Margaret Guilfoyle

Dame Margaret Georgina Constance Guilfoyle, AC, DBE (/ˈɡɪlfɔɪl/; née McCartney; born 15 May 1926) is a former Australian politician who served as a Senator for Victoria from 1971 to 1987, representing the Liberal Party. She was the first woman to hold a cabinet-level ministerial portfolio in Australia, and served as a minister for the duration of the Fraser Government. Guilfoyle was successively Minister for Education (1975), Minister for Social Security (1975–1980), and Minister for Finance (1980–1983). She worked as an accountant before entering politics, and in retirement held various positions in the public and non-profit sectors.


Dame Margaret Guilfoyle

AC, DBE
Minister for Finance
In office
3 November 1980  11 March 1983
Prime MinisterMalcolm Fraser
Preceded byEric Robinson
Succeeded byJohn Dawkins
Minister for Social Security
In office
22 December 1975  3 November 1980
Prime MinisterMalcolm Fraser
Preceded byDon Chipp
Succeeded byFred Chaney
Minister for Education
In office
11 November 1975  22 December 1975
Prime MinisterMalcolm Fraser
Preceded byKim Beazley (senior)
Succeeded byJohn Carrick
Senator for Victoria
In office
1 July 1971  5 June 1987
Personal details
Born
Margaret Georgina Constance McCartney

(1926-05-15) 15 May 1926
Belfast, Northern Ireland
Political partyLiberal
Spouse(s)
Stanley Guilfoyle
(
m. 1952)
OccupationAccountant

Early life

Guilfoyle was born Margaret Georgina Constance McCartney on 15 May 1926 in Belfast, Northern Ireland. She was the second of three children born to Elizabeth Jane (née Ellis) and William McCartney; her father worked as a civil servant and her mother was a schoolteacher before her marriage. The family immigrated to Australia in 1928, settling in Melbourne.[1] Her father died when she was ten, after which she and her siblings were raised solely by their mother; they had no other relatives in Australia. Guilfoyle later recalled that her mother's experiences led her to realise "that, at any time, a woman must be capable of independence".[2]

Guilfoyle began her education at the local state school in Fairfield, then attended a business college until the age of 15. She later took night classes while working as a secretary, studying accountancy at Taylors Institute of Advanced Studies and the Royal Melbourne Institute of Technology. Guilfoyle eventually qualified as an accountant and chartered secretary, and in 1947 became the head accountant at Overseas Corporation Australia Ltd, an export firm. She later went into private practice in order to spend more time with her family.[1]

Politics

Guilfoyle joined the Liberal Party in the early 1950s. She was mentored by Elizabeth Couchman and Senator Ivy Wedgwood, who encouraged her to seek leadership positions within the party's organisational wing. In 1967, with their support, Guilfoyle was chosen as chairman of the state women's section and elected to the state executive. She also served as a delegate to the Federal Council. When Wedgwood announced her retirement, she endorsed Guilfoyle as her successor. She subsequently won preselection for the Senate against 20 male candidates, and was elected in second place on the Coalition's ticket in Victoria at the 1970 half-Senate election.[3]

Senate

Guilfoyle's first term in the Senate began on 1 July 1971. She was re-elected to additional terms in 1974, 1975, and 1980, retiring on 5 June 1987 at the end of her final term.[1] When she began her political career, she and Senator Nancy Buttfield were the only women in parliament; the House of Representatives had no female members. Guilfoyle was Australia's seventh female senator and the third from Victoria, after Wedgwood and Marie Breen. Over the course of her career, an additional 19 women were elected to the Senate.[4]

Soon after taking her seat, Guilfoyle joined the Joint Committee of Public Accounts and the Senate Standing Committee on Finance and Government Operations.[1] As part of the latter, in December 1973 she joined Ellis Lawrie and Bob Cotton in submitting a minority report that advocated the abolition of inheritance tax; their recommendations were eventually adopted almost a decade later.[5] Guilfoyle was appointed to the Senate Select Committee on Foreign Ownership and Control of Australian Resources in 1972, and the following year joined the Joint Committee on Prices. The Herald described her as "a housewife with a big say on prices",[1] while The Sunday Telegraph reported that she would be "looked upon by Australian housewives as their special friend in Canberra".[6] She in fact took pains to avoid being pigeonholed as a spokesperson for women.[1] According to her biographer Margaret Fitzherbert, her choices of committee "reflected her professional interests and experience, and, in sidestepping committees that were overtly concerned with family issues, marked her apart from the women who had preceded her in parliament".[6]

