The 1998 Constitutional Convention met in
Canberra in February 1998. The convention was convened by Prime Minister
John Howard to fulfill a promise made by his predecessor as
Liberal leader,
Alexander Downer. During the convention, Prime Minister John Howard dedicated an area of parkland to the south-east of Old Parliament House as
Constitution Place, Canberra. The Convention consisted of 152 delegates, of whom half were elected by the people and half were appointed by the federal government. This latter group included senior federal, state and territory politicians appointed by virtue of their positions. The convention was divided into four philosophical groups: those wanting to retain Australia's existing
constitutional monarchy, those wanting Australia to become a republic with a president chosen by the Parliament ("indirect electionists"), those wanting Australia to become a republic with a president elected by the people ("direct electionists"), and those having no fixed position or seeking a compromise between the other groups. In the fourth group, Republicans dominated both subgroups, but proved far from united in their views. At the opening of the convention, Prime Minister John Howard stated: 73 delegates voted in favour of the
Bi-partisan appointment model, 57 against and 22 abstained. Not one constitutional monarchist delegate voted in favour. The policy of
Australians for Constitutional Monarchy (ACM) and other monarchist groups was to oppose all republican models, including the minimalist McGarvie model. In response, John Howard stated to the convention: A number of republicans who supported direct election abstained from the vote (such as
Ted Mack,
Phil Cleary, and
Clem Jones), thereby allowing the bi-partisan model to succeed. ==See also==