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Werriwa by-election
A record number of candidates, but no policies for working
people
By Richard Phillips
18 March 2005
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The four-week campaign for the Australian seat of Werriwa,
a mainly working class electorate located in Sydneys outer
western suburbs, has further highlighted the moribund character
of the Australian Labor Party (ALP) and the rightward degeneration
of Australian parliamentary politics.
The by-election was called following ALP leader Mark Lathams
abrupt resignation from parliament in January. Latham, who held
the seat for 11 years, quit three months after the partys
devastating federal election defeat last October. The seat, which
is the 10th poorest electorate in Australia, can no longer be
regarded as safe for the ALP. Few workers and youth
in the area voice any political confidence in the organisation.
Into this political vacuum has stepped a range of candidates,
16 in all, hoping to capitalise on the mounting frustration and
anger over the ever-worsening unemployment and poverty. This includes
anti-tax and law and order populists, anti-immigration
parties, Christian fundamentalists, the Greens and a contestant
calling for a republican constitution. Notwithstanding their various
tactical differences, the overwhelming majority defends the existing
order, claiming that there is a local or national solution to
the problems facing working people.
The only candidate offering a genuine alternative and articulating
the interest of workers and young people in Werriwa is Mike Head,
the Socialist Equality Party (SEP) candidate. Head is advancing
a socialist program to oppose the Iraq war and counter the increasing
militarism, social inequality and attacks on democratic rights.
The Labor Party, which has controlled the seat for over 70
years, has not called a single public meeting during the campaign.
In fact Labor, and its candidate Chris Hayes, are all but invisible,
and for good reason. The ALP, which marches lockstep with the
Howard government on all the essential issues, is regarded with
suspicion, indifference or outright contempt in Werriwa.
Hayes officially launched his campaign, eight days before the
vote at a small gathering of journalists and party bureaucrats
at his Werriwa election office. This dismal event was presided
over by current Labor leader Kim Beazley who told those assembled
that the Labor candidate, a former union official and advisor
to the police association, who currently runs an industrial relations
consultancy for employers, was everything the Labor
Party wanted.
Hayes, despite Beazleys recommendations, has distinguished
himself during the campaign by trying to say as little as possible
about anything. His only reported public statement was to endorse
NSW Labor premier Bob Carrs mobilisation of heavily-armed
police against youth in Macquarie Fields, following a police chase
that led to the death of two teenagers.
Liberals and disaffected Laborites
Labor, which previously argued that it could provide a decent
future for ordinary people by reforming capitalism, once had a
broad and active base of support and could mobilise workers and
youth during elections and for other events. This foundation no
longer exists.
Today the party, which no longer identifies in any way with
the lives and problems of working people and the poor, is one
the chief instruments for undermining and attacking living standards
and basic rights. Any conflicts that erupt within the organisation
have nothing to do with principle or how to defend working people,
but largely centre on differences between party officials, union
bureaucrats and small business people over personal ambition and
business dealings.
The candidacy of Sam Bargshoon, an ex-ALP member and small
businessman, is a case in point.
Bargshoon, a former numbers man for Mark Latham, quit the party
last year, just before the federal election, and decided to run
against Latham. While Bargshoon denounced the party for not
caring about local people and their jobs, his opposition
only developed after the closure of Orange Grove, a large local
retail outlet. Bargshoon had a lucrative cleaning contract for
the shopping complex, which he lost when the state Labor government
ordered the outlet closed, claiming it had contravened zoning
regulations.
While Bargshoon feigns concern about Labors job destruction,
there is no record that he made any complaints against the tens
of thousands of public sector jobs axed by the NSW Labor government
or the previous Hawke and Keating federal Labor regime.
Ned Mannoun is another former ALP member and typical of those
elements attracted by Lathams right-wing policies. A former
president of the Liverpool Youth Council, the 23-year-olds
campaign slogan is I tell it like it is. This consists
of demagogic calls for improvements in local transport, health
and education, but no policy statement on how any of this can
be achieved.
Mannoun, who endorses the occupation of Iraq and the Carr Labor
governments mobilisation of riot police against Macquarie
Fields residents, quit the ALP following Lathams resignation
and immediately joined the Liberal Party.
While the Liberal Party has decided not to run an official
candidate in the by-election, Mannoun is one of two Liberal Party
members contesting the seat, the other being James Young, a 31-year-old
sales advisor. Both of these so-called independents
appear to be using the election to advance their status within
the Liberal Party and secure its endorsement for future elections.
Props for Labor
The Greens and the Progressive Labour Party (PLP) are also
running candidates in Werriwa, Ben Raue and Patricia McGookin,
respectively. Both parties defend the profit system while promoting
illusions in the ALP as a lesser evil to the Howard
government. They have called on their supporters to give their
second preference vote to Labor.
In a press statement Raue claimed that Labor had let
down Werriwa residents because it lacked policies
and purpose. Carrs response to the Macquarie Fields
riots, he claimed, demonstrated that Labor was no longer
capable of helping the people of Western Sydney.
Contrary to Raues claims, the Carr government has very
definite policies and a very clear agendaacting on the orders
of its corporate backers it has conducted an ongoing assault on
the living standards, jobs and basic democratic rights of working
people, in Werriwa and throughout NSW. Its only response to the
inevitable outbreak of social tensions caused by these policies
is brutal police repression.
