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MAIDEN SPEECH TO THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES

JULIAN LEESER MP, MEMBER FOR BEROWRA


14 SEPTEMBER 2016
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As a child the sound of my mothers footsteps coming towards my bedroom to wake me in
the morning was a reassuring feature of daily life. Inevitably I was awake before she made
the door; but the rhythm, the sound, and the intensity of her walk were unmistakable. Each
morning the moment would arrive when she'd fling the door open with that effervescent
greeting time to rise and shine.
Twenty years ago this month my mother approached my room to wake me, but it was with
a very different sound, pace and tempo.
Seared on my mind from that night was the speed of her approach and her scream as she
flung open the door of my bedroom, sobbing, Dads gone, Dads gone.
I got up from my bed to comfort my mum, trying to calm her.
I went down the hall to my fathers office, where he worked late into the night for his
clients.
There I found his pyjamas in a pile and on the glass-topped table in the hall, was a note, like
so many of the notes from my father, written in red pen on the back of a used envelope. It
said simply -I am sorry Sylvia, I just cant cope, love, John.
I felt a great emptiness ripping at my stomach.
I went to the garage and saw the car was missing.
We called the Police and later they came round to tell us that they'd found my fathers body
at the bottom of The Gap at Watsons Bay.
There is a point in life when you are supposed to become a man. As I stood on the veranda
and watched the sun come up that morning, I knew my day had come.
My father loved music. He played 2CH on the radio from the moment he woke up to the
moment he went to bed. Easy listening music was the sound-track of my childhood. But the
day he died the music died with him, and it was years before I could listen to his music again
without tearing up.
Over the past twenty years I have gone back over the week leading up to my fathers death
too many times - and I keep thinking back to the signs he was giving us.
Although we had always been a family that hugged each other, my father had started giving
us all very long hugs.
My father prided himself on being a great car parker and yet the week before he died he
didnt seem to care how he parked. In hindsight its clear that something had changed. I
knew it but didnt say anything.
You ask yourself, what could I have done? What should I have said? Could I have reached
out in a way that I didnt? Could I have said, as we say now, Are you OK?

I reflect on my own conduct the night before my father died, when he asked if I could help
him polish his shoes before he left for a dinner at my brothers school.
I remember as a self-absorbed 20 year old the petulance and rudeness with which I waived
away the opportunity to help my father, a man who so often helped me, and not a day goes
by that I dont regret it.
Suicide, they used to say, is a victimless crime, but they never count the loved ones left
behind.
In the past 20 years we have changed our approach to suicide, depression and mental
health. And while there has rightly been a focus on the mental health of adolescents and
young people, we must remember that people suffering at other stages in their lives are
equally important. And sadly the number of older people taking their own lives is increasing
- my own father was fifty five.
In these past 20 years, we have spent millions on mental health and suicide prevention.
Every government has tried - but despite all the good will, it is a fight we are losing.
In my own electorate we have had more than 100 people take their own lives in the last
eight years. And across Australia eight people die by suicide every day. All this shows that
government money alone will not solve this epidemic. Treating depression as purely a
medical issue is not working. Rather we need to rebuild caring communities where people
know and notice the signs and acknowledge the people around them. Where we ask Are
you OK?, or more directly Are you contemplating suicide? And we need to create the
conditions where those who are thinking about suicide feel comfortable enough to ask for
help.
Through my work in this place, I want to help empower Australians to build a greater sense
of community. I have seen active engagement in community combat loneliness and enable
people to see a world outside themselves. In a society where people are more pressured
and more isolated than ever before, active engagement in community fosters civility,
courtesy and understanding, virtues that are too often undervalued and supplanted by
anger.
There is a role for government in supporting organisations and individuals that reach out to
the socially isolated in our community, even in the face of continued rejection. And there is
a role for Government in fostering innovative solutions that address suicide prevention,
depression and mental health enabling communities to learn from what has worked and
connecting those efforts across our country.
I want to acknowledge the Prime Ministers personal interest in suicide prevention and the
leadership he and the Health Minister took in devising the National Suicide Prevention
Strategy.
As a member of this House I want to do what I can to help pierce the loneliness, the
desperation and the blackness that people who suffer depression feel. During my time here
I will always be an advocate for better mental health policy.
Dad

