• Genre
  • About
  • Submissions
  • Donate
  • Search
Menu

Speakola

All Speeches Great and Small
  • Genre
  • About
  • Submissions
  • Donate
  • Search
Share a political speech

Spiro Agnew: 'I would swap the whole damn zoo', Missouri Republican Party Fundraising Dinner - 1970

June 22, 2022

10 February 1970 , St Louis, Missouri, USA

Heard this grab on Ken Burns’ Vietnam documentary.

The Washington Post, which constantly urges us to lower our voices, said after the President's detailed address to the nation on his decision to clean out the Cambodian sanctuaries, and I quote, the Post said 'there is something so erratic and irrational, not to say incomprehensible about all this that you have to assume there is more to it than he is telling us.' Now, the Post might just well have come out and said that it thought the President had lost his sanity. Words like 'erratic', 'irrational', and 'incomprehensible' are not ordinarily used to describe the carefully studied military decision of the nation's commander in chief .

Ladies and gentlemen, you've heard a lot of wild, hot rhetoric tonight. None of it, mine. This goes on daily in the editorial pages of some very large, reputable newspapers in this country. Not all of them in the East by a long shot. And it pours out of the television set, and the radio in a daily torrent, assailing our ears so incessantly that we no longer register shock at the irresponsibility and the thoughtlessness behind the statements. 'But you are the vice president', they say to me, 'you should choose your language more carefully'. Nonsense. I swore that I would uphold the Constitution against all enemies, foreign and domestic. Those who would tear our country apart or try to bring down its government are enemies, whether here or abroad, whether destroying libraries and classrooms on a college campus, or firing at American troops from a rice paddy in Southeast Asia.

Indeed, as for these deserters, malcontents, radicals, incendiaries, the civil and the uncivil disobedience among our young, SDS, PLP, Weatherman I and Weathermen II, the Revolutionary Action Movement, the Yippies, hippies, Yahoos, Black Panthers, lions and tigers alike — I would swap the whole damn zoo for a single platoon of the kind of young Americans I saw in Vietnam.

Source: https://archive.org/stream/nsia-AgnewSpiro...

Enjoyed this speech? Speakola is a labour of love and I’d be very grateful if you would share, tweet or like it. Thank you.

Facebook Twitter Facebook
In 1960-79 C Tags SPIRO AGNEW, REPUBLICAN PARTY, MISSOURI, FUNDRAISER, VIETNAM WAR, CANADA, DESERTERS, DRAFT
Comment
Then Prime Minister Julia Gillard with Mary Young

Then Prime Minister Julia Gillard with Mary Young

Julia Gillard: 'Thanks Mick. Thanks for what you did for me', Mick Young Scholarship Trust, Fundraising Dinner - 2011

October 16, 2017

11 February 2011, Sydney, Australia

Thanks Swanny.

I couldn’t ask for a better Deputy and Treasurer.

Mary Young and the Young family.

Thank you for all that you still do for Australia.

I want to especially acknowledge your Patron Margaret Whitlam and I know Tony Whitlam is here too.

[Margaret, I reckon in a different Australia, Mick Young might have been remembered as the man who ran the campaign that made you Australia’s first female prime minister.]

Dr Ray Wilson, Chairman of the Mick Young Scholarship Trust, your fellow Trustees and Trust ambassadors.

The brilliant Dr Charlie Teo [TEE-oh]. 

Congratulations on your Order of Australia.  Wonderfully deserved for your outstanding services to medicine.

Bob Hawke.  [Our greatest peacetime Prime Minister ... so far!]

John Dawkins.  [Was our best Education Minister ... until recently!]

I see my parliamentary colleagues Stephen Conroy, Peter Garrett, Penny Wong, Craig Emerson, Rob McClelland, Nick Sherry, Brendan O’Connor, Kate Ellis, Mark Butler, Stephen Jones.

Terry Bracks and my friends from Western Chances!

Friends.

Tonight we honour the life and memory of a very great Australian.

Recorded in official documents as the Honourable Michael Jerome Young AO.

But never known as anything other than “Mick”.

To some of you, Mick Young as a colleague.

A friend.

A mentor.

A beloved father and husband.

To all of us he is an inspiration still.

Mick Young was a leader in a great Labor generation.

A generation that healed the wounds of a fractured party. 

That showed such courage after so long to fight its way into office.