Like the Greens, the PLP, which was established by remnants
of the Stalinist Communist Party of Australia, disgruntled union
bureaucrats and Labor lefts, has criticised
the ALP and the war in Iraq. Its opposition to the war, however,
is thoroughly nationalist: Australian troops should be withdrawn
so they can be deployed to support Australian interests closer
to home. Neither of these parties has held public meetings in
the electorate to discuss or defend their policies.
Independents, racists and right-wing
Christians
Other Werriwa candidates include Janey Woodger for Australians
Against Further Immigration, and Charles Doggett for One Nation.
These racialist parties claim that the unemployment, poverty and
myriad problems in Werriwa will be resolved by cutting immigration.
There are also two right-wing Christian candidatesGreg Tan
for the Christian Democratic Party and Mick Sykes for Family First.
Espousing so-called family values, they oppose the democratic
right to abortion on demand, call for a stricter censorship regime,
and endorse the US-led war in Iraq.
One of the more revealing events during the four-week election
campaign was a forum on March 10, organised by Joe Bryant, a former
deputy mayor of Blacktown, who is also contesting the seat. Byrant,
an anti-tax demagogue, who at various times has called for tariff
protection and other national regulatory measures, describes himself
as a patriotic activist. The event, which was held
inside a local hotel, adjoining a noisy bar, and attended by six
contestants, exposed the right-wing character of the so-called
independents.
Ned Mannoun spoke first, calling for improvements in local
transport, health and education and the reestablishment of family
values. He left the meeting straight after his speech and was
not available during question time.
Robert Vogler said he was contesting the election in order
to discuss a republican constitution. After unfurling his proposal
for a new Australian flag and explaining that he wanted an elected
monarch as head of state. Voters would choose from one candidate
picked by the prime minister and 200 others nominated at random
from the electoral roll. After outlining this oddball proposal,
he ran out of things to say in his allocated time and sat down.
Liberal Party member James Young used every opportunity to
regurgitate and endorse the Howard governments policies,
while calling for tax relief and for public health to be taken
from the state governments and given to Canberra.
Deborah Locke, from Peoples Power, a right-wing grouping
initially established by a former political staffer for the Kennett
Liberal government in Victoria, also spoke. Locke, a retired NSW
police detective, denounced the major parties, called for tax
cuts, support for small business and a protest vote against the
ALP.
Christian Democratic Party candidate Greg Tan brought his children
on stage to join him in performing a religious song and then explained
that better transport, health and education were superficial
issues of life. He called for stricter adherence to the
Bible, whose principles should be incorporated into law,
and left the meeting, not waiting to discuss his policies or answer
any questions.
During question time this writer asked the candidates still
present to explain their position on the Iraq war and the Carr
governments police crackdown against Macquarie Fields youth.
Young supported the invasion and declared that anyone opposing
it was giving tacit support to Saddam Hussein. Joe Bryant said
the invasion was immoral, demagogically denounced
Howard as a dictator, and called for the withdrawal of Australian
troops. His reasoning, however, was a combination of ignorance
and prejudice. Iraqis, he claimed, had been fighting each
other for thousands of years and nothing, apart from
a return of Saddam Hussein, would change that.
Vogler said he opposed the invasion of Iraq but insisted that
the US-led operation, including Australian troops, should remain
because we have a duty to bring some resolution to the conflict.
Deborah Locke, the Peoples Power candidate, who told the audience
she didnt like to speak about things she knew nothing
about, echoed this in a largely unintelligible answer.
Apart from Vogler, who voiced some reservations about the violent
police operation in Macquarie Fields, all the other candidates
backed the police and called for more ruthless crackdowns.
Bryant said the problem was a lack of discipline
in society and proposed the introduction of compulsory military
service for youth. The previously befuddled Locke was now more
forthright. The problem is not the police, she declared.
We have young police heroes out there standing in the frontline
getting bricks thrown at them. Whats necessary, she
continued, was even harsher measures, including the abolition
of bail for anyone arrested for stealing cars.
Given the right-wing character of this event it attracted little
outside interest. Apart from a couple of supporters for the respective
candidates, only three or four other people attended.
The record number of independent candidates in
Werriwa is a reflection of the disintegration of the ALP and the
lack of popular support for the official political parties. But
the overwhelming majority of these contestants, whose support
for the illegal occupation of Iraq, and Australian participation
in it, and Labors police repression of local youth and residents,
offer no way forward. In fact, rather than challenge the rightward
trajectory of Australias ruling elite, they simply advance
the same reactionary agenda, with minor political variations.
The anger, frustration and contempt of wide layers of workers
and youth with official politics, is entirely understandable but
no answer to the ongoing rightward lurch of Australian bourgeois
politics. Those looking for a genuine alternative to the big business
policies of the ALP and its props, the Greens and the PLP, should
study the Socialist Equality Partys program and vote for
Mike Head.
Irrespective of the outcome of the March 19 election, the urgent
question facing working people, youth and students is the construction
of a new socialist and internationalist party, as the only alternative
to the escalating militarism and war and attacks on jobs, living
standards and basic rights.
See Also:
Full coverage
of 2005 Werriwa by-election
Werriwa by-election: Iraq, Macquarie
Fields and Australias History Wars
[16 March 2005]
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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