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Australia:
Jailing of One Nation leaders sets anti-democratic precedent
By Mike Head and Linda Tenenbaum
29 August 2003
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Last weeks conviction and jailing in Australia of two
leaders of a rightwing populist party on trumped-up charges of
fraud has set a dangerous precedent for use against any political
movement considered a threat to the parliamentary order. After
a protracted political and legal witchhunt, secretly orchestrated
at the highest levels of the Australian government, the criminal
law has been manipulated to trample over basic democratic rights
and imprison the founders of an opposition party.
Former MP Pauline Hanson and a co-founder of her One Nation
Party, David Ettridge, were each sentenced to three years
jail without parole under the Queensland Criminal Code. As a result,
both are barred for life from standing for parliament. Their alleged
crime arose from registering Pauline Hansons One Nation
as a party under that states electoral laws in December
1997. They were accused of supplying the names and addresses of
500 members whom a court later ruled to be merely supporters.
Brisbane District Court Chief Judge Patsy Wolfe admitted that
neither Hanson nor Ettridge had obtained any financial or personal
benefit from the partys registration. She specifically referred
to the fact that Hanson had organised a public appeal to repay
all the electoral funding paid to One Nation. Yet, the two were
convicted, under the extremely vague wording of the Criminal Codes
Section 408C, of dishonestly gaining a benefit or advantage.
The only advantage accruing to Hanson and Ettridge
was acquiring the right to contest parliamentary elections under
a party name and to claim reimbursement for electoral expenses.
Forming a political party and standing for election under its
banner are basic democratic rights that should be freely available
to all. They have been transformed into a benefit or advantage
because of anti-democratic electoral laws adopted in the early
1990s, specifically aimed at erecting almost insurmountable barriers
to ordinary people challenging the major parties. Not only that,
the conviction of Hanson and Ettridge signifies that any, even
technical, breach of these anti-democratic laws now constitutes
a crimethe very antithesis of democracy.
In handing down the sentences, Wolfe revealed the highly political
basis of the entire proceedings. She declared that lengthy jail
terms were necessary because the pair had undermined the political
system. The crimes you have committed affect the confidence
of people in the electoral process, Wolfe stated.
The outcome has caused a general furore and sent shockwaves
through the media and political establishment. But in the welter
of recriminations and attempts by leading politicians to disassociate
themselves from the jailings, there has been no examination of
how and why the pair has been railroaded to jail.
A two-pronged assault
Hanson, Ettridge and a third collaborator, David Oldfield,
established Pauline Hansons One Nation following Hansons
unexpected election to federal parliament in 1996. In that year,
the Labor government was defeated in a landslide, a result of
the anger and resentment generated by 13 years of attacks on jobs,
wages and living standards. Hanson, a disendorsed ex-Liberal,
won a previously safe Labor seat by presenting herself as an anti-establishment
candidate, making populist appeals to anti-Asian and anti-Aboriginal
racism. She opposed immigration, advocated Australian nationalism,
tariff protection and draconian law and order measures
as the solution to declining living standards and growing social
inequality.
Howards Liberal-National coalition won office by appealing
to ordinary battlers but rapidly set about deepening
Labors assault. His governments first budget slashed
social spending, provoking widespread hostility. In its aftermath
both Howard and the media began giving prominence to Hansons
reactionary views, which blamed the deepening social crisis on
Aborigines and immigrants and served to shift official politics
to the right. During the next two years she was afforded celebrity
status.
It was in this context that Hanson, buoyed by her new-found
fame and as a sitting MP, registered Pauline Hansons One
Nation as a federal party. In October 1997 she also lodged 1,000
members namestwice the legal requirementto register
the party in the north-eastern state of Queensland. The Queensland
Electoral Commissioner Des OShea verified that a high proportion
of those on the list were genuine, checked the party constitution
and granted the registration, without receiving any objections,
in early December 1997.
Following the Queensland state elections in June 1998, however,
the official response to Hanson shifted abruptly. In the elections,
One Nation attracted nearly 25 percent of the vote, throwing Australian
politics into turmoil. The party won 11 seats in the state parliament,
outpolled the Liberal and National parties and helped oust the
Borbidge Coalition government.
In ruling circles there were fears that if replicated in the
federal election due later that year, the results would be profoundly
destabilising. A breakaway party could potentially control the
Senate and even take seats in the House of Representatives, undermining
the two-party system. The Howard government had its own specific
concerns: One Nation threatened to destroy its electoral base,
just as it had savaged that of the Borbidge government.
Almost immediately, a full-scale propaganda campaign commenced
throughout the media. Journalists who had uncritically reported
Hansons every utterance began to expose One Nations
seamier aspects: its links to neo-Nazi and ultra-right wing outfits,
its dictatorial organisational structure and its grubby disputes
over election expenses and finances. They located or procured
party dissidents and sensationalised their grievances.
It was at this point, in early July 1998, that Howards
closest protégé, Workplace Relations Minister Tony
Abbott, began to agitate for the de-registration of One Nationnot
only in Queensland but federally.
