Athletic shoe and Joh Bjelke-Petersen: Difference between pages

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{{Infobox Officeholder
[[Image:DSC01344.JPG|right|275px|thumb|A [[Nike, Inc.|Nike]] athletic shoe.]]
| honorific-prefix = Sir
An '''athletic shoe''' is a [[generic]] name for footwear designed for [[sport]]ing and [[physical exercise|physical activities]], and is different in style and build than a [[dress shoe]].
| name = Joh Bjelke-Petersen
| honorific-suffix = [[Order of St Michael and St George|KCMG]]
| image = JBPetersen.jpg
| imagesize =
| smallimage =
| caption =
| order = 31st
| office = Premier of Queensland
| term_start = 8 August 1968
| term_end = 1 December 1987
| deputy =
| predecessor = [[Gordon Chalk]]
| successor = [[Michael Ahern (Australian politician)|Mike Ahern]]
| constituency =
| majority =
| birth_date = {{birth date|1911|1|13}}
| birth_place = [[Dannevirke]], [[New Zealand]]
| death_date = {{death date and age|2005|4|23|1911|1|13}}
| death_place = [[Kingaroy, Queensland|Kingaroy]], [[Queensland]], [[Australia]]
| nationality =
| party = [[National Party of Australia|Country/National Party of Australia]]
| otherparty = <!--For additional political affiliations -->
| spouse = [[Flo Bjelke-Petersen]]
| relations =
| children =
| residence =
| alma_mater =
| occupation =
| profession =
| religion = Christian-[[Lutheran]]
| signature =
| website =
| footnotes =
}}
'''Sir Johannes "Joh" Bjelke-Petersen''' [[Order of St Michael and St George|KCMG]] (13 January 1911 &ndash; 23 April 2005], [[New Zealand]]-born<ref>[http://www.news.com.au/couriermail/extras/federation/Timelines/CMFedTimelineWideBayAddJoh.htm "Joh Bjelke-Petersen", ''Courier Mail''] Birth of our Nation, 2001.</ref> [[Australia]]n [[politician]], was the longest-serving and longest-lived [[Premiers of Queensland|Premier]] of the state of [[Queensland]]<ref>[http://www.abc.net.au/7.30/content/2004/s1024956.htm "Sir Joh celebrates 93rd birthday", ''Australian Broadcasting Corporation''] 13 January 2004.</ref>. He held office from 1968 to 1987, a period that saw considerable economic development in the state<ref>[http://www.theage.com.au/news/opinion/sir-joh-our-homegrown-banana-republican/2005/04/24/1114281449030.html "Sir Joh, our home-grown banana republican", ''The Age''] 25 April 2005.</ref>. His uncompromising [[conservatism]] (including his role within the [[1975 Australian constitutional crisis|downfall of the Whitlam federal government]]), his political longevity, and his leadership of a government that, in its latter years, was revealed to be institutionally corrupt, made him one of the best-known political figures in twentieth-century Australia.


==Early life==
Athletic shoes, depending on the location and the actual type of footwear, can also go by the name '''''trainers''''' ([[British English]]), '''''sandshoes''''' or '''''joggers''''' ([[Australian English]]) '''''running shoes''''', '''''runners''''' or '''''gutties''''' ([[Canadian English]], [[Australian English]], [[Hiberno-English]]), '''''sneakers''''', '''''tennis shoes''''' ([[North American English]], [[Australian English]]), '''''gym shoes''''', '''''tennies''''', '''''sport shoes''''', '''''sneaks''''', or '''''takkies''''' ([[South African English]]) and '''''rubber shoes''''' ([[Philippine English]])


Bjelke-Petersen was born in [[Dannevirke]] in the Southern Hawke's Bay region of [[New Zealand]], and lived in [[Waipukurau]], a small town in [[Hawke's Bay (region)|Hawke's Bay]]. Bjelke-Petersen's parents were both [[Denmark|Danish]] immigrants, and his father, Carl, was a [[Lutheran]] [[pastor]]. In 1913 the family left for Australia, moving to [[Kingaroy, Queensland|Kingaroy]] in south-eastern Queensland and taking up [[dairy farming]].
==Use of athletic shoes==
===General purpose===
Originally known as sporting apparel, today they are known as [[casual]] [[footwear]].
===Use in sports===
The term ''athletic shoes'' is used for [[running]] in a [[marathon]] or [[half marathon]], [[basketball]], and [[tennis]] (amongst others) but tends to exclude shoes for sports played on grass such as [[football (soccer)]] and [[Rugby football|rugby]], which are generally known as "boots", or in North America as [[cleat (shoe)|cleats]].


The young Johannes suffered from [[polio]], leaving him with a life-long limp. The family was poor, and Carl Bjelke-Petersen was frequently in poor health. Johannes and his mother Maren worked on the farm. Imbued with the strongly [[pietism|pietistic]] [[Lutheranism]] associated with the Danish immigrants of the area, Johannes was somewhat resentful of both his father and elder brother, whose sickliness and academic leanings meant that they left much of the work to him. Biographer James Walter has suggested that this resentment would feed Johannes' [[anti-intellectualism|anti-intellectual]] tendencies in later life.
The shoes themselves are made of flexible material, typically featuring a sole made of dense [[rubber]]. While the original design was basic, manufacturers have since tailored athletic shoes for the different purposes that they can be used for. A specific example of this is the spiked shoe developed for track running. It is also a good idea to get your foot measured by a trained shoe specialist. Also, some come in leather


In 1933, Bjelke-Petersen began work on the family's newly-acquired second property at land-clearing and peanut farming. His efforts eventually allowed him to begin work as a contract land-clearer and to acquire further capital which he invested in farm equipment and natural resource exploration. He developed a technique for quickly clearing scrub by connecting a heavy anchor chain between two bulldozers. Obtaining a pilot's licence early in his adult life, Joh also started aerial spraying and grass seeding to further speed up pasture development in [[Queensland]].<ref>http://qcl.farmonline.com.au/news/state/agribusiness-and-general/general/curtain-closes-on-joh-era/9914.aspx</ref> By the time he entered Parliament, he had built a thriving business.
High-end [[marathon]] running shoes will often come in different shapes suited to different [[foot type]]s, [[gait]] etc.


Under sponsorship from Sir [[Charles Adermann]] and Sir [[Francis Nicklin]], he was elected as [[National Party of Australia|Country Party]] member for [[Electoral district of Nanango|Nanango]] in the [[Queensland Legislative Assembly]] in 1946 (from 1950 to 1987 he was member for Barambah). The [[Australian Labor Party]] (ALP) had held power in Queensland since 1932 and Bjelke-Petersen spent eleven years as an Opposition member.
There are a variety of specialized shoes designed for specific uses:
* [[Racing flats]]
* [[Track shoe]]
* [[Skate shoes]]
* [[Climbing shoe]]
* [[Approach shoe]]
* [[Wrestling shoes]]
* [[Cleat (shoe)|Cleats]]
* [[Football boot]]


==Etymology==
==Rise to power==
The [[English English]] term "trainer" derives from "training shoe". There is evidence [http://www.bbc.co.uk/history/programmes/wordhunt/fashionistasextras.shtml] that this usage of "trainer" originated as a [[genericised tradename]] for a make of training shoe made in 1968 by [[Gola (manufacturer)|Gola]].


In 1957, following a split in the Labor Party, the Country Party under Nicklin came to power, with the [[Liberal Party of Australia|Liberal Party]] as a junior coalition partner. In the same year, Bjelke-Petersen married [[Flo Bjelke-Petersen|Florence Gilmour]], who was later to become a significant political figure in her own right.
[[Plimsoll shoe|Plimsolls]] (English English) are indoor athletic shoes, and are also called ''sneakers'' in American English and [[Daps]] in [[Welsh English]]. The word "sneaker" is often attributed to Henry Nelson McKinney, an advertising agent for N. W. Ayer & Son, who, in 1917, coined the term because the rubber sole made the shoe stealthy. All other shoes, with the exception of [[Moccasin (footwear)|moccasins]], were unsuitable for sneaking due to the noise they inevitably produced. However, the word was in use at least as early as 1887, as the ''Boston Journal of Education'' made reference to "sneakers" as "the name boys give to tennis shoes".