Government minister

In June 1974, Guilfoyle was appointed to Billy Snedden's shadow ministry as the Coalition's spokesperson for the media. She supported Malcolm Fraser in the March 1975 leadership spill, and when he was successful she was moved to the higher-profile education portfolio. Following the dismissal of the Whitlam Government in November 1975, Guilfoyle was appointed Minister for Education in Fraser's caretaker ministry. This made her the first woman to hold a cabinet-level ministerial portfolio;[7] she was the second woman appointed to cabinet, after Enid Lyons, and the second to be given a ministerial portfolio, after Annabelle Rankin.[lower-alpha 1][4] In December 1975, following the Coalition's victory at the 1975 election, Guilfoyle was appointed Minister for Social Security in the second Fraser Ministry. Her new portfolio was initially placed outside of cabinet, but she was reinstated in July 1976 after Ivor Greenwood's retirement. According to Fraser, she "contributed significantly to cabinet debates ... she could be totally relied on and she could think for herself – she wasn't a captive to the bureaucracy".[1]

In the social security portfolio, Guilfoyle was seen as skilful in balancing political and financial considerations.[8] She strongly resisted pressure to cut her department's budget, arguing that regular increases were needed simply to maintain existing programs. She believed any cuts would be unpopular with both the general public and her party's backbenchers, and there was no guarantee that they would pass the Senate. Fraser agreed with her rationale, and in 1979 she secured a "sizeable increase" in her department's budget.[1] She had an often tense relationship with Treasurer Phillip Lynch, who complained to Fraser that she was the most uncooperative minister in identifying potential spending cuts.[9] During her tenure, Guilfoyle oversaw a major reform of the national child endowment scheme, introducing direct cash payments rather than tax rebates. She helped establish it as a permanent measure, renaming it the "family allowance", and resisted calls to introduce means-testing.[1] As well as running her own department, Guilfoyle was also placed in charge of the new Office of Child Care within the Department of the Prime Minister and Cabinet.[lower-alpha 2] Working with Marie Coleman as the office's director, she oversaw a major enlargement of the federal government's activities in the childcare sector, introducing or expanding funding for preschool, daycare, after-school care, and youth refuges.[10]

After the 1980 election, Guilfoyle was appointed Minister for Finance, effectively becoming the deputy to Treasurer John Howard. She viewed her position as that of "chief accountant for the country".[11] Beginning with the 1981–82 budget, government ministers were required to take budget submissions to Guilfoyle for approval. That role had previously been filled by the Expenditure Review Committee (ERC), a panel of five ministers. Under the new arrangement, the ERC only reviewed submissions if a minister had failed to come to an agreement with Guilfoyle.[1] She was a key member of the Review of Commonwealth Functions Committee, a cabinet subcommittee nicknamed the "razor gang" that was tasked with cutting government expenditure. Its report, handed down in April 1981, recommended that hundreds of functions and programs be abolished, reduced, or transferred to state governments.[12] Guilfoyle remained finance minister until the government's defeat at the 1983 election. She was made spokesperson for finance and taxation in Andrew Peacock's shadow ministry, but resigned the position after the 1984 election and spent her remaining years in the Senate as a backbencher.[1]

Later life

After leaving the Senate, Guilfoyle obtained a Bachelor of Laws degree from the Australian National University (ANU). In 1990, she was nominated by the Hawke Government as a member of the National Inquiry Into the Human Rights of People with Mental Illness, which issued its report in 1993. She later served as chair of the Judicial Remuneration Tribunal from 1995 to 2001. As well as her public-sector appointments, Guilfoyle also served on the boards of a number of non-profit organisations, including the Australian Children's Television Foundation, the Victorian State Opera, the Mental Health Research Institute, and the Infertility Treatment Authority. She was president of the board of management of Royal Melbourne Hospital from 1993 to 1995.[13] In 2001, she and Joan Kirner led a campaign to secure more nominations for women in the Australian honours system.[14]

Guilfoyle remained involved with the Liberal Party after leaving parliament. In 1993, she was briefly a candidate for federal president, the titular head of the party's organisational wing. She had the support of Jeff Kennett and Andrew Peacock, but withdrew from the race in favour of Malcolm Fraser; the successful candidate was Tony Staley, another of her cabinet colleagues.[15][16] Later that year, she was appointed chair of the Liberal Women's Candidates Forum, which was set up by John Hewson to encourage women to run for office as Liberal candidates.[17]