The Howard government was unable and unwilling to oppose Hanson
politically because it had no disagreement with her policies.
But as soon as One Nation became a threat to the governments
social base and to the stability of the two-party system itself,
Howard and his backers launched a two-fold bid to destroy it.
On the one hand, the government set about implementing One
Nations agenda in order to win back the constituency that
had shifted to it, notably small business and rural voterstraditional
Liberal and National party supporterswho had become disaffected
with the governments program. Howard has adopted virtually
all of Hansons policies: refugee rights have been torn to
shreds, democratic rights attacked, welfare programs slashed and
Aboriginal funding cut.
On the other, Howard and his ministers, assisted by the Queensland
Labor government, utilised secret corporate slush funds, dirty
tricks, the police and the courts in a series of legal actions,
and ultimately criminal prosecutions, in an attempt to eliminate
One Nation as a political rival.
The immediate mechanism for the legal witchhunt was the 1992
Queensland Electoral Act. Similar legislation was introduced federally
and in other Australian states in the early 1990s to shore up
the crumbling two-party system. During the second half of the
1980s, the proportion of votes going to Independents and minor
parties rose steadily amid mounting discontent with both major
parties. In 1987, the Hawke Labor government clung to office only
by obtaining the second preference votes of minor parties and
barely survived the 1990 election, polling a near-record low of
less than 40 percent in first preference votes.
The electoral laws serve to augment the flagging finances of
the old partiesLabor and the Liberal-National Coalition
received $32 million for the 2001 federal electionwhile
handing the authorities vast powers to pry and interfere in the
affairs of new parties. Established parties with sitting MPs are
automatically entitled to registration, and therefore state funding
for election campaigns.
But parties not represented in parliament must pay hefty fees
and submit lists of names and addresses of hundreds of members,
opening them up to constant government and intelligence surveillance.
Even if they do not apply for funding, new parties are required
to file extensive annual returns, supply other documents or information
demanded by authorities, publicly name their financial contributors
and submit to invasive inspectionsor face the prospect of
police raids and prosecution.
Tony Abbott telegraphed his intention to fight for the deregistration
of One Nation in a speech to parliament on July 2. One Nation
was not a validly registered political party, he declared,
but a couple of political and financial brigands trying
to hoodwink decent patriotic Australians.
Abbott began criss-crossing the country, meeting numerous disgruntled
ex-One Nation members to solicit litigation. Liberal Party state
president Paul Everingham, National Party leader Tim Fischer,
National Party Senate leader Ron Boswell and Senator Bill OChee
were all involved. Ultimately, Abbott recruited a former One Nation
candidate, Gold Coast accountant Terry Sharples, to spearhead
a deregistration case, personally guaranteeing to pay Sharples
costs.
After repeated public denials, Abbott this week admitted working
with an ex-state Liberal leader, Peter Colemanwho is also
Treasurer Peter Costellos father-in-lawand a former
Labor federal minister, John Wheeldon, to set up a secret slush
fund of at least $100,000 to finance legal bids to de-register
the party. Abbott refused to name the donors to the cynically
named Australians for Honest Politics fund, who are
known to include Harold Clough, one of Australias wealthiest
businessmen.
Abbott recalled the alarm felt in ruling circles at One Nations
damaging potential. It was necessary to make an alliance
with some pretty unusual people to stop a very serious threat
to the social cohesion of the country, he declared. I
mean, how else were we going to stop One Nation at the time?
This was nothing short of a direct admission that neither the
government nor the opposition Labor party were prepared to fight
Hansons politically. They felt obliged to resort to other,
less public, measures.
In a column in Murdochs Australian on August 28,
Coleman sprang to Abbotts defence, making explicit the politics
behind the Howard governments two-pronged attack. I
saw One Nation as a threat not so much to civilisation as to the
Coalition. It had brought down the Borbidge government in Queensland
and was defeating Coalition MPs and candidates all over the country...
We all thought that public and violent denunciation of One Nation
as a Nazi party would only inflame and encourage its supporters,
who knew that this was a ridiculous libel. We preferred a less
confrontational, more oblique approach.
Abbott has claimed that Howard knew nothing about the destabilisation
campaign, attempting to deflect criticism away from the prime
minister by taking full responsibility for the undercover operation
against Hanson. But this is completely implausible. Abbott publicly
announced his intentions in parliament on July 2. In any case,
how could a government leader spend weeks engaged in such activity
without the prime ministers knowledge and consent?
Howard was this week forced to admit that he was, indeed, aware
of Abbotts fund, but sought to fudge the details. Initially,
he insisted that he knew nothing about the fund until after the
November 1998 federal election. Later, under media questioning,
he backtracked, replying I cant tell you exactly when.
Aided by the rifts, resignations and expulsions wracking One
Nation, Howards government narrowly survived that election,
despite polling fewer votes than Labor, while Hanson lost her
seat. One Nation still obtained a million votes, but only one
of its candidates, Heather Hill, won a Senate seat. As part of
the ongoing destabilisation campaign, One Nation defectors challenged
Hills election in the High Court. The court stripped Hill
of her seat in June 1999 on the reactionary and legally dubious
ground that she held dual Australian-British citizenship.