When I think of my father, mostly though I think not of the way that he died, but rather of
the example set by the way that he lived.
My father John was an only child. His father was a pharmacist. His mother and her family
escaped Nazi Germany in 1936 for the freedom and sanctuary of Australia.
My father was an accountant; he had his own practice at Parramatta. As I child I would go
with him to the office or visit clients in their homes, businesses and factories. He knew their
lives, their families and their ups and downs: when they succeeded and when they
struggled, when they were failing, and when they were flourishing. He was a friend they saw
once a year to help them get their affairs in order and comply with the law. But even more
than that he was an advisor on how they could get on with and grow their businesses.
To the extent that I become an effective local member for Berowra, it will be because of
dads example of professionalism, trust and care in working for his clients - and the personal
touch they loved him for.
Dad was a man much involved in his community. He sat on the board of our local
Synagogue. He sat on a theatre board. He was involved in the school my brother and I
attended. Dad was hard working, diligent and prided himself on doing things properly, and
by the book.
He was quiet, unassuming, patient and slow to anger. He had a husky voice that made him
sound like Louis Armstrong.
He and my mother Sylvia gave me three great gifts: my life, my faith and my education
My father instilled in my brother Lindsay and me an important set of values:

Courtesy, civility and fair dealing with everyone with whom he interacted.

The need to give back to the community and get involved; and

A deep sense of faith and love of the joys of Judaism. He gave us a strong sense,
shared by all Jews, that our own story is part of a much larger story. That we should
be, in Jonathan Sacks words, true to our faith while being a blessing to others
regardless of their faith.

While I dont always live up to my fathers ideals, his are the fundamental values which have
shaped my life.
There is a Jewish idea that one should bring joy or naches to ones parents.
I hope that my election to this place would have brought as much naches to him as it does
to my mother and the rest of my family.
Mum
It is to my mother Sylvia that I owe the greatest thanks for being here today. Her courage
and her unconditional love for my brother Lindsay and me has sustained our family through
celebrations and sorrows.
With her unshakable belief that anything was possible for her boys, she created a home
filled with love, stability and opportunity. Nothing has ever been - or will ever be - too much
for her.

