Bartholomew Augustine "B. A." Santamaria, otherwise 'Bob' (14 August 1915 - 25 February 1998), was an Australian political activist and journalist and one of the most influential political figures in 20th century Australian history. A highly divisive figure, with strongly held anti-communist views, Santamaria inspired great devotion from his followers and intense hatred from his enemies. While he regarded his own career as a failure, and never held public office or joined a political party, Santamaria was the guiding influence of the Democratic Labor Party.
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Santamaria was born in Melbourne. The son of a greengrocer who was an immigrant from the Aeolian Islands in Italy, Santamaria was educated at the Catholic primary school of St. Ambrose behind his father's shop, and then at St Joseph's in North Melbourne by the Christian Brothers. He finished his secondary education at St Kevin's College as dux of the school, which was then in East Melbourne. A teacher who greatly influenced the young Santamaria was Francis Maher, who belonged to a newly founded Catholic organisation, the Campion Society. Santamaria then went to the University of Melbourne where he graduated in arts and law. He completed his Master of Arts with a thesis titled Italy Changes Shirts: The Origins of Italian Fascism.
Santamaria was a political activist from an early age, becoming a leading Catholic student activist and speaking in support of Franco's forces in the Spanish Civil War. He also was a strong supporter and wrote about Mussolini's regime in Italy, but denied that he had ever been a supporter of fascism. He always disliked and opposed Hitler and Nazism. While favouring, on the whole, Mussolini's policies up until 1936, he attributed Mussolini's late alliance with Hitler to the failed policies of Anthony Eden and expressed regret that Mussolini went with Hitler.
Santamaria was married in 1939 and had eight children, several of whom became prominent in various professions, but none of whom followed him into political activism. In 1980 his wife, Helen Santamaria, died. He later married Dorothy Jensen, his long-time secretary. His brother, Joseph Santamaria, was a Melbourne surgeon and was prominent in the Catholic bioethics movement.
In 1936 Santamaria was one of the founders of the Catholic Worker, a newspaper influenced by the social teaching of the Roman Catholic Church, particularly the encyclical Rerum Novarum of Pope Leo XIII. He was the first editor of the paper which declared itself opposed to both Communism and Capitalism which it saw as the greater threat.
Although the Catholic Worker group campaigned for the rights of workers and against what it saw as the excesses of capitalism, Santamaria came to see the Communist Party of Australia, which in the 1940s made great advances in the Australian trade union movement, as the main enemy. In 1937, at the invitation of Archbishop Daniel Mannix, he joined the National Secretariat of Catholic Action, a lay Catholic organisation concerned to permeate and improve society.
During World War II Santamaria gained an exemption from military service (it was later alleged that this was obtained through the political influence of Arthur Calwell, a leading Catholic Labor politician, but both men later denied this; it has also been attributed to the influence of former Prime Minister James Scullin and Archbishop Mannix). In 1941 he founded the Catholic Social Studies Movement, generally known simply as "the Movement" or Groupers, which recruited Catholic activists to oppose the spread of Communism, particularly in the trade unions. The movement gained control of the Industrial Groups in the unions, fighting the Communists and gaining control of many unions.
This activity brought him into conflict not only with the Communist Party but with many left-wing Labor Party members, who favoured a united front with the Communists during the war. During the 1930s and 1940s Santamaria generally supported the conservative Catholic wing of the Labor Party, but as the Cold War developed after 1945 his anti-Communism drove him further away from Labor, particularly when H.V. Evatt became Leader of the Labor Party in 1951. Seven Labor MPs, elected from Victoria and associates of Santamaria, criticised Evatt's leadership over the next four years.
In 1954 Evatt publicly blamed "the Groupers" for Labor's defeat in that year's federal election, and after a tumultuous National Conference in Hobart in 1955, Santamaria's parliamentary followers were expelled from the Labor Party. The resulting split (now usually called "The Split", although there have been several other "splits" in Labor history) brought down the Labor governments in Victoria and Queensland.
In Victoria, Mannix strongly supported Santamaria, but in New South Wales, Norman Thomas Gilroy opposed him, favouring the traditional alliance between the Church and Labor. Gilroy's influence in Rome ended official Church support for the Movement as well as, reportedly, Mannix's chances to be elevated to the Cardinalate.
