Kevin
Rudd’s Resignation Speech as Foreign Affairs Minister
Feb. 22, 2012
Ladies and gentlemen, it is with
great sadness that I announce that I will resign as Australia’s Minister for
Foreign Affairs.
I am sad because I love this job.
I’m totally dedicated to the work
that we are doing in Australia’s name around the world, and I believe that we
have achieved many good results for Australia, and I’m proud of them.
It’s therefore been for me a
great privilege to serve our country as foreign minister, to represent our
people abroad, and I thank the people of our country for their support as I
have discharged these responsibilities.
But while I am sad to leave this
office, I am sadder still that it has come to this.
The last time that I resigned
from a position in public office was when I resigned as prime minister of
Australia, and regrettably, there have been some similar factors at play today.
It’s time for some plain speaking
on this.
The truth is I can only serve as
foreign minister if I have the confidence of Prime Minister Gillard and her
senior ministers.
In recent days, Minister Crean
and a number of other faceless men have publicly attacked my integrity and
therefore my fitness to serve as a minister in the government.
When challenged today on these
attacks, Prime Minister Gillard chose not to repudiate them.
I can only reluctantly conclude
that she therefore shares these views.
The simple truth is that I cannot
continue to serve as Foreign Minister if I do not have Prime Minister Gillard’s
support.
I therefore believe the only
honourable thing and the only honourable course of action is for me to resign,
and I do so with a genuinely heavy heart and after much personal reflection.
There are other factors, too,
that I have had to take into consideration today.
The truth is that the Australian
people regard this whole affair as little better than a soap opera, and they
are right.
And under current circumstances,
I won’t be part of it.
It is also, I believe, a
distraction from the real business of government.
I also believe it’s affecting the
business community, and I agree with recent statements by peak bodies to this
effect. It is important that business confidence is maintained in Australia.
The economy and jobs are core to
what any responsible government is about.
I also believe that this ongoing
saga is bad for my good friend Anna Bligh, as she fights the fight of her life
in Queensland.
She’s a great Premier. She’s a
good friend.
And I believe the good people of
Queensland deserve some clear space over the coming month, as they make up
their minds on a very important decision on the future of Queensland - my home
state; a state I’m very proud to be from.
The truth is I also feel very
uncomfortable doing this from Washington and not in Australia, but I don’t feel
as if I have a choice, given the responsibilities I have before me over the
days ahead, here in Washington, in London on the future of Somalia and piracy
in the Indian Ocean, and in Tunisia on the future of Syria.
These are important challenges
for the world, where a responsible Australian voice needs to be heard, a voice
which I have sought to inject in my period as Foreign Minister on these core
challenges, and under no circumstances do I want Australia’s international
reputation brought into disrepute because of this ongoing saga.
Therefore Ambassador Beazley will
discharge my functions here on my behalf in Washington, tomorrow, and the
permanent Secretary of my department, Dennis Richardson, will represent me in
London and in Tunisia.
I will return home to Brisbane
tomorrow, arriving back there on Friday morning.
Over the days ahead I will be
consulting openly and honestly with my family, with my community and my parliamentary
colleagues, taking their counsel on what I should do next, and what my next
step should be.
I will then make a full statement
to the Australian people on my future, before Parliament resumes next Monday.
I deeply believe that if the
Australian Labor Party, a party of which I have been a proud member for more
than 30 years, is to have the best future for our nation, then it must change
fundamentally its culture and to end the power of faceless men.
Australia must be governed by the
people, not by the factions.
But I can promise you this, there
is no way - no way - that I will ever be party to a stealth attack on a sitting
prime minister elected by the people.
We all know that what happened
then was wrong, and it must never happen again.
I would like to thank very much,
the Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade.
Their Secretary, Dennis
Richardson, Australia’s former ambassador here in Washington, is a first class
Australian diplomat and through him I would thank the department’s executive
and all the deputy secretaries I’ve worked with day after day, week after week,
in advancing Australia’s interests around the world.
These are good people, and all
the Ambassadors and High Commissioners, who proudly stand there every day, in
Australia’s name, are doing good things for our interests and expressing our
values right across the world, and I publicly acknowledge them with heartfelt
thanks.
I would also like to thank my
exceptionally loyal and hardworking staff, led by my chief of staff, Philip
Green, and his deputy, Kate Sieper.
These are a great team,
phenomenally loyal and hardworking, and together we have done good things.
In my letter of resignation to
the Prime Minister, I have asked her to give effect to my resignation 48 hours
after my return to Australia, so that I can affect the best transition for my
staff as possible under these circumstances.
I’d think you would understand,
there’s a human dimension to all this.
Together with the foreign policy
team, the department, my office and other great public servants responsible for
foreign policy in the Australian public service, I’m proud of our achievements.
I’m proud of the fact that we
built a new institution in Asia, which, for the first time in the history of
Asia, brings the United States, China, Japan, India, Australia, and all the
other countries in the region, around a single table, able to discuss and
negotiate a peaceful security future for Australia.
I’m proud that we have reformed
fundamentally our development partnerships with the island states of the South
Pacific, to lift their living standards and reduce infant and child mortality,
according to our responsibilities under the Millennium Development Goals.
I’m proud of the fact that we’re
on track to lift our overseas development assistance to 0.5 percentage gross
national income, as I promised prior to the 2007 election.
Also our opening to Burma - the
first Western foreign minister to go in there - six or seven months ago,
hopefully helping to pave the way for Burma’s opening to the rest of the world.
Early action on Libya, a call of
which we are all - in our office and in our department - very proud.
Our re-engagement with Europe,
and Africa and Latin America - these major economic regions of the future.
And, of course, I am deeply proud
of our decision to appoint Australia’s first ever ambassador for women and
girls, and the announcement, which I now trust the government will give effect
to, that is, that during this term we will appoint our first Indigenous
Australian as an ambassador, in one of our embassies abroad.
Ladies and gentlemen, there is
one over-riding question for my caucus colleagues, and that is, who is best
placed to defeat Tony Abbott at the next election?
Mr Abbott, I believe, does not
have the temperament or the experience to ever be elected and hold the office -
the high office - of Prime Minister of Australia.
But at present, and for a long
time now, he’s been on track just to do that.
Ladies and gentlemen, I would
also like to express my appreciation for the support of my family - Therese,
Jessica, Nicholas, Marcus.
Chatting to them over the course
of the last several hours I thank them for their encouragement and their
support, as always.
And you’ll appreciate, I now have
much, much to do and therefore I propose to conclude my statement here, and I
do not propose to take questions.
Thank you. |
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