January 1: Lord Hopetoun, the first Governor General, proclaims the
Commonwealth of Australia at a ceremony in Centennial Park, Sydney.
It is ...
the first liberal democracy in the
world to result from a democratic vote of the people, unpressured by
external threat or internal coercion.
The legislative agenda
outlined in the first speech by the Governor-General concentrated on
practical tasks: setting up a High Court, adopting adult suffrage, creating
a national industrial relations system and planning for the old-age
pension.
M Gordon, The Age, 9 May 2001.
Barton Government,
January 1. The interim Federal Ministry is sworn in, with Sir Edmund Barton
as Australia's first Prime Minister.
Population
is 3.82 million.
Federation of
Australian states: before 1901 the Australian colonies are responsible
for their domestic affairs, with Britain controlling foreign relations
and defence. What changes in 1901 is that the colonies transfer some of
their powers to the Federal Government. Britain retains control of foreign
relations and defence, although in practice the new Australian government
is in a stronger position to make its case to the mother country, and
the British government also prefers to deal directly with the one Australian
government rather than with several colonial (now state) governments.
D McDougall, The Age, 26 March 2001.
Customs houses
along interstate borders are abolished and free trade begins.
May 9: The Duke
(later King George V) and Duchess of Cornwall and York open the first
Commonwealth Parliament in the Royal Exhibition Building, Melbourne. Most
men and women present dress sombrely out of respect for the late Queen
Victoria who had died in January.
September: the
Australian national flag is chosen.
White Australia
Policy: To ensure Australia remains essentially a country of British settlement,
the first major piece of legislation to pass in the new parliament is
the Immigration Restriction Act, enshrining the White Australia Policy.
However, the non-white population is high - many Chinese came to Australia
during the gold rushes and Pacific islanders had been imported to work
in Queensland's sugar plantations. Aborigines are barely mentioned in
the new constitution.
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