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Australian elections: the media rewrites history
By James Cogan
12 October 2004
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The reelection of the conservative Liberal government of Prime
Minister John Howardwhich, along with those of Bush and
Blair, launched the war on Iraqhas become the subject of
a campaign of deception by the media. The consistent theme of
both international and Australian commentary is the false and
cynical claim that the result proves that voters were indifferent
to the invasion and ongoing occupation of Iraq.
The Sydney Daily Telegraph, Rupert Murdochs daily
tabloid, editorialised yesterday: If the pre-election opinion
polls in Australia were anything to go by, Mr Howard was going
to be punished by the electorate for his support of Mr Bush in
Iraq. But when it actually came to voting, Australians preferred
Mr Howards sober and conservative policies...
A similar assessment has dominated television and radio current
affairs. Political analyst Hugh Mackay told the Australian Broadcasting
Corporation (ABC) 7:30 Report last night: Things
like house prices, things like the national obsession with home
renovations and backyards, people would prefer to watch home renovation
programs than current affairs programs on television. When theyre
in that kind of mood, theyre not in the mood to throw out
the government that has made them feel, in their mind, so comfortable.
Echoing the local coverage, the British Independent commented:
...blinkered economic self-interest will trump the publics
anger over the squalid fashion in which we were taken into war.
The New York Times reported: Aware of the strong
opposition to the war, Mr. Howard has handled it with political
deftness.
Some commentators have gone even further, asserting that Howards
reelection is actually evidence that the Australian populace backs
the occupation of Iraq. Greg Sheridan, foreign editor of Murdochs
Australian, wrote yesterday: Americans tend to see
an idealised version of Australiaas a new world nation proverbially
brave, sporting, tolerant and successful, something like California
without the crime. That such a nation endorses the Iraq venture
is a powerful statement to the US and to the world.
Faced with this outpouring, it is necessary to review the real
state of affairs in the lead-up to, and during, the Australian
elections.
Far from revealing the complacency of the population, the election
campaign was a travesty of democracy. Under conditions where millions
of people had demonstrated their opposition to the war, and were
seeking a political alternative to the free market agendas of
the two major parties, Liberal and Labor, the political establishment
and the mass media closed ranks to protect the Howard government.
As many as one million Australianssome five percent of
the populationtook part in the global antiwar protests on
February 16 and 17, 2003. Close to half a million marched in Sydney
alone. Moreover, every opinion poll since then has demonstrated
that the Australian population overwhelmingly opposes the war
on Iraq and the participation of Australian troops in the occupation.
This mass antiwar sentiment was disenfranchised during the
elections. Flowing from its essential agreement with the Liberals
foreign policy and its support for the US-Australia military alliance,
the Labor opposition refused to make the war an issue. Labor leader
Mark Lathams election eve address made no mention of the
war, prompting journalist Matt Price of the Australian
to comment: We can assume this spectacular omission from
yesterday and the wider campaign is no mistake... the conflict
that consumes the worldand had Australia agonising and arguing
through most of 2002 and 2003is apparently a dead issue...
The Greens, which had won support throughout 2003 by claiming
to be the main antiwar party, also refused to make the illegality
of the war the primary issue. As much as Labor, the Greens endorse
an ongoing United Nations-backed occupation of Iraq. Its leader
Bob Brown campaigned for the election of Lathams Labor as
a lesser evil to Howard on environmental issues. As
a result the Greens failed to live up to their own expectations,
increasing their national vote by just 2.2 percent.
In the only electorate where the Greens actually focused on
the warthe seat of Bennelong where former intelligence analyst
Andrew Wilkie stood against Howardthey achieved one of their
highest votes, as well as a significant three percent swing against
the Liberals. Such a swing on a national level would have resulted
in the defeat of the government.
Throughout the six-week campaignone of the longest in
living memorythe establishment media worked to suppress
any discussion on the war. From the corporate-controlled press
through to the supposedly independent state-run ABC, they were
all conscious that any party or candidates prepared to articulate
popular antiwar sentiment would represent a direct challenge to
Labor, and therefore to the two-party system itself.
At no time were Howard, or any of his ministers, questioned
over the daily slaughter of Iraqis by the US military, or the
lack of legitimacy of the US-installed Iraqi interim government.
No section of the media subjected Howard to any serious scrutiny
over his continuing assertion that the invasion of Iraq was justified.
This was despite the publication of a further mass of evidence
that the weapons of mass destruction claims were completely false.
Nor did anyone ask Howard about the speculation that the UN might
formally request a large Australian troop deployment to Iraq to
assist the occupation during the elections planned for January
2005.
Above all, the media censored any voice articulating opposition
to the Iraq war and the concerns of millions of people with deepening
social inequality.
While Socialist Equality Party national secretary and Senate
candidate Nick Beams was interviewed for an hour by Hong Kong
radio, no section of the Australian media even reported the SEP
campaign or its demands for the immediate withdrawal of all Australian,
US and foreign troops from Iraq, along with the prosecution of
the Howard government for war crimes. The considerable media coverage
granted to the celebrity Labor candidate and former Midnight Oil
singer Peter Garrett consciously excluded the SEPs public
exposure of Garretts support for the occupation of Iraq.
The conspiracy of silence by the media provoked condemnation
from Brian Deegan, whose son was killed in the 2002 Bali bombing,
and who stood against Foreign Affairs minister Alexander Downer
in his safe Liberal seat of Mayo to oppose the Iraq invasion.
Noting that he had been interviewed a number of times by the European
press, Deegan accused the Australian media of allowing Howard
to get through the election without having to answer for the war:
The media seem to have allowed him [Howard] to do that and
allowed him simply to concentrate on the minutiae of several domestic
policies, whilst we have still at large this very big issue of
foreign policy that is haunting us and will haunt us in our future.
The Australian working class did not go to the ballot box on
Saturday in a state of indifference to the world situation. On
the contrary, the overwhelming majority of ordinary people felt
a profound sense of alienation from the entire electoral process.
The mass opposition to militarism and social inequality had no
outlet through the Labor Party or the Greens, leaving many people,
who confront economic insecurity, are highly indebted, and face
the prospect of losing their jobs in any economic downturn, susceptible
to Howards scare campaign that interest rates would increase
if his government were defeated.
The role played by the establishment media in assisting the
return of the Howard government highlights the crucial importance
of the SEPs election campaign which was aimed, above all,
at expanding the audience of the World Socialist Web Site
and building a new, socialist and internationalist party of the
working class.
See Also:
Australia: Howard government returned,
courtesy of Labor
[11 October 2004]
The socialist alternative
in the 2004 Australian election
Support the Socialist Equality Party campaign
[6 September 2004]
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