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WSWS : News
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The International Socialist Organisation and the jailing of
Pauline Hanson
By Linda Tenenbaum
5 September 2003
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The recent jailing in Australia of two right wing political
figures has provoked a highly revealing reaction from a middle
class protest group, the International Socialist Organisation
(ISO).
Pauline Hanson and David Ettridge, leaders of the racist One
Nation party, were imprisoned last month for three years on trumped
up charges of electoral fraud. Anti-democratic electoral legislation,
which requires minor parties to lodge the names of hundreds of
members in order to obtain registration, was utilised by leading
government figures in collaboration with business and Labor party
identities, as a means of removing from the political scene a
party they had come to regard as a threat to parliamentary stability.
The convictions and sentence, as the WSWS pointed out last week,
establish a dangerous precedent for the victimisation of any organisation
that wins popular support against the official political establishment.
According to a raft of opinion polls, the majority of ordinary
people have been deeply opposed to the jailings. A Morgan national
poll on August 28 found just 13 percent in support. Some 63 percent
expressed disapproval of the slush fund set up by the Howard governments
Workplace Relations Minister Tony Abbott to fund the legal attack
while 45 percent thought Prime Minister Howard should sack Abbott
for his involvement.
Newspapers, radio stations and politicians have been flooded
with angry denunciations of the verdict as an attack on freedom
of speech and the right to challenge the major parties from supporters
and opponents of Hanson alike.
Notwithstanding its obvious implications for democratic rights,
however, the decision by Brisbane District Court Chief Judge Patsy
Wolfe to imprison the pair for three years has been enthusiastically
welcomed by the ISO. The August 29 edition of its newspaper Socialist
Worker features, under a photograph of Hanson, the banner
headline This racist deserves jail.
The first and most obvious thing to be said about this is that
Hanson was not jailed for being a racist. She was put away as
the result of a five-year conspiracy organised by a leading representative
of the Howard governmenta government that has implemented
nearly all of Hansons policies, above all those that attack
the rights of refugees, immigrants and Australias Aboriginal
population.
If she had been jailed for her racist political views, that
in itself would have constituted a major assault on the right
to freedom of speech. Jailing people for reactionary right wing
views is only the precursor to jailing others for their socialist
convictions. Moreover, the position of the socialist movement
has always been that the task of defeating racist and reactionary
views and defending democratic rights is a political one
that must be prosecuted by the working class itself. It cannot
be ceded to the courts or the policei.e., to the capitalist
state.
How then to explain the ISOs extraordinarily short-sighted
position? What is its political significance?
At the most immediate level, the ISO leadership clearly hopes
that by posturing as virulent anti-racists and anti-Hansonites
it will build support among confused and politically inexperienced
young people. No doubt there are some who have spontaneously responded
to news of Hansons jailing with relief and even glee. Hooray!
Shes gone! She should have gotten life!
But such a view, while understandable as an instinctive reaction,
is profoundly misguided from the standpoint of political principle
and the long-term interests of ordinary working people. And it
is by no means coincidental that it dovetails exactly with the
outlook of leading representatives of the Howard government, including
Abbott and Treasurer Peter Costello.
The ISOs thinking is set out in its August 29 front-page
article No tears for Hanson and its editorial of the
same date: Confront these racist criminals.
Argument No 1: Hanson broke the rules for party
registration in both the structure of the party and the submission
of a membership list. She and Ettridge lied to obtain
registration for the 1998 Queensland election. This lie allowed
One Nation to win 11 seats and claim $500,000 in electoral funding.
With this argument, the ISO adapts itself completely and uncritically
to the anti-democratic electoral laws under which Hanson was charged.
They were introduced in the 1990s in order to create prohibitive
barriers to minor parties standing candidates in elections under
the party name. Their purpose was to bolster the two-party system
under conditions of widespread disgust and alienation from the
entire official setup.
Nowhere does the ISO voice the slightest objection to the new
laws. But it is a fundamental democratic principle that anyone
should have the unimpeded right to stand for election, and any
political party, no matter how many members it has, should have
the right to stand under its own name. And not only that: the
rights of voters are also at stake. They should have the right
to know the political affiliation of the candidates who are standing.
It is also a fundamental principle that internal party affairs,
including a partys organisational structure, are matters
for that partys members, not the capitalist state.
In any event, the Queensland electoral commissioner accepted
the partys application for registration in December 1997.
There is no question but that the 1,000 people whose names were
submitted by One Nations leaders regarded themselves as
members, indicating a significant level of support for the organisation.
It was not until after the June 1998 elections, when Hansons
party shocked the establishment by winning 11 seats that a challenge
was mounted to its registration. Because the penalty provisions
of the Queensland Electoral Act had already expired, charges were
laid against Hanson and Ettridge under the states criminal
code. In other words, criminal laws were used to prosecute and
convict the pair for a technical breach of electoral laws that
were themselves fundamentally anti-democratic.
One Nation won 11 seats because of the hostility of ordinary
people to the two major partiesLabor and Liberal/Nationalnot
because she lied about her partys structure.
Hanson made populist appeals to this mass disaffection and, with
the assistance of the media and the Howard government itself,
sought to divert it into reactionary channels.
Argument No 2: Hanson prepared the ground for
John Howard and [Immigration Minister] Philip Ruddocks vicious
persecution of asylum seekers...
This stands reality on its head. In fact, the ground for Hanson
was prepared by 13 years of Labor government, under which job
security, living standards and basic democratic rights for ordinary
people came under sustained attack. It was Labor that first sought
to channel the mounting social distress and political resentments
into refugee scapegoating. The mandatory detention of asylum seekers,
along with police raids to identify illegal immigrants
and mass deportations were all introduced by the federal Labor
government in the early 1990s.
Howard and Ruddock initially promoted both Hanson and her views
in order to shift the political climate further to the right.
They then sought to win back her social basemost of them
previous Coalition votersby implementing her policies. Since
neither the government nor the Labor opposition could or would
fight her politically, they resorted to other methodsdirty
tricks, slush funds, police raids and the courtsto get rid
of her.
Argument No 3: If Hansons appeal is successful
or her sentence reduced, it will legitimise undemocratic practices
and give a green light to racism.
Again, the opposite is the case. If Hansons jailing is
allowed to stand, it will legitimise witchhunts against minor
parties and their leaderships on any number of spurious technical
grounds.
The ISO makes no mention of the five-year-long campaign to
destroy Hanson and One Nation and the identity and political agenda
of its instigators. Likewise, it omits any reference to Abbotts
slush fund or who the donors were.
The reason is that any objective review of the background to
Hansons jailing would reveal the profound political issues
at stake and the serious tasks confronting the working class as
a whole. But that conflicts with the ISOs immediate political
goalsto claim her imprisonment as a victory
for anti-Hanson protesters and provide the basis for the launching
of future protest stunts. In this way, the ISO seeks to convince
young people that nothing more than the shouting of anti-racist
slogans at a few demonstrations will succeed in combating racism
and the political system that gives rise to it.
In the process, the ISO leadership is lining up with a serious
and unprecedented assault on democratic rights that couldsooner
rather than laterbe used to frame-up and victimise political
organisations of the left, including its own.
See Also:
Australia: Jailing of One
Nation leaders sets anti-democratic precedent
[29 August 2003]
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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