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Australian Labor returned in dreary Queensland election
By Richard Phillips
19 February 2004
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In an entirely predictable result, the Australian Labor Party
(ALP) was reelected in the Queensland state elections on February
7 with a slightly reduced majoritywinning over 60 MPs in
the 89-seat parliament. Given the overwhelming majority won by
the ALP in 2001 and the unanimous support right-wing Labor leader
Peter Beattie has received from the corporate media over the last
three years, the outcome was no surprise.
The press immediately declared the vote a major victory,
describing Beattie as a popular figure in touch with ordinary
people and how they think. These claims are
absurd. The election was little more than a formality, lacking
any genuine democratic content and with none of the central issues
facing ordinary people addressed. Labor simply won by default.
The election was regarded by broad layers of the population in
the increasingly socially-polarised state with cynicism or disinterest.
Conscious of these sentiments, Labor organised the shortest
possible campaign period26 daysduring the annual summer
holidays and the first week of the school year. There was only
one debate between Beattie and opposition leader Lawrence Springborg
and it was held a day before the election. The event attracted
little interest and was regarded as so inconsequential that only
one media outletthe state-funded local ABC radiobothered
to broadcast it.
Brisbanes Courier Mail described it as more like
a sewing circle than a political debate which was
so lacking in vigour that one would not be surprised to
discover each leader was offered a leaf of wet lettuce beforehand,
but declined for fear of being seen as too rough on his opponent.
In fact, the debate was a microcosm of the entire
election, in which there were no essential differences between
the mainstream political parties and the campaign was dominated
by stage-managed media appearances and empty platitudes.
Voting in Australia is compulsory, punishable by fines, and
this guarantees a high participation rate benefiting the established
political parties. Nevertheless, state-polling patterns did indicate
some of the mounting anger over the ongoing assault on jobs, living
standards and social services.
Labor lost votes in several key areas, with the biggest swing
against it in Currumbin, southeast Queensland, a mixed rural and
urban area with a rapidly expanding population. Regarded as a
safe Labor seat, voters angry about a range of social issues dumped
Merri Rose, the former tourism minister, in a 17-percent rout.
The rural-based National party and its partners, the Liberals,
continued to lose support from their traditional basesmall
farmers, urban middle class and small business operators. Overall
the coalition, which was reduced to a 15-seat rump in the 2001
state election, only won five additional seats, making a total
of 20 MPs.
Liberal Leader Bob Quinn claimed the result as a success for
the party; a further demonstration that the organisation, which
is the senior partner in the federal coalition government, has
all but collapsed in Queensland. It now has only one MP in the
greater Brisbane area, the state capital.
Some of the general disillusionment was reflected in support
for the Greens, who attempted to present themselves as an alternative
to the major parties. The Greens ran 72 candidates statewide and
although they failed to win any seats, they secured more than
10 percent of the vote in 10 seats, including 24 percent in the
inner Brisbane seat of Mount Coot-tha, and an average 6.6 percent
statewide. This is more than double their previous polling. If
repeated in this years federal election the result would
ensure the Greens secured a seat in the senate.
Opposition to the established parties was also manifested in
the reelection of five so-called independents and the emergence
of candidates representing sugarcane farmers who have been hard-hit
by deregulation, ongoing drought and lower international sugar
prices.
While the sugar independents failed to win any
seats their campaigns further eroded Nationals rural base.
They have vowed to contest seats in federal elections later this
year, which will be held against the backdrop of the escalating
downturn in the local sugar industry, exacerbated by the Australia
US Free Trade Agreement that blocked increased Australian sugar
exports to the US.
One Nation collapse
One notable aspect of the poll was the collapse in support
for the extreme-right One Nation, whose usefulness as an electoral
protest mechanism has all but exhausted itself.
One Nation emerged in the late 1990s claiming to represent
an alternative to the job destruction, privatisation
and agricultural deregulation policies being implemented by Labor
and Coalition regimes, state and federal. Advancing a right-wing
populist program, it tapped into the generalised anger and confusion
throughout Queensland and won 11 seats in the 1998 state elections.
Hit by internal fighting, defecting MPs and the adoption of
its anti-refugee policies by the Howard government, it quickly
lost votes and in the 2001 state election secured only three seats.
This was reduced even further on February 7 with One Nation leader
Bill Flynn voted out, leaving the organisation, which contested
51 seats statewide, with only one MP in the current parliament.
While One Nation has virtually disintegrated, the social problems
and tensions that produced the organisation and other alternatives
have intensified and will emerge in ever-more explosive forms.
Despite the fact that the state has experienced an average
7.9 percent annual growth, unemployment is 7.5 percent and 13.4
percent of the population lives in poverty. Poverty is most concentrated
in the Cape York, Wide Bay-Burnett, and Western Queensland regions,
but is widespread in working class areas throughout the state.
According to figures released by social welfare organisations,
almost 44,000 people seeking emergency welfare, disability, family
and other services were turned away by Queensland community organisations
last yeara 38 percent increase on previous years. In 2001-2,
housing and accommodation assistance organisations had to turn
away 9,000 people or 28 percent of those seeking emergency housing.
Beattie promised during the election to increase health and
education. Similar promises were made during the 2001 state election,
but nothing was done to arrest the decline of these vital servicesthere
is a growing public health crisis with rising waiting lists and
chronic understaffing, and education spending does not even match
student enrolment growth or increased running costs.
The incoming Beattie government has no intention of seriously
addressing these issues, but will continue slashing business taxes
to benefit the major corporations and boost their profits.
In his first press comment after the vote, Beattie made clear
that Labors overwhelming majority would not be used to introduce
any progressive reforms or increase desperately needed social
spending. Some people think we should have sex and drugs
and rock n roll everyday. Well, we are not going to do that,
he said. This is going to be a stable and sensitive government
delivering what I promised.
The Queensland Resources Council, a wealthy mining lobby group,
welcomed the premiers remarks and immediately called for
a new round of concessions, including a review of royalty payments.
The state government currently receives $780 million per year
in royalties, which the mining group claims is unfair. Beattie
will no doubt quickly accede to these demands.
See Also:
Media and business
back Australian Labor Party in Queensland state election
[16 February 2001]
Conservative parties
routed in another Australian election
[23 February 2001]
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