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Australia: Howards Senate victory fuels Coalition tensions
By Mike Head
19 November 2004
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When the Australian parliament resumed this week, Prime Minister
John Howard could look forward to the prospect of holding a majority
in the Senatethe upper houseas well as the House of
Representatives, as a result of his governments victory
in the October 9 federal election.
Once the new Senate convenes next July 1, the Liberal-National
Party Coalition will control the numbers in both houses for the
first time since 1981, removing all parliamentary obstacles to
its agenda. According to an editorial in Rupert Murdochs
Australian last month, Howard has become the most
pre-eminent conservative politician of his generation with
an extraordinary opportunity to reshape Australia
economically and politically.
A closer analysis, however, suggests a somewhat more contradictory
outcome, that is already triggering new rifts within the Coalition.
In the 76-member Senate, the Coalition will have 39 members.
But of these, the city-based Liberals will comprise only 33, with
the rural-based Nationals having 5 and the joint Northern Territory
Country Liberal Party 1. The opposition Labor Party will have
28 Senators, and the Australian Democrats and Greens 4 each, while
the recently-established church-based Family First party will
take one seat, thanks to preferences from Labor and the Democrats.
The results were less of a victory for Howard than a crushing
defeat for Labor and the smaller parties that have held the so-called
balance of power in the Senate for the past 25 years.
The election saw the final collapse of support for the Australian
Democrats, whose political raison dêtre since 1981
has been to hold the balance in the Senate, claiming
to form a check on the policies of successive Coalition and Labor
governments.
The Democrats vote plunged from 7.3 percent in 2001 to
2.1 percent, reducing their Senate seats from seven to four and
ending their official status as an opposition party. At their
peak in the late 1980s, the Democrats polled nearly 12 percent
in the Senate. Their demise accelerated after they struck a deal
with Howard in 1998 to allow the introduction of the punitive
Goods and Services Tax (GST).
Three Independents also lost their seats: former Democrats
leader Meg Lees, who signed the 1998 GST deal, an ex-Labor Senator
and a Tasmanian-based right-wing Christian MP, who retired. In
addition, the sole Senator from the extreme right-wing Pauline
Hansons One Nation was defeated.
With Labor refusing to present any genuine opposition to the
government on the war in Iraq or any other issue, it was the government
that benefited from these losses. The Greens, who presented themselves
as an alternative third party to the Democrats, while
backing the formation of a Labor government, only picked up two
extra seats. They obtained 7.7 percent of the vote, up from 4.4
percent in 2001. Labor just managed to cling to its existing Senate
representation, with its Senate first preference vote languishing
at 35 percent, compared to the Coalitions 43 percent.
Coalition tensions erupt
No sooner had the allocation of preference votes confirmed
the governments Senate majority, than the National Partys
Senate leader Ron Boswell sent a shot across Howards bows.
Boswell declared that the Nationals had taken control of the balance
of power in the Senate, and would exercise that power, if
necessary, by blocking government legislation.
He made the claim because the Coalitions final seat was
won by a Queensland National, Barnaby Joyce, despite the Liberals
in that state refusing to run a joint ticket with the Nationals.
In fact, Joyce took the seat in spite of the Liberals preference
votes, which were directed against him.
Joyce celebrated his win by reiterating the Queensland Nationals
opposition to one of the Liberals main policy planks, the
full privatisation of Telstra, the Australian telecommunications
giant. Ill be a senator for the Queensland National
Party first and foremost and its the policies of the Queensland
Nationals that Ill support, Joyce said. By their policy
platform, the Queensland Nationals are committed to rejecting
the Telstra sale. In other words, Joyces declaration was
a direct threat to cross the Senate floor and vote against the
planned bill.
Treasurer Peter Costello, who was acting prime minister while
Howard took leave, immediately denounced the comments by Boswell
and Joyce in no uncertain terms. Youd think that one
Queensland National single-handedly won control of the Senate,
he said. Costello emphasised that the Telstra sale was on top
of the governments agenda. We have announced previously
that it is our belief that the ownership of Telstra has to be
resolved.
