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Australian 2004 election:
Howard and Latham united on Iraq war cover-up
By Nick Beams, SEP candidate for Senate in NSW
30 September 2004
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Prime Minister John Howard and Labor leader Mark Latham have
their differences. But on one key issue they are united: the Iraq
war and the lies and falsifications on which it was based are
to be kept off the agenda in this Australian election campaign.
In his major policy speech last Sunday, Howard spoke for more
than an hour, but the Iraq war occupied barely a minute of his
address. Latham devoted even less time to it in his policy speech
on Wednesday, gaining a tick of approval from Murdochs newspaper
the Australian, which noted that there was no stroking
of the consciences of the moral middle class over issues such
as Iraq and asylum-seekers.
Howard made no references to his bogus reasons for joining
the US-led coalition, but nevertheless maintained that his decision
was correct. If I had my time again, I would take the same
decision, he declared. The world is a better place,
the Middle East is a better place, without Saddam Hussein.
In other words, as these remarks make clear, the invasion of
Iraq had nothing to do with alleged weapons of mass destruction
or links to terrorist groups because, even knowing that none of
these allegations was true, Howard would still go to war. This
simply demonstrates that the invasion of Iraq was not determined
by facts, but by the material and strategic interests of the US
and its allies.
Latham had literally nothing to say on the war and the campaign
of falsification that preceded it, except for a passing reference
to the need for a prime minister to tell the truth on the great
issues of war and peace, and that mistakes committed
over Iraq had made an impact in our region. Moreover,
in line with his previous commitment to join future US-led military
operations, Latham made clear that he had no qualms about US plans
for global dominationthe real motivating force of the invasion
of Iraq and the so-called war on terror.
I want to render the United States the best service any
Australian prime minister ever could, he declared. And
that is to help the United States develop its true role of world
leadership, based on respect, understanding and cooperation demonstrated
so powerfully after September 11, but undermined so tragically
by the mistakes in Iraq.
By-passing the public education system
The policy speeches of the major parties are never about providing
accurate information to the voting public. Rather, like the election
campaign as a whole, they are aimed at manufacturing a certain
spin, securing a good headline or a favourable television
news item.
Accordingly, Howards address had two central themes:
his interest rate scare campaign and a commitment to spend an
additional $6 billion, on top of the extra $52 billion already
allocated in the last budget. Notwithstanding the fact that interest
rates are determined by the Reserve Bank, whose decisions are
shaped by world market conditions, Howard repeated his claim that
under a Labor government interest rates would be higher than under
the Liberal National Party coalition.
On the other hand, Latham and his political minders decided
that their best option was to present the Labor Party as responsible
economic managers. In contrast to the Liberals, Latham insisted,
Labor was the only party in this campaign thats been
making budget savings. The only party willing to respect the budget
surplus. The only party putting downward pressure on interest
rates.
Howards spending policiesin the field of technical
education, school funding and tax reliefhad definite political
objectives.
The provision of $800 million over the next four years to set
up 24 technical colleges to train students in years 11 and 12
was put forward on the basis that it would overcome specific skill
shortages in the labour market. But the very structure of the
scheme points to another agenda. The new colleges will not function
under the jurisdiction of the technical and further education
(TAFE) system, which is operated by the states, but will be run
independently of state governments, with funding contributions
from private sponsors. They will thus contribute to the ongoing
privatisation of public educationone of the major aims of
the Howard government. As well, teachers pay in the new
system will be based on performance, another key feature of the
right-wing agenda for education reform.
Similarly, Howards additional $1 billion for repairs
to school buildings and facilities will by-pass the state-run
education systems, and be allocated directly to school principals
and parent bodies. While portrayed as a means of circumventing
bureaucracy at the state level, the scheme drew the immediate
criticism that it would require a new bureaucratic apparatus at
the federal level to administer it. Furthermore, parents
organisations will be forced into competition with each other
to secure funds, with those in better-off regions likely to get
the lions share.
In an attempt to ensure that every conceivable potential voter
for the government would get something, Howard promised yet another
tax initiative, costing around $1.3 billion over the next four
yearsthis time for contractors and small businesses.
Lathams reforms
Every opinion poll has recorded growing concern about the rundown
of health, education and other public facilities, with the latest
surveys revealing that the majority of the population would forego
tax cuts in favour of increased public spending in these areas.
