Early years , who gave him his first ministerial appoinmtent Gullett began contemplating a political career towards the end of the war. Letters to his wife record his alignment with the
Australian Labor Party (ALP), but concerns that "Labour people at home will be hard to swallow" and that "it will be hard to take sides against many good friends in the AIF who are uncompromising". In November 1918, he wrote: I should give a fortune to be out on the Labour ticket next elections in Australia. With a good propagandist on their side they will sweep
H & Co into the sea. The present administration is a hopeless thing & is not improving. Gullett's eventual entry into politics came at the
1922 election, where he and his friend
John Latham stood as anti-Hughes "
Liberal" candidates. His initial attempt to win the
Division of Henty was unsuccessful, but he reprised his candidacy at the
1925 election as an "independent
Nationalist" and was elected. He allied himself with
backbenchers holding similar views and in 1927 attracted attention by referring to
Country Party leader
Earle Page as "the most tragic Treasurer Australia had ever had". However, as with Latham, Hughes' successor as prime minister
S. M. Bruce secured Gullett's support by inviting him into the ministry. He was appointed
Minister for Trade and Customs in November 1928, following the
1928 election, but held office for less than a year before the government's defeat. Bruce lost his seat at the
1929 election and Latham was elected as the new leader of the Nationalists; Gullett became his deputy.
Jack Lang remembered him as "the gad-fly who harassed the
Scullin Government incessantly". He was involved in the formation of the
United Australia Party (UAP) in 1931, which saw former ALP minister
Joseph Lyons succeed Latham as
leader of the opposition. Latham in turn became deputy leader of the new party, succeeding Gullett as deputy opposition leader.
Lyons government Gullett was re-appointed Minister for Trade and Customs when the
Lyons government took office in January 1932. He lobbied Lyons against including the
Country Party in the ministry, predicting "they will prove filthy foes and will stab you all the way from the corner". Later in 1932, Gullett and Stanley Bruce represented Australia at the
British Empire Economic Conference in
Ottawa, which attempted to establish
Imperial Preference, a system of tariff concession within the
British Empire. He suffered from poor health on his return and resigned from the ministry in January 1933. In the same month he was made a Knight Commander of the
Order of St Michael and St George for his work at the Ottawa Conference. In October 1934, Gullett was re-appointed to the ministry as a
minister without portfolio with responsibility for trade treaties. In early 1935, he presented a draft trade treaty with Japan to cabinet. He travelled to England with his wife later that year to attend the Silver Jubilee of King
George V, and to discuss trade with representatives of Britain and the other Dominions. In 1936, Gullett continued his work on the proposed trade deal with Japan, which was tentatively titled the Treaty of Friendship, Commerce and Navigation. However, negotiations broke down and a
trade war commenced over the Lyons government's Trade Diversion Policy, with Australia increasing duties on Japanese clothing and artworks and Japan doing likewise on Australian agricultural products.
Jay Pierrepont Moffat, the U.S. Consul in Sydney, observed in his diaries that Gullett "looked ill and tired" and was "constantly leaving his desk and taking some medicine at a cupboard in the corner". His health forced a second retirement from the ministry in March 1937. However, Moffat believed that his resignation was actually due to a disagreement on trade policy.
Menzies Government In April 1939, Gullett became
Minister for External Affairs in the
first Menzies Ministry and Minister for Information from September 1939. However, when
Robert Menzies formed a
coalition with the
Country Party in March 1940, he was moved to
Vice-President of the Executive Council, and
Minister in charge of Scientific and Industrial Research. He was killed in the
Canberra air disaster in August 1940. ==Personal life==