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Australia:
Election of new Labor leader marks unabashed embrace of free-market
agenda
By Mike Head
4 December 2003
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Tuesdays vote by the Australian Labor Partys federal
members of parliament to instal outspoken right-winger Mark Latham
as new ALP leader signals the jettisoning of what remains of the
partys nostrums of social reform. Latham defeated former
leader Kim Beazley by 47 votes to 45 to take over from Simon Crean,
who quit the post after two years.
Labor MPs did not vote for Latham because he was the most popular
candidate. Every media opinion poll published on the eve of the
vote indicated that Latham had little public supportless
than a third that of Beazley, himself a largely discredited figure
in the eyes of working people. In one poll for preferred prime
minister, Latham scored just 5 percent.
Latham won the ballot because Labor MPs understood that his
rightwing political agenda has the approval of the most powerful
elements in ruling circles. Over the past seven years, ever since
the landslide defeat of the Keating Labor government in 1996,
Latham has been groomed and cultivated, particularly by the corporate
media proprietors, notably Rupert Murdoch, for definite purposes.
In column after column in the pages of the Murdoch press and
the Australian Financial Review, Latham has been an unabashed
advocate of slashing social spending, cutting taxes for high-income
earners and dismantling welfare and education entitlements in
line with the requirements of global capitalism. In the name of
user pays, individual responsibility and
stakeholder capitalism, he has championed the junking
of the last vestiges of the post-war welfare state.
Lathams victory is a clear and unequivocal statement
that the Labor leadership has embraced this program, in the hope
of regaining the support of key sections of business. They have
fallen in behind Latham as the best bet for politically packaging
this deeply unpopular agenda and selling it to hostile and alienated
voters. Despite the narrowness of the vote, leading figures in
all Labors factions, including the various sub-grouping
of the former Left, actively supported Latham.
Far from voicing any, even timid, objection to Lathams
free-market policies, nominally Left MPs expressed open enthusiasm
for them. They offered no alternative candidateall lined
up behind either Latham or Beazley, another arch right-winger.
Their political prostration before this rightwing agenda is the
surest measure of the complete exhaustion and collapse of any
perspective of social reform.
Lathams outlook of free-market individualism was summed
up in his public victory speech. I believe in an upwardly
mobile society when people can climb the rungs of opportunity,
climbing the ladder of opportunity for a better life for themselves
and their family, he said. I believe in hard work.
I believe in reward for effort.
In the guise of promoting equal opportunity, Latham is calling
for an end to any notion that society has a responsibility to
provide for the essential social needs, especially of its weakest
and most vulnerable members. Whatever social facilities remain
will be privatisedhanded over to market forceswith
individuals left to fend for themselves. It is a threadbare justification
for deepening social polarisation: between those who have wealth
or manage to acquire it by the most ruthless means, and the rest
of society who will be blamed and even vilified for failing to
take advantage of the ladder of opportunity.
The mass media, and Latham himself, portrayed his election
as a generational change. But the primary difference
between Latham and Beazley was hardly their ageone is 42
and the other 54. Lathams victory marks a sharp political
turn, one that key media outlets hailed as a step toward shifting
the entire official framework further to the right.
The Australians editor-at-large Paul Kelly put
it most baldly: Mark Latham has the ability to force a realignment
within Australian politics as distinct from the anti-Howard incrementalism
that has been the Labor way since 1996. An Australian
Financial Review editorial gave two cheers to
the Labor caucus, calling its vote the boldest decision
made by Labor since 1996, opening the prospect of a new
wave of pro-competitive economic reform.
Likewise, the Australians editorial applauded
Labor for electing someone who will not be a slave to the
opinion polls, and will not be afraid to offend key Labor constituencies,
including party members and the trade union leaders. At
the same time, it was more explicit in delivering Latham his marching
orders. In order to obtain editorial backing, he had to work with
the Howard government to push through its proposals for gutting
Medicare, tertiary education and welfare.
These comments reflect mounting impatience that the process
of economic de-regulation and restructuring, begun under Hawke
and Keating in 1983, has stalled under Howard. Elected on the
back of a sweeping rejection of Labor after 13 years of economic
deregulation, privatisation, declining real wages and social conditions,
Howard inflicted further savage cuts to social programs in his
first budget in 1996. Two years later, he imposed the highly regressive
Goods and Services Tax (GST), shifting the bulk of the tax burden
onto working people.
But, facing growing popular opposition and rifts within the
ruling coalition, he has since been unable to carry though any
of the major agenda items demanded by corporate boardrooms: the
complete gutting of social programs, the full privatisation of
Telstra, removal of all barriers on slashing working conditions
and sacking workers, and media de-regulation.
After initially staring defeat in the face, Howard won the
2001 election by whipping up campaigns of fear based on refugees
and then the war on terrorism to divert the hostility
to the deteriorating social conditions. He and his ministers have
continued to largely rely upon such tactics ever since, despite
widening opposition to them.
A new set of lies, diversions and spin-doctoring is needed
to implement the next wave of economic reform. This
is the role for which Latham has been groomed.
How Latham has been cultivated
After the Keating government was thrown out of office in 1996,
recording the lowest Labor vote in history, Beazley sought to
distance himself from the naked pro-market policies that Labor
pursued in office. Labor strategists decided that to win back
working class support, they had to try to resurrect the myth of
a party that cares. In the 1998 election campaign,
Beazley, a senior cabinet minister for 13 years, claimed that
he had eaten humble pie. He referred to as many social
issues as he couldwithout committing to any concrete solutions.
