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Rural MPs defection exposes rifts in Australias
governing coalition
By Mike Head
16 July 2001
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Despite a series of policy backflips in recent months to appease
disgruntled rural and regional voters, the Howard government has
failed to prevent a potentially destabilising breakaway from its
rural-based coalition partner, the National Party.
Bob Katter, the MP for the northern Queensland electorate of
Kennedy announced on July 8 that he would resign from the federal
parliamentary National Party and contest the next general electiondue
within monthsas an independent.
With the government facing possible defeat at the election,
Katter condemned its policies and appealed for other candidates
to stand as independents to oppose economic rationalism.
No other National Party MPs have joined him as yet, but his desertion
has caused rifts within the party at local, state and federal
levels, suggesting that further departures may follow.
Party office-bearers within his electorate, which covers much
of inland Queensland, have opposed the National Party standing
a candidate against him. At least one local official, Kennedy
divisional council chairwoman Ailsa Stainkey, has predicted mass
resignations from the party if it does nominate a candidate. Katter
has also attracted significant support from ex-party leaders,
notably longtime Queensland premier and state National Party leader
Sir Joh Bjelke Petersen and former state government minister Mick
Vievers.
Reflecting these divisions, state party leaders took two days
to decide to expel Katter, who did not resign from the party itself.
The federal leadership has nervously refrained from denouncing
Katter, despite the political damage that he has done to the government.
National Party leader and Deputy Prime Minister John Anderson
simply declared that he had given up trying to understand Katter,
while Trade Minister Mark Vaile insisted that the Queensland MP
remained a mate.
In his statement, Katter called for a new rural-based movement
with a platform of restoring tariffs and national protection.
He railed against the government for continuing the doctrines
of free trade, privatisation and deregulation introduced
by the previous Labor Party government, saying they had done
great damage to Australia, and more particularly to rural/regional
and owner/operator-small business Australia. He accused
party leaders of promoting policies that were often the
complete opposite of the traditional position of the National
Party and its predecessor, the Country Party.
He later made his call for a political re-alignment more explicit,
comparing himself and other rural independents with the extreme
right-wing Reform Party in Canada (now renamed the Canadian Alliance),
which took 50 seats in the 1993 elections, helping to reduce the
Conservative Party from 169 seats to two. Katter said the Canadian
party had campaigned on the same issues that were troubling rural
Australia.
Katter currently has a precarious base among disaffected farmers
and small business operators. His sprawling electorate of Kennedy,
which covers more territory than the southern state of Victoria,
illustrates the devastation caused in rural areas by the increasingly
deregulated operation of capitalist markets. Hundreds of family
farmers face financial ruin. Tobacco, sugar cane and dairy farmers,
in particular, have been forced to abandon their operations after
agribusinesses obtained lower prices overseas or elsewhere in
Australia. In the latest blow, tobacco farmers have not planted
crops this year because British American Tobacco has pulled out,
citing high taxes and cheaper overseas crops.
Across Australia, tens of thousands of smaller farmers have
been driven off the land over the past two decades, their properties
absorbed by agricultural transnationals and wealthier farmers.
This process has been accelerated by the financial and industrial
deregulation initiated by the Labor government in the 1980s and
continued by the Howard government. The impact on jobs, income
and living conditions has been compounded by the withdrawal of
basic services from rural and regional towns in recent years,
including banks, airlines, railways and government utilities.
Policy reversals
Since February, when the Liberal-National Party coalition suffered
landslide defeats at two state elections, first in Western Australia
and then Queensland, Prime Minister John Howard has desperately
sought to recover support in former Liberal-National Party constituencies
by reversing aspects of one economic policy after the other. Nearly
all the backflips have benefitted small-to-medium business operators,
retired self-employed people and farmers.
Just five days after the Queensland result, the government
allowed business owners to file annual rather than quarterly returns
for the newly-introduced Goods and Service Tax, effectively giving
them more time to pay their tax and complete cumbersome paperwork,
a policy the government had previously declared unworkable. In
rapid succession, the government then abandoned a promised crackdown
on tax trustspermitting farmers and others to continue minimising
their taxesscrapped a 1.5 cent-a-litre petrol excise rise
and doubled first home buyers grants, in an effort to reverse
a slide into recession.
