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Australia: Mark Latham and Liverpool Council-what the record
shows
By Karen Holland and Mike Head
24 September 2004
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One of the scare campaigns launched by the Howard government
for the October 9 election has been that a Labor government led
by Mark Latham could not be trusted with the management
of the economy. Apart from claiming that housing and other interest
rates would soar under Labor, Prime Minister John Howard and senior
coalition ministers have accused Latham of ruining the finances
of Liverpool Council, in suburban Sydney, when he was mayor of
the municipality between 1991 and 1994.
In all the misleading claims and counter-claims over the issue,
there has been barely a mention, let alone any serious examination,
of Lathams real record as mayor. That is because it offers
a damning insight into the agenda that a Latham government would
adopt toward the working class.
Latham is accused of having engaged in a $A36 million ($US25.5
million) spending spree, increasing rates and charges for property
owners and leaving the council in massive debt. His official response
was given in parliament on June 1, where he declared that in 1994
he left the council budget in surplus to the tune of $1.6 million.
He went on to insist that the councils debt servicing ratio
fell from 17.2 percent to 10 percent as a result.
Emphasising the job cuts he had made during his tenure, Latham
said council staff members fell from 500 to less than 400,
a sign of the financial disciplines that were applied. He
further boasted that: The efficiency gains were realised
through a combination of strategies involving commercialisation
of council functions, contracting out, the commercial management
of council assets and significant labour market reform, moving
away from the centralised award to the first enterprise agreement
in the councils history.
Latham was at the forefront of the labour market reform
offensive launched by the Keating government, with the assistance
of the ACTU trade union leadership. It consisted of slashing secure,
full-time jobs, forcing workers into single-enterprise agreements,
destroying longstanding conditions and basic rights, and privatising,
corporatising or outsourcing public services, from the Commonwealth
Bank to Qantas.
In line with this program, Latham introduced staff performance
contracts and set up a business unit called Liverpool City Works,
which tendered for work both from the council and external clients.
Council employees bore the brunt of these policies. Less than
a year into his term, 243 council workers passed an unprecedented
vote of no confidence in him. Latham responded that some outdoor
workers are beneath contempt and decent human standards.
A former outside worker, who was employed by the Council for
18 years, but lost his job while Latham was mayor, told the WSWS:
The council started putting in contractors. No one lost
their jobs directly, but they ended up handing in their jobs.
The council said no one would be dismissed, but suddenly some
of us found that our jobs were no longer there.
As part of the changes, I was made redundant because
the job I used to do, which was washing down concrete footpaths,
was no longer required. The council got rid of the night garbage
collectors and put contractors in. As Latham said, they did cut
a lot of people.
The council also changed the name we were employed under,
to Liverpool Contracting Services. We had to tender against other
councils for work, such as building new bus shelters. It wasnt
only Liverpool Councilall the councils did it, except for
the wealthy councils, who did not need to tender for work.
Latham told parliament that the council fell into deep debt
after he left to take his parliamentary seat, because it reversed
his initiatives. Unfortunately, the councils elected in
1995 and 1999 abandoned these strategies. For instance, they returned
the outdoor works function to in-house management and staff, and
wound back the commercialisation process and the contracting out.
Once Latham had carried through his attacks on the council
workers, the right-wing Labor Party machine in the state of New
South Wales rewarded him in late 1993 by installing him undemocratically
as the partys candidate for the local federal seat of Werriwa.
Treasurer John Kerin had vacated the seat after the near-defeat
of the Keating government earlier that year.
Following a crushing defeat for Labor in the South Australian
state elections in late 1993, and to avoid further electoral fallout,
Labor Prime Minister Keating decided to call a snap by-election
for Werriwa over the 1993-94 Christmas holiday period, effectively
preventing any serious campaign. Labors normal pre-selection
process was called off, and every other contender was prevailed
upon to withdraw, leaving Latham with the uncontested Labor nomination.
This was the second time in five years that the Labor machine
had attempted to foist Latham on the working class voters of the
Liverpool region. In 1989, he was declared pre-selected as the
partys candidate for the state parliament seat of Liverpool,
only to be dumped by Labors head office when the partys
Left faction produced damning evidence of blatant
ballot-rigging in the pre-selection vote.
When Latham was elected Labor leader last December, the World
Socialist Web Site warned that he won the job because Labor
MPs understood that his right-wing political agenda had the approval
of powerful elements within the ruling elite.
Within these circles, there was mounting impatience that the
process of economic de-regulation and restructuring, begun under
Hawke and Keating in 1983, had stalled under Howard, who has been
unable to carry though any of the big ticket items demanded by
corporate Australia: the gutting of social programs, the full
privatisation of Telstra, the removal of unfair dismissal
laws, and media de-regulation.
In repeated guest columns in the Murdoch press and the Australian
Financial Review, Latham argued that Keatings economic
rationalist agenda had to be revived and developed. While, for
electoral reasons, the party leadership of Kim Beazley and Simon
Crean sought to distance itself from the worst excesses of the
Hawke and Keating governments, Latham fashioned an even more market-oriented
platform, based on the self-provision of education,
health and employment services, and the imposition of reciprocal
responsibility on all welfare recipients to repayor
work forany benefits.
Lathams record of job-shedding and contracting out at
Liverpool Council constitutes yet another demonstration of the
socially regressive character of this program.
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