Everything about Stanley Bruce totally explained
Stanley Melbourne Bruce, 1st Viscount Bruce of Melbourne,
CH,
MC,
FRS,
PC (
15 April 1883–
25 August 1967) was an Australian politician and diplomat, and the eighth
Prime Minister of Australia. He was only the second Australian ever granted an hereditary peerage of the United Kingdom parliament, and the only one whose peerage was formally created. (The first had been
John Forrest, who was advised he was to be made a peer, but died at sea on his way to take his seat in the House of Lords, and as a result his announced peerage didn't actually come into existence).
Early life
He was born in
Melbourne, where his father was a prominent businessman of Scottish descent. He was educated at Glamorgan (now part of
Geelong Grammar School),
Melbourne Grammar School, and then at
Cambridge University. After graduation he studied law in
London and was called to the bar in 1907. He practised law in London, and also managed the London office of his father's importing business. When
World War I broke out he joined the
British Army, and was commissioned to the
Worcestershire Regiment, seconded to the
Royal Fusiliers. In 1917 he was severely wounded in
France, winning the
Military Cross and the
Croix de Guerre.
Political career
Bruce was invalided home to Melbourne, and soon became involved in recruiting campaigns for the Army. His public speaking attracted the attention of the
Nationalist Party, and in 1918 he was elected to the House of Representatives as MP for
Flinders, near Melbourne. His background in business led to his being appointed Treasurer (finance minister) in
1921. When the Nationalist Party lost its majority at the
1922 election, the
Country Party demanded that Prime Minister
Billy Hughes resign as the price of joining a coalition government, and Bruce found himself Prime Minister at the age of only 39.
Prime Minister
Bruce's appointment marked an important turning point in Australian political history. He was the first Prime Minister who hadn't been involved in the movement for
federation, who hadn't been a member of a colonial Parliament, and who hadn't been a member of the original 1901 federal Parliament. With his aristocratic manners and dress – he drove a
Rolls Royce and wore white
spats – he was also the first genuinely "
Tory" Australian Prime Minister.
He formed an effective partnership with the Country Party leader,
Dr Earle Page, and exploited public fears of
communism and militant trade unions to dominate Australian politics through the 1920s. Despite predictions that Australians wouldn't accept such an aloof leader, he won a smashing victory over a demoralised
Labor Party at the
1925 election. He pursued a policy of support for the
British Empire, the
League of Nations, and the
White Australia Policy:
"We intend to keep this country white and not allow its peoples to be faced with the problems that at present are practically insoluble in many parts of the world."
In his policy launch speech made at the Shire Hall in
Dandenong on 25 October 1925, Bruce reiterated his government's commitment to the
White Australia Policy:
"It is necessary that we should determine what are the ideals towards which every
Australian would desire to strive. I think those ideals might well be stated as being to
secure our national safety, and to ensure the maintenance of our White Australia
Policy to continue as an integral portion of the British Empire."
Maritime Industries crisis
Strikes of sugar mill workers in 1927, waterside workers in 1928, then of transport workers, timber industry workers and coal miners erupted in riots and lockouts in New South Wales in 1929. Bruce responded with a Maritime Industries Bill that was designed to do away with the
Commonwealth Court of Conciliation and Arbitration and return arbitration powers to the States. On 10 September 1929,
Billy Hughes and five other Nationalist members joined Labor in voting against the Bill. The Bill was lost 34 votes to 35 when
Littleton Groom, the Speaker, abstained, bringing down the Bruce–Page government and sending Australians to the polls in the
1929 election just one year after the Nationalists won the
1928 election. Labor won a landslide victory and Bruce was defeated by Labor's
Ted Holloway in his electorate of Flinders, making him the first Australian Prime Minister to lose his seat. The only other serving Australian prime minister to have lost his seat was
John Howard, at the
2007 election.
Later life
After his 1929 electoral defeat, Bruce went to England for personal business reasons and contested the
1931 election from that country. In 1931 Bruce won his seat back and became a
Minister without Portfolio in the government of
Joseph Lyons. Lyons quickly dispatched Bruce to England to represent the government there and he led the Australian delegation to the 1932
Ottawa Imperial Conference. But Lyons wanted Bruce out of politics altogether and in 1933 he resigned from Parliament in order to take the position in London as
High Commissioner. This post he held with great distinction for 12 years, playing a notable role in the
Abdication Crisis triggered by
Edward VIII, and representing Australia's interests in London during
World War II. He was appointed a member of the
Imperial War Cabinet and the Pacific War Cabinet.
In 1947 he was created
Viscount Bruce of Melbourne, of Westminster Gardens in the City of Westminster and he was the first Australian to take his seat in the
House of Lords. He was the only
Australian ever created an hereditary peer; however, he died childless and the viscountcy became extinct at his death. (Sir
John Forrest was to have been similarly honoured, but died before the peerage was officially created).
Bruce divided the rest of his life between London and Melbourne. He remained Australian High Commissioner until 1945. He represented Australia on various
United Nations bodies and was considered as a possible candidate for the position of
secretary-general for that organisation and was the chairman of the
World Food Council for five years. He was also
Chancellor of the
Australian National University for a decade starting in
1951. He died in London on
25 August 1967.
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