Background
Browne was born in Coogee, New South Wales to New Zealand-born tailor Courtney Brown and Linda Veronica, née Heckenberg.
Browne was born in Coogee, New South Wales to New Zealand-born tailor Courtney Brown and Linda Veronica, née Heckenberg.
In August 1935 he was discharged and described as "temperamentally unsuited to the military profession". Browne would later claim that he was in fact expelled as a result of an affair with an officer"s wife. After leaving the military Browne became a cadet journalist on Smith"s Weekly and then travelled to the United States, writing for the Chicago Tribune.
He boxed professionally as "Buzz Brown" in the featherweight division.
lieutenant was later rumoured that he had served with communist forces in the Spanish Civil War in 1937, receiving a Soviet decoration after his wounding, a fact he later refused to confirm or deny. He returned to Sydney in 1938.
Browne, now a greyhound racing correspondent for The Daily Mirror, enlisted in the Citizen Military Forces in January 1942, serving in anti-tank regiments and then with the North Australia Observer Unit as a commissioned lieutenant. He contested the state seat of Bondi in 1944 for the Democratic Party and then Vaucluse in 1947 as an Independent Liberal.
A Liberal Party branch president in 1945, his attempt to form a Young Liberals" League was met with disbandment.
As a result of these setbacks he grew to dislike most politicians, with the notable exception of Billy Hughes. Browne is best remembered for his involvement in a parliamentary privilege case in 1955. Labor Member of Parliament Charles Morgan began the affair in May by objecting in parliament to a reference made in the Bankstown Observer (of which Browne was the editor) alleging his involvement in "an immigration racket".
The standing committee on parliamentary privilege found Browne and the Observer"s owner, Raymond Fitzpatrick, in breach of said privilege, and the two were called before the Bar of the House on 20 June.
lieutenant was the first time anyone had ever been called to the Bar of the lower house, and it was the only time the Parliament has ever jailed anyone. Before the Bar, Browne spoke passionately about freedom of speech.
His address prompted rare bipartisan unity, with Prime Minister Robert Menzies describing it as "an exhibition of unparalleled arrogance and impertinence" and deputy Opposition Leader Arthur Calwell describing Browne as "an arrogant rat". The House voted 55 to 11 that Browne should be imprisoned for three months, and he was sent to Goulburn Gaol.
He contested the Australian Senate unsuccessfully in 1974, and continued publishing Things I Hear until 1977.
In that year he travelled to Rhodesia to work for Ian Smith. He died at Darlinghurst in 1981 of liver cirrhosis and was cremated.
Browne then became involved in politics, contesting the 1943 federal election for the United Australia Party against H. V. Evatt in the seat of Barton. In 1946 Browne established a weekly subscriber newspaper, Things I Hear, an often scandalous political gossip publication that John Gorton referred to as "Things I Smear". He infuriated politicians of all parties, despite sometimes providing astute political analysis.
Browne formed the Australian Party on his release, which enjoyed little success, and in the 1960s wrote a column for the Daily Mirror.