Deputy Premier of Victoria, Attorney-General and Minister for the Railways.
"Despite ministerial responsibilities, parliamentary
duties and the continued demands of his legal practice, Menzies' public
performances as a speaker increased in volume and variety in 1933-34,
partly because of what was obviously now his sheer pleasure in the easy
rapport he could establish with most audiences, and partly because he
felt a genuine sense of mission as the advocate of traditional democratic
values, as he saw them, in the face of incipient threats, at home and
abroad."
A W Martin, Robert Menzies A Life Vol 1 1894-1943,
1993 p 107.
The Federal
seat of Kooyong and the Attorney-Generalship become available
"In July 1933 the Argus had observed
the changes brewing in the federal cabinet made it seem likely that
an attempt would soon be made to tempt Menzies to Canberra."
A W Martin, Robert Menzies A Life Vol 1 1894-1943, 1993 p 114.
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