadden (4 months, 1941). Fadden was acting prime minister for a cumulative total of 676 days (over 22 months) between 1941 and 1958.[42]

Honours

Prime ministers have been granted numerous honours, typically after their period as prime minister has concluded, with a few exceptions.

Nine former prime ministers were awarded knighthoods: Barton (GCMG, 1902),[43] Reid (GCMG, 1911),[44] Cook (GCMG, 1918),[45] Page (GCMG, 1938),[46] Menzies (KT, 1963),[47] Fadden (KCMG, 1951),[48] McEwen (GCMG, 1971),[49] Gorton (GCMG, 1977),[50] and McMahon (GCMG, 1977).[51] Of those awarded, Barton and Menzies were knighted while still serving as prime minister, with Page awarded his before becoming prime minister, and the remainder awarded after leaving office. Reid (GCB, 1916),[52] Menzies (AK, 1976)[53] and Fadden (GCMG, 1958)[54] were awarded a second knighthood after leaving office.

Non-titular honours were also bestowed on former prime ministers, usually the Order of the Companions of Honour. This honour was awarded to Bruce (1927),[55] Lyons (1936),[56] Hughes (1941),[57] Page (1942),[58] Menzies (1951),[59] Holt (1967),[60] McEwen (1969),[61] Gorton (1971),[62] McMahon (1972),[63] and Fraser (1977),[64] mostly during office as prime minister.

In almost all occasions these honours were only accepted by non-Labor/conservative prime ministers. However, appointment to the Privy Council of the United Kingdom was accepted by all prime ministers until 1983 (with the exception of Alfred Deakin, Chris Watson and Gough Whitlam), with Malcolm Fraser being the last prime ministerial appointee.

Since its introduction in 1975, former prime ministers of Australia have been appointed to the Order of Australia and to its highest level – Companion: Whitlam (1978),[65] Fraser (1988),[66] Gorton (1988),[67] Howard (2008),[68] Gillard (2017),[69] Rudd (2019),[70] Abbott (2020),[71] and Turnbull (2021).[72] Keating refused appointment in the 1997 Australia Day Honours, saying that he had long believed honours should be reserved for those whose work in the community went unrecognised and that having been Prime Minister was sufficient public recognition.[73][74] Bob Hawke was appointed a Companion in 1979, for service to trade unionism and industrial relations, before becoming prime minister in 1983.[75] Menzies was appointed to the higher grade of Knight of the Order, which is no longer awarded, in 1976.

John Howard was also appointed to the Order of Merit, whose appointments are within the personal gift of the Queen, in 2012.[76]

In addition to these honours, all deceased former prime ministers of Australia currently have federal electorates named after them, with the exception of Joseph Cook (a Division of Cook does exist, but it is named after explorer James Cook). The most recently created of these electorates is the Division of Hawke, named in honour of the recently deceased Bob Hawke in 2021.

Lists relating to the prime ministers of Australia

The longest-serving prime minister was Robert Menzies, who served in office twice: from 26 April 1939 to 28 August 1941, and again from 19 December 1949 to 26 January 1966. In total Robert Menzies spent 18 years, 5 months and 12 days in office. He served under the United Australia Party and the Liberal Party respectively.

The shortest-serving prime minister was Frank Forde,[77] who was appointed to the position on 6 July 1945 after the death of John Curtin, and served until 13 July 1945 when Ben Chifley was elected leader of the Australian Labor Party.

The most recent prime minister to serve out a full government term in the office was Scott Morrison, who won the 2019 election and led his party to the 2022 election, but lost.

Lists of the 31 people who have so far held the premiership:

