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Australia: SEP launches Werriwa by-election campaign
By Richard Phillips
28 February 2005
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The Socialist Equality Party (Australia) officially launched
its campaign for the March 19 Werriwa by-election with a successful
public meeting in Ingleburn on Friday night. The by-election in
Werriwa, a mainly working class electorate in western Sydney with
high levels of unemployment, was called after the sudden resignation
of Australian Labor Party leader Mark Latham in January, just
three months after leading Labor to its fourth consecutive election
defeat since 1996.
Mike Head, the SEPs candidate for Werriwa, and SEP central
committee member Terry Cook were the main speakers at Fridays
meeting, which was attended by local residents as well as SEP
members and supporters.
SEP campaign manager James Cogan,
who chaired the meeting, explained that although there were 16
candidates, the SEP was the only organisation that represented
the interests of the working class. The purpose of the SEP intervention,
he said, was to develop the broadest discussion on the central
political issues facing working people and youth: the war in Iraq
and growing social inequality and poverty.
Mike Head, who is a regular contributor to the World Socialist
Web Site and a law lecturer at the University of Western Sydney,
contested Werriwa for the SEP in the 2004 federal election. Head
began his address by explaining that the SEP unequivocally condemned
the Howard governments decision last week to send 450 combat
troops to the US-led occupation of Iraq.
At the very centre of our campaign, he said, is
the demand for the complete and immediate withdrawal of all Australian,
American, British, Japanese and other foreign troops from Iraq.
We also call for the payment of reparations and compensation to
the people of Iraq for the devastation and looting of their country.
Howards claims that the additional troops were required
to guarantee democracy in Iraq after the recent election were
absurd and nonsensical, the SEP candidate said. The
truth is that, far from being a step toward democracy, the stage-managed
poll was held under the gun barrels of foreign occupation, and
in conditions of martial law imposed by the puppet US-installed
government.
The dispatch of additional Australian troops to Iraq had nothing
to do with democracy but further exposed the illegal and neo-colonial
character of the war on Iraq, he said. By Howards
own admission, the request for troops came not from the supposedly
democratically-elected authorities in Iraq but from the major
occupying powers.
Head explained that Australia was one of the few countries
willing to maintain its support for Washingtons disintegrating
coalition of the willing, as European countries either
refused to assist or were withdrawing their troops from the worsening
military and political quagmire in Iraq.
The US-led military aggression would not stop in Iraq, he warned.
Washingtons militarism marked the opening of a new
period of neo-colonialism and great power rivalry, with the Bush
administration seeking to use American military might to reverse
the protracted US economic decline and establish the US as the
supreme nation-state against its European and Asian competitors.
Howards participation in this criminal enterprise was
to ensure Washingtons support for increasing Australian
militarism in the Asia-Pacific region. The new Australia troop
commitment also allowed it to cement closer ties with JapanAustralias
largest trading partner, he said.
The SEP candidate explained that Howard was confident sending
troops, knowing that there would be no genuine opposition from
the Labor Party. At no time did Latham or any other Labor
leader denounce the falsifications and criminality of the Bush
and Howard governments in invading Iraq. Nor did they condemn
the rounding up and torture of Iraqi civilians and others illegally
branded as enemy combatants, including Australian
citizens David Hicks and Mamdouh Habib.
Labors bipartisanship with the Liberals,
Head said, is not confined to foreign policy. Labor
leader Beazley fully supported policies designed to undermine
public health, education and other basic social needs. Labor also
agreed with the Howard governments attack on democratic
rights and assisted the introduction of sweeping new powers to
the police and security agencies to secretly detain and interrogate
people.
Head explained that behind these policies lay a deepening crisis
of the profit system. The only progressive answer to the eruption
of militarism and war and the mounting inequality and the destruction
of democratic rights, he said, was the construction an independent
movement of working people, in Australia and internationally,
on a socialist program. The SEPs election intervention in
Werriwa was a vital part of that struggle.