Bjelke-Petersen became one of Nicklin's cabinet ministers in 1963 as minister for works and housing.<ref>http://www.bookrags.com/biography/johannes-bjelke-petersen/</ref>
==Popular brands==
When Nicklin retired in January 1968, [[Jack Pizzey]] became Nicklin's successor both as Premier and as Country Party leader. Pizzey died unexpectedly within seven months of assuming office. In the election for leadership of the Country Party, Bjelke-Petersen won. He became Premier on 8 August 1968.<ref>http://www.news.com.au/couriermail/story/0,23739,23862386-5008700,00.html</ref> (During the interval between Pizzey's death and Bjelke-Petersen's accession, the premiership was held by the Liberals' leader, Sir [[Gordon Chalk]].) At this stage Bjelke-Petersen was still not very well known even to most Queenslanders, let alone outside the State. Even after becoming Premier, Joh was still very active in his local community teaching Sunday School.<ref>http://www.news.com.au/couriermail/story/0,23739,23862386-5008700,00.html</ref>
{{main|List of athletic shoe brands}}
Popular brands include [[Nike, Inc.|Nike]], [[Adidas]], [[Etonic]], [[FILA]], [[Reebok]], [[New Balance]], [[Puma AG|Puma]], [[Lacoste]], [[K-Swiss]], [[Gola]], [[DC Shoes]], [[Fred Perry]], [[Converse_(shoe_company)|Converse]], [[Vans]], [[Pony International|Pony]], [[ASICS]], [[Servis-Cheetah]], [[Mizuno Corp.|Mizuno]], [[G-Star Runnerz]] and [[Air Jordan|Jordans]].


Bjelke-Petersen's administration was partly kept in power by an [[Australian electoral system#Gerrymandering and malapportionment|electoral malapportionment]] where rural electoral districts had significantly fewer enrolled voters than those in metropolitan areas. This system was originally introduced by the Labor Party in 1949 as an overt electoral fix. Under Nicklin the bias in favour of rural constituencies was maintained. In 1972 Sir Joh strengthened the system to favour his own party, which led to his opponents referring to it as the [[Bjelkemander|"Bjelke-mander"]], a play on the term "[[gerrymander]]". Although Bjelke-Petersen's 1972 redistributions occasionally had elements of "gerrymandering" in the strict sense, their perceived unfairness had more to do with [[malapportionment]] whereby certain areas (normally rural) are simply granted more representation than their population would dictate if electorates contained equal numbers of voters (or population). The lack of a state [[upper house]] (which Queensland had abolished in 1922) allowed legislation to be passed without the need to negotiate with other political parties.
==Types of athletic shoes==

* High-tops cover the ankle.
With Labor weak and chronically divided in Queensland throughout the 1960s and 1970s, Bjelke-Petersen won a series of election victories, often at the expense of his Liberal coalition partners as much as Labor. Typically the Country Party would gain fewer votes than either Labor or Liberal, but those votes would be spread out across the many rural electorates, giving the Country Party more seats than the Liberals and thus making them the senior coalition partner. Together they had more seats in Parliament than Labor, allowing Bjelke-Petersen to govern as Premier of a State in which his party received, in one election (1972), only 20% of the votes. However at each election Bjelke-Petersen won, the combined Liberal and National two party preferred vote was higher than Labor's.<ref>[http://www.abc.net.au/elections/qld/2006/guide/pastelec.htm Vote by Party at Past Queensland Elections], [[Australian Broadcasting Corporation|ABC]] Queensland 2006/2007 election guide</ref>
* Low-tops do not cover the ankle.

* Mid-cut are in-between high-tops and low-tops.
In 1984 Bjelke-Petersen was created a Knight Commander of the [[Order of St Michael and St George]], for "services to parliamentary democracy". He was then generally known as "Sir Joh" (rather than "Sir Johannes"), and his wife generally (if incorrectly) known as "Lady Flo."
* [[Sneaker boot]]s extend to the calf.

==Queensland under Bjelke-Petersen==
===Relations with Cabinet===
Bjelke Petersen evolved from a diffident beginner to an aging autocrat who faced no opposition of any consequence in Cabinet.<ref> Rae Wear, The Lord's Premier, p 131</ref> As a National Party Premier, he could choose and dismiss Ministers. There was no developed Cabinet office and because during his last years, submissions did not go to Department heads, power was further concentrated in the hands of the Premier and his advisors. <ref> Rae Wear, The Lord's Premier, p 132</ref>
Bjelke Petersen could be charming and helpful, or given to displays of ferocious anger. As his Premiership grew, such displays became more common and frequently greeted attempts to thwart him.<ref> Rae Wear, The Lord's Premier, p 131</ref> Cabinet was more often than not, a rubber stanp for his views. <ref> Rae Wear, The Lord's Premier, p 147</ref>

===State development===

Bjelke-Petersen abolished state duties on deceased estates ([[inheritance tax]]es), leading to a steady flow of retired people moving from the southern states of [[Victoria (Australia)|Victoria]] and [[New South Wales]] to [[Queensland]], particularly the [[Gold Coast, Australia|Gold Coast]]. All other Australian states and territories had abolished this tax by 1981 in attempt to stem the flow of people to Queensland. The rapid rise in population in the Gold Coast, Brisbane and the [[Sunshine Coast, Queensland|Sunshine Coast]] led to a building boom that lasted for three decades.

The development boom was particularly noticeable in the tourist area of the Gold Coast. The Bjelke-Petersen government worked closely with property developers, who constructed resorts, hotels, a [[casino]] and a system of residential developments. Also constructed on the Gold Coast was the Hinze Dam.<ref>http://www.goldcoast.qld.gov.au/t_standard2.aspx?pid=139</ref>

In one controversial case, the Queensland government passed special legislation, the Sanctuary Cove Act, in 1985, to exempt a luxury development, Sanctuary Cove, from local government planning regulations.<ref>http://www.legislation.qld.gov.au/LEGISLTN/CURRENT/S/SanctuaryCvA85.pdf</ref> The developer, Mike Gore, was seen as a key member of the "white shoe brigade', a group of Gold Coast businessmen who became influential supporters of Bjelke Petersen.<ref>Paul Kelly, The End of Certainty,Allen & Unwin, 1994,pp291/294</ref> Gore established Queensland's first gated community at Sanctuary Cove.
<ref> Mathhew Burke, , "The Pedestrian Behaviour of Residents in Gated Communities" University of Queensland, www.dpi.wa.gov.au/mediafiles/walking_21centconf01apaper_burke.pdf</ref> Gore was a vocal backer of the "Joh for PM" campaign. Bjelke Petersen denied that had received any money from Gore. <ref>Paul Kelly, The End of Certainty,Allen & Unwin, 1994,pp291/294</ref>

[[Image:Cloudland.jpg|thumb|left|150px|Interior of Cloudland Dance Hall]]
Considerable development of the state's infrastructure took place during the Bjelke-Petersen era.
He was a leading proponent of Wivenhoe and Burdekin Dams, encouraging the modernising and electrifying of the Queensland railway system, and the construction of the [[Gateway Bridge]].<ref>http://qcl.farmonline.com.au/news/state/agribusiness-and-general/general/curtain-closes-on-joh-era/9914.aspx</ref>

Airports, coal mines, power stations, and dams were built throughout the state. [[James Cook University]] was established. In [[Brisbane]], the [[Queensland Cultural Centre]], [[Griffith University]], the [[South East Freeway]], and the [[Captain Cook Bridge, Brisbane|Captain Cook]], Gateway and [[Merivale Bridge, Brisbane|Merivale]] bridges were all constructed, as well as the Parliamentary Annexe that was attached to Queensland Parliament House.

Bjelke-Petersen was one of the instigators of World Expo'88 (now Southbank Parlands<ref>http://www.visitsouthbank.com/about_south_bank</ref>) and the 1982 Brisbane Commonwealth Games.<ref>http://qcl.farmonline.com.au/news/state/agribusiness-and-general/general/curtain-closes-on-joh-era/9914.aspx</ref>

A Queensland defamation jury found in 1992 that industrialist Sir Leslie Thiess had in 1981-84 bribed Bjelke-Petersen generally 'on a large scale and on many occasions'; specifically, to procure Government contracts involving Winchester South, Expo '88, a Gold Coast cultural centre and three prisons.<ref>Quentin Dempster: http://www.abc.net.au/news/indepth/featureitems/s1348134.htm</ref>

Despite public protests, Brisbane heritage sites, such as the [[Bellevue Hotel]] were demolished. Thirteen Liberal backbenchers supported Labor in parliament, condemning the loss of the state government owned Bellevue. <ref> Rae Wear, The Lord's Premier, p 164</ref>
<!-- <ref>Deleted image removed: [[Image:BellevueBris.jpg]] -->
Former Liberal Parliamentarian, Terry Gygar, described the early morning scene at the Bellevue demolition;
"A large crowd had gathered around the building. There was a cordon of police. They had thrown up a barbed...a mesh wire fence around it. And then the Deen Bros arrived, rolling through like an armoured division, straight through the crowd. People were knocked sideways. Police were dragging people out of the way. Parking meters were knocked over. Traffic signs were bent and twisted on the road. It looked like Stalingrad."<ref>Terry Gygar; Rewind, ABC Television ; http://www.abc.net.au/tv/rewind/txt/s1218262.htm</ref> Bjelke Petersen congratulated the contractors, the Deen Brothers, "on a job well done".<ref> Rae Wear, The Lord's Premier, p 164</ref>

