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Leadership tensions mount as Australian Treasurer outlines
new agenda
By Mike Head
30 July 2001
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With the Australian government facing possible defeat in elections
due later this year, Treasurer Peter Costello is positioning himself
to replace Prime Minister John Howard as Liberal Party leader
as soon as possible after the poll, regardless of the outcome.
Backed by sections of business and the media, Costello is seeking
to demonstrate that, unlike Howard, he will be capable of delivering
the requirements of global capitallower corporate and income
taxes, unrestricted access for foreign investment and a renewed
drive to lower workers wages and conditionswhile fashioning
a new social agenda.
Currently the Liberal Party deputy leader, Costello has long
been the favourite of the financial markets and other business
sectors that have lost patience with the Howard governments
stalling and backtracking on economic policy and its desperate
vote-buying concessions to rural and other protected national
industries.
Costello gave two clear signals last week of a renewed determination
to distance himself from Howard. The first was a Wednesday night
speech to the Sydney Institute, a right-wing thinktank, in which
he argued the merits of global capitalism and pushed for a further
wave of economic reform, particularly on tax and industrial
relations.
Responding to the anti-capitalist demonstrations at the G-8
summit in Genoa, Costello declared that winning foreign investment
and trade were the key to making Australia more prosperous
and a better place to live. He flatly denied there was a
growing gap between rich and poor and insisted that the living
standards of the worlds poor could only be lifted through
open markets and trade liberalisation.
While claiming to have the interests of the poor at heart,
the central axis of his speech was a call for a further shifting
of the tax burden from the wealthy to the working people. To
stay competitive the weight must be kept off direct taxincome
tax and company taxand the indirect tax base must carry
the burden of funding social services, he emphasised.
Income and business taxes, whichtheoretically at leastrequire
the highest-income recipients to pay the most, are being reduced
globally as transnational corporations shift their operations
from one country to another, demanding higher profit margins.
Indirect taxes are designed to extract the most from those who
can least afford to pay: the poorest families who are forced to
spend the highest proportion of their incomes on the necessities
of life.
The day after his speech, Costello was anxious to deny suggestions
that he was foreshadowing an immediate increase in the governments
10 percent Goods and Services Tax, introduced last year. Yet the
thrust of his remarks was unmistakeablefor Australian-based
companies to survive in the world market, governments would have
to continue to reduce their taxes while jacking up the consumption
tax.
With an election looming, Costello presented his call as a
criticism of the Labor Partys vague pledge to roll
back aspects of the hated GST. But his speech was also an
implicit repudiation of the economic policy backflips made by
Howard over the past six months.
His remarks were welcomed by leading media outlets. Costello
pushes reform, was the headline in Rupert Murdochs
Australian. An editorial in the Melbourne Age commented:
Mr Costello was flying the flag for the cause of globalisation
with an aplomb and surefootedness that other members of the Federal
Government, including occasionally Prime Minister John Howard,
have been unwilling to display in the cause in recent years.
Costellos second swipe at Howard was indirect. It came
in the form of excerpts from a soon-to-be-published biography
of Costello, revealing his scorn for Howard. The Age and
its sister newspaper, the Sydney Morning Herald, reported
on their front pages last Friday that Costello has been making
disparaging comments about Howard since at least 1997.
According to Peter Costello: The New Liberal, written
by Age journalist Shaun Carney, in mid-1999 Costello despaired
of Mr Howard in private. He told a friend he believed Mr Howard
was no longer pushing himself and had unofficially retired. Howard
had run out of puff, Costello told one associate.
A year earlier, an angry Costello had opposed a suggestion
by Howard that the proposed GST rate be reduced from 10 percent
to 8 percent and that planned income tax cuts be ditched in order
to appease charity and welfare organisations. Costello was outraged,
describing the idea as dumb and half-baked reform
that voters would not support because they expected income tax
cuts in return for the GST.
