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Right-wing Christian party may gain the balance of power in
Australian Senate
By Richard Phillips
16 October 2004
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While last weekends elections saw Prime Minister John
Howard secure a comfortable majority in Australias House
of Representatives, counting is yet to be finalised for the upper
house or Senate, with complete results not expected for another
two weeks.
According to current trends, however, the Howard government
has won at least 38 seats in the 76-seat Senate and may yet obtain
an outright majoritysomething no prime minister has enjoyed
for more than two decades.
But the most surprising result is the possible election of
Steve Fielding from Family First, a right-wing formation aligned
with the Pentecostal Assemblies of God. He is poised to win a
Senate seat and, if the government fails to win an outright majority,
could hold the balance of power in the upper house. Two other
Family First candidates also have a chance of winning a position.
This relatively unknown party only achieved a small percentage
of the vote. With the voting yet to be finalised, Fielding has
secured just over 46,000 first preference votes, or 1.8 percent,
of the three million cast in Victoriaa fifth of those for
a Greens candidate, who has received 7.5 percent of the vote.
The fact that Fielding is likely to win a Senate seatahead
of the Greensis the outcome of Australias anti-democratic
preferential voting system and the backroom vote-swapping deals
carried out by the major parties.
Under the Australian electoral system, not only is voting is
compulsory but it is also compulsory to give a preference to all
candidates in order to register a valid vote. If one candidate
does not achieve an outright majority or, in the case of the Senate,
a quota, then preferences are distributed until that is the case.
Compulsory preferential voting was introduced to shore up the
two-party systemin the final analysis, voters are compelled
to make a choice between the major parties. All of this is hailed
as democratic and allowing a greater range of choice.
In reality, however, it is undemocratic because certain vital
choices are excluded. A voter cannot simply vote for one party
and leave the rest of the ballot blank, but is forced to mark
a preference against candidates they may not agree with, or know
anything about.
The voting system is particularly pernicious in the Senate.
Because of the generally large number of candidates, there is
the option of simply voting above the linethat
is, putting a one against the preferred partyand accepting
the preferences listed by that party with the Electoral Commission.
Many voters avoid voting below the line because that
means placing numbers, in order of preference, alongside the names
of all candidates. In the state of New South Wales, for instance,
there were 78 candidates.
It will no doubt have come as a complete surprise to many voters
to find that their vote for Labor, Liberal and other parties may
actually contribute to the election of a repugnant right-wing
candidate because of preference deals done by those parties with
Family First.
Fielding fell far short of the necessary 330,000 for a Senate
seat. But because Labor, Liberal and the Australian Democrats
preferenced Family First ahead of the Greens, his vote will continue
to climb, while the tally for the Greens of about 205,000 first
preference votes will remain relatively static. If he does win
the seat, Fielding will sit in the Senate courtesy of the Labor
Party and the Democrats, in particular.
Political backing for Family First
To the vast majority of Australians, Family First is virtually
unknown. In fact, it was established just over three years ago
and, apart from the 2002 election of Andrew Evans to the South
Australian state parliament, it had no other MPs. Evans, a Pentecostal
pastor and former missionary in Papua New Guinea, is a member
of the Assemblies of God world executive and wrote its constitution.
The partys official program consists of vague demands
about protecting families and the rights of children. It calls
for legislation to defend the health, welfare and unity
of families and improve their standard of living and laws
to protect children, the homeless and the aged. This is combined
with calls for the introduction of socially regressive and anti-democratic
measures, including opposition to abortion, same-sex marriages
and stem cell research, as well as populist appeals on various
local issues. A central feature of Family Firsts campaign
in Victoria, for example, was not bans on abortion or gay marriage,
which were deliberately kept in the background, but opposition
to tolls on a new freeway in the state capital Melbourne.
Family First preys upon the widespread fears and insecurities
generated by growing social inequality and economic uncertainty
and seeks to divert these sentiments along the reactionary path
of religious fundamentalism. Leaked documents demonstrate its
extreme right-wing, anti-democratic and sectarian religious character.
John Lewis, one of Family Firsts leading Senate candidates,
has called for better tax treatment for ministers of religion,
upholding the family unit in our society based on Biblical
standards and a long-term aim of officially proclaiming
Australia as the great south land of the Holy Spirit.