Personal life

Guilfoyle's husband is Stanley Guilfoyle, whom she married on 20 November 1952. The couple had two daughters and a son together.[1] Her husband worked as an accountant and company director, as well as being involved with the organisational wing of the Victorian Liberals. He was a director of 3XY, a radio station linked to the party, and was a founding director of the Cormack Foundation.[18]

In 1976, Mungo MacCallum published an article in Nation Review alleging that Guilfoyle was having an extramarital affair with Jim Killen, one of her cabinet colleagues. Oblique references to the rumours had also been made in other publications.[19] She and Killen sued for defamation, and obtained an injunction against further publication.[20]

Honours

Notes

  1. Lyons was appointed Vice-President of the Executive Council in 1949, a largely honorary cabinet-level position with no administrative responsibilities. Rankin was appointed Minister for Housing in 1966, a junior position outside of cabinet.
  2. Guilfoyle was initially appointed "Minister assisting the Prime Minister for Child Care Matters". However, in July 1976 that title was abolished as it was considered redundant; there was no change in her responsibilities.
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References

  1. Margaret Fitzherbert (2017). "Guilfoyle, Dame Margaret Georgina Constance (1926– )". The Biographical Dictionary of the Australian Senate (Online Edition).
  2. Margaret Fitzherbert (2009). So Many Firsts: Liberal Women from Menzies to Turnbull Era. Federation Press. p. 71.
  3. Fitzherbert (2009), p. 72.
  4. "Senate Brief No. 3 – Women in the Senate". Parliament of Australia. August 2018. Retrieved 12 October 2018.
  5. D. B. Waterson (2010). "Lawrie, Alexander Greig Ellis (1907–1978)". The Biographical Dictionary of the Australian Senate (Online Edition).
  6. Fitzherbert (2009), p. 73.
  7. "Senator Margaret Guilfoyle is the first woman to be appointed to a Cabinet portfolio following her appointment as Minister for Education in the first Fraser government in 1975." "Equal Rights: First female Cabinet Minister". Museum of Australian Democracy. Retrieved 18 November 2018.
  8. Fitzherbert (2009), p. 99.
  9. Fitzherbert (2009), p. 101.
  10. Fitzherbert (2009), p. 100.
  11. Fitzherbert (2009), p. 117.
  12. Fitzherbert (2009), p. 116.
  13. "Guilfoyle, Margaret Georgina (1926 - )". The Australian Women's Register. Retrieved 12 October 2018.
  14. "The paradox of bestowing honours". The Age. 4 January 2004. Retrieved 21 October 2018.
  15. "Guilfoyle chance for top job". The Canberra Times. 5 August 1993. p. 1 via National Library of Australia.
  16. "Hewson 'relaxed' as 'bonkers' Fraser pushes on". The Canberra Times. 6 August 1993.
  17. "Liberal sisters are on the march". The Canberra Times. 5 April 1994. p. 9 via National Library of Australia.
  18. "Michael Kroger readies Plan B: 104 Exhibition Street for sale". The Australian Financial Review. 3 April 2018. Retrieved 6 October 2018.
  19. Rob Chalmers (2011). Inside the Canberra Press Gallery: Life in the Wedding Cake of Old Canberra. ANU Press. pp. 94–95. ISBN 1921862378.
  20. "Killen, Guilfoyle sue". The Canberra Times. 23 October 1976. p. 3 via National Library of Australia.
  21. For "public & parliamentary service". "Dame Commander of the Order of the British Empire". It's an Honour. Retrieved 21 October 2018.
  22. For "service to the advancement of Australia's young political leaders". "Centenary Medal". It's An Honour. Retrieved 21 October 2018.
  23. For "significant contributions to public life in Australia in support of hospital and health administration, social justice and education, to young people as a role model, and to the Australian Parliament". "Companion of the Order of Australia". It's An Honour. Retrieved 21 October 2018.

 

Political offices
Preceded by
Kim Beazley (senior)
Minister for Education
1975
Succeeded by
John Carrick
Preceded by
Don Chipp
Minister for Social Security
1975–1980
Succeeded by
Fred Chaney
Preceded by
Eric Robinson
Minister for Finance
1980–1983
Succeeded by
John Dawkins
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