The main focus remained the deregistration case mounted by
Sharples. In August 1999, Queensland Supreme Court Justice Rosalyn
Atkinson upheld Sharples claim that One Nations registration
had been induced by fraud and misrepresentation. There
was no doubt that the 1,000 people whose names were lodged by
Hanson and Ettridge regarded themselves as One Nation members
and supported its registration. In effect, Atkinson overrode their
democratic rights by declaring that because of its autocratic
structure, One Nation technically had only three members: Hanson,
Ettridge and fellow founder, David Oldfield
Under the state Electoral Act, wrongly registering a party
is punishable by six months jail or a $1,500 fine, but the
time limit for prosecuting under that Act had passed. Instead
of dropping the matter, Commissioner OShea made an unprecedented
decision to call on the states Crown Law Officer to refer
it to the police for investigation under the far more serious
fraud provisions of the Criminal Code.
Four months later, in January 2000, large-scale police raids
were conducted against One Nation offices in Ipswich, near Brisbane,
and Sydney. Police tipped off the media in advance, ensuring that
pictures of the raids were splashed all over the tabloid press.
Mounted on the pretext of investigating the case against the One
Nation leaders, the raids were timed to occur just before a three-member
Supreme Court panel handed down its judgment on an appeal lodged
against Atkinsons ruling.
After further hearings in February 2000, the appellate court
also ruled against One Nation. In the same month, OShea
escalated the legal assault by taking Hanson and Ettridge to court
to make them personally liable to repay nearly $500,000 in electoral
funding that One Nation had received, even though the money had
already been spent on election expenses.
The criminal prosecutions
The next turning point came with the February 2001 state elections
in Western Australia and Queensland. After being written off by
the media as a spent force, Hanson again shocked official circles
by winning nearly 10 percent of the vote, and close to 20 percent
in rural areas, contributing toward crushing defeats for Howards
Coalition parties. She advanced no program or policies and barely
campaigned. But her call to place all incumbent candidates last
on the ballot paper resonated with alienated voters and became
devastatingly effective.
The decision to prosecute Hanson and Ettridge followed soon
after. The Queensland police issued the fraud summonses in July
2001, a full 18 months after the Ipswich and Sydney raids, and
just four months before the next federal election, in which Hanson
was standing for the Senate.
Howards government had been reeling under the impact
of public hostility to its introduction of a highly regressive
consumption tax and part-privatisation of the telecommunications
giant Telstra. In the campaign for the election, Howard ramped
up his implementation of Hansons agenda, desperately seeking
to appeal to her constituency. Supported by Labor, his government
mobilised the armed forces to repel refugee boats, a policy first
advocated by Hanson, and seized upon the September 11 terrorist
attacks in the United States to declare the necessity for draconian
inroads into basic democratic rights.
In this charged political atmosphere, in late November 2001,
Queensland Police raided the electorate office of One Nations
remaining federal Senator, Len Harris, seizing documents and computer
files, allegedly as part of their investigation into Hanson and
Ettridge. A Senate privileges committee report, only released
last week on the day the pair was jailed, found that the seizures
were illegal because none of the 74,098 pages confiscated by police
were related to election reimbursement expenses.
In May 2002, just two days before a Brisbane magistrate committed
Hanson and Ettridge for trial, the police further blackened their
names by charging Hanson with dishonestly spending $17,000 from
the fighting fund set up to pay back the Queensland Electoral
Commission. This charge, which the authorities knew to be groundless,
was promptly dropped three days after Hanson and Ettridge were
imprisoned, with Crown prosecutors admitting they had no case.
As Hansons lawyer, Chris Nyst, protested, the charge served
to publicly paint Hanson as a cheat, liar and fraud in the leadup
to her trial.
Hanson and Ettridge have appealed against their convictions,
citing interference by political identities of power and
influence. There is no question but that the convictions
should be quashed and the two should be immediately released.
But the five-year offensive against One Nation raises wider
political questions. Both major parties have come together, using
secret corporate funds, the police, the courts, the electoral
laws and the media, to eliminate a political formation that had
become a danger to them and to the stability of the current political
order. They had no fundamental differences with Hansons
policies, but spared no effort to destroy her party.
The World Socialist Web Site and the Socialist Equality
Party have profound and fundamental political differences with
Hanson, Ettridge and One Nationand everything they represent.
But there are fundamental issues at stake. The operation against
them constitutes a warning of the ruthless, underhanded and anti-democratic
methods being honed for use against parties which, unlike Hansons,
advance a genuine and progressive alternative to the entire political
establishment and to the capitalist profit system itself.
See Also:
Australia: Anti-democratic
election laws behind trial of right-wing politicians
[18 July 2002]
Conservative parties
routed in another Australian election
[23 February 2001]
State Liberal government
thrown out: Another shock election result in Australia
[15 February 2001]
Australia: Police
raids on ultra-right party set dangerous precedent
[7 February 2000]
The rise and decline
of Pauline Hansons One Nation
[9 March 1999]
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