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Australia:
Radio talkback host anoints new NSW Police Minister
By Mike Head
3 December 2001
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Official politics in Australia has reached a new low, with
one of the countrys most notorious right-wing radio talkback
hosts vetting the appointment of a new Police Minister by the
state Labor government in New South Wales.
Premier Bob Carrs choice of Michael Costa to take charge
of the states 17,000-strong police force initially surprised
media pundits and caused ructions within the ranks of Labor Party
Members of Parliament. Costa, the states newest and least
experienced MP, was being elevated to the post after sitting in
parliament for only 17 days. He was sworn in as an MP just two
months earlier after resigning as secretary of the NSW Labor Council,
the states peak trade union body.
His rise has been all the more remarkable given that Costa
was slotted into parliament without any election. Selected and
groomed by the Labor Partys powerful right-wing faction,
he was allocated a cosy seat in the state upper house, conveniently
vacated by long-time stalwart John Johnson.
There were suggestions that disgruntled senior right-wing Labor
MPs, miffed at being by-passed for ministerial office, might challenge
Costas nomination in the Labor Party caucus room. These
rumours soon dissipated when it became known that radio shock-jock
Alan Jones had personally approved the appointment.
Before naming Costa, Carr secretly went to see Jones to seek
his blessing, according to an editors note in the Bulletin
magazine.
Carr then sent Costa to dine with the radio celebrity at Jones
home, before the incumbent Police Minister Paul Whelan had even
quit. There, Costa presented his credentials as minister-in-waiting
to Jones and two other prominent critics of the Carr governments
recent handling of police affairsformer detective-sergeant
Tim Priest and academic Richard Basham.
Costas interview with Jones occurred prior to the premiers
announcement of his appointment to members of the government,
underscoring Carrs close relationship with the extreme right-wing
commentator. Carr has previously admitted getting up in the early
hours of the morning and waiting for Jones to telephone with questions
for his 6am radio show.
Over the past year, Jones, a former Liberal Party candidate,
has used his daily radio program and other media outlets to accuse
the Carr government of allowing a breakdown of law and order.
He has promoted Priest, Basham and others, painting an alarmist
scenario of rising crime rates, rampant gangs and panic-stricken
residents and repeatedly demanded the removal of Whelan and Police
Commissioner Peter Ryan.
So when Carr decided on Michael Costa as the man to replace
outgoing police minister Paul Whelan, one media pundit explained,
it was vital to secure Jones seal of approval. It
was the groom presenting the bride for the first time to the scary
mother-in-law.
According to media reports, Jones, Priest and Basham were apparently
impressed by Costas anxiety to address their demands and
his determination to pull no punches in further beefing up the
police force. Carr was said to be delighted with the outcome.
Within days, Whelan announced his retirement and Carr named Costa
to take his place, winning immediate public praise from Jones.
On November 12, the day before his clandestine meeting with
Costa, Jones told his breakfast program listeners: The NSW
Labor Party has got problems ... These are the problems of Bob
Carrs making. A week later, his tune changed remarkably.
Well, a new police minister is to be sworn in today and
theres some conjecture about it simply because hes
been in parliament for only 17 days, he told his audience.
But hes no dunce, this Michael Costa. And hes
highly regarded by Premier Carr.
A renewed law and order campaign
Since Carr came to office in 1995, he has been at the forefront
nationally of law and order politicsdiverting
attention from the real causes of economic insecurity and deteriorating
social conditions in the profit system, and scapegoating young
people, particularly from immigrant communities, in order to hand
unprecedented powers to the police.
His government has already enacted laws to allow police to
stop, interrogate and search people on the streets, set up general
roadblocks and search all vehicles, impose curfews on youth and
order anyone in a public place to move on. Under the
guise of combatting drug trafficking, Labor has made it a serious
offence to enter or leave declared drug premises,
effectively scrapping the presumption of innocence.
But these measures have not satisfied Jones and his allies.
During the year, they aligned themselves with the embattled Liberal
Party leader Kerry Chikarovski, who has been trying to outbid
Carr on boosting police powers and resources. At the same time,
revelations of ongoing police corruption, including high-level
involvement in drug trafficking, have dealt severe blows to the
credibility of Carr and Ryan, the premiers handpicked police
chief.
Carr is now openly banking on Costa to lead an even more draconian
law and order drive in the lead-up to the next state
election, due in March 2003. For the next 16 months, the tabloid
media will be filled with reports of Carr and Costa cracking
down on alleged gangs, drug users and criminals, urged on
by Jones.
Costa has wasted no time. On his first day in office, he declared
his support for legislation to overturn a magistrates ruling
that police had illegally used drug sniffer dogs indiscriminately
against nightclub patrons during recent large-scale raids in Sydney.
Then he stepped in to reverse a plan by Commissioner Ryan to amalgamate
a number of inner-city police stations, and vowed that extra police
would be on the streets. He has also foreshadowed a series of
measures against youth in the inner suburbs of Redfern and Waterlooboth
areas with many Aboriginal residentswho have been accused
of throwing rocks at passing vehicles. Costa spoke of relocating
families from public housing in the area and of requiring magistrates
to refuse bail to juveniles facing charges.
