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Australia: Anti-democratic election laws behind trial of right-wing
politicians
By the Editorial Board
18 July 2002
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The recent decision to place right-wing Australian politician
Pauline Hanson and a co-founder of her One Nation Party, David
Ettridge on trial on electoral fraud charges highlights the anti-democratic
character of electoral laws passed over the past decade to make
it increasingly difficult to register new political parties and
challenge the major parties.
The Hanson case demonstrates how the electoral lawswhich
require parties without representatives in parliament to publicly
disclose the names and addresses of their members and financial
supporterscan be used to lay the basis for serious criminal
charges against any party regarded as a threat to the political
establishment.
Hanson and Ettridge have been charged under fraud provisions
of the Queensland Criminal Code, with obtaining benefits
by deception in registering Pauline Hansons One Nation as
a political party in that state in 1997. Hanson also faces charges
of wrongfully claiming about $450,000 in election funding on the
basis of the false registration.
On May 27, Brisbane magistrate Michael Halliday committed the
pair to stand trial at a date yet to be fixed. If convicted, they
could be jailed for many yearsin Hansons case for
up to 25 yearsand disbarred from standing for elections
for life.
The charges have been triggered by the states Electoral
Act, which requires new parties to hand over the names and addresses
of 500 members and make them available for public inspection.
While more than 1,000 signatories endorsed One Nations registration
application, a Queensland Supreme Court judge ruled in August
1999 that they were not genuine party members, paving the way
for the current prosecution.
Justice Rosalyn Atkinson declared that One Nations registration
had been induced by fraud and misrepresentation because
the signatories on the list submitted to the Queensland Electoral
Commission were merely members of the Pauline Hanson Support Movement
and its successor, Pauline Hansons One Nation Members Inc.
Under the constitution of Pauline Hansons One Nation, already
registered as a federal party, Hanson, Ettridge and another founder,
David Oldfield, were its only three members.
While this autocratic set-up, designed to concentrate all decision-making
in the hands of the One Nation troika, opened the way for Atkinsons
judgement, there was no dispute that the signatories regarded
themselves as party members for the purpose of registering One
Nation to contest Queensland state elections. The state Electoral
Commission had itself checked and authenticated their membership
claims, verifying 97 percent as genuine.
Because Atkinsons judgment was issued more than a year
after One Nation had been registered, the state Electoral Commission
could not bring a prosecution under the Queensland Electoral Act,
which provides for fines of $1,500 or six months jail. Instead,
Electoral Commissioner Des OShea asked the states
Crown Law Officer to refer the matter to the Police Commissioner
for investigation under the more draconian fraud provisions of
the Criminal Code.
Behind the campaign against Hanson
The decision to prosecute Hanson and Ettridge has nothing to
do with opposition to One Nations policies, which have been
adopted, in large part, by the major parties. Last Novembers
federal election campaign was dominated by bipartisan agreement
on two of Hansons central demandsthe barring of entry
to refugees and the use of the military to repel their boats.
While Hanson based herself on White Australia nationalism,
her support was a distorted expression of far wider social discontent
and political alienation. The concern in ruling circles was that
by presenting herself as an anti-establishment figure she tapped
into the disgust and resentment felt by millions of rural, small
business and working people toward both the traditional ruling
partiesLabor and Liberal-National. Particularly in poorer
country areas, her demagogic attacks on globalisation, free trade
and the banks struck a chord with small business people and farmers
facing ruin.
After Howards election in 1996, under conditions of growing
social inequality, deteriorating living conditions for working
people and increasing social tensions, her movement became a means
of diverting political disaffection with the major parties in
a nationalist and xenophobic direction. Newspaper pundits, TV
news and current affairs commentators and talk-back radio hosts
gave credence to her bigoted views, while Prime Minister Howard
declared them to be an accurate reflection of what people
feel.
By 1998, however, Hansons populist appeal began to spiral
out of control. In the Queensland elections of June that year,
One Nation won an unprecedented 23 percent of the vote and 11
parliamentary seats, threatening to destabilise the political
system. According to poll predictions for that years federal
election, her party was headed for control of the balance of power
in the Senate.
Almost overnight, the mass media and mainstream politicians
started to air allegations of deceptive and dictatorial methods
inside One Nation. Encouraged and financially assisted by leading
Liberal and National Party figures, an unsuccessful One Nation
candidate, Terry Sharples sued Hanson over reimbursement of his
campaign expenses. Sharples complaint became the vehicle
for a full-scale legal and media assault on One Nation.