But of all her gifts to us, the enthusiasm for active citizenship, the patriotism she instilled in
my brother and me, the fact that hopefully, we are happy, well rounded and grateful
Australians, is her greatest contribution.
My mother Sylvia is a fifth generation Australian. Her grandfather was a Gallipoli Anzac and
rode in the charge of the Light Horse at Beer Sheva. Her mother, Barbara, who passed away
last week aged 95, served as a nurse in the Australian Army during the Second World War.
Mums father Sam served in the ill-fated 8th Division, was taken prisoner in Changi and
survived the horrors of the Burma Railway.
The war left my grandfather with a stammer and a steely determination. What kept him
alive in those dark days was a dream to come home and start his own hardware business
which he did after the war, employing many of his fellow former POWs too.
The prosperity that my grandfather created was due to his hard work and ingenuity in
predicting the need for building supplies to meet a post-war building boom.
My mothers Anglo-Jewry gave her a particular take on being an Australian. Fiercely patriotic
about Australia and loyal to the Crown, she realised the historical peculiarity to be both
Jewish and free. And that had such an impact on me.
As I grew up towards the end of the Cold War, with its threat to freedom everywhere, my
mother would constantly remind me of the responsibility that comes with the freedom we
enjoy in Australia - to be thankful for it, and to preserve it whenever it's threatened here because, as she would teach me, most people at most times in most places are not free.
As a child my mother read to me about Australias history and explained how our own
familys story fit into the broader Australian story. A story of explorers, soldiers, farmers,
shopkeepers and professionals, people willing to chance their arm, who carved out a nation
in this physically isolated but socially tolerant land.
My contribution to this story will be influenced by the combination of my fathers quiet
virtues, and my mothers perhaps slightly less quiet, but always deeply patriotic, civic,
virtues.
Constitution
It was that instilled sense of history and an early interest in politics, that prompted me to
want to serve in this place. And so around the time of my tenth birthday I asked my parents
not for a BMX bike or a cricket bat but for a copy of the Australian Constitution. I think the
Latin term for such behaviour is Nerdus Maximus.
Our Constitution is unique and worthy of celebration. It belongs to everyone. It was written
and debated all over the country, led by that great generation of liberal and conservative
barrister-parliamentarians.
Americans and Canadians wrote their constitutions in secret. Modern constitutions tend to
be written by legal academics. But the Australian Constitution was written in the open
across Australia, by Australians for Australian conditions: from the School of Arts at
Tenterfield, to the Court House at Corowa; from the drawing rooms of Adelaide to the
libraries of Hobart; in parliamentary chambers in Sydney, Adelaide and Melbourne; and of
special significance for me, on the Hawkesbury River, in the Berowra electorate, on a
paddle-steamer called the Lucinda where our first Prime Minister Sir Edmund Barton and
our first Chief Justice Sir Samuel Griffith, drafted the judicial power of the Commonwealth.
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The Australian Constitution has provided the basis for stable government and economic
prosperity for over a century. At a time when constitutional structures and political systems
around the world are breaking down, Australias constitutional achievement should be a
source of enormous pride.
Our Constitution establishes our unique Australian democracy. The Constitution matters as
much for what it doesnt say as for what it does. Our Constitution contains no symbolic
language and no bill of rights. Its sparse legal language is its strength. It has meant that only
the most creative judges have been able to invent implied rights to frustrate the democratic
will.
The Constitution has figured prominently in my career and contributions to the public
debate. As the youngest elected delegate at the 1998 Constitutional Convention, I remain a
committed constitutional monarchist, like my friend and former employer the Member for
Warringah, I see it as the best system of government of all the available alternatives.
In 2009 I worked with a broad cross-section of Australians to ensure the defeat of an
Australian Bill of Rights because I believe in the capacity of the political process, to solve
problems, and Im against an American style judiciary which makes political rather than legal
decisions because of their Bill of Rights.
In 2013, with the members for Goldstein and Mitchell and some senators from the other
place I led a scrappy but successful insurgency against Labors plans to have the
Commonwealth intervene in local government.
In important public debates, in a time of increasing polarization of views we need people
who can build consensus and find the middle ground. And so in more recent times, I have
worked with Indigenous leaders and constitutional conservatives to find a constitutional
way to make better policy about, and due recognition of Indigenous Australians, while
avoiding the downsides of inserting symbolic language into a technical document, which
requires interpretation by judges.
Today the Constitution has an important role to play in the next chapter of Australias
unfinished economic reforms. The next item on the reform agenda must be to address the
inefficiencies in our federation. The States and the Commonwealth should have more
clearly delineated responsibilities and the finances to deliver them. Instead, today we have
a system of buck passing, duplication and inefficiency: a lopsided federation that the
framers would not recognise.
Canberra should not have a monopoly on finance and policy. It has become fashionable to
think that whenever the states fail, Canberra will do a better job. Pink bats, school halls and
The Mersey Hospital demonstrate that service delivery is not always Canberras forte.
Canberra collects too much tax, while every year the States come begging because they
dont raise enough money to finance their own services.
Addressing this dissonance in our federation should deliver less red tape, less duplication,
better roads, better schools and better hospitals designed and run to meet local needs. It
should also lead to greater policy innovation as competition between the States drives
excellence.
I have had the privilege of working for two of Australias great federalists High Court Justice
Ian Callinan, who honours me with his presence today, and Professor Greg Craven. I have