See also

References

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  7. ^ "Australia election: Anthony Albanese signals climate policy change". BBC News. 22 May 2022. Retrieved 22 May 2022.
  8. ^ "No. 14 - Ministers in the Senate". Senate Briefs. Parliament of Australia. December 2016.
  9. ^ a b Kerr, John. . WhitlamDismissal.com. Archived from the original on 23 February 2012. Retrieved 11 January 2017.
  10. ^ Australia's Constitution : With Overview and Notes by the Australian Government Solicitor (Pocket ed.). Canberra: Parliamentary Education Office and Australian Government Solicitor. 2010. p. v. ISBN 9781742293431.
  11. ^ Spry, Dr Max (1996). "The Executive Power of the commonwealth: its scope and limits". Parliament of Australia. Retrieved 10 August 2021.
  12. ^ "The Premiers' Conference - Text of the Resolutions". The Age. 23 August 1898. Retrieved 5 December 2019.
  13. ^ "Australia's government is changing after nine years of the Coalition – what happens next?". TheGuardian.com. 22 May 2022.
  14. ^ "Infosheet 20 - The Australian system of government". Parliament of Australia. Retrieved 30 July 2020.
  15. ^ "Prime Minister: Roles, Powers and Restraints". Australian Politics.
  16. ^ "Administrative Arrangements Order". Department of the Prime Minister and Cabinet. Commonwealth of Australia. 1 September 2016. Retrieved 11 January 2017.
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  18. ^ "Prime Minister Kevin Rudd and MPs in line to get a 3% pay rise".
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  23. ^ Mannheim, Markus (10 December 2015). "Politicians, judges and top public servants to gain 2% pay rise after wage freeze". The Canberra Times.
  24. ^ "Politicians under fire for pay increases while penalty rates cut, One Nation wants to reject rise". 23 June 2017.
  25. ^ a b c . Remuneration Tribunal. Archived from the original on 26 November 2020. Retrieved 21 January 2019.
  26. ^ "Parliamentary Offices: Principal determination". Remuneration Tribunal. Retrieved 2 July 2019.
  27. ^ Canberra Times, 18 August 2017. Retrieved 12 June 2018
  28. ^ Metherell, Mark (19 February 2008). "Rudds' staff extends to a child carer at the Lodge". The Sydney Morning Herald. Retrieved 24 June 2010.
  29. ^ "ScoMo dubs his new plane 'Shark One'". Australian Financial Review. 8 September 2019. Retrieved 6 May 2022.
  30. ^ CarAdvice.com.au (6 April 2009). "25% of government car fleet foreign made". Car Advice. Retrieved 12 December 2011.
  31. ^ Hutchens, Gareth (7 February 2017). "Malcolm Turnbull to scrap Life Gold Pass for former MPs". the Guardian.
  32. ^ a b c "Does Australia have a parliamentary line of succession to the Prime Minister and if so, what is the order?". Parliamentary Education Office. Retrieved 18 August 2021.
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Further reading

  • Abjorensen, Norman (2015). The Manner of Their Going: Prime Ministerial Exits from Lyne to Abbott. Australian Scholarly. ISBN 9781925333213.
  • Grattan, Michelle (2016). Australian Prime Ministers. New Holland. ISBN 9781742579337.
  • Hughes, Colin (1976). Mr Prime Minister: Australian Prime Ministers 1901–1972. Oxford University Press. ISBN 0195504712.
  • Strangio, Paul (2013). "Evaluating Prime-Ministerial Performance: The Australian Experience". In Strangio, Paul; 't Hart, Paul; Walter, James (eds.). Understanding Prime-Ministerial Performance: Comparative Perspectives. Oxford University Press. ISBN 9780199666423.
  • Strangio, Paul; 't Hart, Paul; Walter, James (2016). Settling the Office: The Australian Prime Ministership from Federation to Reconstruction. Melbourne University Press. ISBN 9780522868722.
  • Strangio, Paul; 't Hart, Paul; Walter, James (2017). The Pivot of Power: Australian Prime Ministers and Political Leadership, 1949-2016. Melbourne University Press. ISBN 9780522868746.
  • Whitington, Don (1972). Twelfth Man?. Jacaranda Press. ISBN 0701605855.

External links

  • Official website of the prime minister of Australia
  • Department of Prime Minister and Cabinet
  • Australia's Prime Ministers – National Archives of Australia reference site and research portal
  • Biographies of Australia's Prime Ministers / National Museum of Australia
  • Museum of Australian Democracy website about Australian prime ministers