That showed such discipline to rebuild after 1975 and fight back into office.

A generation that built two great Labor Governments.

And it began with Mick’s greatest campaign.

It’s Time.

No one deserves more credit than Mick ... but he didn’t do it alone.

Those of a more mature television vintage would remember a kids’ show called Adventure Island, produced by a noted TV producer, Godfrey Phillips.

It ran from 1967 to 1972, when the ABC decided to axe it.

There was a huge public outcry and plenty of heartbroken kids but, as Gough might have said ... nothing could save Adventure Island.

-      Not much has changed at the ABC.

But if nothing could save Adventure Island, Mick Young could save Godfrey Phillips.

And the ABC’s loss was the ALP’s gain.

-      Not much has changed there either.

The ABC’s cut allowed Mick to secure the services of Godfrey Phillips to produce It’s Time.

[And if the Whitlam Government at times had a few Adventure Island moments ... well we’ll remember the best days.]

The rest, as they say, is history.

We all know the way some people would tell the Mick Young story and use it against Labor today.

The larrikin ex-shearer who liked a feed, a fight, a few beers.

Back breaking work, just 15 when he started, like something out of Henry Lawson.

The representative of the real old Labor Party which would rather lose for the right reasons than win for the wrong ones.

An era which if only we could recapture we’d be better today.

But Mick Young is part of our story and we know what his legacy means.

We love the larrikin legends but we aren’t misled by them.

We know Mick was a tough, gutsy political professional.

A man who knew what was wrong in our country, who knew whose side he was on, who knew change was hard.

Mick Young was about the future, not the past.

Mick Young was a doer, not a dreamer.

Mick Young believed in the new creed of education and social mobility and jobs, not in the old romance of class conflict and “the sons of toil”.

Mick Young was about the future.

In the 1960s he was thinking about the 1970s.

In the 1970s he was thinking about the 1980s.

And in the 1980s was thinking about the 1990s.

And if he were here tonight, he’d say, what about the future?

Education as the driver of equality and opportunity was a dangerous new idea for Labor in the 1960s.

“A desk with a lamp and room to study in” was a powerful word picture for Labor in its time.

Not just because it demonstrated that Labor understood that education was the new key to our dream of a fair go for all.

But because it demonstrated that the Labor understood the way Australians were living, the new life of the suburbs that Australian prosperity of the 1960s and 70s was creating.

Getting Labor to understand that new Australian life – which was so important to the victory of 1972 – didn’t just happen. 

It had to be fought for.

And that understanding was so important in Mick’s work.  A man who didn’t just love Australia, he loved Australians.

A man with a deep and sympathetic understanding of the way Australians lived in his time and a tremendous intuition for what that meant for politics in the future.

Mick Young was a doer.

A fighter, a winner.

A bloke who knew there’s nothing you can do for the people we represent when you sit on the left hand side of the Speaker.

Who never accepted a false choice between achieving Labor’s objectives and winning support from the people we seek to serve.

And who knew that our ideas, for social change, for a fair go, for a better life for all, they have to be fought for.  Fought for in politics against determined conservative opposition.

Reg Withers, a tough Tory, used to say there’s two sides in Australian politics, there has been since the First Fleet, since the first bloke in a redcoat put his boot in the backside of the first bloke with arrows on his suit.

I don’t think Mick would have argued with that.

And Michael Jerome Young was never on the redcoats’ side.

He knew that politics is a fight between us and them, a fight where we can never accept a false choice between cunning and courage.

Because our courage gives us our great goal and our cunning gets us there.

Did then.  Does now.

And Mick Young was about education and social mobility and jobs.

A man who worked in sheds from his childhood had the best education in the demands and principles of labour politics you could hope to have.

But Mick knew there was more to know.

That is why Mick’s memory is honoured through this Trust.

We could put up a statue or a plaque.

We could christen a building or name a street.

We could do all those things.

But how much more important, 15 years after Mick’s death, to send an Australian to TAFE or university...

...  to give an Australian that extra chance in life that only a great education can bring.

That way, each of these scholarship holders takes something of Mick into the lecture hall and the workshop ...

... and into a more successful life beyond.

This is how we best remember Mick Young.

Not just in this Trust dinner tonight, but in every Cabinet meeting, in every Budget committee, in every Government decision.

By putting education first.

And I know we do this and I know we will keep doing this.