During the election, one party member called for lesbians to be
burnt at the stake.
Danny Nalliah, a Family First Victorian Senate candidate, issued
a leaflet describing brothels, liquor shops, mosques and temples
as Satans strongholds and calling for their
destruction. Nalliah, a pastor with the Catch the Fire Ministries,
is facing legal action over accusations that he publicly vilified
Muslims at a seminar last year.
Conscious of the lack of mass support for its real program,
Family First has been at pains to disguise its Christian fundamentalist
perspective. The partys federal chairman, Peter Harris,
has denied the partys homophobic outlook and claimed Family
First was not a church party.
Immediately after the election, Family First moved to rein
in some of its more vocal candidates. In a press release on October
14, the party said its four leading Senate candidates would not
make any media comments until after the count had been finalised.
It announced that all other Family First candidates had been disendorsed.
The directive sought to ensure that the party could officially
disavow any of the more extreme or bigoted post-election statements
made by its former candidates.
Preference agreements
According to Harris, a property developer and senior figure
in the Assemblies of God, Family First decided to intervene in
the federal election 18 months ago because it was concerned about
the demise of the Democrats and the surge of the Greens,
which it claimed was undermining traditional family values.
Family First selected a number of Pentecostal church pastors
or their close relatives to run over 120 candidates for seats
in the House of Representative and Senate. Its election campaign,
however, largely consisted of electoral deals with other political
parties. Howards Coalition, the Labor Party, Australian
Democrats, Australians Against Further Immigration, Pauline Hansons
One Nation and a range of other parties scrambled to secure electoral
pacts with the organisation. In South Australia, it secured a
preference swapping arrangement with every party except the Greens.
Howard and Treasurer Peter Costello were particularly anxious
to link up with Family First and, in fact, both have courted the
organisation since its foundation. Howard officially opened a
3,500-seat Assembly of God auditorium in northwest Sydney in October
2002 while Costello was a guest speaker at a 30,000-strong Assembly
of God conference in July.
A leading Assemblies of God official previously declared that
Costello had been anointed by god to be the Treasurer. Costello,
who has publicly lamented the weakening of Australias
traditional Judeo-Christian values, hailed the church for
promoting the values that made our country strong.
As well as their essential political agreement with Family
First, Howard and Costello were anxious to shore up electoral
support from the organisation to counteract preference arrangements
between Labor and the Greens. As part of his deal with the Christian
party, Howard agreed to establish family impact investigations
into all future legislation.
This deal was struck despite the refusal of Family First to
direct its preferences to a Queensland Liberal candidate, Ingrid
Tall, because she is gay. When asked to explain, Howard told the
media: I would rather give my preferences to a party like
that than I would to the Greens... I dont discriminate against
people according to their sexual preference but we have to make
choices... through a mixture of principle and pragmatism.
Not to be outdone, the Labor Party rushed to cement electoral
arrangements with Family First. Two months before the election,
Howard introduced an amendment to the Marriage Act to ban same-sex
marriages. Having previously rejected this discriminatory legislation,
Labor parliamentarians dropped all opposition and voted with the
government to pass the amendment.
Labor has played a key role in creating the political conditions
for the rise of Family First. Many of its parliamentarians support
the policies of the Christian right on stem cell research, abortion
and more restrictive censorship laws. Several Labor MPs are members
of the Lyons Forum, a right-wing Christian parliamentary lobby
group, which has supported attacks on freedom of expression.
In fact, one of the largest contributors to Fieldings
likely election to the Senate has been the Labor Party. Labor
directed its preferences to Family First in exchange for backing
for Labor Senator Jacinta Collins, who is a strident anti-abortionist.
While Collins failed to hold her Senate seat, her second preferences
will go to Family First, boosting Fieldings chances of election.
Speaking after the election, Labors Victorian state secretary
Eric Locke defended this grubby undertaking, claiming it was not
a mistake but had been the best strategy for
Labors Senate vote.
The willingness of the major parties to wheel and deal with
Family First once again underscores the right-wing character of
the political establishment as a whole and sets the stage for
the further erosion of democratic rights and principles, including
the separation of church and state.
See Also:
Australian elections: the media rewrites
history
[12 October 2004]
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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