Thus, just weeks after securing their electoral victory, the
Coalitions two partners were at each others throats.
Behind these bitter exchanges lie deep-going frictions.
In the National Partys rural heartland, Telstras
failure to provide decent mobile phone access, rapid Internet
connection and even reliable phone servicesindispensable
for every aspect of life, from farming and country-based businesses
to coping with emergencies and everyday social intercoursecontinues
to rankle. The sale of the remaining 50.1 percent of Telstra,
transforming it into a completely privately-owned corporation,
would soon end the long-standing cross-subsidy of some rural services
from profitable urban areas. Almost certainly, the situation would
worsen dramatically for rural and regional families.
More generally, the program of economic deregulation pursued
by both the Liberal and Labor parties over the past 20 years has
spelt disaster for sections of small farming that have traditionally
relied on a series of marketing boards and subsidies to survive.
Major banks have closed hundreds of rural branches, and regional
postal, airline and other services have been gutted. Thousands
of jobs have been axed.
With a declining electoral base, the Nationals barely escaped
oblivion in the late 1990s, when One Nation campaigned on a populist
and protectionist program, tapping into the broad hostility in
rural electorates to the governments free market agenda.
One longstanding Queensland National MP, Bob Katter, defected,
seeking political survival by standing as an Independent. On October
9, the Nationals failed to re-take his seat and two other former
National seats held by Independents. The party also lost one of
its cabinet ministers, reducing its numbers in the House of Representatives
to 12.
Despite One Nations demise, National MPs are still haunted
by the spectre of new rural-based electoral challengers. In order
to distance the Nationals from the government, Boswell has continued
to refuse to serve in Howards ministry. Now that the government
controls the Senate, but only on the basis of maintaining the
ongoing support of five National Senators, these conflicts are
certain to fester.
Big business issues its demands
Having secured a Senate majority, however, the government faces
intensified demands from another quarter. The corporate elite
has long railed against the government for failing to deliver
a raft of big-ticket economic reforms since it was
first elected in 1996. The full sale of Telstra is on top of the
list, together with the removal of unfair dismissal
restrictions on the ability of employers to sack workers at will;
abolition of limits on mass media ownership; wholesale further
tax cuts for business and the wealthy; and the shredding of welfare
entitlements.
Howard must now act to sell Telstra and secure
industrial relations reforms that make it easier for small
business to get rid of unproductive workers, the Australian
editorial insisted. It stepped up Murdochs longstanding
calls for the slashing of the top income tax rates from 48 percent
to 30 percent, and for drastic cuts to social security programs.
Throughout the Howard governments eight-and-a-half years
in office, Murdochs outlets have condemned its failure to
deepen the free-market offensive launched under Hawke and Keating.
According to the Australian, Howard can no longer hide
behind the excuse that his measures have been blocked in the Senate.
The Prime Minister now has the opportunity to build on the
foundations laid by the Hawke-Keating governments, with a second
stage of structural changes in the way Australia is governed.
Howard, however, reacted to the Senate victory with caution.
We do not intend to use the mandate we have been given recklessly
or arrogantly or wantonly or indiscriminately or carelessly. Were
going to use it very carefully and very soberly, he said.
In part, the prime ministers nervousness reflects his
fear of aggravating the tensions with the Nationals. At the same
time, he recognises that, for all the media triumphalism, his
victory was largely achieved by exploiting fears among working
people of rising mortgage and debt levels, and job insecurity.
He is aware that the measures required by the corporate boardrooms
could ignite simmering discontent.
There is a certain irony in the fact that the last Liberal
prime minister to control both houses was Malcolm Fraser, who
won landslide victories in 1975 and 1977. In the wake of the November
1975 dismissal of the Whitlam Labor government, he backed away
from the financial and structural de-regulation demanded by global
capital. Fraser wrote later that he feared the damage that would
have been done to the social fabric that was already
strained by Whitlams removal. After Frasers defeat
in 1983, Hawke and Keating carried through the restructuring in
collaboration with the trade union leadership.
