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Thursday, March 25, 1999 Published at 08:35 GMT
Mateship: Now it's a constitutional issue ![]() Mateship mentioned in the preamble Mateship, an ideology backed by Australian prime minister John Howard, could soon become a cornerstone of the country's constitution.
It will be put to the Australian Senate for ratification, before going to a referendum. Having seen off an electoral threat last year which was against immigrants and Aboriginal rights, Mr Howard's chosen direction for government seems uncannily appropriate for Australia.
"I want to dedicate my government to the maintenance of traditional Australian values. And they include those great values of mateship and egalitarianism," Mr Howard said last year.
When Tony Blair was elected UK prime minister, his big idea was that citizens should be stakeholders. For the newly re-elected Australian PM, John Howard, the driving ideology is that citizens should be "mates".
What-ship? The tradition of mateship, the reliance of a man on his mates, is a fair dinkum (true) Ocker (Australian) male thing that goes far beyond men incessantly calling each other "mate". It may have been more politically correct (but perhaps less politically astute) for Mr Howard to refer to it as male-bonding.
Mateship was also significant in the trenches - both the trenches of WW I, and the gold-mining trenches of last century. Grassrootship McKenzie Wark, a lecturer in Media and Communication studies at Sydney's Mcquarie University said that the concept is a hard one for John Howard's Liberal Party. Traditionally it has held a strong distaste for the masculine, working class, radical nationalist values from which mateship springs. But he also points out that mateship was never an entirely white male concept. "Mateship is about grassroots methods of dealing with cultural difference," he said. "I think people's instinct was to reject top-down definitions of how multiculturalism was supposed to work, and to insist that inclusion is something that ordinary people decide on in their working and community lives." Sickship Australian comedian Brendan Burns said mateship goes beyond being able to have a few tinnies (beers) with mates. "Mateship is throwing up in the back of your your mates car and he doesn't complain," Burns said. He did find it odd, however, that the idea of mateship was being pushed by John Howard. "This is coming from a guy who was supposedly the most hated politician, the guy who was judged to be a loser. Now he's in for a second term," he said. Mr Howard must have some mates after all.
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