Former prime minister (and journalist) Tony Abbott has published a political history of Australia. Across 18 well-written chapters, he narrates the nation's trajectory, starting with the establishment of a penal colony in 1788 and ending with the failed Voice referendum of 2023. Abbott's aim is to restore national pride.
Tony Abbott's history of Australia wants us to be proud
Former prime minister (and journalist) Tony Abbott has published a political history of Australia. Across 18 well-written chapters, he narrates the nation's trajectory, starting with the establishment of a penal colony in 1788 and ending with the failed Voice referendum of 2023. Abbott's aim is to restore national pride by showing that our past was "far more good than bad".
This "balance sheet" approach was first introduced to Australia by historian Geoffrey Blainey in 1993, sparking the "history wars". Argument focused on the impact of colonisation on Indigenous Australians and especially the scale of frontier warfare. Abbott's perspective also feeds into the continuing culture war about Britain's imperial past and polarised views about how to remember the Empire. As historian Stuart Ward recently noted, such debate is as old as imperialism itself.
Abbott begins with a rebuke to professional historians:
This is the book that never should have been needed. Until quite recently it was taken for granted that Australia was a country that all its citizens could take pride in, even the Aboriginal people, for whom the 1967 referendum marked full, if belated, acceptance into the Australian community.



