Gough Whitlam (born July 11, 1916, Kew, Victoria, Australia—died October 21, 2014, Sydney, New South Wales, Australia) was an Australian politician and lawyer who introduced a number of policy measures and social reforms as prime minister of Australia (1972–75), but his troubled administration was cut short when he was dismissed by the governor-general.
Whitlam was born in Kew, a suburb of Melbourne. His father, Fred Whitlam, was a public servant who served as Commonwealth crown solicitor. Whitlam earned a bachelor’s degree from the University of Sydney in 1938. During World War II he served overseas as a navigator in the Royal Australian Air Force, reaching the rank of flight lieutenant. After the war he completed his studies at the university (LL.B., 1946) and became a barrister in 1947. Five years later he was elected to Parliament. Whitlam served as deputy leader of the Australian Labor Party (ALP) from 1960 to 1967, when he became party leader.
Upon becoming prime minister of Australia in 1972, Whitlam ended military conscription, lowered barriers to Asian immigration, and promised more independence from the United States in foreign affairs. His government was troubled by administrative blunders and by rising inflation and unemployment, however. The ALP won a snap election in May 1974, but by mid-1975 the government had lost the parliamentary support needed to pass government expenditure bills. When Whitlam steadfastly refused to call new elections to resolve the parliamentary deadlock, Sir John Kerr, Australia’s governor-general (appointed by the British crown on the advice of the Australian government—in this case of Whitlam’s), dismissed him from office on November 11, 1975, and appointed a caretaker administration led by the political opposition. In the general election that followed, the opposition Liberal–National Country Party coalition won a record majority of seats in Parliament.
Whitlam lost another election as party leader in late 1977 and resigned his seat in Parliament the following year. He was made a Companion of the Order of Australia in 1978 and was later appointed Australian ambassador (1983–86) to UNESCO. Among his numerous publications were Road to Reform: Labor in Government (1975), Labor Essays (1980), The Cost of Federalism (1983), and The Truth of the Matter (1979; revised edition, 2005), a memoir of his time in office and his dismissal.