Channelnewsasia.com
Friday, December 05, 2008
   
 
  blogs  
 
yournews
   
Mumbai Attacks
Video Finance Features Weather Travel Discussion TV Shows
CNA Live    | About Us 
 
  Home ›
 
Asia Pacific News

 
 

Australia's first female governor general sworn in
Posted: 05 September 2008 1226 hrs

 
 
Photos  of

   
 

CANBERRA: Lawyer, academic, women's activist and grandmother Quentin Bryce was sworn in as Australia's governor general Friday, the first woman to act as the British queen's representative Down Under.

Bryce, 65, is the only woman to take on the vice-regal position, which includes becoming the commander-in-chief of the armed forces, in its 107-year-history.

Her appointment was announced earlier this year after Queen Elizabeth II approved Prime Minister Kevin Rudd's recommendation that Bryce, then governor of Queensland state, take the post.

Speaking to a packed parliamentary chamber as she pledged her allegiance to the British monarch, Bryce said she would carry out her duties with "solemnity, impartiality, energy and a profound love for the country we share."

"I feel deeply the gravity of the role bestowed on me today," she said.

The appointment of Bryce, who grew up in a small outback Queensland town and went on to become a lawyer, academic, women's activist and sex discrimination commissioner, has been well received here despite an ongoing debate over whether Australia should become a republic.

Addressing the chamber, Bryce said that Australians were savvy participants in their democratic system and careful scrutinisers of its performance and values.

"We are informed and not afraid to question," she said. "Equally, we embrace change as a natural and necessary consequence of our evolution.

"Our growing capacity to balance tradition with renewal is a sure and uplifting sign of our standing as a sophisticated and highly functional civilised society and member of the global community."

Bryce promised to "do my very best to observe, sustain and uphold the principles, convention and rule of law that are our foundation."

"I promise to be open, responsive and faithful to the contemporary thinking and working of Australian society," she added.

"Australians, you have entrusted a great deal to me, I will honour your trust wholeheartedly."

Queen Elizabeth is formally queen of Australia despite the country's independence from Britain and the governor general acts as the monarch's representative in Australia.

Although they perform largely ceremonial roles, the governor general can appoint a prime minister in the event of a hung parliament after an election, or dismiss the leader if they lose the confidence of the parliament or act unlawfully.

The governor general is nominally the commander-in-chief of the armed forces but in practice they act on the advice on the government.

In 1999, a national referendum to remove the queen as head of state was defeated.

- AFP/yb

 

 



Other asiapacific News
Six dead in Pakistan market blast
Tourists flood out of Thailand but turmoil remains
Malaysia's government faces critical by-election test
India, Russia sign nuclear energy, space deals
Major alert at Delhi airport, police say situation "normal"
Taiwan ex-leader denies son laundered money in Japan
Rice says Pakistan pledges to investigate Mumbai attacks
Russia's Medvedev set to sign nuclear deal in India
Doctor visits Myanmar's Aung San Suu Kyi
Knife-wielding Indonesian pirates rob vessel off Malaysia's Tioman island
US, NKorea envoys in Singapore for talks
Indian opposition demands action against Pakistan
Dozens dead or missing in Philippines floods
Polluted Indonesian river to get major cleanup, says ADB
Philippines says leftist rebels spurned 2009 peace treaty
Nine killed in southern Thailand violence
Japanese still splurging on New Year gifts
Indonesia conducts study on yoga before issuing fatwa
Japanese climber dies hours before rescue on NZealand mountain

 


Advertisements

 
Affiliate Sites:
 
About Us  |  Contact Us  |  Advertise with Us  |  Terms & Conditions