prime, minister, australia, list, officeholders, list, prime, ministers, australia, prime, minister, australia, head, government, commonwealth, australia, prime, minister, heads, executive, branch, federal, government, australia, also, accountable, federal, pa. For a list of officeholders see List of prime ministers of Australia The prime minister of Australia is the head of government of the Commonwealth of Australia The prime minister heads the executive branch of the federal government of Australia and is also accountable to federal parliament under the principles of responsible government The current prime minister is Anthony Albanese of the Australian Labor Party who became prime minister on 23 May 2022 6 7 Prime Minister of AustraliaCoat of arms of AustraliaFlag of AustraliaIncumbentAnthony Albanesesince 23 May 2022Australian GovernmentStylePrime Minister informal The Honourable 1 formal His Excellency 2 diplomatic StatusHead of governmentMember ofParliament Cabinet National Cabinet Federal Executive Council National Security CommitteeReports toHouse of RepresentativesResidenceThe Lodge primary 3 Kirribilli House secondary 3 SeatCanberraAppointerGovernor General 4 Term lengthAt the Governor General s pleasure 3 Formation1 January 1901 122 years ago 1901 01 01 4 First holderEdmund Barton 4 DeputyDeputy Prime MinisterSalaryA 564 360 annually 2022 5 Websitepm wbr gov wbr auFormally appointed by the governor general the role and duties of the prime minister are not described by the Australian constitution but rather defined by constitutional convention deriving from the Westminster system To become prime minister a politician should be able to command the confidence of the House of Representatives As such the prime minister is typically the leader of the majority party or coalition Prime ministers do not have a set duration or number of terms but an individual s term generally ends when their political party loses a federal election or they lose or relinquish the leadership of their party Executive power is formally vested in the monarch and exercised by the governor general on advice from government ministers who are nominated by the prime minister and form the Federal Executive Council The most senior ministers form the federal cabinet which the prime minister chairs The prime minister also heads the National Cabinet and the National Security Committee Administrative support is provided by the Department of the Prime Minister and Cabinet The prime minister has two official residences The Lodge in Canberra and Kirribilli House in Sydney as well as an office at Parliament House Thirty one people have served as prime minister the first of whom was Edmund Barton taking office on 1 January 1901 following federation of the British colonies in Australia The longest serving prime minister was Robert Menzies who served over 18 years and the shortest serving was Frank Forde who served one week There is no legislated line of succession however convention determines that the governor general shall commission the deputy prime minister on a caretaker basis in the event of a vacancy Contents 1 Constitutional basis and appointment 2 Powers and role 3 Amenities of office 3 1 Salary 3 2 Residences and transport 3 3 After office 4 Acting prime ministers and succession 5 Honours 6 Lists relating to the prime ministers of Australia 7 See also 8 References 9 Further reading 10 External linksConstitutional basis and appointment Edit Australia s first prime minister Edmund Barton at the central table in the House of Representatives in 1901 The prime minister of Australia is appointed by the governor general of Australia under Section 64 of the Australian Constitution which empowers the governor general to appoint ministers of state the office of prime minister is not mentioned on the advice of the Federal Executive Council and requires them to be members of the House of Representatives or the Senate or become members within three months of the appointment The prime minister and treasurer are traditionally members of the House but the Constitution does not have such a requirement 8 Before being sworn in as a minister of state a person must first be sworn in as a member of the Federal Executive Council if they are not already a member Membership of the Federal Executive Council entitles the member to the style of The Honourable usually abbreviated to The Hon for life barring exceptional circumstances The senior members of the Executive Council constitute the Cabinet of Australia The prime minister is like other ministers normally sworn in by the governor general and then presented with the commission letters patent of office When defeated in an election or on resigning the prime minister is said to hand in the commission and actually does so by returning it to the governor general In the event of a prime minister dying in office or becoming incapacitated or for other reasons the governor general can terminate the commission Ministers hold office during the pleasure of the governor general s 64 of the Constitution of Australia so in practice the governor general can dismiss a minister at any time by notifying them in writing of the termination of their commission however their power to do so except on the advice of the prime minister is heavily circumscribed by convention John Gorton being sworn in as the 19th Prime Minister on 10 January 1968 To date Gorton is the only Senator to have served as Prime Minister though he