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Mark Latham passes acid test
Behind the media boosting of Australian Labors new leader
By Mike Head
5 February 2004
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Within just two months, a remarkable turnaround appears to
have occurred in the landscape of official Australian politics.
Late last year, with Simon Crean as leader, the Australian Labor
Party was languishing disastrously in the medias opinion
polls, while Prime Minister John Howard was portrayed as a political
giant with an unassailable lead over Crean.
Today, in the wake of last weekends ALP national conference,
its new leader Mark Lathamelected by federal Labor MPs on
December 2is being hailed by the media as a political hero
who has rescued Labors electoral fortunes and given it hope
of ousting Howard at federal elections due this year. Glowing
headlines such as Latham: the power of image have
proclaimed his performance. One commentator even referred to Latham
as Labors new kinga title last afforded
to Paul Keating, who led Labor to a landslide defeat in 1996,
paving the way for Howard.
Howard, by contrast, has been widely reported as rattled
by Latham. The media highlighted Howards cranky display
in a radio studio when his ear piece failed to function and lambasted
him for calling an unprecedented press conference at his official
residence within two hours of Lathams opening address to
the ALP conference, in a botched attempt to deflect attention
from the speech.
In a typical comment, Sydney Morning Herald political
correspondent Mark Riley wrote: In the space of two short
months the ALP has gone from the Australian Losers Party
to the Australian Latham Party... At least with Mark Latham at
the helm Labor is now firmly in that race [the federal election].
Such hype cannot be explained by any popular enthusiasm for
Latham. The same opinion polls, which now claim that Latham has
doubled Creans miniscule satisfaction rating, reported that
Latham had only 5 percent support as preferred prime minister
(even less than Crean) before he was installed as ALP leader.
The dramatic reversal illustrates the extent to which the medias
polling results are simply measuring the impact of their own coverage.
Nor can anyone claim that Lathams speech-making at the
ALP conference was inspirational, despite the extraordinary razzmatazz.
A standing ovation greeted him as he arrived, accompanied by a
fanfare version of the pop song New Sensation and
carefully selected video clips of his life. But, as some media
pundits have admitted, his delivery was awkward, flat and hectoring.
His opening address also contained almost nothing newhe
largely rehashed policies already announced under Crean.
Nor was there any sign of an influx of new members into the
ALP, which over the past two decades has been reduced to a bureaucratic
rump, dominated by rival factional cliques of MPs, union officials
and assorted careerists jockeying for official patronage and the
spoils of office. In fact, the tight security surrounding the
conferencethere were several layers of guards checking name
tagssuggested that Labors apparatchiks were more concerned
to prevent workers attending. Even for Lathams initial speech,
the highpoint of the event, the Darling Harbour Convention Centre
was only a third full. Apart from the large media contingent and
a full house of 110 business observers, the audience was about
700 party faithful, including some 400 delegates.
The only constituencies that interested Labors leaders
were the business lobbyists, who had an exclusive lounge upstairs,
and an elite bevy of media pundits and editorial writers. Faction
chiefs constantly consulted with key journalists. Virtually every
speaker referred to producing the desired message,
script, pitch, spin or image.
Their primary concern was to curry favour with the media owners
and others in the business establishment who have groomed and
cultivated Latham.
The shift in the political wind signalled that Latham had passed
the initial test assigned to him by the media proprietors: to
prove that he could firmly impose his will on the ALP and make
it a reliable vehicle for his extreme right-wing economic and
social agenda.
A January 20 editorial in Rupert Murdochs Australian,
for example, had described the conference as an acid test
for Latham and the ALP. It expressed reservations that Latham
was offering some policy platform concessions, such as freezing
the removal of tariffs, in order to please trade union officials.
If Mr Latham himself returns to his 2003 themes of reduced
government spending and tax relief across the board, voters ...
will quickly prick up their ears. As the battle-lines are finally
drawn, Labors best bet is to let Latham be Latham.
Lathams opening address spelt out plainly enough why
his agenda has the backing of powerful business elements. His
central theme was that only Labor, not Howards Liberal-National
Party Coalition, could deliver the next phase of the pro-market
economic reforms unleashed by the Hawke and Keating
Labor governments from 1983 to 1996. Labor built the modern
Australian economy, he declared. Competition and productivity
are Labor words. They dont belong to the Tories, they belong
to us.
This has been Lathams core message, restated repeatedly
in media columns and interviews, since he quit Labors front
bench following the election defeat of 1998 in order to act as
the flag-bearer for an unabashed free market agenda. His two predecessors
as Labor leader, Crean and Kim Beazley, both sought without success
to distance themselves somewhat from the Hawke-Keating years,
which produced deep-seated hostility among working people. But
Latham has openly advocated a new wave of business de-regulation,
tax cuts for high-income earners, imposition of user-pays measures
and cost-cutting, accusing Howards government of stalling
on this agenda.
