Abbott's Right

Author(s): Damien Freeman

Australiana

Tony Abbott may have been a Rhodes Scholar, but some commentators are convinced that he offered nothing more than three-word slogans. Abbott's Right challenges this perception, and presents Abbott as someone who rejoices in the political battle of ideas. It looks at how the contemporary conservative voice that Abbott champions was fashioned by Sir Robert Menzies, Malcolm Fraser and John Howard, and reflects on what it means to be conservative in modern Australia. It argues that the Liberal Party should return to its conservative roots as a centre-right party and signals how, as such, it might address the public policy challenges in the years ahead.
Tony Abbott responds to Freeman's analysis in an afterword, and sets it in the context of the questions that Donald Trump's ascendancy poses for conservatives and Labor alike.


Product Information

Damien Freeman is a writer, lawyer and philosopher who is currently a visiting fellow at the PM Glynn Institute, Australian Catholic University. Together with Shireen Morris, he edited The Forgotten People- Liberal and Conservative Approaches to Recognising Indigenous Peoples (MUP, 2016).

General Fields

  • : 9780522871883
  • : Melbourne University Publishing
  • : Melbourne University Press
  • : August 2017
  • : August 2017
  • : books

Special Fields

  • : Damien Freeman
  • : Paperback