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The Second
Fraser Ministry was the
fifty-second Australian
Commonwealth ministry, and ran from 22
December 1975 to 20 December 1977.
Don Chipp and
Senator Tom
Drake-Brockman had been
in Fraser's first
Ministry as they had been
Shadow Ministers at the time of the Dismissal, but
after a massive electoral victory he now had other
people in mind. Rather than having their commissions
terminated, an embarrassing position for a new Prime
Minister to take so early into his term, he resigned
as Prime Minister on 22 December and recommended to
the Governor-General Sir John
Kerr he be recommissioned
with a new ministry, from which Chipp and
Drake-Brockman were excluded.[2] The
consequence of Chipp's exclusion from the new
ministry saw him resign from the Liberal Party and
form his own party the Australian Democrats.
Liberal
Party of Australia–National
Country Party Coalition
Cabinet
- Rt Hon Malcolm
Fraser, MP: Prime Minister
- Rt Hon Doug
Anthony, MP: Deputy Prime Minister,
Minister for National Resources, Minister for
Overseas Trade (NCP)
- Rt Hon Phillip
Lynch, MP: Treasurer (to 19 November
1977). Minister for Finance (7 December 1976 to 19
November 1977)
- Rt Hon Ian
Sinclair, MP: Minister for Primary
Industry (NCP)
- Senator Rt Hon Reg
Withers: Minister for Administrative
Services, Vice-President of the Executive Council
- Senator Hon Ivor
Greenwood, QC: Minister for Environment,
Housing and Community Development (to 8 July 1976)
- Senator Hon Bob
Cotton: Minister for Industry and
Commerce
- Hon Tony
Street, MP: Minister for Employment and
Industrial Relations, Minister assisting the Prime
Minister for Public Service Matters. Minister
assisting the Prime Minister in Women's Affairs
(16 August 1976 to 8 November 1976)
- Hon Peter
Nixon, MP: Minister for Transport (NCP)
- Senator Hon John Carrick: Minister for
Education, Minister assisting the Prime Minister
for Federal Affairs
- Hon Andrew
Peacock, MP: Minister for Foreign Affairs
- Hon James
Killen, MP: Minister for Defence
- Senator Hon Margaret
Guilfoyle: Minister for Social Security.
Minister assisting the Prime Minister for Child
Care Matters (to 23 July 1976) (in Cabinet from 8
July 1976)
Outer
ministry
- Hon Robert Ellicott, QC MP:
Attorney-General (to 6 September 1977)
- Hon John
Howard, MP: Minister for Business and
Consumer Affairs (to 17 July 1977). Minister
assisting the Prime Minister (from 24 May 1977).
Minister for Special Trade Negotiations (from 17
July 1977). Treasurer (from 19 November 1977)
- Hon Victor
Garland, MP: Minister for Post and
Telecommunications, Minister assisting the
Treasurer (to 6 February 1976). Minister for
Veterans' Affairs (from 6 September 1977)
- Hon Ralph
Hunt, MP: Minister for Health (NCP)
- Hon Michael
MacKellar, MP: Minister for Immigration
and Ethnic Affairs
- Hon Ian Viner,
MP: Minister for Aboriginal Affairs. Minister
assisting the Treasurer (from 7 December 1976)
- Hon Evan
Adermann, MP: Minister for the Northern
Territory, Minister assisting the Minister for
National Resources (NCP)
- Hon Eric
Robinson, MP: Minister for the Capital
Territory (to 16 February 1976). Minister for Post
and Telecommunications, Minister assisting the
Treasurer (from 6 February 1976)
- Hon John McLeay, MP: Minister for
Construction, Minister assisting the Minister for
Defence
- Hon Kevin Newman, MP: Minister for
Repatriation (to 8 July 1976). Minister for
Environment, Housing and Community Development
(from 8 July 1976)
- Senator Hon James
Webster: Minister for Science (NCP)
- Hon Tony
Staley, MP: Minister for the Capital
Territory (from 16 February 1976). Minister
assisting the Prime Minister in matters concerning
the Arts (from 16 August 1976)
- Senator Hon Peter
Durack, QC MP: Minister for Repatriation
(8 July 1976 to 5 October 1976). Minister for
Veterans' Affairs (5 October 1976 to 6 September
1977). Attorney-General (from 6 September 1977)
- Hon Ian
Macphee, MP: Minister for Productivity.
Minister assisting the Prime Minister in Women's
Affairs, Minister assisting the Minister for
Employment and Industrial Relations (from 8
November 1976)
- Hon Wal Fife,
MP: Minister for Business and Consumer Affairs
(from 17 July 1977)
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