===Relations with the media===
His Government dominated Parliament, not allowing committees or impartial speech, and ran a very sophisticated media operation, sending press releases out right on deadline so journalists had very little chance to research news items.<ref>Wear, Rae. "Study examines Sir Joh's life and times" UQ News Online http://www.uq.edu.au/news/index.html?article=1471</ref>

Journalists covering industrial disputes and picketing, were afraid of arrest. In 1985, the Australian Journalists Association withdrew from the system of police passes because of police refusal to accredit certain journalists. Some journalists experienced police harassment. <ref>Wear, Rae. Johannes Bjelke Petersen; the Lord's Premier. University of Queensland Press, Brisbane. 2002</ref>

Bjelke Petersen's authoritarian and manipulative approach to media, at times became visible behind his tangled syntax, which frequently bemused interviewers. Was he joking, confused or saying what he really thought when he said: "The greatest thing that could happen to the state and nation is when we get rid of all the media ... then we could live in peace and tranquility and no one would know anything."<ref>Cunningham et al, Contemporary Australian Television,UnSW Press, 1994, p61.</ref>

A number of times Bjelke Petersen responded to unfavourable media coverage by using government resources to sue for [[defamation]]. Queensland historian, [[Ross Fitzgerald]] was threatened with criminal libel when he sought to publish a critical history. <ref>[http://www.abc.net.au/news/indepth/featureitems/s1348142.htm Ross Fitzgerald], [[Australian Broadcasting Corporation|ABC]] website</ref>

In 1989, the Australian Broadcasting Tribunal, found that in 1986 Bjelke-Petersen had placed then Channel 9 owner [[Alan Bond]] in a position of 'commercial blackmail' when Bond improperly agreed to pay $400,000 as an out-of-court defamation settlement.<ref>[http://www.abc.net.au/news/indepth/featureitems/s1348134.htm Quentin Dempster], [[Australian Broadcasting Corporation|ABC]] website</ref>

Joh's catchphrase answer to unwelcome queries, "Don't you worry about that," was widely parodied.

===Terrorism===
In 1975, a letter-bomb addressed to Premier Joh Bjelke-Petersen was sent to his office. The bomb exploded seriously injuring two of his staff.<ref>http://www.naa.gov.au/collection/explore/cabinet/by-year/1975-events-issues.aspx</ref>

===Civil liberties and political protest===

The Bjelke-Petersen government sought to make political capital with its hardline approach against protest and industrial action. Police violence was witnessed against demonstrators at the [[University of Queensland]], which was a haven for anti-Bjelke-Petersen sentiment.<ref>Semper Floreat 1973</ref> A decision by this University's Senate to award him an honorary [[doctor of laws|doctorate of laws]] brought about criticisms from both students and staff. Leading Queensland poet, [[Judith Wright]], returned her own honorary Doctorate, in a personal protest. <ref>[http://dlibrary.acu.edu.au/staffhome/gehall/Judith.htm Dr Gerard Hall]</ref>

The [[1971 Springbok tour]] by the [[South Africa national rugby union team]] sparked nation-wide demonstrations against apartheid. The Springboks Brisbane match was moved from the Rugby Union headquarters at Ballymore because it was easier to erect barricades at the Exhibition Ground.<ref>http://www.austadiums.com/stadiums/stadiums.php?id=20</ref> However, the [[Royal_National_Agricultural_and_Industrial_Association_of_Queensland|RNA]] refused. Bjelke-Petersen "grabbed the political initiative" <ref>Don Lane, Trial and Error, p63</ref>by declaring a [[state of emergency]]<ref>http://www.icons.org.uk/theicons/collection/rugby/features/a-question-of-politics</ref> which compelled the RNA to co-operate. The declaration covered the whole of Queensland and operated for a period from ten days before the first game to fourteen days after the last, "in case the police had any unfinished business".<ref>Rae Wear, The Lord's Premier, p 137</ref> [[Doug Anthony]], a former National Party Deputy Prime Minister, said Bjelke-Petersen's support for South Africa's apartheid regime, in direct defiance of the Fraser Government's stance, showed him as "unreasonable, selfish and un-Christian".<ref>"Don't you worry about that" SMH, 25.4.05 </ref>
The government subsequently campaigned on "Law and Order", winning two by-elections, including the seat of Merthyr, won by Don Lane, a former Special Branch policeman. <ref>Don Lane, Trial and Error, p64</ref>

According to Lane, one of Bjelke Petersen's closest ministerial allies, Joh saw street marchers as a menace who clogged up traffic, caused distress to pedestrians, motorists and shop keepers and were mainly made up of grubby left wing students, Anarchists, professional agitators and trade union activists.<ref>[Trial and Error,Boolarong Publications, Brisbane, 1993 Don Lane]</ref><ref>[Trial and Error,Boolarong Publications, Brisbane, 1993 Don Lane]</ref> The government transferred 450 police from country areas to suppress demonstrations. <ref>[http://www.abc.net.au/tv/rewind/txt/s1204845.htm Allan Hall]</ref> Future Queensland Premier [[Peter Beattie]], then a student protestor, witnessed police violently attacking peaceful demonstrators, including women. <ref>[http://www.abc.net.au/dimensions/dimensions_in_time/Transcripts/s608221.htm Peter Beattie], [[Australian Broadcasting Corporation|ABC]] website</ref> Brisbane aboriginal activist, [[Sam Watson]] claimed the police wanted to "smash and cripple and destroy".<ref>[http://www.abc.net.au/dimensions/dimensions_in_time/Transcripts/s608221.htm Sam Watson], [[Australian Broadcasting Corporation|ABC]] website</ref> Bjelke-Petersen praised police conduct during the demonstrations and awarded them an extra day's leave.<ref>[http://www.australianbiography.gov.au/whitrod/interview9.html Ray Whitrod]</ref>

Bjelke Petersen rejected recommendations by the Police Minister, Max Hodges, and the Police commissioner, Ray Whitrod, who sought an inquiry into an incident in 1976, where a police officer struck a student with a baton during a demonstration.<ref>Rae Wear, The Lord's Premier p 201</ref>
Bjelke Petersen told Whitrod that the cabinet, not the Commissioner would decide if an investigation was warranted. The Police Union sent a letter of thanks to the Premier and offered support. Hodges was replaced as Police Minister soon after.<ref>Rae Wear, The Lord's Premier p 201</ref>
The Police, secure in the knowledge that they had the Premier's backing, continued to act provocatively, most notably in a raid on a commune at Cedar Bay later that year.<ref>Rae Wear, The Lord's Premier p 202</ref> The Police who had been looking for marijuana, torched the residents' houses and destroyed their property. Whitrod sought an inquiry but the results were never revealed.<ref>Rae Wear, The Lord's Premier p 202</ref>
After seven years as Police Commissioner, Whitrod resigned saying he could no longer tolerate poltical interference and the Police Commissioner had become a political puppet. He was replaced by Terry Lewis who had been previously promoted to Assistant Commissioner, against Whitrod's recommendation, over the heads of 122 officers of higher or equal rank. <ref>Rae Wear, The Lord's Premier p 202</ref> The Police force became increasingly politicised. <ref>Rae Wear, The Lord's Premier p 203 </ref>
[[Peter Beattie]] said that, "...if you went to a protest there was always photos being taken". "You know, you'd always pose to get your best side. (Laughs) And they had a dossier on everybody," Beattie said. <ref>Beattie, Peter. "Springbok Tour" Rewind, ABC TV 2004. [http://www.abc.net.au/tv/rewind/txt/s1204845.htm]</ref> In 1977, Bjelke Petersen decided to ban street marches altogether. Seven Liberal parliamentarians crossed the floor defending the right of association and assembly.<ref>Lamont, Colin,"The Joh Years -Lest we Forget" Online Opinion,2005, http://www.onlineopinion.com.au/view.asp?article=3500</ref> One of the Liberals, Colin Lamont, told a meeting at University of Queensland that the Premier was engineering confrontation for electoral purposes."Two hours later, he (Bjelke Petersen) lunged at me across the floor of Parliament, waving a tape recorder and spluttered, 'I’ve heard every word. You are a traitor to this Government'," Lamont wrote later. Lamont said he learned the Special Branch had been keeping files on Liberal rebels and reporting, not to their Commissioner, but directly to the Premier. "The police state had arrived*," Lamont said.<ref>Lamont 2005</ref>