Not just because of Mick’s legacy of ideas lives in this Government.

But because Mick’s personal legacy lives in this Government.

Wayne Swan is not an emotional man and I don’t want to embarrass him tonight.  I just want to say this.

Mick would have been so proud of you during the GFC, Wayne.

Sure, proud of the whole Government, but especially proud of his mate.  When the fight was on, you fought for jobs.

Because you know Australians still think in Mick’s words

I want to work.

Ben Chifley once said that he’d have given a million pounds to have Bert Evatt’s education.

Mick Young believe in an Australia where Ben Chifley’s education should have been free.

Mick was a bright working class boy from South Australia.

He went from school to the sheds when he was fifteen.

He missed out on great opportunities in life.

And because he fought in politics with courage and cunning, and because when he fought, Labor won ...

This working class girl from South Australia went from school to university.

To every opportunity Australia has to offer.

To the law. 

To the Lodge.

Thanks Mick. Thanks for what you did for me.

And thank you to the Young family, for giving me a chance to say so.

Thank you to Labor speechwriter Micahel Cooney for sharing this speech with Speakola. There is no other copy of the speech on the public record.


Michael Cooney who wrote speeches for Prime Minister Gillard, including parts of this one, was a guest on episode 45 or the podcast.



Enjoyed this speech? Speakola is a labour of love and I’d be very grateful if you would share, tweet or like it. Thank you.

Facebook Twitter Facebook
In 2010s MORE 3 Tags JULIA GILLARD, MICK YOUNG, MICK YOUNG SCHOLARSHIP TRUST, FUNDRAISER, LABOR PARTY, AUSTRALIAN LABOR PARTY, TRANSCRIPT, DINNER
Comment

See my film!

Limited Australian Season

March 2025

Details and ticket bookings at

angeandtheboss.com

Support Speakola

Hi speech lovers,
With costs of hosting website and podcast, this labour of love has become a difficult financial proposition in recent times. If you can afford a donation, it will help Speakola survive and prosper.

Best wishes,
Tony Wilson.

Become a Patron!

Learn more about supporting Speakola.

Featured political

Featured
Jon Stewart: "They responded in five seconds", 9-11 first responders, Address to Congress - 2019
Jon Stewart: "They responded in five seconds", 9-11 first responders, Address to Congress - 2019
Jacinda Ardern: 'They were New Zealanders. They are us', Address to Parliament following Christchurch massacre - 2019
Jacinda Ardern: 'They were New Zealanders. They are us', Address to Parliament following Christchurch massacre - 2019
Dolores Ibárruri: "¡No Pasarán!, They shall not pass!', Defense of 2nd Spanish Republic - 1936
Dolores Ibárruri: "¡No Pasarán!, They shall not pass!', Defense of 2nd Spanish Republic - 1936
Jimmy Reid: 'A rat race is for rats. We're not rats', Rectorial address, Glasgow University - 1972
Jimmy Reid: 'A rat race is for rats. We're not rats', Rectorial address, Glasgow University - 1972

Featured eulogies

Featured
For Geoffrey Tozer: 'I have to say we all let him down', by Paul Keating - 2009
For Geoffrey Tozer: 'I have to say we all let him down', by Paul Keating - 2009
for James Baldwin: 'Jimmy. You crowned us', by Toni Morrison - 1988
for James Baldwin: 'Jimmy. You crowned us', by Toni Morrison - 1988
for Michael Gordon: '13 days ago my Dad’s big, beautiful, generous heart suddenly stopped beating', by Scott and Sarah Gordon - 2018
for Michael Gordon: '13 days ago my Dad’s big, beautiful, generous heart suddenly stopped beating', by Scott and Sarah Gordon - 2018

Featured commencement

Featured
Tara Westover: 'Your avatar isn't real, it isn't terribly far from a lie', The Un-Instagrammable Self, Northeastern University - 2019
Tara Westover: 'Your avatar isn't real, it isn't terribly far from a lie', The Un-Instagrammable Self, Northeastern University - 2019
Tim Minchin: 'Being an artist requires massive reserves of self-belief', WAAPA - 2019
Tim Minchin: 'Being an artist requires massive reserves of self-belief', WAAPA - 2019
Atul Gawande: 'Curiosity and What Equality Really Means', UCLA Medical School - 2018
Atul Gawande: 'Curiosity and What Equality Really Means', UCLA Medical School - 2018
Abby Wambach: 'We are the wolves', Barnard College - 2018
Abby Wambach: 'We are the wolves', Barnard College - 2018
Eric Idle: 'America is 300 million people all walking in the same direction, singing 'I Did It My Way'', Whitman College - 2013
Eric Idle: 'America is 300 million people all walking in the same direction, singing 'I Did It My Way'', Whitman College - 2013
Shirley Chisholm: ;America has gone to sleep', Greenfield High School - 1983
Shirley Chisholm: ;America has gone to sleep', Greenfield High School - 1983

