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1939-1941
Menzies was elected leader of the UAP and became Prime Minister in April 1939, following the death in office of Lyons, and after the 18-day caretaker prime ministership of Country Party leader, Earle Page. He suffered an immediate ferocious attack in parliament from Page, who had favoured the recall to parliament of former Prime Minister Stanley Melbourne Bruce. Page bitterly accused Menzies of disloyalty to Lyons and the government, and suggested he had been a coward for choosing not to serve overseas during the First World War, although he was a lieutenant in the Army reserve. (Menzies said his first loyalty was always to the people of his electorate, and explained that he had family reasons for not serving overseas, as two of his brothers had done.) Refusing to work with Menzies, Page took the Country Party out of coalition with the UAP.
As Prime Minister, Menzies announced the declaration of war against Germany on 3 September 1939. He formed a war cabinet on 15 September and oversaw Australia's entry into the Second World War.
The Country Party re-entered a coalition with the UAP in March 1940, but losses to Labor at the general election in September severely weakened the Menzies coalition government. Continuing dissension with the coalition prompted Menzies to resign as UAP leader and Prime Minister on 28 August 1941. Country Party leader Arthur Fadden replaced Menzies as Prime Minister, but held office for only 40 days before being defeated in parliament, making way for John Curtin's Labor government on 7 October. Despite the instability in the coalition and his loss of office, Menzies had led a government which prepared the nation for war as well as its limited resources allowed.
Menzies was re-elected UAP leader and became Leader of the Opposition in September 1943. In October-December 1944 he sponsored the formation of a new party, the Liberal Party, combining the UAP and 17 other non-Labor groups. He was subsequently elected Liberal leader.
1949-1966
Following increasing public dissatisfaction with Joseph Benedict Chifley's Labor government, the Liberal and Country parties swept to power at the general election on 10 December 1949. The fall of JB Chifley's Labor government followed a series of Communist-inspired strikes, controversies over Labor's wish to nationalise private banks, medical practitioners, transport and communications, and mounting public impatience with continuing wartime austerity measures. Shaking off an earlier reputation for disdain of the public, Menzies proved to be a highly effective populist campaigner, appealing to ordinary citizens through slogans such as 'Put value back in the pound' and 'Are the people the masters of government or government the masters of the people?' By exchanging electoral preferences the Liberals won 55 seats and the Country Party 19, to Labor's 47. The Liberal and Country parties formed a coalition government on 19 December 1949 with Menzies as Prime Minister and Country Party leader AW Fadden as Deputy Prime Minister. Menzies' comeback as Prime Minister after the humiliating circumstances of his resignation from the position eight years previously was a great personal triumph. Menzies led the Liberal-Country Party coalition to victory at the next five general elections: in 1951, 1954, 1958, 1961 and 1963.
Menzies' coalition government pursued various initiatives of the former Chifley Labor government, including development of the Snowy Mountains Scheme, mass immigration and the Colombo Plan for aiding developing nations of the Commonwealth. Otherwise it set its own agenda. A key policy was to stamp out Communist influence in the union movement and end disruption caused by strike action; goals to be achieved by abolishing the Communist Party. Parliament passed the Communist Party Dissolution Act in October 1950. The Act was immediately challenged in the High Court by ten trade unions, Labor's deputy leader HV Evatt representing one of these. The Act was declared invalid in March 1951. Menzies then sought power to outlaw the Communist Party through a referendum in September 1951. Evatt successfully led a campaign for a 'No' vote to deny government such powers. The referendum on government power to ban the Communist Party occurred in a climate of mounting 'Cold War' tension between Western and Soviet power blocs.
Menzies' government sent Australian armed services to the Korean War between 1950-1953 and signed the ANZUS treaty with USA and NZ in 1951, which became the basis of Australian defence planning for the next four decades.
The Menzies government presided over the longest period of economic prosperity in Australia's history, lasting from the late 1940s to the early 1970s. This period was one of rapid development, almost continual economic growth, rising standards of living and very low (below 2 per cent) unemployment rates. From the mid-1960s the 'long boom' continued with the discovery and exploitation of new mineral and petroleum resources. Two major public spectacles of the mid-1950s became the focus of national attention, prompting outpourings of national sentiment - the Royal Tour of Queen Elizabeth II and Duke of Edinburgh in 1954 and the Melbourne Olympic Games in 1956. Both events were strongly promoted by the government. Menzies' position was also strengthened by a split in the Labor Party during the 1950s.
During the late 1950s and early 1960s the Menzies government laid the foundations for the subsequent rapid growth of Australia's university system and began providing financial support to non-government schools.
As well as being Prime Minister, Menzies at different times held other ministerial and acting ministerial positions. His portfolios included Defence Coordination, Information, Trade and Customs, External Affairs, External Territories, Treasury, Attorney-General and responsibility for the Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation (CSIRO). During his second period as Prime Minister, Menzies' principal political adversaries were Dr HC ('Bert') Evatt (1894-1965), Labor leader from 1951 to 1960, and Arthur Calwell (1896-1973), Labor leader from 1960 until 1967.
Menzies travelled widely in Australia and overseas on government business. Apart from frequent trips to the UK, USA and Commonwealth nations (New Zealand, Canada, South Africa, India, Pakistan, Singapore, Malaysia), he visited numerous countries in Europe and Asia for conferences on international relations, trade and defence matters. As such, he played an important ambassadorial role on behalf of both Australia and the Commonwealth of Nations. One particularly important excursion abroad was his trip to Cairo in September 1956 as head of a five-nation delegation mediating in the Suez crisis. Menzies' mission failed, and many commentators regarded his intervention as a fiasco.
The commitment of the Menzies government to its alliances with the UK led to the establishment of UK nuclear weapon testing facilities in Australia. The test program continued from 1952 to 1963. An increasingly close alliance with the USA resulted in the establishment of American military communications bases in the 1960s as well as other defence and science installations.
From 1962, the Menzies government sent military observers and then troops, including conscripts, to Vietnam to assist the South Vietnamese government and US military forces in the war against the Communists.
A devoted royalist, during his second period as Prime Minister Menzies received numerous honours and awards, including the imperial titles Companion of Honour (1951), Knight of the Thistle (1963), Lord Warden of the Cinque Ports (1965), Chief Commander US Legion of Merit (1950) and 20 honorary doctorates. He resigned from the Prime Ministership in January 1966, passing the position to Harold Holt, the Liberal's deputy leader, and resigned from parliament in February 1966. His total of 18 years as Prime Minister, and his unbroken 16-year tenure of office during his second period in the position, is the longest of all Australian Prime Ministers. His second period as Prime Minister has remained an inspiration to Liberal Party members.
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