George Turner (politician)

George Turner (politician)

Infobox_Premier
honorific-prefix=The Right Honourable
name =Sir George Turner
honorific-suffix=
KCMG, PC
nationality =Australian
order =18th Premier of Victoria
term_start =27 September 1894
term_end =5 December 1899
term_start2 =19 November 1900
term_end2 =12 February 1901
predecessor1 =James Patterson
predecessor2 =Allan McLean
successor1 =Allan McLean
successor2 =Alexander Peacock
deputy =


caption =
birth_date =8 August 1851
birth_place =Melbourne, Victoria, Australia
death_date =death date and age|1916|8|13|1851|8|8|df=y
death_place =Hawthorn, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia
constituency =
party =
spouse =Rosa Morgan
profession =
religion =Anglican


footnotes =

Sir George Turner, KCMG, PC (8 August 1851 - 12 August 1916), Australian politician, was the 18th Premier of Victoria and a member of the first federal ministry.

Turner was born in Melbourne: he was the first Premier of Victoria born in the colony. He received a sound education and began work as a clerk in a law office, matriculating in 1872 and being admitted to practise as a solicitor in 1881. He was a founding member of the Australian Natives Association, an influential lobby group of Australian-born political liberals who campaigned for Australian federation and other causes. He was a member of the town council in St Kilda and was mayor in 1887-1888.

A liberal, Turner was elected to the Victorian Legislative Assembly for St Kilda in 1889. He was Minister of Health and later Solicitor-General in the liberal government of William Shiels from 1891-1893. When Shiels was defeated by the conservatives under James Patterson in 1893, he went into opposition, and succeeded Shiels as leader of the liberal party - mainly because Alfred Deakin, the colony's leading liberal, refused the position.

In September 1894 the Patterson government, floundering in the face of the deep depression which followed the Crash of 1892, was heavily defeated at the polls. Turner's image as a modest, dependable suburban solicitor proved popular, and he also gained the support of the newly-emerged Labour Party, which won 17 seats. As well as Premier, Turner was Treasurer, Minister for Defence and Vice-President of the Board of Land and Works. His ministry included Alexander Peacock, John Gavan Duffy and Isaac Isaacs.

Turner imposed a policy of strict economy and balanced budgets, raising taxes and cutting spending in accordance with the economic theory of the time. Although these policies did little to relieve the effects of the Depression, they did restore confidence in Victoria's public finances and the banking system. The historian Don Garden describes Turner as "frugal, prudent, unyielding and self-sacrificing," an image in tune with the deeply depressed economy. His policies of cutting government spending caused increased unemployment, but were accepted as necessary. His government was re-elected in 1897.

In other areas Turner's government was more liberal. He persuaded the Legislative Council to accept the abolition of plural voting, and tried unsuccessfully to pass a bill giving votes to women (achieved in South Australia in 1892). He also introduced Victoria's first scheme of old-age pensions. He was made a Privy Councillor and a Knight Commander of the Order of St Michael and St George in 1897.

In December 1899 discontented radicals joined with the conservative opposition to defeat Turner's government in the Assembly, and he resigned. He was succeeded by the conservative leader Allan McLean, but Mclean was unable to consolidate his position, and at elections in November 1900 the liberals were returned and Turner again became Premier. He retained office until February 1901, when he resigned to contest the first federal elections.

Turner was elected to the first Australian House of Representatives in 1901 as a Protectionist member for the Division of Balaclava. His long experience in Victoria made him a natural choice to be Treasurer in the first federal ministry under Edmund Barton. He held this post from January 1901 under Barton and then Deakin until April 1904, and again in George Reid's conservative government in 1904-1905. His acceptance of office under Reid offended the Deakinite liberals, and he was not re-appointed to Deakin's second ministry in 1905. He retired from politics in 1906, and served as Chairman of the Commissioners of the State Savings Bank of Victoria until his death in 1916.

ee also

*Australian Commonwealth ministries 1901-2004

References

*Geoff Browne, "A Biographical Register of the Victorian Parliament, 1900-84", Government Printer, Melbourne, 1985
*Don Garden, "Victoria: A History", Thomas Nelson, Melbourne, 1984
*Kathleen Thompson and Geoffrey Serle, "A Biographical Register of the Victorian Parliament, 1856-1900", Australian National University Press, Canberra, 1972
* Raymond Wright, "A People's Counsel. A History of the Parliament of Victoria, 1856-1990", Oxford University Press, Melbourne, 1992


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