In recent weeks, the government has given retirees and farmers
cash benefits in the annual Budget; renounced plans to recover
some over-paid family allowance payments from those, mostly self-employed,
who underestimate their annual income; and made it easier for
contractors to pay tax at the company rate of 30 percent, rather
than the highest income tax rate of 47 percent.
According to an estimate in the Australian Financial Review
this week, the Budget allocated some $4 billion over five years
to various rural adjustment schemes and infrastructure
projects, including financial packages for farmers in politically
volatile electorates. The government has also backed away from
the immediate privatisation of the remainder of Telstra, the government-owned
telecommunications company, on which many rural and regional people
depend for subsidised telephone and Internet access.
The fact that Katter has made his break nonetheless, after
months of threatening to do so, indicates that, despite these
limited concessions, the National Party continues to face bitter
discontent in its rural heartland. Katter has said that his resignation
was triggered by an angry meeting of local tobacco farmers, who
warned him that he would lose his seat if he did not break with
the government.
Media commentators have generally given the false impression
that Katter had no fear of electoral defeat because he retained
his seat with a healthy majority at the last election in 1998.
But in the early 1990s he held Kennedywhich also includes
the mining town of Mt Isa and other regional working class areaswith
only a slender margin. He has boosted his vote by attacking the
Liberal Party and some National Party leaders, particularly over
tariffs and the Telstra sell-off. He has made a career out
of bashing his brethren, one Australian Financial
Review commentator observed.
In 1993, Katter described the pro-market policies of Liberal
leader John Hewson as lunatic and he once blamed slanty-eyed
ideologues for Howard government policies. Last year, Communications
Minister Richard Alston called him a national disgrace
for opposing the Telstra sale. Earlier this year, Katter attempted
to oust the National Party Senate leader Ron Boswell and urged
the Nationals to swap voting preferences with Pauline Hansons
extreme right-wing One Nation party.
Like Hanson, Katter combines denunciations of pro-market reforms
with anti-Asian prejudice that harks back to the White Australia
policy. But he has not immediately joined One Nation and seems
to be keeping his distance. Katter, whose father held the Kennedy
seat before him, is appealing more directly to the traditional
rural base of the National Party. He appears to be hoping that
he can emerge at the head of a third force of so-called
independents, usually former National Party or One Nation candidates,
grabbing a substantial share of the one million votes that Hansons
party obtained at the 1998 elections.
Three years ago, Hanson originally enjoyed overwhelming promotion
in the media. Her party provided a right-wing, nationalist outlet
for the discontent in both rural and outlying urban areas with
the high levels of unemployment, poverty and inequality associated
with the Labor-Liberal program of economic deregulation. When
her early electoral successes threatened to destabilise the two-party
system, however, the media turned on her. Moreover, her anti-Asian
utterings undermined Australian business and strategic interests,
particularly in key Asian markets for agricultural and mining
exports.
In an editorial, the Sydney Morning Herald wrote
approvingly of Katters move as a fascinating development
and opined that it is the fault of the major parties if
large groups of regional Australians feel so disenfranchised that
they turn elsewhere. Indicating a preference in ruling circles
for Katter over Hanson, the newspaper concluded that: If
they do, it is surely better that they look to local Independents
than to an extremist party like One Nation.
Whatever the immediate calculations of Katter and his associates,
whose financial backers reportedly include prominent rural businessmen,
his defection is symptomatic of the disintegration of the National
Party, one of the central institutions of Australian parliamentary
politics.
For much of the 20th century, the Country and National parties
were able to garner a majority of votes in rural areas by championing
high farm tariffs and subsidies. With the assistance of electoral
gerrymandering that inflated parliamentary numbers in rural and
regional areas, they held sufficient seats to require inclusion
as a coalition partner in every conservative government at the
federal level since the 1920s.
Notwithstanding Katters attempts to resurrect rural protectionism,
the National Partys previous program has been completely
undermined by the increasing globalisation of economic life, including
agricultural production, over the last two decades and its social
base is increasingly disaffected and fractured. Despite the governments
attempts to shore up its rural support, the next elections will
undoubtedly see a further decline in the National Partys
electoral fortunes.
See Also:
Australian government budget:
a last-ditch attempt to avoid election defeat
[23 May 2001]
Conservative parties routed
in another Australian election
[23 February 2001]
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