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Australia: Werriwa by-election result no great boost for Labor
By the Editorial Board
23 March 2005
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The by-election for the outer Sydney seat of Werriwa last Saturday
resulted in a win for the Australian Labor Party (ALP), but the
party can draw little joy from the outcome. Its candidate Chris
Hayes, a former union official turned private industrial relations
consultant, gained 55.53 percent of the primary votean increase
of 2.89 percent over the ALP result in the federal election last
October. The ALP victory is deceptive, however, disguising a profound
alienation with Labor among broad layers of voters in a seat that
the party has held for 71 years.
The by-election was necessitated by the resignation of Mark
Latham, not only as Labor leader but from parliament, following
the ALPs defeat in last Octobers federal election.
Labor lost despite the widespread opposition to the Liberal-National
Party coalition led by Prime Minister John Howard over the Iraq
war, deteriorating living standards and attacks on democratic
rights.
ALP figures claimed over the weekend that the Werriwa result
marked a resurgence in support for the party. Lathams replacement
as ALP leader, Kim Beazley, declared that the Werriwa result was
a sign that we have been doing our job, that we have stabilised,
and that we are now holding the government accountable.
In his victory speech, Hayes declared: Labor is back in
business.
This triumphalism, however, masked a distinct nervousness in
the Labor leadership, born out by its own private polling, that
the party could have lost the seat. There was also a collective
sigh of relief in ruling circles expressed most clearly in an
editorial in Rupert Murdochs Australian. If Labor
had lost, it began, the party could have pulled up stumps
and left the job of serious opposition to somebody else.
It stated: A strong political system needs a strong opposition...
for this reason alone it is good to see Labor beginning to regroup.
In fact, the result was no ringing endorsement either of Labor
or Beazley. In the first place, the Liberal Party did not stand
a candidate. Having won the October election by burying the issue
of the Iraq war, with Labors complicity, and running a scare
campaign on interest rates, Howard did not want a campaign that
once again raised the issues. This was particularly the case as
his government had just announced the dispatch of a further 450
Australian troops to Iraq and the Reserve Bank was about to hike
up interest rates.
The media played its part by treating the by-election and its
16 candidates as a circus. In the final days, after completely
ignoring the election for most of the campaign, the TV and press
focussed attention on the more offbeat candidates.
On election night, Hayes put his win down to interest rate
increases and the troop deployment. But in the course of the campaign,
he remained virtually silent on these and on every other issue.
The ALP promoted him as a family man and its only slogan was local
and proud of it. Insofar as the Labor Party had an electoral
strategy, it was to coast to victory on the basis of disaffection
with Howard. As in October, the Werriwa by-election demonstrated
that there are no fundamental differences between the two major
parties.
During the election, social tensions erupted in a series of
street battles between police and working class youth in Macquarie
Fields, part of the Werriwa electorate. The state Labor government
had provocatively dispatched hundreds of riot police to the area
after two young men died as a result of a high-speed police car
chase in the area. After saying nothing on the issue for most
of the campaign, Hayes finally lined up behind the right-wing
law-and-order stance of state Labor Premier Bob Carr, telling
the Sun Herald that the police operations had been sane.
Even in crude electoral terms, Labors win in Werriwa
was no triumph. Traditionally, voters have used by-elections to
express anti-government sentiment. The 2.9 percent swing to Labor
in Werriwa, however, was markedly less than the 6.5 percent average
swing against the government in by-elections since 1949. Werriwa,
which covers large working class suburbs, both public housing
estates and private developments, was once regarded as one of
the safest ALP seats. As recently as 1994, Latham polled 61 percent
of the vote when the ALP hierarchy first installed him in the
seat.
Moreover, there was a marked differentiation within the electorate
in last Saturdays poll. In more established working class
suburbs like Casula, Macquarie Fields, Minto, Prestons and Greenway
Park, there were swings against Labor. Alongside a general hostility
to Labor, many voters were angry at the state Labor government
which has presided over continuing deterioration in public health,
education, roads, transport and other infrastructure.
Labor suffered its sharpest rebuff at the Eucalyptus Drive
polling booth in Macquarie Fieldsthe scene of police confrontations
just three weeks earlier. Labors vote fell by almost 10
percent, reflecting anger over the police violence and Carrs
statement that the problems in the Glenquarie public housing estate
were the result of hardened criminals, not social
disadvantage.
Virtually all of Labors increased vote was in the new,
mortgage-belt suburbs such as Green Valley, Hinchinbrook, Hoxton
Park and Cecil Hills, where Labors vote rose by 4 to 9 percentage
points. These areas had swung equally sharply to the Liberals
last October, mainly in response to the Howard governments
claim that interest rates would increase sharply under Labor.
The swing back to the ALP points to underlying volatility among
many younger voters who confront tremendous economic insecurity
and have no attraction or loyalty to either major party.
The collapse of active support for Labor was also seen in the
lack of local party members on polling boothsa further symptom
of plummetting membership and a defunct branch structure. Among
those seen handing out ALP how-to-vote cards were Senator Michael
Forshaw, federal MP Roger Price and state housing minister Joe
Tripodi. According to a newsletter circulated by former ALP parliamentarian
Rodney Cavalier, the partys Werriwa federal electoral council
has not met for three years.
Broad hostility to the two-party system
These raw figures point to a deeper underlying alienation and
disaffection among broad layers of working people not only to
Labor but the entire political establishment.