The [[Uniting Church]] synod passed a resolution requesting "Queensland heads of churches to mediate between the State government and student and civil liberties groups to achieve better ways of expressing their differences." Sir Joh replied, "If churches want to consort with atheists and communists dedicated to the elimination of religion, that is their problem." <ref>Brennan, Frank. " Launch and Dedication Of The Uniting Care Queensland Centre for Social Justice" Jesuit Social Justice Centre. http://www.uniya.org/talks/f_uniting.html</ref>

Bjelke-Petersen often accused political opponents of being covert [[communist]]s bent on anarchy. "I have always found ... you can campaign on anything you like but nothing is more effective than communism," he said. "If he's a Labor man, he's a socialist and a very dangerous man." <ref>Sydney Morning Herald 2005: http://www.smh.com.au/news/National/Dont-you-worry-about-that/2005/04/24/1114281452280.html</ref>His rhetoric may have been ridiculed in the national media but it proved highly effective among conservative and rural voters who enjoyed disproportionate political influence due to malapportionment.

===Aboriginal people===

In June 1976, Bjelke-Petersen blocked the proposed sale of a pastoral property on the [[Cape York Peninsula]] to a group of [[Indigenous Australians|Aboriginal]] people, because according to cabinet policy, "The Queensland Government does not view favourably proposals to acquire large areas of additional freehold or leasehold land for development by Aborigines or Aboriginal groups in isolation." <ref name="land_policy">cabinet memo dated September 1972, quoted in ''[http://www.austlii.edu.au/au/cases/cth/HCA/1982/27.html Koowarta v Bjelke-Petersen]''.</ref> This dispute resulted in the case of ''[[Koowarta v Bjelke-Petersen]]'', which was decided partly in the [[High Court of Australia|High Court]] in 1982, and partly in the [[Supreme Court of Queensland]] in 1988. The courts found that Bjelke-Petersen's policy had discriminated against Aboriginal people.

Also in 1976, Bjelke-Petersen evicted a team treating [[trachoma]], led by [[Fred Hollows]] from state-controlled Aboriginal land. Bjelke-Petersen claimed that Hollows' team had been encouraging Aborigines to enrol to vote.<ref>Kidd, Ros. "The Colour of Democracy" [http://www.faira.org.au/lrq/archives/199908/stories/the-colour-of-democracy.html]</ref> In his visits to northern communities, Fred Hollows was accompanied by two respected Aboriginal spokesmen and civil rights activists, Mick Miller and Clarrie Grogan. With an election looming, and keen to shut down this source of independent information, the Premier simply ejected Hollows' team. Electoral office data refuting his claims that there had been a rush of voter enrolments in the wake of the trachoma team, was not released for public consumption.<ref>Dr Ros Kidd</ref>

In 1978, the newly-formed [[Uniting Church]] became involved in a struggle between the rights of Aborigines at [[Aurukun, Queensland|Aurukun]] and [[Mornington Island]] (former Presbyterian missions) and the Queensland Government, which was anxious to allow mining to proceed. Bjelke-Petersen granted a 1,900 square kilometre mining lease to a mining consortium under extremely favourable conditions. With support from the church, the Aurukun people challenged the legislation, eventually winning their case in the Queensland Supreme Court. But they ultimately lost it when the Queensland Government appealed to the Privy Council in England.<ref>Uniting Church. ''Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islanders'' [http://nsw.uca.org.au/schoolprojects/aboriginal.htm]</ref>

Cheryl Buchanan, chairwoman of the Kooma Traditional Owners Association said it was difficult now for people to accept how different things were in Queensland for Aboriginal people in the 1960s and 1970s. "We got raped by police in those days and couldn't do anything about it. They were the SS. The police would pick us up on a regular basis because they knew who we all were, and they'd take us out the back of Samford and harass us and push us around for hours", Buchanan said.<ref>Buchanan, Cheryl. "Queensland's Darkest Days" 2005, [http://www.cpa.org.au/garchve05/1231joh.html]</ref>

Aboriginal activist Sam Watson said: "Aboriginal people will always remember him [Bjelke-Petersen] as a racist, a thug and a dictator." <ref>Watson, Sam. "Tributes and harsh words flow for Sir Joh" ''The Australian'', 25 April 2005</ref>

===Role in the Whitlam dismissal===

In 1975 Bjelke-Petersen played what later turned out to be a key role in [[Australian constitutional crisis of 1975|the political crisis]] which brought down the federal Labor government of [[Gough Whitlam]], who referred to Bjelke-Petersen as "that Bible-bashing bastard, Bjelke". Whitlam's government did not have control of the [[Australian Senate|Senate]], whose members are elected as representatives of the individual [[States and territories of Australia|states]]. Senators are normally elected directly, but if a Senate position becomes vacant, a replacement is appointed by the relevant [[Governors of the Australian states|State Governor]]. State Governors are also responsible for the issue of [[writ]]s for elections to the Senate. Bjelke-Petersen twice used these practices to thwart Whitlam's attempts to gain control of the Senate.

In 1974, Whitlam had approached former Queensland Premier and then Senator for the [[Democratic Labor Party]], [[Vince Gair]], with the offer as a job as ambassador to [[Ireland]] as a way of creating an extra vacant Senate position in Queensland that Whitlam hoped would be won by his Labor Party. When this arrangement became public, Bjelke-Petersen advised the Governor Sir [[Colin Hannah]], to issue writs for five, rather than six, vacancies, denying Labor the chance of gaining Gair's Senate spot.

The convention in filling Senate vacancies since 1949 had been that the State Parliament would appoint the nominee of the former Senator's political party. When Labor Senator [[Bertie Milliner]] died, Bjelke-Petersen rejected Labor's nominee to fill the vacancy, [[Mal Colston]], and instead asked for a short list of three nominees, from which he would pick one. When the ALP refused to supply such a list, Bjelke-Petersen appointed [[Albert Field]], an ALP member who was critical of the Whitlam government. The ALP tried to block the appointment by expelling Field, and announcing that it would expel anyone else who would accept the appointment in Colston's place, but Bjelke-Petersen went ahead with the appointment anyway.

Field's appointment was the subject of a High Court challenge and he took leave in late 1975. During this period, the Coalition led by [[Malcolm Fraser]] refused to allot a [[pair (parliamentary convention)|pair]] to balance Field's absence. This gave the Coalition control over the Senate. Fraser used this control to prevent passage of the [[Loss of supply|Supply Bills]] through Parliament, denying Whitlam's then-unpopular government the legal capacity to appropriate funds for government business and leading to his dismissal as Prime Minister.

During the tumultuous election campaign precipitated by Whitlam's dismissal by [[John Kerr (Governor-General)|Sir John Kerr]], Bjelke-Petersen alleged that Queensland police investigations had uncovered damaging documentation in relation to the [[Loans Affair]]. This documentation was never made public and these allegations remained unsubstantiated.

===Break-up of the coalition===

In August 1983 [[Terry White]], a Liberal minister, joined backbench colleagues [[crossing the floor]] to vote against the government in Parliament. The Liberal leader, Dr [[Llew Edwards]], asked White to resign as a Minister but instead White successfully challenged him for leadership of the Liberal Party. The Coalition agreement was eventually torn up by the Liberals.<ref>http://newmatilda.com/2008/07/30/no-shotgun-wedding</ref> At the 1983 state election, the intensely divided Liberals suffered a heavy loss of seats losing 14 seats.<ref>http://www.abc.net.au/elections/qld/2006/guide/pastelec.htm</ref>
The National Party were one seat short of a majority. On October 25, following the election, two Liberal MLAs, Brian Austin (Wavell) and Don Lane (Merthyr) defected to the National Party.<ref>http://www.theaustralian.news.com.au/story/0,20867,19288923-601,00.html</ref> The National Party had formed a majority government for the first time in Australian history.

==Downfall==
==="Joh for Canberra"===
In 1987 Bjelke-Petersen made an extraordinary political move, launching a campaign for the [[Prime Minister of Australia|Prime Ministership]]. The move attracted intense media attention across Australia. By early 1987 the Joh-for-Canberra push was attracting 20 per cent in [[opinion polls]].<ref>[http://www.smh.com.au/news/National/Farewell-Sir-Joh-the-great-divider/2005/04/24/1114281454295.html]</ref>
The "[[Joh for Canberra]]" campaign was abandoned after a snap election<ref>[http://www.theage.com.au/news/National/Death-of-a-populist/2005/04/24/1114152369155.html]</ref> was called by Labor Prime Minister, [[Bob Hawke]], not giving him enough time to get prepared.