Accordingly, Latham centred his speech on a populist appeal for
the defence of the Medicare health system and the mechanism of
bulk-billing, under which patients pay no up-front fees for medical
consultations.
Pledging to increase the rate of bulk-billing to 80 percent
of all medical consultations, Latham promised to lift the rebate
for bulk-billing doctors, provide incentives for doctors who reach
the bulk billing target and set up Medicare teams of salaried
doctors and nurses in communities where bulk-billing has collapsed.
Howard, Latham declared, was waging war on Medicare.
The Liberals, he said, favoured a private health system, based
on private hospitals and private insurance. Howard had opposed
Medicare from its inception and had pledged to take a scalpel
to it when he first became leader of the Liberal Party in the
1980s. The deputy prime minister, John Anderson, had recently
spoken in favour of a two-tier system. The election, Latham continued,
was a referendum on the future of Medicare. Mr
Howard is waging war on Medicare. I want to build a fortress around
it.
But Lathams defence of the public health system did not
extend to spiking some of the main artillery used against itin
particular, the $3.7 billion paid by the government to subsidise
the private health funds. Instead of using this money to expand
the public health system, the Labor Party remains just as committed
as the Liberals to maintaining this massive benefit to the private
insurance industry.
Lathams major policy initiative in health was to pledge
that a federal Labor government would take over the hospital costs
of all those aged 75 and over, ending the situation where they
had to wait for periods of 12 months and more for hip, knee and
eye operations. People aged over 75 would no longer have to take
out hospital insurance, since they would be automatically covered
by the government.
The commitment was accompanied by lofty tributes to senior
citizens, who had served the country well, built
peace and prosperity and now deserved to be treated
with honour and respect. The real reason was somewhat more
prosaic: pensioners and retirees are concentrated in the marginal
seats that Labor needs to wrest from the Liberals, if it is to
win the election.
Moreover the so-called Medicare Gold reform only
raised the larger question: why arent sufficient resources
being allocated to ensure that everyone needing treatment has
automatic entry to the hospital system? Neither Labor nor Liberal
will end the systematic rundown that has led to hundreds of thousands
of people, not just the elderly, being forced to wait for weeks,
months and even years before receiving adequate care.
A fundamental unity
Both policy speeches contained all the key words and phrases
used by capitalist politicians throughout the decades to invoke
the so-called Australian ethos, while covering over the deep class
divisions, based on wealth and property, which run through Australian
society.
Latham promised a government for the people, not just
the powerful, caring for the sick and the frail, a government
that gives real life expression to the great Australian ethos
of a fair go for all.
Except, of course, for the poorest families. The Labor tax
and family benefit package announced earlier in the campaign actually
reduced living standards for single-income families bringing in
less than $35,000 a year. According to the Labor Partys
own calculations, an unemployed couple with three children would
actually be $1,199 worse off than they are now.
But in election policy speeches hypocrisy knows no bounds.
Declaring the problem of 800,000 children growing up in jobless
families to be a national shame, Latham claimed that
for the disadvantaged, the Labor plan, which uses the stick
of reduced benefits to push them into low-paying jobs, offered
new opportunities in life.
For his part, Howard insisted that Australia should never
be a nation defined by class or envy, but rather a nation united
by mateship and achievement.
One invocation of mateship is never enough for Howardhe
once suggested that it should be included in the preamble to the
constitutionso he returned to it at the end of his speech.
What was his vision? An Australia bound together by common
bonds of egalitarianism and mateship, an Australia made up of
people proudly drawn from the four corners of the earth ...
Except if they happen to be refugees fleeing persecution and
oppression. Then they are subject to detention for indefinite
periods, under the notorious mandatory detention program initiated
by the previous Labor government, and extended under Howard. This
will be continued by whichever party takes office after October
9.
There are, of course, differences between the Liberal and Labor
parties, and they were reflected in the two speeches. But Howard
and Lathams basic class orientationand fundamental
unitywas expressed in their attitude to the Iraq war, and
the fate of the most vulnerable and impoverished layers of society.
See Also:
The socialist alternative in the 2004
Australian election
Support the Socialist Equality Party campaign
[6 September 2004]
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