Political Troglodytes and Economic Lunatics: The Hard Right in Australia
By (Author) Dominic Kelly
Black Inc.
La Trobe University Press
5th March 2019
Australia
General
Non Fiction
Economics
320.520994
Paperback
256
Width 153mm, Height 232mm, Spine 26mm
434g
The bracing history of the pioneers of the hard right and how their work has transformed Australian politics. In the mid-1980s, Ray Evans and his boss at Western Mining Corporation, Hugh Morgan, became the pioneers of a new form of political activism. Morgan and Evans set up four small but potent organisations, intending to transform public thinking on industrial relations, the Constitution, Indigenous affairs and climate change. Together they had an energy that bordered on fanaticism. They lobbied politicians and wrote opinion articles. They were born intriguers and colourful speakers. It was Bob Hawke who called them 'political troglodytes and economic lunatics', yet in their dogged pursuit of influence these hard right conservatives had an impact on mainstream public policy that continues today. Calmly, forensically and with a dry wit, Dominic Kelly shows how they did it. Political Troglodytes and Economic Lunatics is a case study in how some very determined people can change a political culture.
Dominic Kelly's writing has appeared in The Age, The Monthly, Guardian Australia, Meanjin, The Saturday Paper and Inside Story. He is an honorary research fellow at La Trobe University. Political Troglodytes and Economic Lunatics is his first book.