===Fitzgerald Inquiry===
Also in 1987, the [[Australian Broadcasting Corporation]] [[investigative journalism]] program ''[[Four Corners (TV program)|Four Corners]]'' aired an episode entitled "The Moonlight State" alleging high-level corruption in the [[Queensland Police]], including the receipt of bribes from owners of illegal brothels. At the time the program aired, Bjelke-Petersen was involved in his aborted national political campaign and was outside Queensland.

In response to these allegations, Deputy Premier and Minister of Police [[Bill Gunn]], who was serving as acting premier in Bjelke-Petersen's absence, announced an inquiry.
The two-year-long Commission of Inquiry into "Possible Illegal Activities and Associated Police Misconduct" was chaired by barrister [[Tony Fitzgerald]] and known as the [[Fitzgerald Inquiry]]. As it began, evidence of corruption was unearthed implicating not only Police Commissioner [[Terry Lewis (Queensland)|Terry Lewis]], but also senior members and associates of the Bjelke-Petersen government. As a result of the inquiry, Lewis was tried, convicted, and jailed on corruption charges. He was later stripped of his knighthood and other honours. A number of other officials, including ministers [[Don Lane (politician)| Don Lane]] and Austin were also jailed. Another former minister, [[Russ Hinze]], died while awaiting trial.

The Bjelke-Petersen government's decline in political standing prompted fierce conflict between his supporters and his detractors within the Nationals' partyroom. Sir [[Robert Sparkes]], the State Secretary of the party, who for decades had been Bjelke-Petersen's influential sponsor, withdrew his support and the two became enemies. Bjelke-Petersen then met with [[Governor of Queensland|State Governor]] [[Walter Campbell|Sir Walter Campbell]] in an effort to restructure his Cabinet and purge dissenters from the ministry. After a period of negotiation, Sir Walter agreed to sack three ministers.

===Resignation===
Bjelke-Petersen denied his National Party opponents the opportunity to confront him by refusing to call a meeting of the party's parliamentarians. Eventually, the organisational wing of the party intervened and called one. Bjelke-Petersen's request that Nationals MPs join him in a boycott went unheeded, and the meeting deposed him as National Party leader and elected in his place [[Michael Ahern (Australian politician)|Mike Ahern]], one of the ministers he had sacked.<ref>{{cite journal |year= 1988 |month= August |title= Australian Political Chronicle: July-December 1987 |journal= Australian Journal of Politics and History |volume= 34 |issue= 2 |pages= 238-242 |issn=0004-9522}}</ref>

Bjelke-Petersen refused to resign as Premier. The stand-off was resolved after a period of negotiation{{Verify source|date=September 2008}}, when Bjelke-Petersen resigned as Premier.
Bjelke-Petersen resigned on [[1 December]] [[1987]] after spending time in his office destroying incriminating papers.<ref>Whitton, Evan ''When the Sunshine State set up a scoundrel trap'', The Australian, 12 May 2007</ref>

Announcing his resignation as premier and parliamentarian, he said "The policies of the National Party are no longer those on which I went to the people. Therefor I have no wish to lead the Government any longer. It was my intention to take this matter to the floor of State Parliament. However, I now have no further interest in leading the National Party any further."<ref>Political Chronicle (34(2), June 1988)</ref>

In the subsequent by-election in April 1988, the seat was won by Trevor Perrett representing the [[Citizens Electoral Council]] against the endorsed National candidate, [[Warren Truss]]. Perrett ultimately joined the National Party in December 1988.<ref>http://www.abc.net.au/news/qe98/elect05.htm</ref>

===Perjury trial===
In 1991 Bjelke-Petersen faced criminal trial for [[perjury]] arising out of the evidence he had given to the Fitzgerald Inquiry (an earlier proposed charge of corruption was incorporated into the perjury charge). Evidence was given to the perjury trial by Sir Joh's former police Special Branch bodyguard Sergeant Bob Carter that in 1986 he had twice been given packages of cash totalling $210,000 at Sir Joh's office. He was told to take them to a Brisbane city law firm and then watch as the money was deposited in a company bank account.

The money had been given over by developer [[Sng Swee Lee]], and the bank account was in the name of Kaldeal - operated by a trustee of the National Party, Edward Lyons. <ref>"Joh a great servant: jury foreman", Australian 27.042007</ref> John Huey, a Fitzgerald Inquiry Investigator later told [[Four Corners]]: "I said to Robert Sng, "Well what did Sir Joh say to you when you gave him this large sum of money?" And he said, "All he said was, 'thank you, thank you, thank you'."<ref>John Huey ; http://www.abc.net.au/4corners/content/2008/s2178617.htm</ref>

The jury in the case remained deadlocked. In 1992 it was revealed that the jury foreman, Luke Shaw, was a member of the Young Nationals and was identified with the "Friends of Joh" movement.<ref>"Joh a great servant: jury foreman", Australian 27.042007</ref>

A special prosecutor announced in 1992 there would be no retrial because Sir Joh, then aged 81, was too old.<ref>http://www.abc.net.au/news/promos/s1302904.htm</ref>

A key witness, [[Sng Swee Lee]] refused to return from Singapore for a retrial. However, one unproven estimate of Bjelke-Petersen's extortions was at least AU$6 million.<ref>Whitton, Evan ''When the Sunshine State set up a scoundrel trap'', The Australian, 12 May 2007</ref>

In 2003, The Queensland government rejected a $353 million damages claim by Sir Joh Bjelke Petersen seeking compensation for loss of business opportunities resulting from the Fitzgerald inquiry. In his advice to the government, tabled in parliament, Crown Solicitor Conrad Lohe not only recommended dismissing the claim, but said Sir Joh was "fortunate" not to have faced a second trial.<ref>"Sir Joh's compensation claim rejected", The Age, 7.10.2003 </ref>.

==Post-premiership==

Bjelke-Petersen remained a popular figure with rural conservatives in Queensland.

For a while he pursued business interests in [[Tasmania]] while attempting to pay off debts incurred during his perjury trial.<ref>[http://www.abc.net.au/news/promos/s1302904.htm]</ref>

Bjelke-Petersen's memoirs, ''Don't You Worry About That: The Joh Bjelke-Petersen Memoirs'', were published in 1991.<ref>[http://www.bookrags.com/biography/johannes-bjelke-petersen/]</ref>

Bjelke-Petersen died in April 2005, with Lady Bjelke-Petersen and a number of other family members by his side. Bjelke-Petersen received a state funeral and is buried at his property "Bethany" at [[Kingaroy]]. Australian Prime Minister [[John Howard]] was a speaker at the funeral of Sir Joh Bjelke-Petersen.<ref>[http://www.abc.net.au/news/australia/qld/toowoomba/200505/s1358840.htm]</ref>


==References==
==References==
{{reflist}}
{{reflist|2}}

* [http://news.bbc.co.uk/sportacademy/hi/sa/athletics/features/newsid_3935000/3935703.stm BBC Sport — "The history of running shoes"]
*Deane Wells, ''The Deep North'' (1979) (Outback Press)
* [http://visual.merriam-webster.com/clothing-articles/clothing/sportswear/running-shoe.php ''running shoe'' in the Visual Dictionary at Merriam-Webster.com]

* [http://www.drpribut.com/sports/sneaker_odyssey.html "2002: A Sneaker Odyssey"]
*[[Evan Whitton]], "The Hillbilly Dictator", Australian Broadcasting Commission, 1989, ISBN 0 642 12809 X
* Smith, Ian. "Do the Shoes Fit?" [[Time]]; 09/27/99, Vol. 154 Issue 13, p.111
* Globus, Sheila. "What's Your Athletic Shoe IQ?" [[Current Health]] 2; Sep2002, Vol. 29 Issue 1, p12
* [http://inventors.about.com/library/inventors/blshoe.htm "The History of Shoes"]


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==External links==
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{{succession box| before=[[Gordon Chalk]]| title=[[Premier of Queensland]] | after=[[Michael Ahern (Australian politician)|Mike Ahern]] | years=1968 – 1987}}
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{{QueenslandPremiers}}
*[http://www.podiatryworldwide.com Podiatry Worldwide Directory Homepage]


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Revision as of 07:59, 10 October 2008

Sir
Joh Bjelke-Petersen
File:JBPetersen.jpg
31st Premier of Queensland
In office
8 August 1968 – 1 December 1987
Preceded byGordon Chalk
Succeeded byMike Ahern
Personal details
Born(1911-01-13)January 13, 1911
Dannevirke, New Zealand
DiedApril 23, 2005(2005-04-23) (aged 94)
Kingaroy, Queensland, Australia
Political partyCountry/National Party of Australia
SpouseFlo Bjelke-Petersen

Sir Johannes "Joh" Bjelke-Petersen KCMG (13 January 1911 – 23 April 2005], New Zealand-born[1] Australian politician, was the longest-serving and longest-lived Premier of the state of Queensland[2]. He held office from 1968 to 1987, a period that saw considerable economic development in the state[3]. His uncompromising conservatism (including his role within the downfall of the Whitlam federal government), his political longevity, and his leadership of a government that, in its latter years, was revealed to be institutionally corrupt, made him one of the best-known political figures in twentieth-century Australia.