also spent several years thinking about federalism as the Vice President of the Samuel
Griffith Society.
I am not the first person to seek to propose reform of the federation on a federalist model.
Coalition and Labor Politicians have pursued this option before. But every time such
solutions have been proposed, they have been undermined by short-term politicking.
Previous economic reforms had a greater chance of success when there was a cross-party
consensus. The same approach is needed to reform our federation today.
We know the task is to deliver the States more of their own source revenue and to lighten
Canberras footprint in areas of policy for which it has little expertise. What has been lacking
is the political cooperation to make it happen.
I therefore propose to look for reform partners in all parties in this Parliament to establish a
group to build consensus for reform of fiscal federalism. Reform of this scale can be
daunting and while we may not complete the task while we are in this place, nor are we free
to desist from it.
Berowra
But by far my most important task is to serve the people of Berowra with the full measure
of my devotion.
The electorate of Berowra was created in 1969. Running from the banks of the Hawkesbury
River to the M2 motorway, the people of Berowra are community minded and self-reliant.
That is why there is a greater number of volunteers, people of faith and small business
owners than in many other communities.
Despite its strengths, the Berowra community is one that faces major infrastructure
challenges. Pennant Hills Road is one of the worst roads in Australia. But now Liberal State
and Federal governments are working with the private sector to deliver Northconnex, which
will remove 5000 trucks from Pennant Hills Rd every day, improving air quality and reducing
noise while completing the missing national transport link between the M1 and the M2.
It is not the only infrastructure issue we face. Other roads like New Line Rd need widening
to take into account the growing population in the electorate and in surrounding areas.
And the undulating hills and the sparse population in the rural areas make mobile
connectivity difficult. But the Coalitions mobile blackspot program is starting to address this
infrastructure challenge.
I wish to thank the people of Berowra for giving me the extraordinary opportunity to serve
them. My first duty will always be to them.
I would like to thank the members of the Liberal Party in Berowra, and my friends and
supporters beyond that organisation, for all their work to see me come into this place. Many
have travelled vast distances to be here today.
The best way I can demonstrate my gratitude to them is through the quality of my service
here. In that, I hope to emulate the style of my three predecessors Philip Ruddock, who
throughout his record term helped build an ethnically diverse country with strong secure
borders; Harry Edwards, who was a leading economic thinker on microfinancing; and one of
Australias most distinguished lawyers, the first member for Berowra, Tom Hughes QC, who
is here today.

I am also honoured that my friend Heather Henderson, the daughter of Sir Robert Menzies,
is here today. For six and a half years I had the privilege of running the Centre named after
her father. I acknowledge Tom Harley my Chairman at the Menzies Research Centre who is
also here.
Sir Robert Menzies was a poor country boy from a one horse town, who by dint of his own
hard work and intellect rose to lead his profession, his party and his nation. Our task as
Liberals is to create the conditions so the next generations Sir Robert Menzies can rise and
thrive.
I am conscious of the huge responsibility involved in being the Liberal Member for Berowra.
I will seek to carry on Sir Robert Menzies traditions of policy and principle in all I do in this
place.
Finally I wish to thank my wife Joanna. If my parents gave me the foundations for a good
and worthwhile life in years past, it's Joanna who anchors me in the present, and always
points me forward with optimism to the future. She is the reason more than any other than
I am here. Joanna introduced me to Berowra. It was her home before it was mine. I could
not have embarked on this journey without her. She is smart, accomplished, beautiful and
challenging and she has never lost faith in me. She is, in fact, perfect in every way, except
for that occasion 11 years ago, when her judgment clearly failed her and she decided to
marry me. Joanna - I love you with all my heart.
Every new member comes into this place with life experiences from which they can draw
strength.
I come here with the certain knowledge that no one lives a perfect life, that we all need help
and community in good times and hard times. But I draw strength from the example of my
family. I draw strength from my faith. I draw strength from Australias traditions of service.
And I draw strength from our unique Australian story of progress epitomized by the story
of the individuals who persevered and wrote our Constitution.
Reform is never easy but the opportunity to participate in the public debate and be an
advocate for the cause I believe in: a strong, free, confident and prosperous Australia is
something that fills me with the greatest enthusiasm.

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