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WSWS : News
& Analysis : Australia
& South Pacific
Middle class voters desert Liberal government in Australian
by-election
By Linda Tenenbaum
21 March 2001
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In the third electoral contest in Australia in just six weeks,
the Howard Coalition government has suffered yet another rout.
Following major swings against the conservative Liberal-National
Coalition parties in two state elections last month, a by-election
in the federal seat of Ryan has witnessed a further outpouring
of anti-government sentiment.
Located in metropolitan Brisbane, the capital of the north-eastern
state of Queensland, Ryan is a leafy upper middle class suburban
electorate. Since its establishment in 1949, it has been one of
the safest, blue-ribbon Liberal seats in the country.
As recently as three months ago, when Defence Minister John Moore
resigned from parliament and the seat was declared vacant, the
opposition Labor Party was undecided as to whether it should even
bother to stand a candidate.
In last weekend's poll, the swing against the Liberals was
9.6 percent, with the party's primary vote (before the distribution
of preferences from minor parties) plunging from 50 percent in
the last general election in 1998 to 43 percent. Labor's primary
vote rose 8 percent to 39 percent, giving it 50.1 percent of the
vote after preferences. With some 800 pre-poll and postal votes
still to be counted, Labor is marginally ahead, and looks likely
to take the seat.
In light of the forthcoming general election, due before the
end of the year, both the Liberal and Labor Parties ploughed significant
resources into the campaign. The Liberals mailed 15,000 promotional
videos to selected households as well as a personal plea from
Prime Minister John Howard to Liberal voters not to abandon the
party. For the first time in a by-election, Labor broadcast state-wide
television advertisements, at considerable cost. In the two weeks
leading up to the poll, senior politicians from all the contending
parties, major and minor, including Howard and Opposition leader
Kim Beazley, pounded Ryan's pavements, door-knocking electors
in a bid to consolidate their vote.
With opinion polls pointing to an almost certain Liberal defeat,
the media turned out in force on Saturday to interview voters
as they emerged from the polling booths, in an attempt to identify
the reasons. Elderly retirees, small business proprietors and
contractors told reporters they opposed the government's new Goods
and Services Tax (GST) and high petrol prices. Medical professionals,
accountants and academics lashed out at the absurdity
and unnecessary expense of the by-election, remarking
that the sitting member could easily have waited until the general
election to resign. Many pointed to the economic downturn and
attacked the government's arrogance, aloofness and failure to
listen. Others raised concerns over Howard's backward-looking
social policies: his attitude to immigrants and asylum-seekers,
Aborigines and his continuing support for the British monarchy.
As in every election and by-election since 1996, when the Howard
government first came to office, the swing was almost entirely
negative against the government rather than for
Labor. The official third party, the Australian Democrats,
also suffered a significant decline in support, dropping from
8 percent to 5 percent, after similar falls in the Queensland
and Western Australian state elections. The Democrats, who hold
the balance of power in the Senate, used their position to pass
Howard's GST last year and are now embroiled in a bitter leadership
contest. Most of their lost votes went to the Greens, who picked
up 6 percent, an increase of 2.2 percent since 1998.
If the Ryan result were to be replicated in the general election,
the government would be ousted in a landslide, and the Coalition
parties reduced to a parliamentary rump. Labor needs a swing of
just one percent to win seven seats from the Coalition and form
government. Referring to the outcomes of the three recent elections,
the Prime Minister remarked: I look back over the past couple
of months and I feel as though the Government has been subjected
to political carpet-bombing in relation to a large number of issues.
In the wake of the Ryan by-election, Howard has rushed to reassure
the financial markets and big business that his government will
continue to champion their interests through policies of economic
reform. At the same time, he has pledged to make the
impact of change... as palatable and as acceptable as possible
to vulnerable sections of the community.
But these commitments are mutually exclusive. Like Labor, the
Coalition rested, throughout the post-war years, on policies of
national regulation, protection and social welfare. Its embrace
of the free-market policies demanded by global capital and the
corporate elite is precisely what has so deeply alienated many
of its former constituents. Over the past 15 years, along with
millions of working class families, family farmers, small businesspeople
and large sections of the middle class have been plunged into
insecurity and financial hardship, with no safety net to break
their fall.
Moreover, Howard's efforts to claw back support in rural and
regional areas through populist appeals to racism and social backwardness,
have angered his urban constituents in electorates like Ryan,
where the Liberals' vote has plummeted by a massive 18 percent
since 1996.
As the Financial Review noted, the government is dominated
by tactical and philosophical confusion. The Coalition
parties no longer have a cohesive ideological orientation. The
anti-government sentiment emanating from the middle class has
a multi-faceted character, underscoring one of the most critical
features of the current political instability: the Liberal and
National parties have lost any stable social base. The old concept
of a safe seat no longer applies, while, conversely,
the term swinging voter refers to a large percentage
of the voting population. The middle ground of Australian politics,
on which the stability of bourgeois democracy has rested for the
past century, is irrevocably breaking apart.
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