After little more than a week in office, he has taken charge
of the passage of a barrage of new laws, already prepared under
Whelan.
* The Judicial Amendment (Non-Association and Place Restriction)
Act allows police to order alleged members of gangsloosely
defined as people who commit an offence in the company of othersnot
to associate with other members or attend certain places. Breaches
of these orders carry penalties of up to six months jail.
* The Crimes Amendment (Self Defence) Act will allow people
to attack and even kill suspected thieves or assailants, whether
in their home, at their business or on the street, provided they
use reasonable force to defend themselves, other people
or property.
* Another Bill will permit juveniles convicted of serious offences
to be imprisoned in adult jails once they turn 18.
These measures give the police further far-reaching powers
to harass and victimise youth, while encouraging vigilantes. In
what the NSW Civil Liberties Council referred to as an outright
attack on freedom of association and movement, Costa declared
that youth and street gangs would be kept away from
their turf.
A November 29 editorial in Rupert Murdochs Sydney Daily
Telegraph praised the government for providing a strong
legislative framework to curb gang-related crime but warned
Costa: These laws can only be effective if police are on
the streets to enforce them. Later that day, Costa unveiled
a new anti-gang squad of more than 50 detectives.
Who is Michael Costa?
Under any circumstances, the installation of a former top trade
union leader as police minister within weeks of becoming an MP
would be worthy of comment. But Costas virtual overnight
shift from union bureaucrat to government police minister highlights
the evolution of the unions into nothing but appendages of big
business and the capitalist state.
Not one trade union leader, past or present, took offence when
Carr insisted that Costas three-year stint at the head of
the states union movement from 1998 to 2001 had provided
him with excellent experience for running the police service.
Carr himself was once a Labor Council official, as was his short-lived
predecessor as Labor state Premier, Barrie Unsworth. In his maiden
speech to his fellow parliamentarians in the Legislative Council
on September 19, Costa expressed particular gratitude to Unsworth,
thanking him for support, advice and encouragement.
In the speech, Costa gave an interesting account of his own
political trajectory. Long backed by Unsworth and other right-wing
Labor bosses, he began his political life in 1975-76, just as
the powerful radicalisation of workers and youth that had begun
a decade earlier was coming to an end. The son of Greek working
class immigrants, he was initially attracted to Marxism and briefly
joined the Socialist Labour Leaguethe forerunner of the
Socialist Equality Party.
Like many others, however, Costa responded to the shift in
the political situation by rejecting Marxist principles. His turn
to the right took him into the middle class radical outfit, the
Socialist Workers Party (SWP) and, not long after, into the Labor
Party as well. In 1977 he was expelled from the Labor Party for
retaining ties to the SWP. But, within a decade, he was back in
the Labor fold, beginning to claw his way up to the leadership
of its dominant right-wing faction. By 1987, after a short stint
as a train driver, Costa was selected as the factions candidate
to oust Bernie Willingale, the long-time left leader
of the train drivers union, the AFULE.
In his speech, Costa dismissed contemporary Marxism as a dogma,
contemptuously claiming that if Karl Marx were alive today, he
would be a member of the Centre Unity (Right) faction of the Labor
Party of New South Wales. Taking great pains to emphasise
that his fleeting brush with socialism had been a youthful mistake,
he declared: I come to this House as a political being,
who started off by accident on the far left and in more recent
times has been regarded by my political opponents as being on
the far right.
After two years at the helm of the AFULE, Costa headed for
the NSW Labor Council, where he worked closely with another young
official, Mark Duffy, whom Costa described in his speech as his
intellectual soulmate. He and Duffy produced a book
criticising the prevailing prices and incomes Accord between the
unions and the federal Hawke Labor government from the right.
They called for a de-regulated labour market, advocating lower
wages in rural areas and the introduction of what later became
known as enterprise bargainingthe setting of
wages and conditions to meet the needs of individual employers.
Once regarded as far right, these ideas became
the official program of the labour bureaucracy in the 1990s, paving
the way for Costas meteoric rise to its upper echelons.
Under the Carr government, Costa became the right-wings
choice for Labor Council secretary, distinguishing himself by
championing Carrs ultimately withdrawn bid to privatise
the states electricity system.
In his term as Labor Council secretary, Costa further endeared
himself to Unsworth and Carr by securing a deal to prevent all
industrial action during the 2000 Sydney Olympic Games. Before
finally leaving the Labor Council, he delivered to the Labor government
a WorkCover agreement that slashed employer insurance premiums
for workers compensation.
Costas elevation to the police ministry came less than
two weeks after the federal Labor Partys third successive
defeat in a general election. It constitutes a clear signal by
the Labor leadership, at both the state and federal levels, that
Labors response to the conservative victory will be a further
shift to the right.
See Also:
Australia: Police deeply entrenched
in Sydney's drug traffic
[23 October 2001]
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