Latham, by contrast, declared the necessity to take Keatings
economic rationalist agenda to a new stage. He sought to fashion
an even more market-oriented platform, 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 the lead-up to the 1998 poll, he published a book, Civilising
Global Capital, insisting that Labor had to re-fashion itself
along the lines of Blairs New Labour in Britain.
It had to implement the demands of the globalised capitalist market,
for the dismantling of all the past social welfare-style concessions
made to the working class, while somehow purporting to advance
policies to secure social justice and equity.
He proposed, for example, that poor families should have their
social welfare payments reduced if they failed to accept
their proper responsibilities as home educators. Latham
dismissed the notion that chronically under-funded public schools
were a source of social inequality. Educational disadvantage
cannot be resolved simply by providing better schools for the
poor, he wrote.
Beazley, however, baulked at adopting Lathams proposal
for self-funded tertiary educationa step toward a wider
voucher system for educationfearing the hostile response
of parents, students and academics. After Labor lost the election,
Latham refused to serve in Beazleys shadow cabineta
decision for which he was firmly applauded by the mediaand
remained on the backbench until after the 2001 election. While
in self-imposed exile from the Labor leadership, Latham was regularly
featured in the Murdoch media and the Australian Financial
Review, writing opinion pieces under headlines such as: The
poor need capitalism and Its time for Labor
to jettison the Left.
In the 2001 election, Beazley calculated that the hostility
toward the Howard government would be sufficient for Labor to
regain office. His policies were virtually indistinguishable from
Howards. When Howard resorted to vilifying asylum seekers
and ramping up the war on terror, Beazley stood four-square
behind him. This bipartisanship allowed Howard to recover sufficient
electoral support to retain office for a third term.
After his defeat, Beazley was replaced by Crean, who declared
the necessity to offer policy alternatives. Yet, the policies
still remained little different from Howards. Even Labors
pretence to oppose the Howard governments GST was dropped.
Reinstated to the shadow ministry under Crean, Latham began
to promote himself as a larrikinposturing as
a name-calling opponent of the political, media and corporate
establishment. It was a crude attempt to recover Labors
support among working people. Earlier this year, for example,
amid mass opposition to the Iraq war, he denounced George Bush
as the most incompetent and dangerous president in living
memory and labelled Prime Minister John Howard an arse-licker
for joining the invasion.
As Latham has been at pains to emphasise this week, his remarks
were not intended to call into question the US military alliance.
At his media conference he reiterated his commitment to the so-called
war on terror, emphasised his life-long attachment to the American
alliance and declared his wish for a very, very good relationship
with Washington. To some extent, Lathams position reflects
those sections of the Australian bourgeoisie that have reservations
about the closeness with which Howard has tied his government
to the Bush administration, possibly threatening their lucrative
operations throughout the Asian region.
Above all, however, Lathams rhetoric was an attempt to
breathe new life into the Labor carcass. As he explained in a
volume of speeches published in June under the title From the
Suburbs: Building a Nation from our Neighbourhoods, it was
fundamental to the revitalisation of Labor: We
need to be anti-establishment. 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.
Upon his elevation to the post of shadow treasurer this August,
Latham moved to re-assert his credentials with the business elite
as the flag-bearer for a new wave of Keating-style economic
reformism. Among his proposals was one, borrowed from the
Blair government, to allocate every newborn child an investment
account that would mature at age 18, in order to create a
society of owners, not just a society of workers. Lathams
scheme would accelerate the privatisation of education and other
essential services, requiring individual families and their children
to pay their own way.
He also attacked the Howard government from the right on economic
and social policy, accusing it of becoming an extravagant, pork-barrelling
and wasteful administration, which had squandered billions of
dollars. It was no accident that Keating welcomed Lathams
win as a new beginning. Just as Keating carried through
economic de-regulation that the previous Fraser government of
1976 to 1983 failed to implement, Latham hopes to gain the backing
of the corporate elite by outbidding the Howard government on
economic policy.
Latham is seeking to mould a constituency for a renewed social
assault, appealing to the most confused, alienated and backward
layers among working people, as well as more affluent elements.
Thus, he has no disagreement with Howard on demonising refugees.
In the past, he has lambasted Labor Party members who called for
moderating the mandatory detention of asylum seekers as a gentrified
left-wing group who are a soft touch on refugees.
Latham cynically trades on his childhood in the Green Valley
public housing estate in Sydneys working class western suburbs
to identify himself as a self-made mana model for his view
of an upwardly mobile society. In reality, he is a
grasping, self-serving political hack who was bureaucratically
installed in a series of Labor Party posts from an early age and
has been a full-time party functionary throughout his entire adult
life.
Among the myths that he peddles is that he represents a new
generation of aspirational voters. But what aspirations
does he mean? All working people have hopes and dreamsfor
decent living standards, well-paid and secure employment, high-quality
health, education and social services and a better, peaceful future
for their children. These are social aspirations that can only
be realised by collectively reorganising economic and social life
to free it from the dictates of private and corporate profit.
Lathams social prescriptions have the opposite content:
to provide the means for setting working people against each other
and imposing ever-greater social inequality. Several weeks ago,
echoing one of Murdochs pet themes, Latham issued a call
for reducing taxes for higher-income earnersthose earning
as much as $80,000 a year.
Lathams election is the end-product of a protracted political
process. Since 1983, Labor has abandoned in practice its previous
program of social reform. With Latham, Labor has now openly and
unequivocally adopted unrestrained free-market policies in order
to satisfy the appetites of global capital, which will inevitably
create deepening social polarisation.
See Also:
Australia: Media promotes
Labors Mark Latham
[23 August 2003]
The political economy of New
Labor
[27 June 1998]
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