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Australia: Media promotes Labors Mark Latham
By Mike Head
23 August 2003
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Only two months ago, Australian Labor Party leader Simon Crean
survived a party room leadership challenge by his predecessor
Kim Beazley. The mainstream media initially boosted Creans
win as an act of political tenacity. But with his opinion poll
ratings languishing at abysmal levelscurrently 19 percentthere
are signs that media outlets are casting around for an alternative
leader.
Most notable was a recent interview with Mark Latham, Creans
newly elevated treasury spokesman, in Murdochs Weekend
Australian. Mark Latham, the new shadow treasurer, is
evolving into his next phaseas champion of an updated brand
of Labor economic reformism, former editor Paul Kelly enthused.
He places himself directly in the Hawke-Keating 1980s tradition.
Latham intends to take Hawke-Keating economic reformism to its
next stage.
Significantly, Latham praised the fiscal discipline
of Howards initial 1996 budget, which made unprecedented
cuts to government spending on education, health and social services,
provoking mass opposition. Since then, Latham asserted, the government
had backed off, and become wasteful and extravagant, squandering
$90 billion from the budget bottom-line.
It has been a big-spending government over its last seven
budgets, Latham told Kelly. When we establish our
razor gang, there is a lot to be cut into. According to
Kelly, Latham intends to axe spending regardless of squeals
from industry and community groups.
Lathams remarks echo those of Murdoch and other business
leaders, who have accused the government of retreating from key
economic demands, including the further gutting of social spending.
Under corporate pressure, Howard introduced a Goods and Services
Tax in 1999, shifting billions of dollars in taxes from high-income
earners to low-paid consumers. But apart from that, the government
has failed to deliver the big-ticket items demanded by business,
such as the full privatisation of the telecommunications company
Telstra, the removal of media ownership restrictions and the abolition
of unfair dismissal laws.
Latham is seeking ways to portray a new round of economic
reform as benefiting ordinary working people. He identifies
himself as an adherent of the radical centrism pursued
by British Prime Minister Tony Blair and former US President Bill
Clinton. His interview featured a proposal, borrowed from the
Blair government, to allocate every newborn child an investment
account that would mature at age 18.
According to Kelly, Lathams plan is a step toward the
stakeholder capitalism once espoused by Margaret Thatcher.
Its stated aim is to create a society of owners, not just
a society of workers and democratise economic ownership,
supposedly ending the class divide between capital and labour.
In reality, Lathams proposals would help dismantle what
remains of welfare and education entitlements and allow market
forces to dictate these needs, inevitably widening the class gulf
between working people and the wealthy. The nest egg accounts
could not be freely spentthe funds would be tied to purchasing
education, employment training, housing or investments.
Latham labelled his plan the youth equivalent of superannuation.
Compulsory superannuation, which Hawke and Keating introduced,
has effectively forced growing numbers of workers to fund their
own retirements. Lathams scheme would accelerate the privatisation
of education and other essential services, requiring individual
families and their children to pay their own way.
Latham and Labor
Under the banner of consensus and an Accord with
the trade unions, between 1983 and 1996 Labor carried out the
demands of global markets for the ripping up of jobs, living standards
and basic services. The results shattered Labors former
base of electoral support in the working class and paved the way
for Howard to take office in 1996 and deepen the assault on social
conditions.
Since 1996, Labor has lost two further elections to Howards
conservative Liberal-National Party Coalition. Beazley, a senior
cabinet under both Hawke and Keating, unsuccessfully sought to
distance himself from their legacy.
Latham, by contrast, has sought to fashion a more right-wing
alternative, based on the self-provision of education,
health and employment services, and the imposition of reciprocal
responsibility on all welfare recipients to repayor
work forany benefits.
In 1998, he published a book, Civilising Global Capital,
arguing that such measures were dictated by the globalisation
of capital and the collapse of Labors former perspective
of securing social concessions within a protected national economy.
Beazley, however, baulked at adopting one of Lathams
key proposalsself-funded tertiary educationduring
the 1998 election campaign, fearing the hostile response of parents,
students and academics. Latham then refused to serve in Beazleys
shadow cabinet and remained on the backbench until after the 2001
election.
Since rejoining the frontbench under Crean, Latham has presented
himself as an aggressive, name-calling opponent of the political,
media and corporate establishment in a crude attempt to recover
Labors support among working people. Earlier this year,
for example, he labelled Prime Minister John Howard an arse-licker
for joining the Bush administrations war on Iraq.
Latham explained his antics in a volume of speeches published
in June under the title From the Suburbs: Building a Nation
from our Neighbourhoods. Asking, what should Labor now
stand for? he answered, we need to be anti-establishment.
Demagogically describing ordinary people as outsiders,
he declared: The outsiders want us to shake the tree, to
rattle the cage on their behalf. They want us to be less respectable
and less orthodox, breaking down the powerful centre of society.
Latham is trying to trade on his childhood in the Green Valley
public housing estate in Sydneys working class western suburbs
to identify himself as an outsider. In reality, with
the backing of the New South Wales right-wing Labor machine, he
has been a full-time Labor Party functionary throughout his entire
adult life.
Discredited political system
The renewed speculation about Creans political future
points to underlying concerns in ruling circles about the discredited
state of the political system itself. While Labor occupies office
in every Australian state and territory, essentially implementing
Howards program, the party has been reduced to an empty
shell, with a dwindling membership dominated by competing factional
cliques.
There are fears within the business and media establishment
that without a viable Labor Party, there is no safe channel to
divert mounting social tensions produced by mass unemployment,
economic insecurity and deteriorating public services. The deep-going
opposition to Howards government has been exacerbated by
its unconditional backing for the US invasion and occupation of
Iraq and the exposure of its weapons of mass destruction
lies.
The danger signs erupted to the surface last February, when
more than one million people marched against the US-led war, yet
the opposition Labor Party, which embraced the weapons of mass
destruction lie, was nowhere to be seen. When Crean emerged to
address an anti-war rally in Brisbane, he was jeered off the stage.
Howards portrayal in the media as politically impregnable
is a direct outcome of the lack of any opposition to any of the
governments policiesparticipation in the war against
Iraq, support for the war on terrorism, assault on
democratic rights, the Solomons intervention, mandatory detention
of refugees, privatisation of health, education and welfare, casualisation
of jobsfrom the Labor Party. But his recent decision to
stay in office for at least another 18 months, rather than hand
over to his deputy, Treasurer Peter Costello, reveals nervousness
in the ruling elite about the lack of any plausible replacement.
Lathams promotion as a reformist leadership
candidate capable of dressing up the next stage of economic restructuring
with anti-establishment rhetoric is a symptom of the
depth of the crisis wracking the entire political order.
See Also:
Australian Labor mired in leadership
turmoil
[14 June 2003]
The Political
Economy of New Labor
[27 June 1998]
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