The Socialist Equality Party (SEP) and our candidate Mike Head
campaigned energetically throughout the electorate to raise the
necessity for a socialist perspective to combat militarism and
war, deepening social inequality and to defend democratic rights.
On polling day, SEP members and supporters used the opportunity
to discuss the partys policies with voters both entering
and leaving the booths.
Far from any enthusiasm for Labor, what was revealed was deeply
felt anger with both political parties over the Iraq war, the
vilification of Macquarie Fields youth, and a broad range of social
issues. [See: Australian by-election:
a microcosm of political alienation and hostility] Insofar
as people voted for Labor, it was to express their opposition
to the Howard government or out of inertia. Despite their hostility
to Liberal and Labor, many people nevertheless clung to the belief
that there was no alternative to the two-party system. All one
could do was apply pressure on one or other party to implement
better policies.
The same sentiment was reflected negatively in the high informal
vote of 10.78 percentup from 8 percent last year and 5 percent
in 1994. As voting is compulsory in Australia, many voters, seeing
no other option, expressed their disgust by deliberately spoiling
their ballots. From the reported vote figures, it is possible
that another 10 percent of the 90,760 enrolled voters may not
have voted at all, despite a possible $100 penalty.
The remaining 45 percent of the formal vote was spread out
over the large number of remaining candidates, including a significant
number of extreme right-wing contenders seeking to capitalise
on the hostility to Labor and Liberal.
While the Liberal Party stood no official candidate, two Liberal
Party members stood as independentsJames Young
and Ned Mannounhoping no doubt to position themselves for
the next federal election. Young specifically identified himself
with the Howard government and defended its record. He gained
7.8 percent of the vote, while Mannoun secured just 1.8 percentin
total far less than Liberal vote of 35 percent in the 2004 election.
Two anti-immigrant partiesOne Nation and Australians
Against Further Immigrationsecured 8.5 percent of the vote
by focussing on the most socially-deprived areas of the electorate,
including Macquarie Fields. Another 8.0 percent went to Christian
fundamentalist partiesFamily First and the Christian Democratic
Party. Right-wing populistsincluding independent Joe Bryant
and Deborah Locke from People Powergained 2.7 percent and
2.1 percent respectively.
In all, some 21 percent of the vote went to parties or individuals
standing for right-wing policies. While many of these votes will
have been a form of protest against Labor and the Howard government,
the outcome underscores the danger that discontent and political
alienation can take a reactionary direction.
Another expression of disgust was the relatively high vote
for independent Mal Lees, a radio announcer, who gained 2 percent
on the basis of a prank campaignthe promise of free beer,
silly shirt days and the declaration that he would
repudiate all promises if elected.
The Greens, which had won the ALP heartland Wollongong-based
seat of Cunningham in an October 2002 by-election, and which at
times promotes itself as being to the left of Labor,
won just 5.5 percent of the voteup from 3.8 percent last
year.
Unlike the Cunningham by-election, in which the Greens capitalised
on mounting antiwar sentiment in the lead-up to the Iraq invasion,
the party and its candidate had almost nothing to say about Howards
new troop deployment to Iraq, nor on Labors tacit acceptance
of the decision. Its limited criticisms of Labor were premised
on the assumption that the ALP could be pressured in a more progressive
direction. The partys promotion of Labor as a lesser
evil was highlighted by the direction of its voting preferences
to the ALP candidate.
The Greens response to the Macquarie Fields clashes was
particularly revealing. While pointing to the underlying social
disadvantage in the area, a Greens spokeswoman declared that the
riots were a wake up call to the state Labor government.
The huge police deployment in Macquarie Fields was not a mistake,
however, but a conscious policy aimed at whipping up law-and-order
hysteria in order to deflect attention from the social catastrophe
its policies have created in such suburbs.
The Progressive Labour Party, a grouping of former Stalinists,
trade union bureaucrats and Labor lefts, sought to
win disaffected ALP voters by calling for a return to real
Labor values. The diminishing effect of such appeals to
Labors supposedly golden past is indicated by the PLPs
voteless than one percent.
The SEP was the only party to campaign for a complete break
from the two-party system and for a clear socialist perspective.
In the midst of the plethora of candidates, the SEPs vote
of 478 was a small, but significant result. Following the partys
campaign in the 2004 election, this indicates that an important
layer of workers and young people consciously supported a revolutionary
socialist alternative and are actively considering the partys
policies.
From the outset, the SEP insisted that the partys intervention
was not about votes, but about ideas. Unlike our political opponents,
we aimed at fostering the broadest possible discussion of the
crucial issues facing working people. The SEP was the only party
to hold public meetings in the electorate, to distribute a comprehensive
election statement and to seek to reach as many layers within
the area as possible.
In the aftermath of the campaign, the SEP calls on all those
who voted for Mike Head to consider the implications of the election
outcome. Hostility, protest and anger do not by themselves provide
any political answers to the serious problems confronting working
people. What is required is the building of an international party
based on a scientifically worked out program and perspective to
refashion society from top to bottom on socialist lines. We urge
all our supporters to carefully study our program and apply to
join the SEP.
See Also:
Full coverage
of 2005 Werriwa by-election
Werriwa by-election
Socialist Alliance promotes Australian Greens as "a progressive
alternative"
[19 March 2005]
Werriwa by-election
A record number of candidates, but no policies for working people
[18 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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