As Frasers Treasurer, Howard was critical of his leaders
timidity, and is intent on implementing todays corporate
agenda. However, mindful of the deep unpopularity of such measures,
his record since 1996 has been largely one of fashioning and shoring
up a right-wing social constituency in order to create the political
conditions for carrying them through. Hence, his nationalist and
scapegoating appeals on such issues as refugees, terrorism and
Aboriginal programs, which often has been combined with blatant
pork-barrelling and protectionism in favour of local businesses.
His own treasurer, Costellowho has been seeking to replace
Howard for several yearshas more openly courted the financial
markets and is regarded as a more reliable instrument for pursuing
their interests. It was noticeable that Costellos response
to the Senate win struck a different tone to Howards caution.
Costello was quick to pledge that the government would deliver
its program in full. All of those bills that
have been blocked [in the Senate] for the last two years will
be put back on the agenda, he stated. Nor would the government
wait until next July before bulldozing its legislation through
the Senate with the help of minor parties. There is no point
in just sitting around, he said.
If Howard does not heed the instructions he has been given
by the business establishment, he could find himself quickly pushed
aside to make way for Costello.
Senate complicity
One arena where Howard fears no resistance is in the Senate
itself, including the outgoing Senate that will remain until July
1. Now that the government will soon no longer need their votes,
the opposition senators are all the more keen to work
with the government. As a matter of fact, they are jockeying for
position to assist. On media ownership laws, for example, Senator
Lees has declared: I am open for discussions. Her
offer followed similar comments by the two other departing Independents,
as well as the One Nation representative.
For the past quarter century, the minor parties in the Senate
have acted as a political safety valve for the erosion of support
for the Coalition and Labor and their pro-business policies. The
official slogan of the Democratskeep the bastards
honestpromoted the illusion that the major parties
could be kept in check by Senate scrutiny.
All those outraged by government plans were implored to channel
their energies into lobbying senators and lodging submissions
to parliamentary committees, which were depicted as models of
parliamentary democracy at work. In line with this, the speakers
platforms at many and varied protest demonstrations featured Democrats
or Greens senators.
In reality, the record shows that only a fraction of government
legislation was held up in the Senate. Time and again, the Democrats,
and more recently the Greens, helped make essentially cosmetic
changes to government legislation. Indeed last year, when Howard
complained of Senate obstructionism, Greens leader
Bob Brown declared that the Senate had passed 97 percent of government
billsof the 1,305 bills presented, only 36 had been rejected.
In June 2003, for example, after 18 months of committee hearings
and intense political manoeuvring in the face of public opposition,
the Senate voted overwhelmingly to pass the ASIO Terrorism Bill,
giving the countrys political policethe Australian
Security Intelligence Organisationunprecedented police state-style
powers, including the right to detain and interrogate anyone without
charge or trial. In the final debate, the Greens and Democrats
opposed the legislation but helped legitimise its introduction
by proposing limited changes to the Bill.
With this process no longer required, some media pundits have
warned of the dangers of arousing popular disaffection. This
[Senate] check and balance no longer applies. In other words,
the government will now live and die by its own unfettered judgment
about what it thinks the Australian people will find legislatively
acceptable, columnist Glenn Milne wrote in the Australian
on November 1.
As such misgivings suggest, Howard and his ministers will walk
a political tightrope as they endeavour to satisfy their conflicting
constituencies. All the while, they will be under mounting corporate
pressure to dramatically escalate the attacks on working people,
both in the cities and the countryside, including those who voted
for them.
See Also:
The Australian 2004 election: the secret
of Howard's "success" Part 1
[3 November 2004]
The Australian 2004 election: the secret
of Howard's "success" Part 2
[4 November 2004]
Australian elections: voting
trends reveal deepening disaffection
[25 October 2004]
Right-wing Christian party
may gain the balance of power in Australian Senate
[16 October 2004]
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