In particular, he has outlined a vicious social policy, based
on punishing and stripping social welfare from those deemed not
to be pulling their weight. This was the second axis of his opening
speech. There was not a murmour of dissent in the hall when Latham
asserted that there were two types of people in societythe
slackers and the hard workers. Only those who were willing
to work hard and respond the right way deserved any social
welfare or government assistance, he declared. Latham explained
that this was the essential content of his main sloganthat
of creating a ladder of opportunity. It was up to
individuals to climb the rungs of the ladder themselves.
On foreign policy, Latham advanced a more nationalist line
than the Howard government, saying he would never call Australia
the US deputy sheriff in the region. This is in tune
with those in ruling circles who have been concerned that Howards
unconditional support for the Bush administrations militarism
is damaging their commercial and strategic interests in Asia,
without any notable payoff in return. Nevertheless, despite Washingtons
ongoing war crimes in Iraq, Latham reinforced Labors commitment
to the American military alliance, describing it as one of the
three pillars of the ALPs foreign policy, together with
membership of the UN and engagement with Asia.
Labors script
After the conference, the media continued to extol Latham as
an ideas man. All that means is that he is susceptible
to every reactionary nostrum floated by right-wing thinktanks.
For the corporate establishment, his primary function is to present
a fresh set of camouflage, myths and spin-doctoring to implement
a deeply unpopular agenda. In this, he has been assured of the
total subservience of the Labor Left.
This was made clear from the outset of the conference. Party
president Carmen Lawrence, a member of the Left faction, opened
the proceedings with effusive praise for Latham, expressing her
excitement at the prospect of Labor returning to office under
his leadership. With a new, energetic leader comes the very
real prospect of that we are months away from victory, she
said.
From that point on there was never any doubt about the conference
outcome. With two symbolic exceptions, every vote at the conference
was unanimous. Factional leaders ensured that compromise resolutions
and amendments were agreed behind closed doors to ensure there
was no distraction from Lathams message.
Lawrence led one cynical set-piece debateon the detention
of asylum seekers. It was an attempt to shore up Labors
vote among workers, students and professional people appalled
by Labors bipartisan backing of the Howard governments
policy of mobilising the armed forces to repel refugee boats and
incarcerate their passengers on remote Pacific islands. Several
Labor for Refugees resolutions advocated modifying
the mandatory detention of asylum seekers (which the Keating government
introduced in 1992).
The difference between the two sides was minimal. Latham insisted
on retaining compulsory detention, except for children, while
Labor for Refugees proposed detaining adult refugees
for an unspecified brief period for health, security
and ID checks. Not a single delegate opposed Lathams plans
to introduce ID cards to crack down on supposed illegal
migrants working in Australia, establish a Coast Guard to
turn back refugee boats and impose life sentences on the so-called
people smugglers who help desperate refugees flee
to Australia.
The vote was never in doubt. The 40 percent tally for the Labor
for Refugees motions was determined weeks earlier in negotiations
between factional leaders. Lawrence delivered what amounted to
a concession speech, and then in an attempt to maintain the illusion
of genuine policy debate in the ALP, said: Well come
back again and again. Yet, the media portrayed the session
as a key test for Latham and presented the outcome as a major
victory for his leadership.
Another equally orchestrated debate was designed
to give a sop to the trade union bureaucracy, whose coverage of
the workforce has plunged to 16 percent in the private sector
after two decades of ruthlessly enforcing massive job destruction
and the smashing up of workers conditions. Appealing for
fair trade rather than free trade, Australian
Manufacturing Workers Union national secretary Doug Cameron proposed
a more protectionist version of the official platform. But he
concluded by happily conceding that the resolution would be comfortably
defeated and pledging his support for Lathams vision,
courage and commitment.
Also sniffing the possibility of a Labor government, the major
banks, construction companies, pharmaceutical and private health
corporations, media empires and retail chains all sent observers,
each paying $7,500 for the privilege. Their numbers were up by
40 percent, pouring more than $800,000 into the partys coffers.
In return, they had intimate access to Latham and his shadow ministers,
as well as the Labor leaders of the eight states and territories.
At a corporate fund-raising dinner the night before the conference,
900 guests contributed $11,000 a table, underscoring the ALPs
orientation to big business.
Having succeeded, with little difficulty, in stamping his authority
over the ALP conference, Latham has been given a further set of
instructions. Although the media generally lauded his performance
at the conference, reservations remained. The Australian Financial
Review editorial of January 30, for example, warned him not
to be distracted by the glitz and glamour of the conference.
It accused him of making undue concessions to the unions and urged
him to ride roughshod over the party platform where necessary,
as the Hawke and Keating governments did many times to the
countrys enduring benefit.
The extent to which Latham will continue to receive ruling
class support depends on his ability to deliver on these directives.
Murdoch and others have long expressed dissatisfaction with Howard,
accusing him of running out of steam on economic and social restructuring.
Now these circles consider they have a possible alternative. Latham,
however, remains on probation and must continually prove himself
to the powers that be. One thing is clear: in doing so he will
face no resistance within the ALP.
See Also:
Australian Labor backs
call for execution of Hussein
[20 December 2003]
Australia: Election
of new Labor leader marks unabashed embrace of free-market agenda
[4 December 2003]
Australia: Media promotes
Labors Mark Latham
[23 August 2003]
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