Australian liberal : a political biography of Sir Littleton Groom, 1867-1936
Abstract
The main purpose of this thesis is to present the
career of Sir Littleton Groom in terms of his being a
representative liberal of his generation and, at the same
time, a significant force in Australian politics. Born in
Toowoomba in 1867, his background and education led to his
becoming after 1901 a forceful federal parliamentarian on
the radical wing of the protectionist party. Between 1905
and 1908, first as Minister for Home Affairs, and then as
Attorney-General, he tried to foster federal sentiment
through the expansion of the Commonwealth powers. The
1909 fusion of non-Labor parties presented him with a
dilemma but he supported it on the grounds that otherwise
his party and its principles faced extinction. As Minister
for External Affairs until April 1910, however, he had
greater difficulties with many of his new colleagues than
with the Labor opposition. Yet he still attacked Fisher's
subsequent Labor administration as class-biased and
irresponsible. Minister for Trade and Customs in Cook's
short-lived government of 1913-14, he largely devoted himself
to reversing Labor policies but was still occasionally able
to exhibit his old disregard for parochial state interests.
After the outbreak of war in 1914 he constantly stressed
the moral righteousness of the British Empire's cause, with
which he equated that of Australian nationalism. As Minister
for Works and Railways between 1918 and 1921 Te aligned
himself with those who saw the need for some social reform
combined with increased government participation in the
country's economic development. He was appointed Attorney-General again in December 1921. In this post he reformed
aspects of the Commonwealth public service, tried to further
extend federal commercial and industrial powers and to
deport those whom, he believed, carried foreign disruptive
ideas into the country. As leader of the Australian delegation
to the 1924 League of Nations Assembly he unsuccessfully
advocated the adoption of a new scheme for international
arbitration. In 1925 Prime Minister Bruce, dissatisfied with
Groom's performance as Attorney-General, forced his resignation.
Groom retaliated in 1929 when as Speaker of the House of
Representatives he refused to vote to save the government in
a crucial division. His commitment to federal arbitration,
the issue in question, and his concern about tne "dignity of
the chair" were the main reasons for his decision. He was
defeated in the subsequent election but returned as an
independent in 1931. He spent much of the remainder of his
life in seeking to make his fellow Australians more aware of
the valuable work done by the federal pioneers in the
Commonwealth's first decade. Despite the numerous tributes
paid to him immediately after his death in 1936, since then
he has been largely ignored. His reputation deserved a
better fate both because he left such a solid legacy behind,
and, more notably, his career reflected the shifts in the
politics of his time as they affected a man whose basic
beliefs remained largely unchanged.
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