A Step to the Right : The Life and Times of Alexander Downer (softcover) SOLD OUT$39.95
Tony Parkinson
“…the person I regard as Australia’s best Foreign Affairs Minister.” – John Howard
By the time Alexander Downer left office, he had surpassed “Doc” Evatt and Dick Casey to become Australia’s longest-serving Foreign Affairs Minister. Over nearly twelve years on the chessboard of global politics, he negotiated with some of the world’s most powerful leaders to promote and protect Australia’s interests.
This book is the first comprehensive account of Downer’s remarkable political journey. It traces his early passion for politics while growing up in the Adelaide Hills, his childhood memories of playing cricket at The Lodge under the watchful eye of Robert Menzies, and his first taste of international diplomacy as a trainee diplomat. It follows his rise in the 1990s as a formidable political force — including his brief and turbulent stint as the youngest-ever federal Liberal Leader.
With March 2026 marking the 30th anniversary of the Howard Government’s election, this book offers a timely opportunity to re-examine how Downer helped shape Australia’s reputation as a reliable and constructive neighbour and ally at the dawn of the 21st century. It also explores his unique insights into enduring global issues: the rise of a more assertive China, the fragmentation of Western democracies, Vladimir Putin’s aggression in Eastern Europe, and the ongoing quest for peace in the Middle East.
This biography marks Tony Parkinson’s return to the form. In 2000, he published Jeff: The Rise and Fall of a Political Phenomenon, his acclaimed portrait of Victorian Premier Jeff Kennett — another of the Liberal Party’s “big beasts.” After nearly three decades in journalism, Parkinson spent two years as an adviser in Downer’s office, gaining a rare inside view of foreign policy under the Howard Government.
For many of today’s teenagers, that era may seem like distant history — a time before the Global Financial Crisis and the COVID-19 pandemic, and before Barack Obama, Donald Trump, or Joe Biden entered the Oval Office.
Yet this book is not just a story about the past. It also explores the choices Australians face in the present and the future. It asks what lessons can be drawn from the Howard Government’s approach to leadership, policy, and diplomacy — and whether that experience offers a template for how Australia might navigate the challenges of a very different world.
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