Santamaria founded a new organisation no longer an organ of Catholic Action, the National Civic Council (NCC), and edited its newspaper, News Weekly, for many years. His followers, known as Groupers, continued to control a number of important unions. Those expelled from the Labor Party formed a new party, the Democratic Labor Party (DLP), dedicated to opposing both Communism and the Labor Party, which they said was controlled by Communist sympathisers. Santamaria never joined the DLP but was one of its guiding influences.
During the 1960s and 1970s Santamaria regularly warned of the dangers of communism in Southeast Asia, and supported South Vietnam and the United States in the Vietnam War.
He founded the Australian Family Association and the Thomas More Centre (for Traditional Catholicism) to extended the work of the NCC. However, his political role gradually declined. The death of the 99-year-old Archbishop Mannix (in 1963) ended the Roman Catholic Church's support for the NCC, even in Victoria. In 1974 the DLP lost all its seats in the Senate, and was wound up a few years later. Santamaria ran the NCC in a highly personal and (according to his critics) autocratic way, and in 1982 there was a serious split in the organisation, with most of the trade unionists leaving it. The Grouper-controlled unions then returned to their ALP affiliation.
But Santamaria's personal stature continued to grow, through his regular column in The Australian newspaper and his regular television spot, Point of View (he was given free air time by Sir Frank Packer, owner of the Nine Network). A skilled journalist and broadcaster, he was one of the most articulate voices of Australian conservatism for more than 20 years. He was greatly admired by conservative politicians such as Malcolm Fraser and John Howard. Santamaria claimed that Robert Menzies told him that he twice voted DLP (this being confirmed by Menzies' family), and that the DLP was the party Menzies thought he had founded.[1]
Santamaria had the satisfaction of living to see the fall of the Soviet Union and the collapse of the world Communist movement. But he was also hostile to free-market capitalism, and to abortion, homosexuality, euthanasia and other liberal and secular trends of the modern Western world. He was consistent in his support of spiritual, religious and family values and opposed those policies he believed threatened these pillars.
For these reasons he was a strong critic of secular humanism in his later years. Politically he could best be described as a Christian Democrat, a political tradition which has never taken root in secular Australia. In the eighties and nineties, he opposed the 'economic-rationalist'/market-based economic policies of the Australian Labor Party and Liberal/National Coalition alike. He came to despise politicians of all parties who failed to oppose these things, and towards the end of his life said several times that his political career had been a complete failure.
Santamaria also bitterly opposed what he saw as liberal and non-traditional trends in the Catholic Church following the Second Vatican Council (which he had sought to attend as an independent observer), and founded a magazine through his Thomas More Centre, called A.D. 2000, to argue for traditionalist views. He welcomed Pope John Paul II's return to conservatism in many areas.The conservative Archbishop of Melbourne, George Pell, a staunch supporter and admirer of Santamaria delivered the panegyric at his funeral held at St.Patrick's Cathedral. He died of an inoperable brain tumour aged 82 at Caritas Christi Hospice, Kew.
On his death Santamaria was praised by conservatives for his opposition to communism, but also by some on the left (such as veteran left-wing Labor ex-Cabinet Minister Clyde Cameron) and by social democrats (such as former Governor-General Bill Hayden) for his consistent critique of unrestricted capitalism.
Late in his life he began to write passionately against the dangers of "monopoly capitalism" and was consistent in his view that this represented as great a threat to civil society as communism. He wrote throughout the 1990s, in The Australian newspaper and elsewhere, that the debt-based monetary system, credit creation and the private ownership of major banking institutions were all fundamentally deleterious to good order and government, and that international investment banks based in New York, London and Frankfurt had taken effective control of the levers of Australian economic policy since the 1970s.
He was also concerned about the consistent contractionary economic policies pursued in the "pro-market" 1990s, which in his view had produced a long-term decline in real wages, which had in turn forced mothers into the workforce, and had then led to the breakdown of the family unit. Late in life, he continued to believe that the power of the "market" was the greatest threat to the survival of the family and, more broadly, of Western civilization in the late 20th century.
He was consistent throughout his life in being a supporter of what he called the "Christian Democratic thesis". Based on his strong anti-socialist sentiments, his opposition to completely unrestrained capitalism as well as his support of traditional morals and ethics, many commentators have described Santamaraia as a national conservative.