Featured sport

Featured
Joe Marler: 'Get back on the horse', Harlequins v Bath pre game interview - 2019
Joe Marler: 'Get back on the horse', Harlequins v Bath pre game interview - 2019
Ray Lewis : 'The greatest pain of my life is the reason I'm standing here today', 52 Cards -
Ray Lewis : 'The greatest pain of my life is the reason I'm standing here today', 52 Cards -
Mel Jones: 'If she was Bradman on the field, she was definitely Keith Miller off the field', Betty Wilson's induction into Australian Cricket Hall of Fame - 2017
Mel Jones: 'If she was Bradman on the field, she was definitely Keith Miller off the field', Betty Wilson's induction into Australian Cricket Hall of Fame - 2017
Jeff Thomson: 'It’s all those people that help you as kids', Hall of Fame - 2016
Jeff Thomson: 'It’s all those people that help you as kids', Hall of Fame - 2016

Fresh Tweets


Featured weddings

Featured
Dan Angelucci: 'The Best (Best Man) Speech of all time', for Don and Katherine - 2019
Dan Angelucci: 'The Best (Best Man) Speech of all time', for Don and Katherine - 2019
Hallerman Sisters: 'Oh sister now we have to let you gooooo!' for Caitlin & Johnny - 2015
Hallerman Sisters: 'Oh sister now we have to let you gooooo!' for Caitlin & Johnny - 2015
Korey Soderman (via Kyle): 'All our lives I have used my voice to help Korey express his thoughts, so today, like always, I will be my brother’s voice' for Kyle and Jess - 2014
Korey Soderman (via Kyle): 'All our lives I have used my voice to help Korey express his thoughts, so today, like always, I will be my brother’s voice' for Kyle and Jess - 2014

Featured Arts

Featured
Bruce Springsteen: 'They're keepers of some of the most beautiful sonic architecture in rock and roll', Induction U2 into Rock Hall of Fame - 2005
Bruce Springsteen: 'They're keepers of some of the most beautiful sonic architecture in rock and roll', Induction U2 into Rock Hall of Fame - 2005
Olivia Colman: 'Done that bit. I think I have done that bit', BAFTA acceptance, Leading Actress - 2019
Olivia Colman: 'Done that bit. I think I have done that bit', BAFTA acceptance, Leading Actress - 2019
Axel Scheffler: 'The book wasn't called 'No Room on the Broom!', Illustrator of the Year, British Book Awards - 2018
Axel Scheffler: 'The book wasn't called 'No Room on the Broom!', Illustrator of the Year, British Book Awards - 2018
Tina Fey: 'Only in comedy is an obedient white girl from the suburbs a diversity candidate', Kennedy Center Mark Twain Award -  2010
Tina Fey: 'Only in comedy is an obedient white girl from the suburbs a diversity candidate', Kennedy Center Mark Twain Award - 2010

Featured Debates

Featured
Sacha Baron Cohen: 'Just think what Goebbels might have done with Facebook', Anti Defamation League Leadership Award - 2019
Sacha Baron Cohen: 'Just think what Goebbels might have done with Facebook', Anti Defamation League Leadership Award - 2019
Greta Thunberg: 'How dare you', UN Climate Action Summit - 2019
Greta Thunberg: 'How dare you', UN Climate Action Summit - 2019
Charlie Munger: 'The Psychology of Human Misjudgment', Harvard University - 1995
Charlie Munger: 'The Psychology of Human Misjudgment', Harvard University - 1995
Lawrence O'Donnell: 'The original sin of this country is that we invaders shot and murdered our way across the land killing every Native American that we could', The Last Word, 'Dakota' - 2016
Lawrence O'Donnell: 'The original sin of this country is that we invaders shot and murdered our way across the land killing every Native American that we could', The Last Word, 'Dakota' - 2016