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Victorian election: Vote for Will Marshall and the SEP in
Broadmeadows
By the Socialist Equality Party (Australia)
24 November 2006
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Workers in Victoria go to the polls on Saturday having endured
an official election campaign in which all the fundamental issueswar,
attacks on democratic rights and deteriorating living standardshave
been buried.
The campaign, which was deliberately limited to just three
weeks, was designed to ensure the least possible public debate
and discussion. With the corporate and media establishment lined
up behind the Labor government of Premier Steve Bracks, the efforts
of the opposition Liberal Party took on an element of farce. Its
party leader Ted Baillieu resorted to singing and even attempting
an Elvis impersonation in a desperate effort to raise his media
profile.
All the parties, including the Greens and Democrats, confined
themselves to the narrowest of so-called local issues,
cynically aimed at swinging the vote in marginal electorates.
In many electorates, such as the working class seat of Broadmeadows,
there was no campaign to speak of. Sitting member and state Treasurer
John Brumby made virtually no appearances, contemptuously assuming
that working people saw no alternative but to return him to office.
The Liberals and the Greens concentrated their efforts where their
parliamentary prospects were more promising.
The entire campaign exposes the immense chasm between all the
major parties and broad masses of working people. While the media
has interpreted the popular alienation and disgust with official
politics as a sign of lack of interest, the Socialist Equality
Party (SEP) in its campaign for Broadmeadows found quite the opposite:
an eagerness to discuss the complex political issues of the day,
particularly the war in Iraq, and a readiness to consider far-reaching
policies for the socialist reorganisation of society.
The SEP calls for the largest possible vote for our candidate
Will Marshall to register rejection of the big business agenda
of the entire political establishment and conscious support for
a genuine socialist alternative to the existing economic and social
order.
Every vote cast for the SEP will strengthen the struggle to
develop a mass socialist movement of the working class. The SEP
fights to unite workers in Victoria with those throughout Australia
and internationally against the capitalist profit system, which
is responsible for militarism, repression, poverty, social inequality
and environmental destruction.
In the course of our campaign we had to overcome many obstacles,
including a deliberate media blackout, harassment of SEP campaigners
by police, and restrictive, anti-democratic electoral laws designed
to maintain the political monopoly of the establishment parties.
It is because of these laws that the SEP will not appear on the
ballot paper alongside Marshalls name.
A de facto coalition
The gulf between working people and the political elite is
nowhere clearer than on the issue of war. According to opinion
polls, 6 out 10 people now believe troops should be withdrawn
from Iraq. But neither Labor nor any of the other parties has
said anything about the issue in the course of the campaign. The
US congressional elections took place three days after Bracks
set a date for the election, but not even a sweeping Republican
defeat, driven by bitter antiwar and anti-Bush sentiment, was
permitted to disturb the conspiracy of silence.
Similarly, there has been no discussion of Australias
neo-colonial interventions in East Timor, the Solomons and now
Tonga, the war on terror, the ongoing destruction
of democratic rights, the growing social polarisation and workers
worsening living standards. This silence speaks volumes. It highlights
the de facto coalition that has been in operation between Labor,
Liberal the Democrats and Greens over all the fundamental issues
confronting the working class. Whatever their tactical differences,
they are all complicit in Australias criminal foreign policy
operations and they all defend the interests of the major corporations
over the needs and aspirations of the vast majority of working
people.
Bracks made very few election promises beyond the announcement
of utterly inadequate spending increases on school refurbishments
and hospital upgrades. His central pitch to voters has been to
claim that a vote for the Liberals will mean a return to the Kennett
era. Between 1992 and 1999, Jeff Kennetts Liberal
government mounted a sustained offensive against the working class,
with severe social spending cuts, school closures and public sector
job sackings. But Brackss appeal to the lesser evil
argument is completely bogus.
Since taking power, Labor has advanced the same corporate agenda
pursued by Kennett. In the present campaign, Bracks appealed to
big business to back his Labor government as a safe pair
of hands for managing the economy. He promised the financial
markets that he would maintain the states triple-A credit
rating and deliver large budget surpluses. This promise will inevitably
mean a further erosion of vital public services such as education
and health.
