Cabinet minister, 1983–1996 , Rear Admiral
David Martin and Kim Beazley receive a briefing from the 16 inch gun operator in Turret 1. Beazley was considered a protege of newly elected prime minister
Bob Hawke, who like Beazley was a Western Australian former Rhodes Scholar. Hawke appointed Beazley to the Cabinet immediately after his election in 1983, making him
Minister for Aviation. Following a reshuffle after the
1984 election, Beazley was promoted to become
Minister for Defence, a role he would hold until 1990, making him one of the longest-serving holders of that post. Beazley took a particularly active role as defence minister, appearing frequently in the press, and was responsible for establishing the
Royal Australian Navy's
submarine program, although this would be beset by technical problems. Beazley's time as defence minister, combined with his lifelong interest in military matters and enthusiasm for military hardware earned him the nickname "Bomber Beazley" in the press. In 1988, Hawke appointed Beazley to the additional role of
Leader of the House, a position he would continue to hold until the end of the Labor government in 1996. After the
1990 election, Beazley requested to be moved to the role of
Minister for Transport and
Communications in order to gain greater exposure to domestic political issues. He served in this role until 1991, and fervently supported Hawke during that year's
leadership tensions between Hawke and
Paul Keating. After Keating
successfully challenged Hawke and became Prime Minister in December 1991, he was moved to become
Minister for Employment and
Education, putting Beazley in charge of overseeing the creation of the government's welfare-to-work programs as part of the economic package 'One Nation'. Subsequently, at the
1998 election, Labor polled a majority of the
two-party vote and received the largest swing to a first-term opposition since
1934. However, while Labor regained much of what it had lost in its severe defeat of two years earlier, the uneven concentration of their vote left Labor eight seats short of making Beazley Prime Minister. Much of the Labor swing came in seats it already held, not in the seats it needed to take back government. Despite defeat, by securing a majority of the vote just two years after a landslide defeat, Beazley was re-elected unopposed as Labor Leader. The party spent much of the following three years well ahead in the opinion polls, and seemed set to win the next election, but in August 2001, following the
Tampa affair when the Howard government refused to allow several hundred asylum seekers to disembark on
Christmas Island, Beazley was judged to have failed in response. Beazley's momentum was further stalled by the
September 11 attacks, which saw an increase in support for Howard, who pledged to support the
United States, and Labor subsequently lost the
2001 election.
Backbencher and Shadow Cabinet Minister, 2001–2005 , July 2004 Although Labor's loss in 2001 was narrow, having lost two elections in a row, Beazley felt obliged to resign as Labor Leader; he was succeeded by
Simon Crean, and sat on the backbench for the first time since 1983. Despite initial improvements in Labor's opinion polling, by mid-2003 Crean was performing very badly against Howard as preferred Prime Minister, and Labor MPs began to fear that the Coalition would easily win the next election. Beazley was persuaded to
challenge Crean for the leadership in June, although Crean was comfortably re-elected. Despite this, Crean continued to perform poorly in opinion polling, and on 28 November 2003, Crean announced that he would be resigning as Labor Leader. Beazley immediately announced that he would be
contesting the leadership, but was narrowly defeated by Shadow Treasurer
Mark Latham by 47 votes to 45. After the result, Beazley announced he would remain in Parliament, but was unlikely to return to the frontbench again. In July 2004, however, Latham arranged for Beazley to return to the Labor frontbench as Shadow Defence Minister. This followed controversy over Latham's policy of withdrawing
Australian troops from Iraq by the end of 2004. Beazley's return to the front bench was generally seen as a move by Latham to reassure Australian public opinion that a Labor government would not put the
United States–Australian alliance at risk. Later that month, Beazley was forced to battle claims he had a "special relationship" with
Ratih Hardjono when he was Defence Minister; it was alleged this relationship posed a security risk.
Second term as Leader of the Opposition, 2005–2006 in every respect, at every stage until the
next election". legislation, at the
Melbourne Cricket Ground 30 November 2006Labor was comfortably defeated at the
2004 election, at which Beazley also became the longest-serving Labor MP. After Mark Latham resigned the leadership, Beazley was elected unopposed to replace him in January 2005. Rejecting doubts from some that Labor could win the
2007 election with a leader who had already lost two elections, Beazley said: "There's no doubt in my mind that I can lead a winning team in the next election."
Kevin Rudd and
Julia Gillard had considered standing in the election, but withdrew at the last moment. In the first half of 2006, Beazley focused much of the Labor Party's efforts on the
Australian Wheat Board (AWB) scandal and the government's
WorkChoices legislation; the former allegedly involved bribes and kickbacks with the then-Iraqi dictator
Saddam Hussein that breached UN sanctions. The situation reached a climax in the aftermath of treasurer
Peter Costello's
2006 budget, whereby for the first time in Australian political history, the opposition leader ceased questioning the budget papers in favour of further questioning on the AWB scandal. This led to heavy media criticism for the Labor Party, although some acknowledged the need for the government to be held accountable for the AWB scandal. These perceived tactical deficiencies plagued Beazley's return to the leadership and were amplified by factional infighting in the broader Labor Party, raising many questions concerning Beazley's ability to lead. At the time, opinion polls by
ACNielsen and
Newspoll for preferred prime minister had him at record lows. This was confirmed in a forum on the
Special Broadcasting Service (SBS)
Insight television program on 2 May 2006. Beazley said that, whilst winning an election would be difficult, he was adamant that the 2007 election would be a "referendum on the Howard government's unfair industrial relations laws". Beazley's leadership was fatally undermined following several public gaffes, most notably at a press conference on 17 November 2006 when Beazley confused the name of grieving TV host
Rove McManus (who had lost his wife
Belinda Emmett to cancer at the age of 32) with
George W. Bush adviser
Karl Rove. Following this, Kevin Rudd and Julia Gillard reached an agreement to challenge Beazley as a joint-ticket, with Rudd as Leader and Gillard as Deputy Leader, and on 30 November 2006, Rudd declared his intention to challenge for the leadership. At
the ballot held on 4 December, Rudd defeated Beazley by 49 votes to 39. Following the ballot, Beazley said of his political future, "For me to do anything further in the Australian Labor Party I would say is
Lazarus with a quadruple bypass. So the time has come for me to move on but when that gets properly formalised I will let you know." It was subsequently revealed that Beazley's brother David had died of a heart attack that same day at age 53 shortly before the vote took place; Prime Minister
John Howard led tributes to Beazley, saying that he was a "thoroughly decent man" and expressed his "genuine sorrow" both for his political demise and for his family tragedy. Several figures later speculated that the removal of Beazley as leader in 2006 may have been a mistake in retrospect given the
subsequent leadership chaos that engulfed the Labor government from 2010 to 2013. After her own
fall as Prime Minister, Julia Gillard expressed regret in working with Rudd to roll Beazley as leader. Mr Beazley has been referred to as "the best prime minister we never had". ==Post-political career==