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2.33 MB

Extraction Summary

9
People
4
Organizations
12
Locations
1
Events
1
Relationships
6
Quotes

Document Information

Type: News article / interview transcript / book review
File Size: 2.33 MB
Summary

This document appears to be a page from a House Oversight Committee production (stamped HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_029561) containing an article or interview with former Australian Prime Minister Paul Keating. Keating discusses the state of the Australian Labor Party, his book 'After Words', and critiques the leadership styles of Barack Obama and Angela Merkel while praising Deng Xiaoping. He also predicts a 2050 world order dominated economically by China, the US, and India. There is no direct mention of Jeffrey Epstein or his associates on this specific page.

People (9)

Name Role Context
Paul Keating Interviewee / Former Australian Prime Minister
Discussing his book 'After Words', criticizing modern leadership, and analyzing geopolitics.
Barack Obama US President
Criticized by Keating for acting as a mediator rather than a leader; text speculates on him not getting a second term.
Angela Merkel German Chancellor
Criticized by Keating as a 'worry-wart' who assesses rather than leads.
Deng Xiaoping Former Chinese Leader
Praised by Keating as the 20th-century leader with the most influence on the coming century.
Mikhail Gorbachev Former Soviet Leader
Compared to Deng Xiaoping regarding walking away from ideology.
Roosevelt Historical Figure
Mentioned in comparison to Deng Xiaoping.
Churchill Historical Figure
Mentioned in comparison to Deng Xiaoping.
Stalin Historical Figure
Mentioned in comparison to Deng Xiaoping.
Mao Historical Figure
Mentioned in comparison to Deng Xiaoping.

Timeline (1 events)

Undated (Circa 2011-2012)
Interview with Paul Keating regarding his book 'After Words' and global politics.
Unknown (Interview setting)
Paul Keating Interviewer (unnamed)

Relationships (1)

Paul Keating Former Leader/Critic Australian Labor Party
Keating defends Labor but highlights its problems and shift to 'party of insiders'.

Key Quotes (6)

"Labor must recognise what it has created... It has a created a new society and it has to be the party of the new society."
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Quote #1
"The great curse of modern political life is incrementalism."
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Quote #2
"President Obama conducts himself as an arbitrator or mediator between the competing strands of American economic and political ideology."
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Quote #3
"Chancellor Merkel is the archetypal worry-wart. She does not lead; she assesses."
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Quote #4
"Because, in the end, everyone in political life gets carried out - the only relevant question is whether the pallbearers will be crying."
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Quote #5
"When the Berlin Wall came down the Americans cried victory and walked off the field."
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Quote #6

Full Extracted Text

Complete text extracted from the document (3,787 characters)

Pressed on whether he thinks the Australian Labor Party is in permanent decline, Keating defends Labor, insists it doesn't have to decline but highlights the problem. "Labor must recognise what it has created," he says, invoking the Hawke-Keating era. "It has a created a new society and it has to be the party of the new society.
"It can't be the party of part of the old society. Labor must be the party of those people who gained from the pro-market growth economy that we created. Labor must be open to the influences of this middle class, to people on higher incomes. And I don't think it is."
It is, perhaps, the clearest statement of Labor's problem. The party, in an act of strategic folly, abandoned the path of its previous success. It turned inwards on itself, away from the community.
"At the operating level it's become the party of insiders," Keating says. "The problem is that members get too caught up in the gift of faction managers and they get caught up in the false construct of popularity, the false god."
Fixated by the nature of political leadership, Keating's book After Words shouts out: "The great curse of modern political life is incrementalism."
Leaning across the table he says to me that briefing notes and economic texts aren't enough: the leader must locate his own source of higher command and inner belief. He laments the efforts of US President Barak Obama and German Chancellor Angela Merkel in the teeth of contemporary challenges.
"There is nothing preordained about American decline any more than the European project is destined to fail," he writes.
"But the portents are not good. Despite the rhetoric, President Obama conducts himself as an arbitrator or mediator between the competing strands of American economic and political ideology. He repeatedly eschews striking out, snatching the naked flame and hanging on. But the cost of this strategy is not simply a cost to him; it is a cost to the whole world.
"On the other hand, Chancellor Merkel is the archetypal worry-wart. She does not lead; she assesses.
"You really wonder why leaders want these jobs when they really do not want to lead. And what is their risk? That Barack Obama will not get a second term? Or that Angela Merkel's coalition might finally end up on the rocks? If they actually made the leap they might astound themselves. Because, in the end, everyone in political life gets carried out - the only relevant question is whether the pallbearers will be crying."
For Keating, the 20th-century leader exerting most influence on the coming century is China's Deng Xiaoping.
"If you look at the other figures of the century, Roosevelt, Churchill, Stalin and Mao, none will leave the legacy in terms of the 21st century that Deng leaves," he says. "He walked away from the ideology of the Communist Party just as effectively as Mikhail Gorbachev walked away from the essence of the Soviet Union."
By 2050 Keating sees a world order with nations in terms of gross domestic product in this hierarchy: (1) China, (2) US, (3) India, (4) Japan, (5) Brazil, (6) Russia, (7) Britain, (8) Germany, (9) France and (10) Italy.
The key, however, is that Japan lags a distant fourth behind the top three.
On America, Keating is dismayed by the pivotal change in its outlook after the end of the Cold War. "When the Berlin Wall came down the Americans cried victory and walked off the field," he says.
"Yet the end of the Cold War offered the chance for America to develop a new world order. It didn't know what to do with its victory. This at the moment the US should have begun exploiting the opportunity of establishing a new world order to embrace open regionalism and the inclusion of great states like China, India and the then loitering Russia.
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