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Question mark over the future of Australian prime minister
By Linda Tenenbaum
23 March 2002
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Australian Prime Minister John Howard has been implicated in
a third grubby scandal in a matter of weeks, prompting speculation
about his political future. Pointed suggestions are being aired
that heir apparent, Treasurer Peter Costello, should start counting
the numbers for a leadership challenge. Behind the deepening crisis
lies a factional war within Australian ruling circles.
The latest incident involves an attempt by one of Howards
key parliamentary supporters to force the removal of a High Court
judge on the basis of homophobic slanders and fake documents.
Last week, Howards cabinet secretary Senator Bill Heffernan
utilised the protection afforded by parliamentary privilege to
accuse Justice Michael Kirby, a Labor appointee to the High Court,
of using a Commonwealth car (Comcar) to trawl for
under-age male prostitutes in Darlinghurst, Sydneys red
light district. Justice Kirby, a self-declared homosexual, is
one of the countrys most eminent legal figures. Head of
the International Commission of Jurists since 1995 and founding
chairman of the Australian Law Reform Commission, he has served
on numerous national and international judicial bodies, including
UNESCO, the Human Genome Organisation and the UN. Kirby is well
known as a leading advocate of human rights and international
law.
Heffernans allegations, which amounted to charges of
pedophilia and the criminal misuse of a government vehicle, provoked
a storm of protest from the legal profession and gay rights organisations,
among others, who leapt to Kirbys defence. Kirby denied
them as false and absurd, accusing Heffernan of homophobia.
On Monday night, Heffernans case collapsed when the Comcar
records were exposed as fraudulent. Moreover the prostitutes
credibility was shattered when it was revealed he gave evidence
that was rejected as entirely unreliable in a recent unrelated
pedophile court case.
Faced with the damning exposure, Howard had no option but to
call for Heffernans resignation as Cabinet secretary. On
Tuesday, under Howards instructions, Heffernan made an unconditional
apology to the Senate and to Kirby, which was accepted by the
judge. The Senate passed censure motions against both Howard and
Heffernan.
On Wednesday Howard, speaking from London where he was attending
a Commonwealth meeting, told ABC radio he regarded the matter
as closed. He stressed that the senator remained a close friend
and that he would not be calling for his resignation from the
Senate. At the same time he felt obliged to note that Kirbys
position on the High Court remained secure.
Kirby, Heffernan and Howard
Kirby is one of seven High Court judgesfour appointed
by Labor governments and three by the conservatives. Once selected,
a High Court judge can only be removed by a vote in both houses
of parliament on the basis of proved misbehaviour. Described as
an activist judge, Kirby has repeatedly clashed, during
the past six years, with Howard and his ministers over a number
of issues: the Wik and Mabo cases, involving Aboriginal land rights;
funding for public education; mandatory sentencing in Western
Australia and the Northern Territory, which particularly targets
Aboriginal youth; the importance of international law and international
legal conventions; the rights of homosexuals. It is no secret
that Howard is profoundly hostile to Kirbys views and would
like a more socially and politically conservative bench.
As for Heffernan, he is notorious as Howards personal
hatchet man. A farmer from rural New South Wales, a devout Catholic
and extreme conservative, he became state president of the New
South Wales Liberal Party in 1993, was placed on the Liberal ticket
in the 1996 federal election and subsequently elected to the Senate.
According to the Sydney Morning Herald: It was in
the couple of years before that poll that Howard and Heffernan
forged the close personal bond thats catapulted the farmer
from Junee to boundary rider, stalking the parliamentary
corridors as the PMs eyes and ears, and to a formal place
in the inner sanctum as parliamentary secretary to the Cabinet.
Reportedly dog-devoted to Howard but hated
by many Liberal MPs, he has been variously described as a
cardinal at the prime ministers elbow, a fixer and head-kicker,
as the rottweiler who rounds up stragglers for his political master.
He functions as Howards personal representative on the state
executive of the Liberal Party, and was the prime ministers
chosen appointee to sit on the upcoming Senate inquiry into the
children overboard scandal.
Heffernan is also an obsessive crusader against alleged pedophiles
and public figures he regards as their protectors, and a pathological
homophobe who has spent years compiling dossiers on high-profile
homosexuals, including Justice Kirby. The current media-provoked
furor over the governor-generals cover-up of child sex abuse
in the Anglican Church apparently tipped him over the edge. According
to the Sydney Morning Herald he told his Liberal colleagues
that the boil is about to be lanced. One Liberal MP
surmised: He is becoming more manic and more vehement.