Through Carneys book, Costello claims credit for the
GST, prevailing upon Howard to place it back on the agenda in
1997. To Costello, Howard seemed lost in the prime ministership,
Costellos view was that only by keeping the reform agenda
thumping along at a rollicking pace could the government grasp
and keep hold of the political ascendancy.
Both Howard and Costello have played down the damaging revelations,
but Costello confirmed that he has had disagreements with his
leader. Moreover, while describing the biography as unauthorised,
he did not deny that he had spent 50 hours with Carney as the
author prepared the book. The resulting message is deliberate:
Costello, not Howard, is the man to keep pro-business reform thumping
along.
Other extracts from the book are designed to show that Costello
opposed Howard not just on economic matters but social policy
as well. In 1997, Costello claimed Howard was uncomfortable
at some level with the prevalence of Asian faces in Australian
streets. Three years later, Costello was angry and
appalled when Howard instructed him not to join an Aboriginal
reconciliation march over Sydney Harbour Bridge.
Sections of business regard these issues as critical, for both
international and domestic reasons. Howards perceived anti-Asian
inclinations and failure to secure a mutually-beneficial settlement
with Aboriginal leaders are seen as blights on Australian capitalisms
reputation overseas, notably in crucial Asian markets, and as
barriers to forging a new sense of national purpose at home.
Reorganising the Liberals
Last week also saw the first public moves to insert high-profile
merchant banker Malcolm Turnbull into the Liberal leadership.
Turnbull, a millionaire businessman and former lawyer for media
magnate Kerry Packer, headed the Australian Republican Movement
throughout the 1990s and was closely associated with Labor Party
prime minister Paul Keating.
Having failed to win the republic referendum of 1999, he has
now nailed his colours firmly to the Liberal Party mast, and made
it clear he is looking for a parliamentary seat to be arranged
for him as soon as possible. In the meantime, he has been given
the post of the partys deputy federal treasurer, becoming
the heir-apparent to a post that carries considerable clout in
establishment circles.
One Australian Financial Review columnist last Friday
commented: Chief bagman for the Liberal Party has traditionally
been a position of significant influence. Under the headline,
Turnbull serves change of course, the writer speculated
on the possibility of a Costello/Turnbull leadership, reflecting
a new face of progressive liberalism.
These moves are directed against Howard and his wing of the
Liberal Party, which has based itself on traditional conservatives,
right-wing and Christian fundamentalist elements and small business
layers. Turnbull speaks for those sections of big business most
closely integrated into international capital, which have opposed
not just Howards pandering to economic nationalism but also
his social conservatism, including his adherence to the British
monarchy.
These layers require a government that can somehow manufacture
a new socially-inclusive image for the political establishment
in order to better camouflage the further destruction of working
class living standards. Howards cultivation of a backward-looking,
xenophobic and protectionist social base, while it has served
to shift the official political debate sharply to the right, has
become an obstacle to this agenda.
The elevation of Costello and Turnbull expresses mounting exasperation
in ruling circles with the current leadership of both major partiesLiberal
and Labor. It is now almost 18 months since the Australian
editor Paul Kelly railed against Howard and Labor Party leader
Kim Beazley, labelling their leaderships as a national disgrace
for backing away from economic restructuring.
The Australian last weekend added its own twist to Costellos
opinion of Howard, running a banner headline: Theyre
all out of puff. The article claimed to present the results
of the newspapers survey of voters in 20 marginal electorates,
where the federal election may be decided. Australians are
deeply disillusioned with their political leadership and regard
both John Howard and Kim Beazley as weaker than their predecessors,
it asserted.
The Australian appears to be making an attempt to divert
the popular hostility toward both parties into support for a strong
and visionary leadership. Regardless of whether the
next government is headed by Beazley, Howard or Costello, however,
the media agitation is a sure sign that once the election is over,
the incoming administration will be under orders to speed up the
attack on working people, provoking even deeper discontent.
See Also:
Australian government minister blames
the poor for poverty
[26 July 2001]
Alienation from the major parties revealed
in Australian by-election
[17 July 2001]
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