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Tiberius with a telephone : the life and stories of William McMahon / Patrick Mullins.

By: Publication details: Brunswick, Victoria : Scribe Publications, 2018.Description: 776 pages, 8 unnumbered pages of plates : illustrations, portraits, ; 25 cmISBN:
  • 9781925713602 (hardback)
Other title:
  • William McMahon
Subject(s): Genre/Form: DDC classification:
  • 994.061 23
Awards:
  • Winner 2020 National Biography Award. Winner 2020 NSW Douglas Stewart Prize for Non-fiction (biography).
Summary: William McMahon was a significant, if widely derided and disliked, figure in Australian politics in the second half of the twentieth century. This biography tells the story of his life, his career, and his doomed attempts to recast views of his much-maligned time as Australia?s prime minister. After a long ministerial career under Menzies, McMahon became treasurer under Harold Holt, and fought a fierce, bitter war over protectionism with John McEwen. Following Holt's death in 1967, McEwen had his revenge by vetoing McMahon?s candidature for the Liberal Party?s leadership, and thus paved the way for John Gorton to become prime minister. But almost three years later, amid acrimony and division, McMahon would topple Gorton and fulfill his life?s ambition to become Australia?s prime minister. In office, McMahon worked furiously to enact an agenda that grappled with the profound changes reshaping Australia. He withdrew combat forces from Vietnam, legislated for Commonwealth government involvement in childcare, established the National Urban and Regional Development Authority and the first Department of the Environment, began phasing out the means test on pensions, sought to control foreign investments, and accelerated the timetable for the independence of Papua New Guinea. But his failures would overshadow his successes, and by the time of the 1972 election McMahon would lead a divided, tired, and rancorous party to defeat. A man whose life was coloured by tragedy, comedy, persistence, courage, farce, and failure, McMahon?s story has never been told at length. Tiberius with a Telephone fills that gap, using deep archival research and extensive interviews with McMahon?s contemporaries and colleagues. It is a tour de force - an authoritative, compelling, and colourful account of a unique politician and a vital period in Australia?s history.
List(s) this item appears in: Australian Biography | Awarded Biography
Holdings
Item type Home library Collection Call number Status Date due Barcode Item reserves
Book Melbourne Athenaeum Library Biography 994.061 MUL Available 068914
Total reserves: 0

William McMahon was a significant, if widely derided and disliked, figure in Australian politics in the second half of the twentieth century. This biography tells the story of his life, his career, and his doomed attempts to recast views of his much-maligned time as Australia?s prime minister. After a long ministerial career under Menzies, McMahon became treasurer under Harold Holt, and fought a fierce, bitter war over protectionism with John McEwen. Following Holt's death in 1967, McEwen had his revenge by vetoing McMahon?s candidature for the Liberal Party?s leadership, and thus paved the way for John Gorton to become prime minister. But almost three years later, amid acrimony and division, McMahon would topple Gorton and fulfill his life?s ambition to become Australia?s prime minister. In office, McMahon worked furiously to enact an agenda that grappled with the profound changes reshaping Australia. He withdrew combat forces from Vietnam, legislated for Commonwealth government involvement in childcare, established the National Urban and Regional Development Authority and the first Department of the Environment, began phasing out the means test on pensions, sought to control foreign investments, and accelerated the timetable for the independence of Papua New Guinea. But his failures would overshadow his successes, and by the time of the 1972 election McMahon would lead a divided, tired, and rancorous party to defeat. A man whose life was coloured by tragedy, comedy, persistence, courage, farce, and failure, McMahon?s story has never been told at length. Tiberius with a Telephone fills that gap, using deep archival research and extensive interviews with McMahon?s contemporaries and colleagues. It is a tour de force - an authoritative, compelling, and colourful account of a unique politician and a vital period in Australia?s history.

Winner 2020 National Biography Award.
Winner 2020 NSW Douglas Stewart Prize for Non-fiction (biography).

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