Early life

Bjelke-Petersen was born in Dannevirke in the Southern Hawke's Bay region of New Zealand, and lived in Waipukurau, a small town in Hawke's Bay. Bjelke-Petersen's parents were both Danish immigrants, and his father, Carl, was a Lutheran pastor. In 1913 the family left for Australia, moving to Kingaroy in south-eastern Queensland and taking up dairy farming.

The young Johannes suffered from polio, leaving him with a life-long limp. The family was poor, and Carl Bjelke-Petersen was frequently in poor health. Johannes and his mother Maren worked on the farm. Imbued with the strongly pietistic Lutheranism associated with the Danish immigrants of the area, Johannes was somewhat resentful of both his father and elder brother, whose sickliness and academic leanings meant that they left much of the work to him. Biographer James Walter has suggested that this resentment would feed Johannes' anti-intellectual tendencies in later life.

In 1933, Bjelke-Petersen began work on the family's newly-acquired second property at land-clearing and peanut farming. His efforts eventually allowed him to begin work as a contract land-clearer and to acquire further capital which he invested in farm equipment and natural resource exploration. He developed a technique for quickly clearing scrub by connecting a heavy anchor chain between two bulldozers. Obtaining a pilot's licence early in his adult life, Joh also started aerial spraying and grass seeding to further speed up pasture development in Queensland.[4] By the time he entered Parliament, he had built a thriving business.

Under sponsorship from Sir Charles Adermann and Sir Francis Nicklin, he was elected as Country Party member for Nanango in the Queensland Legislative Assembly in 1946 (from 1950 to 1987 he was member for Barambah). The Australian Labor Party (ALP) had held power in Queensland since 1932 and Bjelke-Petersen spent eleven years as an Opposition member.

Rise to power

In 1957, following a split in the Labor Party, the Country Party under Nicklin came to power, with the Liberal Party as a junior coalition partner. In the same year, Bjelke-Petersen married Florence Gilmour, who was later to become a significant political figure in her own right.

Bjelke-Petersen became one of Nicklin's cabinet ministers in 1963 as minister for works and housing.[5] When Nicklin retired in January 1968, Jack Pizzey became Nicklin's successor both as Premier and as Country Party leader. Pizzey died unexpectedly within seven months of assuming office. In the election for leadership of the Country Party, Bjelke-Petersen won. He became Premier on 8 August 1968.[6] (During the interval between Pizzey's death and Bjelke-Petersen's accession, the premiership was held by the Liberals' leader, Sir Gordon Chalk.) At this stage Bjelke-Petersen was still not very well known even to most Queenslanders, let alone outside the State. Even after becoming Premier, Joh was still very active in his local community teaching Sunday School.[7]

Bjelke-Petersen's administration was partly kept in power by an electoral malapportionment where rural electoral districts had significantly fewer enrolled voters than those in metropolitan areas. This system was originally introduced by the Labor Party in 1949 as an overt electoral fix. Under Nicklin the bias in favour of rural constituencies was maintained. In 1972 Sir Joh strengthened the system to favour his own party, which led to his opponents referring to it as the "Bjelke-mander", a play on the term "gerrymander". Although Bjelke-Petersen's 1972 redistributions occasionally had elements of "gerrymandering" in the strict sense, their perceived unfairness had more to do with malapportionment whereby certain areas (normally rural) are simply granted more representation than their population would dictate if electorates contained equal numbers of voters (or population). The lack of a state upper house (which Queensland had abolished in 1922) allowed legislation to be passed without the need to negotiate with other political parties.

With Labor weak and chronically divided in Queensland throughout the 1960s and 1970s, Bjelke-Petersen won a series of election victories, often at the expense of his Liberal coalition partners as much as Labor. Typically the Country Party would gain fewer votes than either Labor or Liberal, but those votes would be spread out across the many rural electorates, giving the Country Party more seats than the Liberals and thus making them the senior coalition partner. Together they had more seats in Parliament than Labor, allowing Bjelke-Petersen to govern as Premier of a State in which his party received, in one election (1972), only 20% of the votes. However at each election Bjelke-Petersen won, the combined Liberal and National two party preferred vote was higher than Labor's.[8]

In 1984 Bjelke-Petersen was created a Knight Commander of the Order of St Michael and St George, for "services to parliamentary democracy". He was then generally known as "Sir Joh" (rather than "Sir Johannes"), and his wife generally (if incorrectly) known as "Lady Flo."

Queensland under Bjelke-Petersen

Relations with Cabinet

Bjelke Petersen evolved from a diffident beginner to an aging autocrat who faced no opposition of any consequence in Cabinet.[9] As a National Party Premier, he could choose and dismiss Ministers. There was no developed Cabinet office and because during his last years, submissions did not go to Department heads, power was further concentrated in the hands of the Premier and his advisors. [10] Bjelke Petersen could be charming and helpful, or given to displays of ferocious anger. As his Premiership grew, such displays became more common and frequently greeted attempts to thwart him.[11] Cabinet was more often than not, a rubber stanp for his views. [12]

State development

Bjelke-Petersen abolished state duties on deceased estates (inheritance taxes), leading to a steady flow of retired people moving from the southern states of Victoria and New South Wales to Queensland, particularly the Gold Coast. All other Australian states and territories had abolished this tax by 1981 in attempt to stem the flow of people to Queensland. The rapid rise in population in the Gold Coast, Brisbane and the Sunshine Coast led to a building boom that lasted for three decades.

The development boom was particularly noticeable in the tourist area of the Gold Coast. The Bjelke-Petersen government worked closely with property developers, who constructed resorts, hotels, a casino and a system of residential developments. Also constructed on the Gold Coast was the Hinze Dam.[13]

In one controversial case, the Queensland government passed special legislation, the Sanctuary Cove Act, in 1985, to exempt a luxury development, Sanctuary Cove, from local government planning regulations.[14] The developer, Mike Gore, was seen as a key member of the "white shoe brigade', a group of Gold Coast businessmen who became influential supporters of Bjelke Petersen.[15] Gore established Queensland's first gated community at Sanctuary Cove. [16] Gore was a vocal backer of the "Joh for PM" campaign. Bjelke Petersen denied that had received any money from Gore. [17]

Interior of Cloudland Dance Hall

Considerable development of the state's infrastructure took place during the Bjelke-Petersen era. He was a leading proponent of Wivenhoe and Burdekin Dams, encouraging the modernising and electrifying of the Queensland railway system, and the construction of the Gateway Bridge.[18]

Airports, coal mines, power stations, and dams were built throughout the state. James Cook University was established. In Brisbane, the Queensland Cultural Centre, Griffith University, the South East Freeway, and the Captain Cook, Gateway and Merivale bridges were all constructed, as well as the Parliamentary Annexe that was attached to Queensland Parliament House.