would swiftly move to the House of Representatives as the member for Higgins According to convention the prime minister is the leader of the majority party or largest party in a coalition of parties in the House of Representatives which holds the confidence of the House The governor general may also dismiss a prime minister who is unable to pass the government s supply bill through both houses of parliament including the Australian Senate where the government doesn t normally command the majority as happened in the 1975 constitutional crisis 9 Other commentators argue that the governor general acted improperly in 1975 as Whitlam still retained the confidence of the House of Representatives and there are no generally accepted conventions to guide the use of the governor general s reserve powers in this circumstance 10 However there is no constitutional requirement that the prime minister sit in the House of Representatives or even be a member of the federal parliament subject to a constitutionally prescribed limit of three months though by convention this is always the case The only case where a member of the Senate was appointed prime minister was John Gorton who subsequently resigned his Senate position and was elected as the member for Higgins in the House of Representatives Despite the importance of the office of prime minister the Constitution does not mention the office by name The conventions of the Westminster system were thought to be sufficiently entrenched in Australia by the authors of the Constitution that it was deemed unnecessary to detail these 11 Indeed prior to Federation in 1901 the terms premier and prime minister were used interchangeably for the head of government in a colony 12 If a government cannot get its appropriation budget legislation passed by the House of Representatives or the House passes a vote of no confidence in the government the prime minister is bound by convention to either resign or immediately advise the governor general to dissolve the House of Representatives and hold a fresh election citation needed Following a resignation in other circumstances or the death of a prime minister the governor general generally appoints the deputy prime minister as the new prime minister until or if such time as the governing party or senior coalition party elects an alternative party leader This has resulted in the party leaders from the Country Party now named National Party being appointed as prime minister despite being the smaller party of their coalition This occurred when Earle Page became caretaker prime minister following the death of Joseph Lyons in 1939 and when John McEwen became caretaker prime minister following the disappearance of Harold Holt in 1967 However in 1941 Arthur Fadden became the leader of the Coalition and subsequently prime minister by the agreement of both coalition parties despite being the leader of the smaller party in coalition following the resignation of UAP leader Robert Menzies Excluding the brief transition periods during changes of government or leadership elections there have only been a handful of cases where someone other than the leader of the majority party in the House of Representatives was prime minister Federation occurred on 1 January 1901 but elections for the first parliament were not scheduled until late March In the interim an unelected caretaker government was necessary In what is now known as the Hopetoun Blunder the governor general Lord Hopetoun invited Sir William Lyne the premier of the most populous state New South Wales to form a government Lyne was unable to do so and returned his commission in favour of Edmund Barton who became the first prime minister and led the inaugural government into and beyond the election During the second parliament three parties Free Trade Protectionist and Labor had roughly equal representation in the House of Representatives The leaders of the three parties Alfred Deakin George Reid and Chris Watson each served as prime minister before losing a vote of confidence As a result of the Labor Party s split over conscription Billy Hughes and his supporters were expelled from the Labor Party in November 1916 He subsequently continued on as prime minister at the head of the new National Labor Party which had only 14 members out of a total of 75 in the House of Representatives The Commonwealth Liberal Party despite still forming the official Opposition provided confidence and supply until February 1917 when the two parties agreed to merge and formed the Nationalist Party During the 1975 constitutional crisis on 11 November 1975 the governor general Sir John Kerr dismissed the Labor Party s Gough Whitlam as prime minister Despite Labor holding a majority in the House of Representatives Kerr appointed the Leader of the Opposition Liberal leader Malcolm Fraser as caretaker prime minister conditional on the passage of the Whitlam government s Supply bills through the Senate and the calling of an election for both houses of parliament Fraser accepted these terms and immediately advised a double dissolution An election was called for 13 December which the Liberal Party won in its own right although the Liberals governed in a coalition with the Country Party Compared to other Westminster systems such as those of Canada s federal and provincial governments the transition from an outgoing prime minister to an incoming prime minister has been brief in Australia since the 1970s Prior to that in accordance