Labors record
SEP central committee member Terry Cook examined the historical
record of the Labor and trade union bureaucracy, focusing in particular
on the 13-year rule of the Hawke-Keating Labor government.
The installation of former union official and small businessman
Chris Hayes as Labors Werriwa candidate, he said, reinforced
the comments of newly-installed Labor leader Kim Beazley who has
openly declared that the ALP would work in the interests of the
wealthy.
Hayes, a former assistant national secretary of the right-wing
Australian Workers Union and then an adviser to the Police Federation,
personified the transformation of the Labor Party and union movement
into a direct tool of big business, Cook emphasised.
Hayes cashed in on his record as a union bureaucrat and in
1999 went into business for himself as an industrial relations
mediator. This, Cook said, is a polite
title for an agent who advises employers on how best to suppress
industrial unrest while ripping back hard-won conditions.
His clients include the Sydney Airport Corporation, the National
Crime Authority, employers in the printing industry, and health
and aged care providers.
After noting recent complaints from the union bureaucracy about
Howards new industrial relations reforms, the speaker pointed
out that the Coalition government had not done what the Hawke-Keating
government diddestroyed a union, the Builders Labourers
Federation, and mobilised the military against the working people.
Labors offensive against the working class, he said,
ensured a major shift from wages to profits, destroyed hard-won
working conditions and other measures to establish a cheap labour,
and prepared the way for the election of the Howard government
in 1996. The unions had continued to police the assault on wages
and conditions under Howard.
Cook said the transformation of Labor and the unions into direct
agencies for big business was bound up with the globalised character
of production that had undermined forever the basis for Labors
national reformist program. Labor cannot be revived,
he emphasised, nor can the perspective of national reformism
on which it was once based.
Questions from the audience on Labors record, its Werriwa
by-election campaign and the Howard governments criminal
treatment of Mamdouh Habib, provided Head and Cook with the opportunity
to further discuss the SEPs political program. The meeting
concluded with a collection for the SEPs Election Fund and
an appeal for those present to assist the SEP campaign over the
next three weeks.
Lu Jian, who immigrated to Australia from China in 1989, following
the Tiananmen Square massacre in 1989, spoke with the World
Socialist Web Site. Lu said he previously supported the Labor
Party, but decided to attend the meeting because he was concerned
about Labors refusal to oppose Howards announcement
that another 450 Australian troops would be sent to Iraq.
I thought Labor would say something in opposition to
the war during the last election. But they didnt say anything
and so Howard was reelected because he was able to scare people
about interest rates.
Im confused about why they kept quiet. Maybe they
were trying to get the support of the average person, but all
the people that I know didnt support the invasion of Iraq.
I agree with your speakers tonight that this has to be the main
issue discussed in this election.
Its obvious the situation in Iraq is going to get
worse and its very worrying to hear Bush threatening other
countries all the time. Im also concerned about the problems
of unemployment in the local community. Like Iraq, none of the
politicians wanted to talk about this in the last election either,
and I dont think anyone really wants to discuss it this
time.
Unemployed single mother Narelle Kelly from Eschol Park also
spoke with WSWS reporters. She opposed the invasion in Iraq and
did not accept any of the reasons previously advanced to justify
the war. But Bush, Howard and all the others took no notice
of the opposition and just railroaded people into this.
I studied welfare at Campbelltown TAFE college and know
all about social inequality, but the meeting tonight opened my
eyes to a lot of other social injustices, she said.
Having worked for the charity Mission Australia, she said that
the governments welfare agency Centrelink, as well as Mission
Australia, were terrorising welfare recipients, constantly
threatening to cut them off welfare. Although shed always
been told to vote for the Labor Party, Kelly said, I agree
with your assessment of Labors evolution. It doesnt
represent workers.
See Also:
Socialist Equality Party stands in
Australian by-election
Support the socialist alternative in Werriwa
[25 February 2005]
Socialist Equality Party to contest Australian
by-election
[15 February 2005]
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