Race Mathews

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Race Mathews
Member of the Australian Parliament
for Casey
In office
2 December 1972 – 13 December 1975
Preceded byPeter Howson
Succeeded byPeter Falconer
Member of the Victorian Legislative Assembly
for Oakleigh
In office
5 May 1979 – 2 October 1992
Preceded byAlan Scanlan
Succeeded byDenise McGill
Victorian Minister for the Arts
In office
1982–1987
Preceded byNorman Lacy
Succeeded byIan Cathie
Personal details
Born (1935-03-27) 27 March 1935 (age 89)
Hawthorn, Victoria, Australia
Political partyAustralian Labor Party
OccupationAuthor

Charles Race Thorson Mathews (born 27 March 1935[1]) is an Australian co-operative economist, and former member of Victoria's State Parliament and Australia's Federal Parliament for the Australian Labor Party (ALP). As of 2012 he was a senior research fellow at Monash University's Faculty of Business and Economics.[2]

Career[edit]

Mathews joined the Labor Party in 1956[3] and served as chief of staff to Prime Minister Gough Whitlam and Labor leaders in the Parliament of Victoria[3] before his election to the House of Representatives.

From 1972 to 1975, Mathews was the Federal Member for Casey, where he served as the chairman of the House of Representatives Select Committee on Specific Learning Difficulties (1974–1975), and the chairman of the Government Members' Committee on Urban and Regional Development. From 1979 to 1992, Mathews served as the State Member for Oakleigh in the Victorian Legislative Assembly during the Cain Government. In this capacity, Mathews served as the chairman of the Ministerial Advisory Committee on Co-operatives, the Minister for Community Services from 1987 to 1988, and Minister for Police and Emergency Services and Minister for the Arts 1982–1987.[1]

Mathews is the author, co-author, or editor of numerous books on politics and economics. These include Building the Society of Equals: Worker Co-operatives and the A.L.P.,[4] Jobs of Our Own,[5] Australia's First Fabians,[6] Whitlam Re-visited: Policy Development, Policies and Outcomes,[7] Labor's Troubled Times,[8] Turning the Tide: Towards a Mutualist Philosophy and Politics for Labor and the Left[9] and Of Labour and Liberty: Distributism in Victoria, 1891-1966.[10]

In the context of co-operative economics, Mathews supports distributism and strongly favours worker cooperatives as the basis of a left-wing economic model.

Controversy[edit]

Mathews' Co-operative Individualism, coupled with his strong Fabian Socialist beliefs, has led to some criticism by other academics. For instance, Jocelyn Pixley has attacked Mathews for his (apparent) support of the Cain Government's Co-operative Development Program, on the basis that Beatrice Webb, a founder of the Fabian Society, was a prominent member of the Federalist school of Co-operative economics, which supports Consumers' Co-operatives linked through co-operative wholesale societies, and was a harsh critic of workers' cooperatives. Pixley writes:

A 'prefigurative' argument, that [Workers] co-ops were 'pioneers of a new exciting territory', a 'testing ground' for socialism... formed the basis of one Labor politician's support [i.e. Mathews], among others. It is an interesting position for a professed Fabian to hold, given Beatrice Webb's harsh judgement that [Workers'] co-operatives were associations of small capitalists as fraudulent as any other."[11]

However, in spite of being a Minister in the Cain Government's Chairman of the Ministerial Advisory Committee on Co-operatives, and being a supporter of Workers Co-operatives, Mathews was a critic of the Cain Government's Co-operative Development Program, telling one magazine at the time that they were:

"... 'in most instances wretchedly managed, chronically under-performing and expressive of the attitude that the world owes their members a living.' He said that we should 'wipe what has already happened in this state in the field of co-operation.' It was 'an historical aberration,' and it 'would have been better if it had never been.'"[12]

Personal life[edit]

Mathews has been a member of science fiction fandom since the early 1950s. He attended his first science fiction convention in 1952, and was instrumental in the founding of the Melbourne Science Fiction Group. He mostly abandoned fannish activities, as political matters began to occupy more of his time around 1956.[13] Since his retirement from active politics, he has returned to fannish circles.

Mathews was in a relationship with Ainsley Gotto, personal private secretary to Liberal Party leader John Gorton (prime minister from 1968 to 1971). Most of the media were aware of the relationship with Gotto but did not report on it. Mathews also told Whitlam, who tolerated the relationship on the proviso there was no "pillow talk".[14]

Mathews later married Iola Hack, a journalist who co-founded the Women's Electoral Lobby and worked within the Australian Council of Trade Unions to achieve workplace gender equity in the 1980s and 1990s.[15]

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b Curriculum Vitae: Race Mathews Archived 7 October 2006 at the Wayback Machine
  2. ^ Dr. Race Mathews Archived 11 January 2008 at the Wayback Machine
  3. ^ a b Mathews, Race (2 March 2014). "Victorian Labor's new crisis". The Age. Fairfax Media. Retrieved 3 March 2014.
  4. ^ Mathews, Race, Building the Society of Equals: Worker Co-operatives and the A.L.P., Melbourne : Victorian Fabian Society, 1983.
  5. ^ Mathews, Race, Jobs of Our Own: Building a Stakeholder Society, Sydney, Pluto Press (Australia), and London, Comerford & Miller, 1999.
  6. ^ Mathews, Race, Australia's First Fabians: Middle-Class Radicals, Labour Activists and the Early Labour Movement Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1993.
  7. ^ Mathews, Race; Emy, Hugh; and Hughes, Owen; Whitlam Re-visited: Policy Development, Policies and Outcomes, Sydney: Pluto Press, 1992.
  8. ^ Mathews, Race, Burchall, David Labor's Troubled Times, Sydney: Pluto Press (Australia), 1991.
  9. ^ Mathews, Race, Turning the Tide: Towards a Mutualist Philosophy and Politics for Labor and the Left, Melbourne: Australian Fabian Society and Arena Publications, 2001.
  10. ^ Mathews, Race, Of Labour and Liberty: Distributism in Victoria, 1891-1966, Notre Dame, Indiana: University of Notre Dame Press, 2017.
  11. ^ Pixley, Jocelyn, "Citizenship and Employment: investigating Post-Industrial Options", Melbourne: Cambridge University Press, 1993.
  12. ^ "Mathews Attacks Co-operative Program", in The Co-operator: Victoria’s Journal of Co-operative Affairs, No. 12, p. 5.
  13. ^ Mathews, Race. "Whirlaway to Thrilling Wonder Stories: Boyhood Reading in Wartime and Postwar Melbourne". University of Melbourne Library Journal Vol. 1, No. 5 (Autumn/Winter 1995); pp. 18-31.
  14. ^ Carroll, Brian (2011). Whitlam. Dural Delivery Centre NSW: Rosenberg Publishing. ISBN 978-1921719462.
  15. ^ "Iola Mathews' gutsy fight for social change and action". 9 August 2019.

External links[edit]

Parliament of Australia
Preceded by Member for Casey
1972–1975
Succeeded by
Victorian Legislative Assembly
Preceded by Member for Oakleigh
1979–1992
Succeeded by
Political offices
Preceded by Minister for the Arts
1982–1987
Succeeded by