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SEP holds second public meeting in Australian by-election
By James Cogan
15 March 2005
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On March 13, the Socialist Equality Party (Australia) held
the second public meeting of its campaign in the by-election for
the western Sydney seat of Werriwa. The meeting, which took place
in the suburb of Green Valley, was addressed by the SEPs
candidate, Mike Head, and SEP national secretary Nick Beams.
The speeches of Head and Beams elaborated on the four central
issues of the SEPs campaign: the implications of the illegal
US-led conquest of Iraq; social inequality and the deterioration
in living standards affecting working people the world over; the
erosion of democratic rights and civil liberties; and the need
for a new international socialist party.
Mike Head, speaking first, reviewed how the efforts of the
SEP to generate political discussion with ordinary working people
stood in stark contrast with the conduct of the Australian Labor
Party (ALP) and the other candidates. In all, 16 parties and independents
are contesting the seat, the second largest number in any Australian
by-election.
The official launch of the Labor campaign only took place on
March 11just eight days before polling day. The Labor candidate,
Chris Hayes, had made no official statements on two of the most
important developments in the course of the election: the Australian
governments escalating military involvement in the occupation
of Iraq and the state Labor governments mobilisation of
police into the impoverished suburb of Macquarie Fields. The intervention
followed the death of two teenagers in a police car chase, provoking
four nights of violent confrontations between the police and local
youth.
Discussing the Iraq war, Head stressed the opposition of the
SEP to the invasion and the campaign of lies employed by the conservative
Liberal Party-led government of John Howard to justify its support
for the Bush administration. He reviewed how Labor had derailed
and disenfranchised the mass sentiment against the war during
the 2004 Australian elections. The ALP and its leader Mark Latham,
the former member for Werriwa, suppressed any discussion on the
falsifications of Howard and Bush over weapons of mass destruction
and on the real economic and political motives behind the invasion.
Labor had no essential disagreements with the foreign and domestic
policies of the Howard government. Its criticisms of the Australian
deployment in Iraq centred on the fact that the occupation was
becoming a quagmire and that the troops should be utilised to
pursue the strategic, diplomatic and business interests of Australian
capitalism in the Asia-Pacific region.
Head discussed how the vast changes associated with the globalisation
of production had undermined the old nationalist and reformist
program of the ALP and the trade unions. From the 1980s, they
had transformed into open agencies for globally mobile capital,
intent upon breaking up all the past concessions and democratic
rights obtained by the working class. The most dramatic
reversals in working class living standards had been carried out
by the Hawke and Keating Labor governments from 1983 to 1996.
In order to highlight Labors repudiation of even the
limited reformist agenda it once advanced, Head drew attention
to the reports that the Labor Party mayor in the area, Brenton
Banfield, had been ruled out as the candidate for Werriwa because,
while working as a lawyer, he had defended people charged with
sex offences. The ALP, Head said, would not allow itself
to be identified with a candidate who, even as part of his professional
responsibilities, was not completely aligned with the law
and order politics of the party.
Head explained how the events in Macquarie Fields had demonstrated
the hostility of the Labor Party and the entire ruling establishment
towards the well-being and basic rights of working people.
The suburb had become a testing ground for new methods of
suppressing the kind of social unrest that inequality and
deprivation inevitably trigger.
The SEP candidate dwelt on the significance of the statements
by Labor premier Bob Carr rejecting any relationship between crime
and the social disadvantage affecting people in suburbs like Macquarie
Fields. Carrs comments, Head remarked, were a repudiation
of the understanding that the intellectual and personal
development of individuals is fundamentally a product of their
social, cultural and economic development. Under conditions
where the ruling elite could no longer even hold out the
promise of improving the conditions of life, the only answer
of its representatives, such as Carr, was police repression.
Head concluded by explaining how organisations such as the
Greens and Socialist Alliance worked to prevent a political development
by the working class by promoting the conception that Labor, despite
its history and program, was a lesser evil to the
conservative parties.
The Greens statement on the events in Macquarie Fields, for
example, described them as a wake-up call for the
Carr government, calling on the ALP to pay more attention
to overcoming social disadvantage. The problem, Head
pointed out, is not that Carr is asleep. He and his government
are fully aware of the deteriorating conditions for which they
are responsible. They have run down public housing, hospitals,
schools, public transport and social services...
Head called on workers and youth to support the SEP and to
give serious consideration to joining the party. The purpose
of our campaign, he said, is to advance the ideas
and policies necessary to forge a new, independent and international
political movement of the working class, whose goal is the abolition
of the root cause of war, social inequality and the assault on
democratic rightsthe capitalist profit system itself.
Connection between war and inequality
Nick Beams, the SEPs national secretary, began his remarks
by recalling the reactionary conceptions advanced just over two
years ago by author Keith Windschuttle in his book, The Fabrication
of Aboriginal History. The book claimed to disprove the previous
historical analysis that the British colonial settlement of Tasmania
was responsible for the complete destruction of the indigenous
Aboriginal population within just two generations.
Windschuttle argued that the Aboriginal people of Tasmania
were responsible for their own fate because they did not take
advantage of the benefits of the free market
capitalist society which British colonialism had brought to Australia.
Instead, according to Windschuttle, they resorted to theft and
criminality and were responsible for their own demise. Windschuttle
referred to Aborigines confronting British colonialism as no different
to junkies raiding a service station.
