Senate debates

Tuesday, 12 May 2026

Condolences

Morris, Hon. Peter Frederick, OAM

3:39 pm

Photo of Tim AyresTim Ayres (NSW, Australian Labor Party, Minister for Industry and Innovation) Share this | Hansard source

by leave—I move:

That the Senate records its sadness at the death, on 26 April 2026, of the Honourable Peter Frederick Morris OAM, former Minister for Transport, Minister for Aviation, Minister for Resources, Minister for Housing and Aged Care, Minister for Transport, Minister for Industrial Relations and member for Shortland, places on record its gratitude for his service to the parliament and the nation, and tenders its sympathy to his family in their bereavement.

The Hunter Valley has produced some of Australian Labor's finest sons and daughters, and Peter Morris was one of those. He and his seven siblings were born to a family proud of its Greek heritage and deeply dedicated to Newcastle. Though study and work periodically took Peter further afield, he always made his way back to the Hunter.

Unsurprisingly for a man so deeply invested in his community, Peter was drawn to Labor politics. In his mid-30s, he became an alderman on the Newcastle city council, and in 1972 Peter came into parliament on the wave of excitement that brought the Whitlam government to office. Like Whitlam, Peter believed firmly in Labor's ability and mission to make life better for Australians in the outer suburbs and regions. As a backbencher, Peter had a ringside seat to the heady days of the Whitlam government, its ambition and its frenetic pace, and he was there, actually on the steps of parliament with Gough, on 11 November 1975.

Those experiences of reform and conflict in our parliament shaped the kind of minister he would later become. Peter Morris was not a fairweather friend. In the aftermath of the Dismissal, as federal Labor entered some of its darkest days, he rolled up his sleeves and he got to work, holding the Fraser government to account and simultaneously laying policy foundations for the Hawke government's later success.

Peter represented the people of Shortland during pivotal and occasionally tragic times, such as the 1989 earthquake, which killed 13 and injured so many others, including at the Hunter Valley's Newcastle Workers Club, and the closure of the BHP steelworks, right at the end of his 26 years in parliament. Throughout all of that turmoil, Peter Morris was there. He wasn't a flashy politician, but he was active in so many of the Hawke government's reforms in the 1980s, such as the modernisation of telecommunications and an enterprise bargaining system where blue-collar workers would reap the rewards of their own productivity.

He made his true mark in transport and aviation policy. He worked to make Australia's roads, airports and wharves more productive. His mission was about fairness, safety and decency, especially for wage earners who bore unfair commuting burdens and assumed large occupational risks in those sectors. And his achievements are foundational for Australia and, in particular, for the Hunter Valley. They include the M1 Motorway, Newcastle Airport, the foundations of Western Sydney International Airport, the end of the duopoly in our skies, and the 1992 Ships of shame report, which drew international attention to bad ships where work was dangerous and exploitative for seafarers and destructive to our marine environment. Those are just some of the monuments to Peter Morris.

When Bob Hawke wanted to sense-check his government's standing in the Hunter, he would turn to Peter Morris. Bob Hawke knew, and Peter knew, and Hawke said famously that if they loved Newcastle properly it would love them back.

He inspired great loyalty in his staff. To work for Peter, I'm told, was to join something like a family.

By the time he received his Medal of the Order of Australia in 2012, he could have been enjoying a well-deserved retirement. Instead, he was still advocating for Newcastle's future, its economic vibrancy and its civic richness. The legacies of that work include the Fighter World RAAF museum, Newcastle Maritime Museum and the locally adored William the Fourth steamship. We in New South Wales, in the Hunter Valley and in Australia owe much to Australians like Peter—Australians who might not be from the nicer parts of our capital cities, but who step up to advocate for their communities in Canberra, Sydney and wherever else people like them are often forgotten.

Peter and his wife, Florence, were loving parents of four children, including the late Matthew Morris. Matthew's eight years of service in the New South Wales parliament made a real difference to the quality of public services in Charlestown. What greater example—what greater tribute, I should say, to the power of Peter's example could there be? Peter, Florence and Matthew are survived by Michael, Paul and John Morris along with Peter's remaining siblings, including former member for Newcastle Allan Morris, who I spoke with earlier today. I know that the Morris family is watching these proceedings now with great sadness but also with great pride in the achievements of Peter and the Morris family in that wonderful Hunter community in New South Wales. On behalf of the Australian government, I pay tribute to a great Australian.

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