Gary Sturgess, The Bulletin, June 2, 1981, pp. 26-28.

A letter was sent this week to all non-Labor Federal and State parliamentarians inviting them to join a new pro-free market organisation to be known as The Society of Modest Members. Membership of the society is to be limited to present and former members of the Upper and Lower House of the various Australian parliaments. Such a grouping would make it unique in Australian politics, and, if it succeeds, a potentially powerful one.

The letter is signed by six State and Federal Liberal parliamentarians. Prominent are three of the hard-core “free marketeers” of the Federal Liberal back bench — Jim Carlton, NSW, John Hyde, WA, and Peter Shack, WA. The other three signatories, who have supported the society from early planning stages, are Senator David Hamer, Vic, Don Hayward, MLC, Vic, and Lloyd Lange, MLC, NSW. The former “Modest Member,” Bert Kelly, is to be the patron of the society which is already known colloquially as “The Kelly Gang.”

But the Kelly Gang will be avoiding any political Glenrowans. The letter states:

The idea of starting up such a society arose in informal discussions between some State and Federal parliamentarians who wanted to promote more discussion among those who share a belief in the virtues of the competitive market. It was felt that the society should have simple rules, be non-bureaucratic in structure and be independent of power groupings in political parties.

The purpose of the society is not to adopt policies on specific issues, nor to support any person or public office. Rather it is to promote the virtues of the competitive market through the dissemination of information and encouragement of discussion.

The inaugural meeting of the Society of Modest Members will be held in Melbourne during the 1981 winter recess. According to Carlton, Melbourne was chosen:

(a) because it is central for the whole of Australia,
and (b) because there is some irony in having the meeting in the centre of protection.

The functions of the society will be restricted to the dissemination of information. The Federal “free marketeers” have a strong network of business and academic contacts who can provide ready advice on current issues. The Society of Modest Members will spread the influence of this network.

But more significantly the society will provide some structure for the loose affiliation of free marketeers in Federal Parliament. A feature of this group has been its informality. The common factor is philosophy, not personalities, and alliances have been temporary because of differing views on what parts of the market ought to be free.

The Society of Modest Members will provide a permanent common ground for this group. “The society will be a tangible organisation,” Carlton says, “reinforcing people so they feel they are not alone. Often these fights are lonely fights.”

Naming the society after the Modest Member, Carlton says, was “an acknowledgement of his pioneering work.” Kelly, modestly, plays down his own importance. He says that the “free marketeers” have a wider vision than he did, and are having more success because of it.

But he also acknowledged that an organisation like the Society of Modest Members would not have been possible even five years ago:

The wind has changed. It has been demonstrated that, although meaning well, government generally does badly in commercial matters, and this has made people braver than they used to be about questioning it.

Kelly is optimistic about the society. He says:

How much success it will have will depend on whether the people who join it will stick. They certainly won’t stick all the way. There’ll be people who’ll shoot off in different directions, but if they’ll come back to their philosophy, to their basic belief in the market, then we’ll get somewhere.