Bjelke-Petersen was one of the instigators of World Expo'88 (now Southbank Parlands[19]) and the 1982 Brisbane Commonwealth Games.[20]

A Queensland defamation jury found in 1992 that industrialist Sir Leslie Thiess had in 1981-84 bribed Bjelke-Petersen generally 'on a large scale and on many occasions'; specifically, to procure Government contracts involving Winchester South, Expo '88, a Gold Coast cultural centre and three prisons.[21]

Despite public protests, Brisbane heritage sites, such as the Bellevue Hotel were demolished. Thirteen Liberal backbenchers supported Labor in parliament, condemning the loss of the state government owned Bellevue. [22] Former Liberal Parliamentarian, Terry Gygar, described the early morning scene at the Bellevue demolition; "A large crowd had gathered around the building. There was a cordon of police. They had thrown up a barbed...a mesh wire fence around it. And then the Deen Bros arrived, rolling through like an armoured division, straight through the crowd. People were knocked sideways. Police were dragging people out of the way. Parking meters were knocked over. Traffic signs were bent and twisted on the road. It looked like Stalingrad."[23] Bjelke Petersen congratulated the contractors, the Deen Brothers, "on a job well done".[24]

Relations with the media

His Government dominated Parliament, not allowing committees or impartial speech, and ran a very sophisticated media operation, sending press releases out right on deadline so journalists had very little chance to research news items.[25]

Journalists covering industrial disputes and picketing, were afraid of arrest. In 1985, the Australian Journalists Association withdrew from the system of police passes because of police refusal to accredit certain journalists. Some journalists experienced police harassment. [26]

Bjelke Petersen's authoritarian and manipulative approach to media, at times became visible behind his tangled syntax, which frequently bemused interviewers. Was he joking, confused or saying what he really thought when he said: "The greatest thing that could happen to the state and nation is when we get rid of all the media ... then we could live in peace and tranquility and no one would know anything."[27]

A number of times Bjelke Petersen responded to unfavourable media coverage by using government resources to sue for defamation. Queensland historian, Ross Fitzgerald was threatened with criminal libel when he sought to publish a critical history. [28]

In 1989, the Australian Broadcasting Tribunal, found that in 1986 Bjelke-Petersen had placed then Channel 9 owner Alan Bond in a position of 'commercial blackmail' when Bond improperly agreed to pay $400,000 as an out-of-court defamation settlement.[29]

Joh's catchphrase answer to unwelcome queries, "Don't you worry about that," was widely parodied.

Terrorism

In 1975, a letter-bomb addressed to Premier Joh Bjelke-Petersen was sent to his office. The bomb exploded seriously injuring two of his staff.[30]

Civil liberties and political protest

The Bjelke-Petersen government sought to make political capital with its hardline approach against protest and industrial action. Police violence was witnessed against demonstrators at the University of Queensland, which was a haven for anti-Bjelke-Petersen sentiment.[31] A decision by this University's Senate to award him an honorary doctorate of laws brought about criticisms from both students and staff. Leading Queensland poet, Judith Wright, returned her own honorary Doctorate, in a personal protest. [32]

The 1971 Springbok tour by the South Africa national rugby union team sparked nation-wide demonstrations against apartheid. The Springboks Brisbane match was moved from the Rugby Union headquarters at Ballymore because it was easier to erect barricades at the Exhibition Ground.[33] However, the RNA refused. Bjelke-Petersen "grabbed the political initiative" [34]by declaring a state of emergency[35] which compelled the RNA to co-operate. The declaration covered the whole of Queensland and operated for a period from ten days before the first game to fourteen days after the last, "in case the police had any unfinished business".[36] Doug Anthony, a former National Party Deputy Prime Minister, said Bjelke-Petersen's support for South Africa's apartheid regime, in direct defiance of the Fraser Government's stance, showed him as "unreasonable, selfish and un-Christian".[37] The government subsequently campaigned on "Law and Order", winning two by-elections, including the seat of Merthyr, won by Don Lane, a former Special Branch policeman. [38]

According to Lane, one of Bjelke Petersen's closest ministerial allies, Joh saw street marchers as a menace who clogged up traffic, caused distress to pedestrians, motorists and shop keepers and were mainly made up of grubby left wing students, Anarchists, professional agitators and trade union activists.[39][40] The government transferred 450 police from country areas to suppress demonstrations. [41] Future Queensland Premier Peter Beattie, then a student protestor, witnessed police violently attacking peaceful demonstrators, including women. [42] Brisbane aboriginal activist, Sam Watson claimed the police wanted to "smash and cripple and destroy".[43] Bjelke-Petersen praised police conduct during the demonstrations and awarded them an extra day's leave.[44]

Bjelke Petersen rejected recommendations by the Police Minister, Max Hodges, and the Police commissioner, Ray Whitrod, who sought an inquiry into an incident in 1976, where a police officer struck a student with a baton during a demonstration.[45] Bjelke Petersen told Whitrod that the cabinet, not the Commissioner would decide if an investigation was warranted. The Police Union sent a letter of thanks to the Premier and offered support. Hodges was replaced as Police Minister soon after.[46] The Police, secure in the knowledge that they had the Premier's backing, continued to act provocatively, most notably in a raid on a commune at Cedar Bay later that year.[47] The Police who had been looking for marijuana, torched the residents' houses and destroyed their property. Whitrod sought an inquiry but the results were never revealed.[48] After seven years as Police Commissioner, Whitrod resigned saying he could no longer tolerate poltical interference and the Police Commissioner had become a political puppet. He was replaced by Terry Lewis who had been previously promoted to Assistant Commissioner, against Whitrod's recommendation, over the heads of 122 officers of higher or equal rank. [49] The Police force became increasingly politicised. [50] Peter Beattie said that, "...if you went to a protest there was always photos being taken". "You know, you'd always pose to get your best side. (Laughs) And they had a dossier on everybody," Beattie said. [51] In 1977, Bjelke Petersen decided to ban street marches altogether. Seven Liberal parliamentarians crossed the floor defending the right of association and assembly.[52] One of the Liberals, Colin Lamont, told a meeting at University of Queensland that the Premier was engineering confrontation for electoral purposes."Two hours later, he (Bjelke Petersen) lunged at me across the floor of Parliament, waving a tape recorder and spluttered, 'I’ve heard every word. You are a traitor to this Government'," Lamont wrote later. Lamont said he learned the Special Branch had been keeping files on Liberal rebels and reporting, not to their Commissioner, but directly to the Premier. "The police state had arrived*," Lamont said.[53]

The Uniting Church synod passed a resolution requesting "Queensland heads of churches to mediate between the State government and student and civil liberties groups to achieve better ways of expressing their differences." Sir Joh replied, "If churches want to consort with atheists and communists dedicated to the elimination of religion, that is their problem." [54]

Bjelke-Petersen often accused political opponents of being covert communists bent on anarchy. "I have always found ... you can campaign on anything you like but nothing is more effective than communism," he said. "If he's a Labor man, he's a socialist and a very dangerous man." [55]His rhetoric may have been ridiculed in the national media but it proved highly effective among conservative and rural voters who enjoyed disproportionate political influence due to malapportionment.

Aboriginal people

In June 1976, Bjelke-Petersen blocked the proposed sale of a pastoral property on the Cape York Peninsula to a group of Aboriginal people, because according to cabinet policy, "The Queensland Government does not view favourably proposals to acquire large areas of additional freehold or leasehold land for development by Aborigines or Aboriginal groups in isolation." [56] This dispute resulted in the case of Koowarta v Bjelke-Petersen, which was decided partly in the High Court in 1982, and partly in the Supreme Court of Queensland in 1988. The courts found that Bjelke-Petersen's policy had discriminated against Aboriginal people.

Also in 1976, Bjelke-Petersen evicted a team treating trachoma, led by Fred Hollows from state-controlled Aboriginal land. Bjelke-Petersen claimed that Hollows' team had been encouraging Aborigines to enrol to vote.[57] In his visits to northern communities, Fred Hollows was accompanied by two respected Aboriginal spokesmen and civil rights activists, Mick Miller and Clarrie Grogan. With an election looming, and keen to shut down this source of independent information, the Premier simply ejected Hollows' team. Electoral office data refuting his claims that there had been a rush of voter enrolments in the wake of the trachoma team, was not released for public consumption.[58]

In 1978, the newly-formed Uniting Church became involved in a struggle between the rights of Aborigines at Aurukun and Mornington Island (former Presbyterian missions) and the Queensland Government, which was anxious to allow mining to proceed. Bjelke-Petersen granted a 1,900 square kilometre mining lease to a mining consortium under extremely favourable conditions. With support from the church, the Aurukun people challenged the legislation, eventually winning their case in the Queensland Supreme Court. But they ultimately lost it when the Queensland Government appealed to the Privy Council in England.[59]

Cheryl Buchanan, chairwoman of the Kooma Traditional Owners Association said it was difficult now for people to accept how different things were in Queensland for Aboriginal people in the 1960s and 1970s. "We got raped by police in those days and couldn't do anything about it. They were the SS. The police would pick us up on a regular basis because they knew who we all were, and they'd take us out the back of Samford and harass us and push us around for hours", Buchanan said.[60]

Aboriginal activist Sam Watson said: "Aboriginal people will always remember him [Bjelke-Petersen] as a racist, a thug and a dictator." [61]

Role in the Whitlam dismissal

In 1975 Bjelke-Petersen played what later turned out to be a key role in the political crisis which brought down the federal Labor government of Gough Whitlam, who referred to Bjelke-Petersen as "that Bible-bashing bastard, Bjelke". Whitlam's government did not have control of the Senate, whose members are elected as representatives of the individual states. Senators are normally elected directly, but if a Senate position becomes vacant, a replacement is appointed by the relevant State Governor. State Governors are also responsible for the issue of writs for elections to the Senate. Bjelke-Petersen twice used these practices to thwart Whitlam's attempts to gain control of the Senate.