with longstanding Australian constitutional practice convention held that an outgoing prime minister would stay on as a caretaker until the full election results were tallied Starting with the 1972 Australian federal election on 2 December 1972 Gough Whitlam and his deputy were sworn in on 5 December 1972 to form an interim government for two weeks as the vote was being finalized and the full ministry makeup was being determined Recently Anthony Albanese became prime minister on 23 May 2022 which was two days after the 2022 Australian federal election where his party won a decisive victory with Albanese and four senior cabinet ministers received an interim swearing in while the entire ministry is to be set by 30 May 2022 13 Powers and role Edit The first prime minister of Australia Edmund Barton sitting second from left with his Cabinet 1901 Most of the prime minister s power derives from being the head of government 14 In practice the Federal Executive Council acts to ratify all executive decisions made by the government and requires the support of the prime minister The powers of the prime minister are to direct the governor general through advice to grant royal assent to legislation to dissolve and prorogue parliament to call elections and to make government appointments which the governor general follows according to convention The Constitution divides power between the federal government and the states and the prime minister is constrained by this 15 The formal power to appoint the governor general lies with the king of Australia on the advice of the prime minister whereby convention holds that the king is bound to follow the advice The prime minister can also advise the monarch to dismiss the governor general though it remains unclear how quickly the monarch would act on such advice in a constitutional crisis This uncertainty and the possibility of a race between the governor general and prime minister to dismiss the other was a key question in the 1975 constitutional crisis Prime ministers whose government loses a vote of no confidence in the House of Representatives are expected to advise the governor general to dissolve parliament and hold an election if an alternative government cannot be formed If they fail to do this the governor general may by convention dissolve parliament or appoint an alternative government 9 The prime minister is also the responsible minister for the Department of the Prime Minister and Cabinet which is tasked with supporting the policy agendas of the prime minister and Cabinet through policy advice and the coordination of the implementation of key government programs to manage Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander policy and programs and to promote reconciliation to provide leadership for the Australian Public Service alongside the Australian Public Service Commission to oversee the honours and symbols of the Commonwealth to provide support to ceremonies and official visits to set whole of government service delivery policy and to coordinate national security cyber counter terrorism regulatory reform cities population data and women s policy 16 Since 1992 the prime minister also acts as the chair of the Council of Australian Governments COAG an intergovernmental forum between the federal government and the state governments in which the prime minister the state premiers and chief ministers and a representative of local governments meet annually 17 Amenities of office EditSalary Edit Prime ministerial salary history Effective date Salary Ref 2 June 1999 A 289 2706 September 2006 A 309 2701 July 2007 A 330 3561 October 2009 A 340 704 18 1 August 2010 A 354 671 19 1 July 2011 A 366 3661 December 2011 A 440 00015 March 2012 A 481 000 20 1 July 2012 A 495 430 21 1 July 2013 A 507 338 22 1 January 2016 A 517 504 23 1 July 2017 A 527 852 24 1 July 2018 A 538 460 25 1 July 2019 A 549 250 25 As of 1 July 2019 update Australia s prime minister is paid a total salary of A 549 250 This is made up of the base salary received by all Members of Parliament A 211 250 plus a 160 percent additional salary for the role of prime minister 26 Increases in the base salary of MPs and senators are determined annually by the independent Remuneration Tribunal 25 Residences and transport Edit Prime ministers Curtin Fadden Hughes Menzies and Governor General The Duke of Gloucester 2nd from left in 1945 While in office the prime minister has two official residences The primary official residence is The Lodge in Canberra Most prime ministers have chosen The Lodge as their primary residence because of its security facilities and close proximity to Parliament House There have been some exceptions however James Scullin preferred to live at the Hotel Canberra now the Hyatt Hotel and Ben Chifley lived in the Hotel Kurrajong More recently John Howard used the Sydney prime ministerial residence Kirribilli House as his primary accommodation On her appointment on 24 June 2010 Julia Gillard said she would not be living in The Lodge until such time as she was returned to office by popular vote at the next general election as she became prime minister by replacing an incumbent during a parliamentary term Tony Abbott was never able to occupy The Lodge during his term 2013 15 because it was undergoing extensive renovations which continued into the early part of his successor Malcolm Turnbull s term 27 Instead Abbott resided in dedicated rooms at the Australian Federal Police College when in