While it wasn’t his idea, Medicare helped make the mythos of Bob Hawke
- Written by Mark Kenny, Professor, Australian Studies Institute, Australian National University
It was the big-picture reform that defined the Labor prime minister Bob Hawke and infuriated his opponents with its radical promise of a fairer, healthier society.
Medicare, Australia’s taxpayer-funded system of universal health insurance, established in 1984, has long presented as a paradox. It’s a political winner and a political target. A government-run scheme in an era of marketisation. A constant that has been constantly debated.
Pledges to limit the program have come and gone, and most elections have, at some point, centred on threats to its continuation – whether real or conjured.
For Hawke, it would be his signature achievement – the reform for which his promise of a new national unity or “reconciliation” was to be most enduringly evinced.
Read more: Medicare co-payment: a case study in policy implosion
Medicare or mediscare?
The scheme has not only survived these travails but has gradually acquired formal bipartisan protection, even as it remained a magnet for philosophical differences and over-heated political skirmishes.
A narrowly reelected Malcolm Turnbull complained on election night in 2016 that a Labor SMS campaign alleging Medicare was to be privatised by a re-elected Turnbull government, constituted “the most systematic, well-funded lies ever peddled in Australia”.
A 2016 Labor election campaign ad.In the past two elections (2022 and 2025) Labor has successfully paraded its full commitment to Medicare against the less enthusiastic support of the Coalition.
Substantive or not, that contrast continues, with voters generally ranking Labor as the party more likely to prioritise health policy.
Even recently, in March 2026, Health Minister Mark Butler accused the Coalition’s newly appointed shadow treasurer, Tim Wilson, of not-so-secretly wanting to privatise the scheme.
“He wants to tear the whole system down,” Butler told the House of Representatives.
this is what he’s written. He wants to see “the transfer of health financing shifted from government to individuals”. Put simply, every Australian would have an individual health account that they’d contribute to on a periodic basis from their income, and that savings account would be used to pay for healthcare services as required through their lifetime.
Butler described Wilson as “a bloke who wants to privatise Medicare; a bloke who wants to foist American-style healthcare on the Australian people”.
While this is not Coalition policy, rhetoric such as this has long surrounded Medicare. Even at its inception in the mid-1980s, it had to overcome the pro-market, small government milieu – often called neoliberalism – sweeping across western economies.
For Hawke, this was key to its political logic. By having the government run healthcare, it could pull out of sectors such as banking while ensuring voters felt they were being well-served. For a Labor government, this trade-off was crucial to holding its electoral and union bases together.
Plus, the new scheme was specifically referenced in the government’s Prices and Incomes Accord. The accord introduced the “social wage”: a deal with the unions to stop wages increasing too high in return for more government provision of social services.
John Howard was fond of saying good policy is good politics. Medicare’s survival through his government and others, seems to prove that point.
Read more: Australian politics explainer: the Prices and Incomes Accord
Authors: Mark Kenny, Professor, Australian Studies Institute, Australian National University