In the past period, Bracks has postured as an opponent of the
Howard governments WorkChoices industrial legislation. In
the campaign, he claimed his government would shield Victorian
working families from these unfair laws which undermine job security
and work conditions and encouraged voters to view the state
election as a referendum on the legislation. But the Labor government
has done nothing to reverse Kennetts handover of industrial
powers to the Howard government. Along with the unions, it has
deliberately blocked any genuine campaign against the hated WorkChoices
laws.
The Victorian Police Associations endorsement of Bracks
speaks volumes about Labors right-wing orientation. Bracks
has been at the forefront of Howards efforts to exploit
the war on terrorism to introduce a battery of draconian
laws that destroy basic democratic rights. He has bolstered police
powers to match Canberras legislation, increased police
numbers and expanded the police armoury. In the course of the
campaign itself, a major police operation was mounted to crack
down on anti-globalisation protesters outside the G20 meeting
of economic ministers in Melbourne last weekend.
Labor is widely expected to easily secure another term in office,
despite its track record and general unpopularity. Every media
outlet has endorsed a Labor win, while at the same time demanding
the government accelerate its pro-business reform agenda. An editorial
in Murdochs Australian today pushed for a bigger
vote for the Liberals, but only so the Bracks government
will be under pressure to maintain its economic and managerial
credibility as a consequence of tougher economic conditions.
The message from corporate Australia is clear: the next Labor
government will have to make further inroads into the social position
of the working class.
A recent opinion poll pointed to the widespread alienation
among voters: less than one-third believed the Liberals deserved
to win the election, while less than half believed Labor deserved
to win. The Greens are expected to make significant gains as a
result, and they may, for the first time in Victoria, win one
or more lower house seats and hold the balance of power in the
upper house. Young people are particularly inclined to vote Green,
with one survey showing that between 16 and 18 percent of those
aged 18 to 34 intend to vote for the party.
While the Greens rise is a significant expression of
the growing fragility of the two-party system, they do not represent
any alternative to the Labor and Liberal agenda. The Greens defend
both the profit system and the existing political set-up. Their
critical function is to divert oppositional sentiment into safe
channels, and above all, to block working people and youth from
turning toward a socialist alternative. The Greens oriented their
election campaign to assuring the political and media establishment
that they would pose no threat to their interests. This was underscored
by their agreement with the Liberal party to swap preferences
in those electorates where the Greens have a chance of unseating
Labor. Together with all the major parties, their campaign was
exclusively focussed on so-called local issues.
Insofar as there is an attempt to portray health, educational
or environmental questions as confined to particular areas or
suburbs, they are inevitably exploited to pit one community against
another. Moreover, local issues are inextricably bound
up with national and global issues. Drought, the crisis in water
supply, the lack of funding for a local library, the pollution
of a nearby creek or the latest sackings at Ford Broadmeadows
are all products of a social order that subordinates every aspect
of social life to the drive for corporate profit. Similar problems
and concerns, as well as far broader fears about war, confront
working people internationally. A genuine and progressive solution
depends on uniting working people in every country and developing
an independent struggle against the profit system.
The SEP insist that the interests of the working classthat
is, the overwhelming majority of the populationtake precedence
over those of the ultra-wealthy minority. We call for the reorganisation
of social, political, and economic life on a genuinely democratic
and egalitarian basis through the establishment of a democratically
and rationally planned world economy.
This requires the development of a new mass political party
of the working class, based on a socialist and internationalist
program. While we strongly urge a vote for Will Marshall, the
SEPs campaign in Broadmeadows is primarily about ideas,
not votes. We aim to restore the great traditions of Marxism to
the centre of the struggles of the working class, and stress the
historic necessity for working people to fight for a new political
perspective. We urge workers and youth in Victoria and throughout
Australia to study our program and give serious consideration
to joining the SEP.
See Also:
Australia: Socialist Equality Party holds
successful election meeting in Broadmeadows
[23 November 2006]
Victorian election:
A socialist answer to war, environmental disaster and social inequality
[23 November 2006]
Australia: a socialist alternative in
the Victorian state election
Support the SEP campaign
[1 November 2006]
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