That such a character serves as the prime ministers closest
aide is revealing enough. But the issue is: what was Howards
own role in the effort to discredit Kirby? Now that the allegations
have exploded, Howard is carefully distancing himself. But when
they were made, he pointedly sided with Heffernan, refusing to
defend the judge. Moreover, he fanned the slanders by tabling,
in the House of Representatives, a letter from Heffernan containing
further details of Kirbys alleged activities. In a radio
interview, Howard suggested that proved misbehaviour
could be the grounds for dismissing a High Court judge under the
constitution, even if it did not involve criminal misbehaviour.
Refusing repeatedly to apologise to Kirby himself, Howard has
fobbed off questions about his own roleand what he knew
and whenas boring.
But doubts are being raised in many quarters, including the
inner sanctums of Howards Liberal Party. Former Liberal
leader John Hewson, for example, wrote in yesterdays Australian
Financial Review: It would appear to be an orchestrated
strategy... The fact is, John Howard has used Bill Heffernan to
distribute dirt and to run his agenda against individuals for
almost as long as I have known him.
An internecine war
The use of fake documents and homophobic innuendo to smear
a member of the High Court is the latest in a series of extraordinary
incidents involving the prime minister and his closet political
collaborators. It follows hard on the heels of the children
overboard affair, in which Howard and other government ministers
were recently forced to admit that slanders they circulated against
a group of asylum seekers were completely false. The lies were
used to foment anti-immigrant racism and xenophobia and help the
government win last Novembers general election.
More recently, Howard was obliged to defend his appointee for
governor-general, a former cleric, who has come under sustained
fire for covering up instances of child sexual abuse when he was
Anglican archbishop of Brisbane.
Behind the scandalsall of which have erupted since February
12, when parliament resumed and Howard officially embarked on
his third term in officelies a bitter internecine war between
rival factions within the ruling establishment.
The conflict cuts right across party lines. Significant sections
of the bourgeoisiethose more attuned to the changed international
environment, the more globally competitive sections of capitalregard
Howard as a liability and want him removed. Their social constituency
is the upper middle class, the residents of global Sydney
and global Melbournethe beneficiaries of globalisation
and restructuring during the past two decades.
They advocate shifting Australias economic and strategic
focus to Asia, where their most lucrative investments are based,
as opposed to Britain and the US, favoured by the traditionalist
Howard. They want ties to the British crown severed, and the establishment
of an Australian republic, while Howard remains a staunch monarchist.
They want a more progressive human rights image with
which to intervene in the Asia-Pacific region, whereas Howard
has become internationally infamous for his savage treatment of
asylum seekers. Former Labor Prime Minister Paul Keating was their
favoured spokesman, but their ranks include media baron Rupert
Murdoch, high-powered business executives and longstanding Liberals.
Domestically, Howards opponents want the government to
pursue a far more aggressive pro-market agenda, including the
full privatisation of public assets, further labor market reform
(a euphemism for slashing wages and working conditions), a rapid
dismantling of the welfare state, corporate tax cuts, the removal
of capital gains tax.
Howard broadly agrees with this economic agenda. But his government
has been plagued with major difficulties in carrying it out. Let
us recall: Howard only won the 1996 election because of a huge
anti-Keating vote. The Labor government, which had ruled for 13
years, was defeated in the biggest landslide against Labor in
history. Concentrated in working class electorates, the vote expressed
the widespread anger and disgust that had built up against Labors
pro-market, anti-working class policies.
Committed to deepening the assault waged by Labor, Howard quickly
concluded that, to avoid his predecessors fate, he needed
to develop a social constituency through populist rhetoric. He
soon began making open appeals to White Australia
racism and xenophobia. When, just months after the election, the
renegade Liberal Pauline Hanson made her maiden parliamentary
speech, railing against Asian immigrants and welfare payments
to Aborigines, Howard lent encouragement, utilising the ensuing
controversy and media sensationalism to whip up support for her
deeply reactionary social views. At the same time he initiated
what was to become a sustained attack on politically correct
intellectual elites.