Canberra During his first term Rudd had a staff at The Lodge consisting of a senior chef and an assistant chef a child carer one senior house attendant and two junior house attendants At Kirribilli House in Sydney there are a full time chef and a full time house attendant 28 The official residences are fully staffed and catered for both the prime minister and their family In addition both have extensive security facilities These residences are regularly used for official entertaining such as receptions for Australian of the Year finalists The prime minister receives a number of transport amenities for official business The Royal Australian Air Force s Airbus A330 MRTT or KC30 A transports the prime minister within Australia and overseas 29 The call sign for the aircraft is Envoy For ground travel the prime minister is transported in an armoured BMW 7 Series model It is referred to as C 1 or Commonwealth One because of its number plate It is escorted by police vehicles from state and federal authorities 30 Privileges of office The Lodge Kirribilli House Prime Ministerial Limousine Official aircraftAfter office Edit Politicians including prime ministers are usually granted certain privileges after leaving office such as office accommodation staff assistance and a Life Gold Pass which entitles the holder to travel within Australia for non commercial purposes at government expense In 2017 then prime minister Malcolm Turnbull said the pass should be available only to former prime ministers though he would not use it when he was no longer PM 31 Only one prime minister who had left the Federal Parliament ever returned Stanley Bruce was defeated in his own seat in 1929 while prime minister but was re elected to parliament in 1931 Other prime ministers were elected to parliaments other than the Australian federal parliament Sir George Reid was elected to the UK House of Commons after his term as High Commissioner to the UK and Frank Forde was re elected to the Queensland Parliament after his term as High Commissioner to Canada and a failed attempt to re enter the Federal Parliament Acting prime ministers and succession EditThe deputy prime minister becomes acting prime minister if the prime minister is unable to undertake the role for a short time for example if they are ill overseas or on leave and if both are unavailable then another senior minister takes on this role 32 The Acts Interpretation Act 1901 confers upon acting ministers the same power and authority with respect to the absent Minister s statutory responsibilities 33 34 If the prime minister were to die then the deputy prime minister would be appointed prime minister by the governor general until the government votes for another member to be its leader 32 This happened when Harold Holt disappeared in 1967 32 when John McEwen was appointed prime minister 35 On the other two occasions that the prime minister has died in office in 1939 and 1945 Earle Page and Frank Forde respectively were appointed prime minister 35 In the early 20th century overseas travel generally required long journeys by ship As a result some held the position of acting prime minister for significant periods of time including William Watt 16 months 1918 1919 36 George Pearce 7 months 1916 37 Alfred Deakin 6 months 1902 38 Joseph Cook 5 months 1921 39 James Fenton 19 weeks 1930 1931 40 John Forrest 4 months 1907 41 and Arthur Fadden 4 months 1941 Fadden was acting prime minister for a cumulative total of 676 days over 22 months between 1941 and 1958 42 Honours EditPrime ministers have been granted numerous honours typically after their period as prime minister has concluded with a few exceptions Nine former prime ministers were awarded knighthoods Barton GCMG 1902 43 Reid GCMG 1911 44 Cook GCMG 1918 45 Page GCMG 1938 46 Menzies KT 1963 47 Fadden KCMG 1951 48 McEwen GCMG 1971 49 Gorton GCMG 1977 50 and McMahon GCMG 1977 51 Of those awarded Barton and Menzies were knighted while still serving as prime minister with Page awarded his before becoming prime minister and the remainder awarded after leaving office Reid GCB 1916 52 Menzies AK 1976 53 and Fadden GCMG 1958 54 were awarded a second knighthood after leaving office Non titular honours were also bestowed on former prime ministers usually the Order of the Companions of Honour This honour was awarded to Bruce 1927 55 Lyons 1936 56 Hughes 1941 57 Page 1942 58 Menzies 1951 59 Holt 1967 60 McEwen 1969 61 Gorton 1971 62 McMahon 1972 63 and Fraser 1977 64 mostly during office as prime minister In almost all occasions these honours were only accepted by non Labor conservative prime ministers However appointment to the Privy Council of the United Kingdom was accepted by all prime ministers until 1983 with the exception of Alfred Deakin Chris Watson and Gough Whitlam with Malcolm Fraser being the last prime ministerial appointee Since its introduction in 1975 former prime ministers of Australia have been appointed to the Order of Australia and to its highest level Companion Whitlam 1978 65 Fraser 1988 66 Gorton 1988 67 Howard 2008 68 Gillard 2017 69 Rudd 2019 70 Abbott 2020 71 and Turnbull 2021 72 Keating refused appointment in the 1997 Australia Day Honours saying that he had long believed honours should be reserved for those whose work in the community went unrecognised and that having been Prime Minister was sufficient public recognition 73 74 Bob Hawke was appointed a Companion in 1979 for service to trade unionism and industrial relations