Beams traced how the outpouring of praise for Windschuttles
book within the Australian establishment, especially by columnists
writing for the Murdoch press, related to the ideological issues
of today.
He drew attention to the way that defenders of the US invasion
of Iraq were justifying the numerous crimes associated with the
war with the claim that the United States had to establish a
global empire, to bring order and stability to the world of the
twenty-first century as the British empire did in the nineteenth...
In the same way that a cancer unless treated will metastasize
and spread throughout the body, Beams explained, fundamental
legal rights were under attack flowing from the US war of aggression.
Beams also noted the parallel between Windschuttles assertion
that criminality on the part of Tasmanian Aborigines was responsible
for their destruction, with Carrs claims that the problems
in suburbs like Macquarie Fields were the result of criminal
behaviour, not the product of social conditions, and could
only be dealt with by police measures.
Under conditions where capitalist society could no longer advance
any reforms, Beams stated, the ideology being promoted was that
everyone must scramble up the ladder of opportunity,
clawing at those above and kicking at those below. This is the
doctrine of the free market imposed by the power of
the state.
Beams stressed to the audience there was a profound connection
between the eruption of imperialist war and the police-state response
to deepening social inequality.
The war in Iraq, he said, was a pre-emptive strike by
the US against its rivals in Europe and Asia to establish domination
and control over resources, raw materials and markets.... This
conflict for resources, markets and ultimately profit is prosecuted
on the home front as well. It is undertaken by the means of a
never-ending offensive against the social position of the working
class. Social polarisation, Beams said, was being answered
with increased state repression and the methods deployed
in Macquarie Fields today will be used more broadly tomorrow.
Beams emphasised that the solution to the problems of society
depended on the development of political consciousness. No answer
could be found within the existing political order
or in conflicts with the police and the state. A far
more radical task had to be undertaken, he said, the complete
reconstruction of society as a whole.
The problems confronting the working class, Beams insisted,
were, above all, problems of perspective. Central was the political
campaign of the ruling class over the past decade-and-a-half to
argue that socialism had died with the collapse of the Soviet
Union. Beams reviewed the history of the Russian Revolution and
clarified that it was not socialism that collapsed in the former
USSR, but Stalinism. The demise of the Stalinist regime had marked
the disintegration of all programs that were based on nationalist
ideology and that stood in opposition to an internationalist and
socialist program, including those of the Labor Party and the
trade union bureaucracy.
Beams told the audience: Our focus in this election has
been on ideas. The most important task facing the working class
is the development of a perspective and an understanding of the
history of the twentieth century. The very development of mankinds
productive forces has completely shattered the old framework of
national states. There is not a single problem that we confront
today that can be solved on a national basis.
What was required, Beams concluded, was an international revolutionary
party, the construction of which was being developed by the World
Socialist Web Site.
Following the reports, audience members raised a number of
questions. A local worker said that the problem was that most
working people were afraid, and asked how the SEP could overcome
their reluctance to engage in politics.
Head emphasised that the problems in the working class were
not fear, but the tremendous disorientation caused by the collapse
of what was alleged to be socialismthe regimes in the Soviet
Union and Eastern Europeand the failure of reformist parties
such as Labor. There are no short cuts, Head said,
to clarifying big historical questions.
Beams explained the task of the socialist movement was not
to agitate or excite the working class into struggle. The
opposition generated by the Iraq war had produced the largest
globally coordinated demonstrations in history in February 2003.
The problem was not that millions of people werent prepared
to take action or did not recognise that they faced global problems.
It was that the participants in the movement were not equipped
with the necessary level of consciousness to reject those tendencies
who said that a solution could be found within the existing political
framework. The unique task of the revolutionary movement,
Beams said, is to arm the working class with a political
understanding.
A 58-year-old Green Valley resident put to the SEP speakers
that jobs could be defended by refusing to buy American and other
foreign goods imported into Australia. A discussion ensued about
national conceptions such as these, which clarified how protectionism
and trade war served to align the working people with their own
oppressorsthe ruling class in the country they lived inwhereas
the working class was, objectively, a unified international class.
Members of the audience showed their appreciation for the seriousness
of the partys approach, remaining behind after the meeting
concluded to continue discussing with Beams, Head and other members
of the SEP.
Janet, a student at the University of Western Sydney, who has
joined the SEP Student Club being formed on the campus, told the
WSWS after the meeting: Coming to this meeting is probably
the first political thing Ive done. I wanted to become involved
with the party so I could learn about politics. I want to have
my say. Im against wars. I want to change society. Lots
of things are wrong with it. Its unfair. Ive had a
chance to speak to people living in substandard situations. It
doesnt feel like theres a chance for a lot of people
to move up.
A collection to support the SEP election campaign raised over
$500. Several audience members took bundles of the SEP election
statement to distribute in the electorate and volunteered to work
on polling booths on March 19 to distribute the partys election
statement and how-to-vote cards.
See Also:
Full coverage
of 2005 Werriwa by-election
Australia: Labor Party candidate in
Werriwa by-election silent on vital issues
[10 March 2005]
Australia: Macquarie Fields-the political
issues
[10 March 2005]
Socialist Equality Party
stands in Australian by-election
Support the socialist alternative in Werriwa
[25 February 2005]
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