Since then, the prime minister has seized every available opportunity
to promote backwardness, parochialism and racism. His targets
have been small businesspeople, farmers, lower sections of the
middle class and working families struggling to make ends meet
in regional areas and the outer suburbs of the major cities. Beset
by economic insecurity, the loss of social supports and, above
all, the total absence of any alternative perspective from the
Labor party or the trade unions, these layers have been the most
susceptible to Howards rhetoric.
Notwithstanding his populist campaign, Howard lost the popular
vote in the 1998 election, and, except for an electoral quirk,
would have been tossed out of office. By 2001, his government
was staring certain defeat in the face. His carefully cultivated
rural and regional constituency, stung by the effects of a new
Goods and Services tax, growing unemployment and the rundown of
public services, began turning against the government, reflected
in huge electoral swings in a number of state elections.
Howards response was twofold. First, he began a series
of desperate economic back flips on taxes and privatisation to
stem the tide of revolt. Second, he set about accelerating his
governments attacks on asylum seekerscreating hellish
conditions in its six detention centres, designed to create provocations;
establishing a naval cordon on Australias north-west coast
to turn back boatloads of refugees; slandering Muslim refugees
as terrorists.
The campaign against Howard
For the bourgeoisie, the 2001 election demonstrated that Howards
populist strategy, aimed at consolidating a conservative social
base for his economic agenda, had backfired. The very layers he
had cultivated began raising their own demandscuts to the
fuel tax, a halt to the further privatisation of Telstra, changes
to the Goods and Services Taxthat directly cut across Howards
capacity to deliver to big business. Moreover, the almost daily
military confrontations with asylum seekers badly undermined Australias
international image.
A few days before the poll, in an editorial entitled, The
election takes nation to a political low point, Murdochs
Australian lambasted the government for its phony
campaign, for porkbarrelling in marginal seats and
reversals in policy, for handing out money here, and
doing deals there and for its policy vacuum.
In another pre-election editorial the newspaper castigated
both the Labor and Liberal leadership and insisted on a generational
change across the board. It went on to advocate a Liberal
victory, in the hope that the Coalition, if not under Howard
then under someone else, will renew itself and its ideas.
Events have largely followed this script. Howards government
was returneddue in large part to the Labor opposition, which
parroted his anti-refugee slanders and helped divert attention
from the Coalitions policies and record. Then, almost at
once, the campaign to undermine Howard began in earnest. By the
end of November cover-up allegations were already swirling around
the governor-general. In February, the children overboard
scandal blew up, followed by the rapid exposure of Heffernans
smears against Kirby.
The frustration within ruling circles at Howards policy
paralysis was voiced by the Australian Financial Review
on March 20. The scandals, it complained, have distracted
the Howard government from developing a meaningful third-term
agenda.
The modus operandi of Howards opponents deserves comment.
Why have they not called openly for Howards replacement,
directly attacked his program and policies and outlined the program
and leadership they would prefer?
The answer lies in the fact that there is no significant social
base among broad masses of the population for their agendawhich
amounts to a wholesale attack on the jobs, wages, living standards
and basic rights of the working class. In other words, it is simply
impossible to mobilise popular support for the replacement of
Howard by Treasurer Costelloor, for that matter, by any
other politician, Liberal or Labor.
Despite the constant media barrage, portraying Howard and his
reactionary views as overwhelmingly popular, the reality is that
the vast majority of ordinary working people are profoundly alienated
from the entire official political establishment. Traditional
loyalties have eroded. Workers feel betrayed by the Labor party,
while the Coalition parties have largely lost their support in
the middle classeswhere deep insecurity and the threat of
bankruptcy or unemployment are ever-present.
Both parties stagger on from one crisis to the next, attempting
to do the bidding of corporate Australia, but constantly coming
face to face with growing hostility from broad masses of the population.
While the political situation is dominated by confusion and
disorientation, this will not last forever. Without ever stating
it openly, the bourgeoisie is well aware that class tensions are
deepening and that, at some point, they will explode onto the
surface.
That is why neither side of the factional conflict can call
things by their right name. Instead, they seize upon various scapegoatsrefugees,
the governor-general, Kirbyto arouse public passions, manipulate
public opinion and blind the population to the real political
issues involved.
See Also:
Scandal surrounding Australia's governor-general
threatens a "constitutional earthquake"
[2 March 2002]
Howard's dirty tricks campaign
committee
How the Australian election was subverted
[19 February 2002]
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