This article is from the source 'guardian' and was first published or seen on . It last changed over 40 days ago and won't be checked again for changes.
You can find the current article at its original source at http://www.theguardian.com/australia-news/2014/nov/10/wayne-goss-queensland-premier-dies
The article has changed 4 times. There is an RSS feed of changes available.
Version 1 | Version 2 |
---|---|
Wayne Goss, former Queensland premier, dies at 63 | Wayne Goss, former Queensland premier, dies at 63 |
(35 minutes later) | |
Political friends and foes alike have paid tribute to the former Queensland premier Wayne Goss, who has died aged 63. | |
Goss had been in ill health in recent years and had undergone surgery for brain tumours. His death was announced on Monday morning. | |
In December 1989, he became Queensland’s first Labor premier in 32 years, ending the old National party’s long grip on power in the years dominated by Sir Joh Bjelke-Petersen. | |
Goss is survived by his wife Roisin, and adult children Ryan and Caitlin. | |
“As a family we mourn the man we love; as Queenslanders we join with so many others in gratitude for everything Wayne did for our community and our state,” they said in a statement. | |
“In Wayne’s own words from 1996, ‘Thank you, Queensland. You’ve been good to me. I hope I’ve left you a better place’.” | |
Among Goss’s reforms were ending the gerrymander, decriminalising homosexuality and introducing measures to protect the environment. | |
The state Labor leader, Annastacia Palaszczuk, said Goss would be remembered as one of the state’s great premiers. | |
“Not only did he lead the Labor party back into government in 1989 after 32 years in the wilderness, he led a government that changed forever the face of our state and the expectations of Queenslanders,” she said. | “Not only did he lead the Labor party back into government in 1989 after 32 years in the wilderness, he led a government that changed forever the face of our state and the expectations of Queenslanders,” she said. |
“His initiatives in areas such as education, health, the environment and accountability set new and higher standards for our state.” | |
Tony Fitzgerald, the retired judge whose landmark inquiry into government and police corruption in Queensland helped usher in a new political age, paid tribute to Goss as the state’s key political reformer in recent years. | |
“Wayne Goss was a man of uncompromising integrity and an outstanding Queenslander whom I greatly admired,” Fitzgerald told Guardian Australia. | “Wayne Goss was a man of uncompromising integrity and an outstanding Queenslander whom I greatly admired,” Fitzgerald told Guardian Australia. |
Fitzgerald said he first met Goss during the corruption inquiry in meetings with then premier Mike Ahern and Liberal party leader Anguss Innes. | |
“All three provided essential support then and, after he became premier, Wayne’s leadership produced the reforms which transformed the state,” Fitzgerald said. | “All three provided essential support then and, after he became premier, Wayne’s leadership produced the reforms which transformed the state,” Fitzgerald said. |
“Like most political reformers, he paid a heavy price.” | “Like most political reformers, he paid a heavy price.” |
Fitzgerald said he had shared a meal with Goss and his wife a few months ago, when Goss was already gravely ill. | |
Rob Schwarten, who was a backbencher in the Goss government and went on to become a minister in subsequent Queensland Labor governments, said the changes introduced under Goss had made Queensland unrecognisable from the Bjelke-Petersen years. | |
“You tell kids today that it was illegal to be a homosexual in Queensland prior to 1989 and they look at you disbelievingly,” he told radio station 4BC. | |
“The house sat until 3am and 4am day after day after day to tackle these social reforms, everything from gun laws to prostitution reform.” | |
Schwarten said Goss was a shy man, which occasionally caused some to think he was arrogant. | |
“He was a thoroughly decent man … he was a deep man I think, a great thinker, a great orator. Certainly his passion for change and to bring about a better Queensland can’t be underestimated,” Schwarten said. | |
Goss kept the top job until February 1996, when the Mundingburra byelection caused Labor to lose its majority. | |
Goss had been preselected to run against Pauline Hanson at the 1998 federal election, but his first brain tumour ended that career option. | |
The premier, Campbell Newman, said he was saddened to hear of Goss’s death and observed a minute’s silence in a cabinet meeting where he was informed of the death. He has offered Goss’s family a state funeral. | |
“Wayne was a true leader who guided his party and the state through a turbulent time in Queensland’s history,” Newman said in a statement. | |
“He drove much-needed reform in many aspects of Queensland’s public life, including social policy, electoral laws and reform of the police service and broader public service. | |
“He did so with tenacity, determination and courage. Those attributes were also very much at the forefront as he battled cancer.” | |
The federal opposition leader, Bill Shorten, said Goss was a “lifelong champion for social justice” and it was a very sad day for the Labor party. | |
He reflected that Goss was driven to politics after becoming enraged at the dismissal of the former Labor prime minister Gough Whitlam. | |
“Like Gough before him, Wayne would go on to achieve a drought-breaking electoral triumph, bringing with it a mandate for landmark progressive reforms,” Shorten said in a statement. | |
“His victory in the 1989 state election marked a new era – an end to the malaise and corruption that had eaten away at Queensland’s democracy in the final stretch of 32 years of conservative rule.” | |
Terry Mackenroth, who was a minister in the Goss government, said he had last spoken to Goss a few months ago. | |
“He was a good premier, he brought a great deal of discipline to government and he brought in many reforms that are still in place today,” Mackenroth said. | “He was a good premier, he brought a great deal of discipline to government and he brought in many reforms that are still in place today,” Mackenroth said. |
“His reforms put us in good stead for many years to come.” | “His reforms put us in good stead for many years to come.” |