In 1974, Whitlam had approached former Queensland Premier and then Senator for the Democratic Labor Party, Vince Gair, with the offer as a job as ambassador to Ireland as a way of creating an extra vacant Senate position in Queensland that Whitlam hoped would be won by his Labor Party. When this arrangement became public, Bjelke-Petersen advised the Governor Sir Colin Hannah, to issue writs for five, rather than six, vacancies, denying Labor the chance of gaining Gair's Senate spot.

The convention in filling Senate vacancies since 1949 had been that the State Parliament would appoint the nominee of the former Senator's political party. When Labor Senator Bertie Milliner died, Bjelke-Petersen rejected Labor's nominee to fill the vacancy, Mal Colston, and instead asked for a short list of three nominees, from which he would pick one. When the ALP refused to supply such a list, Bjelke-Petersen appointed Albert Field, an ALP member who was critical of the Whitlam government. The ALP tried to block the appointment by expelling Field, and announcing that it would expel anyone else who would accept the appointment in Colston's place, but Bjelke-Petersen went ahead with the appointment anyway.

Field's appointment was the subject of a High Court challenge and he took leave in late 1975. During this period, the Coalition led by Malcolm Fraser refused to allot a pair to balance Field's absence. This gave the Coalition control over the Senate. Fraser used this control to prevent passage of the Supply Bills through Parliament, denying Whitlam's then-unpopular government the legal capacity to appropriate funds for government business and leading to his dismissal as Prime Minister.

During the tumultuous election campaign precipitated by Whitlam's dismissal by Sir John Kerr, Bjelke-Petersen alleged that Queensland police investigations had uncovered damaging documentation in relation to the Loans Affair. This documentation was never made public and these allegations remained unsubstantiated.

Break-up of the coalition

In August 1983 Terry White, a Liberal minister, joined backbench colleagues crossing the floor to vote against the government in Parliament. The Liberal leader, Dr Llew Edwards, asked White to resign as a Minister but instead White successfully challenged him for leadership of the Liberal Party. The Coalition agreement was eventually torn up by the Liberals.[62] At the 1983 state election, the intensely divided Liberals suffered a heavy loss of seats losing 14 seats.[63] The National Party were one seat short of a majority. On October 25, following the election, two Liberal MLAs, Brian Austin (Wavell) and Don Lane (Merthyr) defected to the National Party.[64] The National Party had formed a majority government for the first time in Australian history.

Downfall

"Joh for Canberra"

In 1987 Bjelke-Petersen made an extraordinary political move, launching a campaign for the Prime Ministership. The move attracted intense media attention across Australia. By early 1987 the Joh-for-Canberra push was attracting 20 per cent in opinion polls.[65] The "Joh for Canberra" campaign was abandoned after a snap election[66] was called by Labor Prime Minister, Bob Hawke, not giving him enough time to get prepared.

Fitzgerald Inquiry

Also in 1987, the Australian Broadcasting Corporation investigative journalism program Four Corners aired an episode entitled "The Moonlight State" alleging high-level corruption in the Queensland Police, including the receipt of bribes from owners of illegal brothels. At the time the program aired, Bjelke-Petersen was involved in his aborted national political campaign and was outside Queensland.

In response to these allegations, Deputy Premier and Minister of Police Bill Gunn, who was serving as acting premier in Bjelke-Petersen's absence, announced an inquiry. The two-year-long Commission of Inquiry into "Possible Illegal Activities and Associated Police Misconduct" was chaired by barrister Tony Fitzgerald and known as the Fitzgerald Inquiry. As it began, evidence of corruption was unearthed implicating not only Police Commissioner Terry Lewis, but also senior members and associates of the Bjelke-Petersen government. As a result of the inquiry, Lewis was tried, convicted, and jailed on corruption charges. He was later stripped of his knighthood and other honours. A number of other officials, including ministers Don Lane and Austin were also jailed. Another former minister, Russ Hinze, died while awaiting trial.

The Bjelke-Petersen government's decline in political standing prompted fierce conflict between his supporters and his detractors within the Nationals' partyroom. Sir Robert Sparkes, the State Secretary of the party, who for decades had been Bjelke-Petersen's influential sponsor, withdrew his support and the two became enemies. Bjelke-Petersen then met with State Governor Sir Walter Campbell in an effort to restructure his Cabinet and purge dissenters from the ministry. After a period of negotiation, Sir Walter agreed to sack three ministers.

Resignation

Bjelke-Petersen denied his National Party opponents the opportunity to confront him by refusing to call a meeting of the party's parliamentarians. Eventually, the organisational wing of the party intervened and called one. Bjelke-Petersen's request that Nationals MPs join him in a boycott went unheeded, and the meeting deposed him as National Party leader and elected in his place Mike Ahern, one of the ministers he had sacked.[67]

Bjelke-Petersen refused to resign as Premier. The stand-off was resolved after a period of negotiation[verification needed], when Bjelke-Petersen resigned as Premier. Bjelke-Petersen resigned on 1 December 1987 after spending time in his office destroying incriminating papers.[68]

Announcing his resignation as premier and parliamentarian, he said "The policies of the National Party are no longer those on which I went to the people. Therefor I have no wish to lead the Government any longer. It was my intention to take this matter to the floor of State Parliament. However, I now have no further interest in leading the National Party any further."[69]

In the subsequent by-election in April 1988, the seat was won by Trevor Perrett representing the Citizens Electoral Council against the endorsed National candidate, Warren Truss. Perrett ultimately joined the National Party in December 1988.[70]

Perjury trial

In 1991 Bjelke-Petersen faced criminal trial for perjury arising out of the evidence he had given to the Fitzgerald Inquiry (an earlier proposed charge of corruption was incorporated into the perjury charge). Evidence was given to the perjury trial by Sir Joh's former police Special Branch bodyguard Sergeant Bob Carter that in 1986 he had twice been given packages of cash totalling $210,000 at Sir Joh's office. He was told to take them to a Brisbane city law firm and then watch as the money was deposited in a company bank account.

The money had been given over by developer Sng Swee Lee, and the bank account was in the name of Kaldeal - operated by a trustee of the National Party, Edward Lyons. [71] John Huey, a Fitzgerald Inquiry Investigator later told Four Corners: "I said to Robert Sng, "Well what did Sir Joh say to you when you gave him this large sum of money?" And he said, "All he said was, 'thank you, thank you, thank you'."[72]

The jury in the case remained deadlocked. In 1992 it was revealed that the jury foreman, Luke Shaw, was a member of the Young Nationals and was identified with the "Friends of Joh" movement.[73]

A special prosecutor announced in 1992 there would be no retrial because Sir Joh, then aged 81, was too old.[74]

A key witness, Sng Swee Lee refused to return from Singapore for a retrial. However, one unproven estimate of Bjelke-Petersen's extortions was at least AU$6 million.[75]

In 2003, The Queensland government rejected a $353 million damages claim by Sir Joh Bjelke Petersen seeking compensation for loss of business opportunities resulting from the Fitzgerald inquiry. In his advice to the government, tabled in parliament, Crown Solicitor Conrad Lohe not only recommended dismissing the claim, but said Sir Joh was "fortunate" not to have faced a second trial.[76].

Post-premiership

Bjelke-Petersen remained a popular figure with rural conservatives in Queensland.

For a while he pursued business interests in Tasmania while attempting to pay off debts incurred during his perjury trial.[77]

Bjelke-Petersen's memoirs, Don't You Worry About That: The Joh Bjelke-Petersen Memoirs, were published in 1991.[78]

Bjelke-Petersen died in April 2005, with Lady Bjelke-Petersen and a number of other family members by his side. Bjelke-Petersen received a state funeral and is buried at his property "Bethany" at Kingaroy. Australian Prime Minister John Howard was a speaker at the funeral of Sir Joh Bjelke-Petersen.[79]

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  3. ^ "Sir Joh, our home-grown banana republican", The Age 25 April 2005.
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  58. ^ Dr Ros Kidd
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  • Deane Wells, The Deep North (1979) (Outback Press)
  • Evan Whitton, "The Hillbilly Dictator", Australian Broadcasting Commission, 1989, ISBN 0 642 12809 X
Political offices
Preceded by Premier of Queensland
1968 – 1987
Succeeded by