before becoming prime minister in 1983 75 Menzies was appointed to the higher grade of Knight of the Order which is no longer awarded in 1976 John Howard was also appointed to the Order of Merit whose appointments are within the personal gift of the Queen in 2012 76 In addition to these honours all deceased former prime ministers of Australia currently have federal electorates named after them with the exception of Joseph Cook a Division of Cook does exist but it is named after explorer James Cook The most recently created of these electorates is the Division of Hawke named in honour of the recently deceased Bob Hawke in 2021 Lists relating to the prime ministers of Australia EditThe longest serving prime minister was Robert Menzies who served in office twice from 26 April 1939 to 28 August 1941 and again from 19 December 1949 to 26 January 1966 In total Robert Menzies spent 18 years 5 months and 12 days in office He served under the United Australia Party and the Liberal Party respectively The shortest serving prime minister was Frank Forde 77 who was appointed to the position on 6 July 1945 after the death of John Curtin and served until 13 July 1945 when Ben Chifley was elected leader of the Australian Labor Party The most recent prime minister to serve out a full government term in the office was Scott Morrison who won the 2019 election and led his party to the 2022 election but lost Lists of the 31 people who have so far held the premiership List of prime ministers of Australia List of prime ministers of Australia by birthplace List of prime ministers of Australia by time in officeSee also EditHistorical rankings of prime ministers of Australia List of Commonwealth heads of government List of prime ministers of Australia by time in office List of prime ministers of Elizabeth II Prime Ministers Avenue in Horse Chestnut Avenue in the Ballarat Botanical Gardens contains a collection of bronze busts of former Australian prime ministers Prime Ministers Corridor of Oaks in Faulconbridge New South Wales contains a corridor of oaks of former Australian prime ministers Prime Minister s XI Spouse of the prime minister of Australia Leader of the Opposition Australia References Edit Contact Your PM Prime Minister of Australia Retrieved 29 May 2020 How to address Senators and Members Retrieved 26 April 2021 a b c Prime Minister Parliamentary Education Office Retrieved 29 May 2020 a b c Prime Ministers Australian Prime Ministers Centre Old Parliament House Retrieved 29 May 2020 PoliticalSalaries com Leaders PoliticalSalaries com What the world pays its politicians 15 June 2022 Retrieved 20 August 2022 Prime Minister of Australia Prime Minister of Australia Department of the Prime Minister and Cabinet 21 May 2022 Retrieved 22 May 2022 Australia election Anthony Albanese signals climate policy change BBC News 22 May 2022 Retrieved 22 May 2022 No 14 Ministers in the Senate Senate Briefs Parliament of Australia December 2016 a b Kerr John Statement from John Kerr dated 11 November 1975 explaining his decisions WhitlamDismissal com Archived from the original on 23 February 2012 Retrieved 11 January 2017 Australia s Constitution With Overview and Notes by the Australian Government Solicitor Pocket ed Canberra Parliamentary Education Office and Australian Government Solicitor 2010 p v ISBN 9781742293431 Spry Dr Max 1996 The Executive Power of the commonwealth its scope and limits Parliament of Australia Retrieved 10 August 2021 The Premiers Conference Text of the Resolutions The Age 23 August 1898 Retrieved 5 December 2019 Australia s government is changing after nine years of the Coalition what happens next TheGuardian com 22 May 2022 Infosheet 20 The Australian system of government Parliament of Australia Retrieved 30 July 2020 Prime Minister Roles Powers and Restraints Australian Politics Administrative Arrangements Order Department of the Prime Minister and Cabinet Commonwealth of Australia 1 September 2016 Retrieved 11 January 2017 Federation Homepage Federation Prime Minister Kevin Rudd and MPs in line to get a 3 pay rise Hudson Phillip 25 August 2010 Politicians awarded secret pay rise Herald Sun Australia Archived from the original on 6 March 2019 Retrieved 25 August 2010 Determination 2012 02 Members of Parliament Base Salary and Related Matters PDF www remtribunal gov au Archived from the original PDF on 13 April 2013 Tony Abbott defends increase in MP salary saying he s working hard for every Australian Herald Sun 5 July 2012 Archived from the original on 2 December 2013 Retrieved 4 July 2012 Peatling Stephanie 14 June 2013 PM s salary tops 500 000 The Sydney Morning Herald Mannheim Markus 10 December 2015 Politicians judges and top public servants to gain 2 pay rise after wage freeze The Canberra Times Politicians under fire for pay increases while penalty rates cut One Nation wants to reject rise 23 June 2017 a b c What do Federal Members of Parliament get paid Remuneration Tribunal Archived from the original on 26 November 2020 Retrieved 21 January 2019 Parliamentary Offices Principal determination Remuneration Tribunal Retrieved 2 July 2019 Canberra Times 18 August 2017 Retrieved 12 June 2018 Metherell Mark 19 February 2008 Rudds staff extends to a child carer at the Lodge The Sydney Morning Herald Retrieved 24 June 2010 ScoMo dubs his new plane Shark One Australian Financial Review 8 September 2019 Retrieved 6 May 2022 CarAdvice com au 6 April 2009 25 of government car fleet foreign made Car Advice