Sharples launched a civil action in the state Supreme Court
seeking a review of One Nations registration. His initial
solicitor was former Northern Territory Chief Minister Paul Everingham,
a leading light in the federal Liberal Party. During the case,
evidence was presented revealing that federal government cabinet
member Tony Abbott had financially backed Sharples.
Hanson and Ettridge appealed against Atkinsons verdict,
but in January 2000, just as three Supreme Court judges were due
to hand down their decision on the appeal, police in two states
conducted highly-publicised raids on One Nation offices, carrying
off boxes of documents and computer hard disks, ostensibly seeking
criminal evidence against the accused pair.
After further hearings in February 2000, the appellate court
upheld Atkinsons ruling. In the same month, OShea
escalated the legal assault by taking Hanson and Ettridge to court,
making them personally liable to repay $450,000 in electoral funding
granted to One Nation on the basis of the number of votes it won.
Despite being written off by the media as a spent force, Hanson
successfully issued a public appeal to pay her share of the money
demanded by the Electoral Commission. In February 2001, One Nation
again caused consternation in official circles, when it obtained
nearly 10 percent of the vote in the West Australian and Queensland
state elections, and close to 20 percent in rural areas, contributing
toward crushing defeats for the conservative parties. Hanson barely
campaigned in the elections and issued no policies; she simply
appealed to widespread hostility to the major parties by calling
on voters to reject all incumbents.
Not long after, it seems, the decision was made to prosecute
Hanson and Ettridge. Again, the timing was revealing. Police served
summonses last July, a full 18 months after the January 2000 raids,
and just four months before the November federal election, in
which Hanson was standing for the Senate.
The recent committal hearing raised further questions about
high-level political involvement. Prosecution witnesses spoke
of meetings with not only Abbott, but also National Party Senate
leader Ron Boswell and former Senator Bill OChee. Two witnesses,
a married couple, admitted having Abbott at their home and receiving
a phone call from former National Party leader Tim Fischer. It
was revealed that Abbott had written to Queensland Electoral Commissioner
OShea several times, urging him to lay charges.
Anti-democratic laws
The move to jail Hanson and Ettridge is a graphic example of
the anti-democratic character of the electoral laws. Facing the
fracturing of their bases of support, Labor and Coalition governments
have, over the past decade, made it virtually impossible for ordinary
peoplewithout access to large funds and staffto form
new parties and contest elections. Queenslands requirements,
including the lodging of 500 members names and addresses,
are typical.
In neighbouring NSW, the parliamentary partiesLabor,
Liberal, National, Democrats and Greenscombined to push
through similar laws following a 1999 election in which support
for minor parties and independents rose to nearly 35 percent in
the upper house. To register, parties not represented in parliament
now have to pay $2,000, submit signed membership forms from 750
people and update their lists annually. This is on top of hefty
fees to stand candidates in elections.
These laws open up every aspect of a partys organisation
to official surveillance and interference. In the first place,
the registration applications, complete with names and addresses,
are open to the public, leaving party members exposed to victimisation
and harassment. While the electoral authorities are barred from
actually handing over the lists to intelligence and other government
agencies, the records are available for any undercover security
operative to inspect.
Secondly, the laws provide for state funding of political parties,
both to prop up the flagging finances of the old parties and to
give the authorities broad powers to pry into the affairs of new
parties. Under the federal Electoral Act, whether registered parties
apply for funding or not, they must file extensive annual returns,
right down to the local branch level, and publicly name their
financial contributors.
In the guise of checking financial returns, the Electoral Commission
can obtain search and seizure orders, demand the production of
documents, and require evidence to be given under oath. It can
ask for a detailed timetable of a partys activities and
by scheduling inspections and audit meetings, constantly monitor
and disrupt these activities.
These provisions are part of a broader assault on democratic
rights. Late last month, Labor joined hands with the Howard government
to pass, with only cosmetic amendments, far-reaching anti-terrorist
legislation, which will enable the authorities to charge participants
in many basic forms of political dissent and protest with committing
terrorist acts, punishable by life imprisonment. Political
parties accused of supporting terrorism can be outlawed, their
funds frozen and their members jailed. Further legislation is
scheduled for August to allow ASIO, the secret police, to detain
people without charge for interrogation.
Taken together, these measures are the response of a political
establishment that has no answer whatsoever to the growing social
chasm between rich and poor. One Nation, a right-wing anti-working
class outfit, has been chosen as the first target. But as social
tensions continue to mount, the attack on Hanson and Ettridge
will be used as a precedent for suppressing movements that advance
a genuine, progressive alternative to the current economic and
social order.
See Also:
The rise and decline
of Pauline Hanson's One Nation
[9 March 1999]
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