
Eighteen of his children, grandchildren, great-grandchildren, and my grandmother Mary, witnessed a聽聽for my beloved late grandfather, the Honourable Stewart John West MP on聽May 9.
Prime Minister Anthony Albanese and Leader of the Opposition Peter Dutton delivered speeches honouring the moral character and significant achievements of this wonderful man.
The tributes were powerfully worded, but hearing them honour my grandfather for the kinds of things they themselves mostly do not do also made me angry.
Growing up, my cousins and I always called them 鈥淢ary鈥 and 鈥淪tewart鈥, not 鈥淕randma鈥 and 鈥淕randpa鈥. It was from Stewart that I learned the true meaning of solidarity. He stood up staunchly for what he believed in 鈥 before and long after his time in parliament.
Stewart worked tirelessly for workers鈥 rights and he spoke up against Labor and the Coalition鈥檚 inhumane refugee policy at rallies in the 2010s. The value of standing shoulder-to-shoulder with others to fight together for your rights and theirs was a powerful lesson.
As I listened to Albanese and Dutton praise my grandfather for his advocacy for refugees, his 鈥渦nbending principle鈥, I recalled hearing Stewart passionately argue at one rally that Australia was violating its responsibilities as a signatory to the United Nations High Commission for Refugees. A decade later, these criticisms sadly still apply.
As they said 鈥減oliticians of principle are the ones history tends to remember鈥,聽I reflected that parliament today is sorely lacking MPs, who like Stewart, are willing to put their convictions ahead of their own careers.
Albanese and Dutton both began their condolence speeches with stories of Stewart鈥檚 longstanding advocacy. He was a lifelong trade unionist, president of the Port Kembla branch of the Waterside Workers Federation, before becoming MP for Cunningham in 1977.
He was, they said, a 鈥淟abor man through and through鈥.
Stewart served as Shadow Minister for the Environment and then as Minister for Immigration, Housing and Administrative Affairs, following the 1983 election.
My grandmother, Mary, recalled the range of concerns he had in an article in the聽March 31 Illawarra Mercury:聽鈥淚t wasn鈥檛 just wages for dock workers, it was environmental [and] refugees, Aboriginal land rights.鈥
The PM said one of Stewart鈥檚 greatest achievements was the policy that saved the Franklin River. 鈥淔orty years later, as a direct result of that policy taken by Stewart West, the Franklin still flows wild and free,鈥 Albanese said.
I thought back to a letter I鈥檇 read a few weeks before, among the memorabilia on display at Stewart鈥檚 funeral. It thanked him for his 鈥渦nflagging efforts to save the South-West wilderness and the rest of Australia鈥檚 remnant wild and scenic heritage鈥. Sent by Bob Brown in 1982, it closed with: 鈥淵ou encourage us all鈥.
Many of the things Stewart fought for, including workers鈥 rights, women鈥檚 rights, Aboriginal land rights, rights of refugees, environmental issues, peace and nuclear non-proliferation, encourage me to live up to the example he set.
Albanese and Dutton described how distraught Stewart was after fiercely speaking against a move which sought to change the party position from an immediate ban on uranium mining to one 鈥渟upporting its phase out over time鈥, only to see the motion narrowly pass.
Stewart鈥檚 convictions led to him to resign from a cabinet position in 1983 after Bob Hawke decided to sell uranium to France. He was reinstated in 1984.
Albanese credited Stewart for 鈥減utting his money where his mouth was鈥. Dutton echoed this, saying: 鈥淲hether one agrees with Stewart鈥檚 position or not, no-one can deny that he was a man of great courage and that he put his convictions ahead of his own career.鈥
Unlike the cowardice of many in the room that day, my grandfather聽actually聽put his money where his mouth was.
How can parties which accept political donations from coal corporations take the action that is necessary to halt climate change? And there鈥檚 the government鈥檚 plan to spend $368 billion on nuclear-powered AUKUS submarines and the possible plan to build a base on Stewart鈥檚 home turf of Port Kembla.
The PM and Dutton praised my grandfather鈥檚 longstanding advocacy for refugees. Albanese said he 鈥渨as instrumental in reforming Australia鈥檚 immigration policy and remained vocal about the plight of refugees long after his political career came to a close鈥.
I knew this to be true. My grandfather spoke at rallies in the early 2010s against indefinite mandatory offshore detention and published several articles condemning both Labor and the Coalition for what he called 鈥渁 shockingly negative refugee policy for any country鈥.
In 鈥溾, a piece he wrote for the Sydney Morning Herald in 2014, Stewart pointed out that dumping asylum seekers on Manus Island and Nauru was Labor鈥檚 policy.
鈥淲ere we trying to be tougher than the Coalition to gain votes?鈥 he asked. He criticised Labor鈥檚 鈥渟hock-and-horror deterrent policy鈥, calling it savage, severe, inhumane and politically stupid. He said it drove caring voters away from Labor and hammered home that it has 鈥渘o place in a civilised society鈥.
This was true then and remains true today.
Labor and the Coalition have been in lock step voting against ending immigration detention on Nauru. They stopped Independent MP Andrew Wilkie鈥檚 bill, Ending Indefinite and Arbitrary Detention Bill 2022, from being passed.
As I listened to both party leaders praise Stewart for championing the rights of refugees, it was starkly apparent their actions do not measure up.
I listened as the federal budget was tabled on the drive home.
It was strange to hear the half-measures I鈥檇 expected confirmed the same day the PM had paid tribute to my grandfather for his convictions.
Labor in opposition criticised the Coalition for not raising the rate of JobSeeker. Albanese shared a video in 2019, criticising Scott Morrison for dodging a question about whether he could live on $40 a day. Morrison deflected by saying: 鈥淲e have made those choices about priorities rather than increasing the size of the welfare budget.鈥
Albo鈥檚 response then was: 鈥淥f course he couldn鈥檛 live on $40 a day. No one can. And that鈥檚 exactly why Newstart should be increased.鈥 Now Labor is crowing about a surplus, while raising JobSeeker by a scant $2.85 a day or $40 a fortnight. This is less than what the Coalition raised it by in 2019, $50 a fortnight.
After an election, Albanese has changed his tune. This is but one of the many budget choices that show where Labor鈥檚 priorities lie.
Where are those principles you praised my grandfather for, Albo?
My family closed Stewart鈥檚 funeral with a rousing rendition of聽Solidarity Forever. I sang it at the top of my voice, just as I had a few months before at the rally of striking teachers, proud to stand with my colleagues.
At that strike, at Stewart鈥檚 funeral and at the condolence motion, I reflected on what I鈥檝e learned from my grandfather.
Stewart continued to stand up for what he believed in, right up until dementia tragically robbed him of his powerfully righteous coherence.
Albanese said he was 鈥済rateful for the advice that [Stewart] gave me as a young man and for the lessons that he taught me鈥.
If it鈥檚 true that 鈥減oliticians of principle are the ones history tends to remember鈥 I implore Albo to reflect on that. What legacy do you want to leave?
Have the courage to stand by your convictions even if it risks your parliamentary career. Honour Stewart West in actions, not just in words.
Vale Stewart West, 1934鈥2023.
[Emily McGrath is a granddaughter of Stewart West.]