Retrieved 12 December 2011 Hutchens Gareth 7 February 2017 Malcolm Turnbull to scrap Life Gold Pass for former MPs the Guardian a b c Does Australia have a parliamentary line of succession to the Prime Minister and if so what is the order Parliamentary Education Office Retrieved 18 August 2021 The Ministry House of Representatives Practice 7th ed Parliament of Australia Retrieved 16 December 2019 Acts Interpretation Act 1901 s 19 4 a b Australia s PMs and how they left office SBS News 24 August 2018 Retrieved 18 August 2021 Watt William Alexander 1871 1946 Australian Dictionary of Biography Vol 12 1990 Beddie B 1988 Pearce Sir George Foster 1870 1952 Australian Dictionary of Biography Vol 11 Norris R 1981 Deakin Alfred 1856 1919 Australian Dictionary of Biography Melbourne University Press ISSN 1833 7538 via National Centre of Biography Australian National University Crowley F K Cook Sir Joseph 1860 1947 Australian Dictionary of Biography Australian National University Retrieved 24 April 2016 Robertson J R 1981 Fenton James Edward 1864 1950 Australian Dictionary of Biography Vol 8 Crowley Frank Forrest Sir John 1847 1918 Australian Dictionary of Biography National Centre of Biography Australian National University Arklay Tracey M 2010 Arthur Fadden A Political Silhouette PDF PhD thesis Griffith University p 196 Archived from the original PDF on 28 May 2018 Retrieved 16 December 2019 No 27448 The London Gazette Supplement 26 June 1902 pp 4189 4196 GCMG Department of Prime Minister and Cabinet No 30831 The London Gazette Supplement 6 August 1918 p 9264 GCMG Department of Prime Minister and Cabinet KT Department of Prime Minister and Cabinet It s an Honour Fadden KCMG Archived 2 October 2008 Date mismatch at the Wayback Machine GCMG Department of Prime Minister and Cabinet It s an Honour Archived 26 May 2011 at the Wayback Machine Knight Grand Cross of the Order of St Michael and St George It s an Honour GCMG Itsanhonour gov au 12 June 1977 Archived from the original on 26 May 2011 Retrieved 25 April 2010 GCB Department of Prime Minister and Cabinet AK Department of Prime Minister and Cabinet GCMG Department of Prime Minister and Cabinet CH Department of Prime Minister and Cabinet Mr Joseph Aloysius LYONS It s An Honour Department of the Prime Minister and Cabinet Retrieved 2 April 2019 It s an Honour Archived from the original on 13 November 2013 Retrieved 4 January 2012 It s an Honour CH Itsanhonour gov au 26 June 1942 Archived from the original on 9 November 2018 Retrieved 4 November 2011 It s an Honour CH Australian Government Archived from the original on 4 June 2011 Retrieved 15 October 2009 CH Department of Prime Minister and Cabinet CH Department of Prime Minister and Cabinet CH Department of Prime Minister and Cabinet CH Department of Prime Minister and Cabinet CH Department of Prime Minister and Cabinet AC Department of Prime Minister and Cabinet AC Department of Prime Minister and Cabinet It s an Honour Archived 26 May 2011 at the Wayback Machine Companion of the Order of Australia It s an Honour AC Australian Government 9 June 2008 archived from the original on 21 September 2016 retrieved 20 June 2017 It s an Honour AC Itsanhonour gov au Government of Australia 26 January 2017 retrieved 26 January 2017 AC Department of Prime Minister and Cabinet Queen s Birthday Honours 2020 PDF Governor General retrieved 7 June 2020 Australia Day Honours 2021 Governor General retrieved 29 January 2021 After office Australia s PMs Paul Keating National Archives of Australia Retrieved 15 July 2010 Keating gone wrong The Sun Herald 26 January 1997 p 3 It s an Honour Government of Australia Archived from the original on 18 May 2019 Retrieved 3 September 2007 No 60028 The London Gazette 12 January 2012 p 485 Francis Forde naa gov au www naa gov au Retrieved 8 June 2022 Further reading EditAbjorensen Norman 2015 The Manner of Their Going Prime Ministerial Exits from Lyne to Abbott Australian Scholarly ISBN 9781925333213 Grattan Michelle 2016 Australian Prime Ministers New Holland ISBN 9781742579337 Hughes Colin 1976 Mr Prime Minister Australian Prime Ministers 1901 1972 Oxford University Press ISBN 0195504712 Strangio Paul 2013 Evaluating Prime Ministerial Performance The Australian Experience In Strangio Paul t Hart Paul Walter James eds Understanding Prime Ministerial Performance Comparative Perspectives Oxford University Press ISBN 9780199666423 Strangio Paul t Hart Paul Walter James 2016 Settling the Office The Australian Prime Ministership from Federation to Reconstruction Melbourne University Press ISBN 9780522868722 Strangio Paul t Hart Paul Walter James 2017 The Pivot of Power Australian Prime Ministers and Political Leadership 1949 2016 Melbourne University Press ISBN 9780522868746 Whitington Don 1972 Twelfth Man Jacaranda Press ISBN 0701605855 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Prime Ministers of Australia Official website of the prime minister of Australia Department of Prime Minister and Cabinet Australia s Prime Ministers National Archives of Australia reference site and research portal Biographies of Australia s Prime Ministers National Museum of Australia Classroom resources on Australian Prime Ministers Museum of Australian Democracy website about Australian prime ministers Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Prime Minister of Australia amp oldid 1132279045, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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