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NSW election campaign
SEP opposes exclusion of Noel Holt from Newcastle candidates
forum
By Terry Cook
27 February 2007
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Members and supporters of the Socialist Equality Party (SEP)
distributed an open letter at a forum for NSW state candidates
for the seat of Newcastle organised by the New Institute on February
22. The letter called on those who attended to oppose the New
Institutes decision to exclude SEP candidate Noel Holt from
participating. The New Institute had advertised the forum as
a rare chance to join a genuine town meeting with
all parties taking part.
The SEPs open letter to the New Institutes chairman
Ross Kerridge strongly protested Holts exclusion and called
on the institute to reverse its decision, which, it insisted,
was entirely undemocratic, denying the people
of Newcastle the right to hear and discuss the program of the
Socialist Equality Party.
Kerridge had originally stated that he did know the SEP was
standing a candidate in Newcastle and that the institute had invited
all candidates who had declared. He also claimed that
it was impossible to alter the forums structure to allow
Holts participation.
As the SEP pointed out, however, writs for the NSW state election
had not yet been issued and therefore no one had officially declared
their intention to stand. The SEP had publicly declared
that it was fielding three candidates in the NSW Legislative Assembly,
including Noel Holt in Newcastle, and a slate of 15 candidates
in the Legislative Council in its election statement posted on
the widely-read World Socialist Web Site on February 10.
Any changes to the forums format needed to allow Holts
late inclusion would have been minimal.
In fact, despite its claims to the contrary, the New Institute
was not committed to facilitating a genuine democratic debate
or making available all political views. In discussion with the
SEP, Kerridge had admitted that the organisation had already decided
to exclude so-called minor parties from the forum, arbitrarily
imposing a cut off line to restrict participation
to those it decided would achieve more than 10 percent of the
vote.
As the SEP letter declared: This position amounts to
a self-fulfilling prophecy. The New Institute was aligning
itself with the entire official political and media establishment,
which worked constantly to deny minor parties such as the
SEP access to the public so as to undermine the growth of their
influence and thereby preserve the domination of the two-party
system.
It made clear that the decision to exclude Holt amounted to
censorship of the views and policies of the SEP within a climate,
fomented by both the Labor and Liberal parties at state and federal
level, of escalating attacks on democratic and civil rights.
At the start of the meeting, attended by around 180 Newcastle
residents, the SEP moved a motion from the floor for the suspension
of standing orders to allow the audience to discuss and vote on
a resolution supporting Holts democratic right to participate.
The forums chairperson Felicity Biggins, a journalist
with radio station 2NUR and a New Institute interim management
committee member, attempted to ignore the mover, but eventually
declared she was only willing to put a resolution that the forum
continue along the lines of the planned formatincluding
the exclusion of Holt. When the SEP objected, Biggins admitted
that the institute had decided to invite only major parties and
so-called high profile candidates who would
attract an audience.
While a majority of the audience, which was mostly comprised
of members and supporters of the five candidates on the platformvoted
in favour of Bigginss proposal, a significant minority voted
to uphold Holts right to participate. Several abstained,
while members of the middle class protest organisation, the Socialist
Alliance, voted in favour of excluding the SEP candidate.
The anti-democratic character of the Greens was particularly
exposed. Greens candidate Michael Osborne, one of the five
on the platform, refused to raise any objection to the SEPs
exclusion, and in the course of the meeting failed to mention
the US-led war in Iraq or the growing threat of US military aggression
against Iran. By excluding Holt, the Greens joined the forum organisers
to ensure that the most vital issue confronting working people
in Newcastle and around the country was neither raised nor discussed.
Predictably, the forum turned out to be a sterile, stage-managed
affair. Questions from the floor were not allowed. Instead, the
candidates were quizzed by a panel of so-called experts, who restricted
their questions to the most parochial issues.
Despite extensive reportage of the event in the media the following
day, the exclusion of the SEP was not mentioned. When the SEP
complained to the Australian Broadcasting Corporation (ABC), the
radio station eventually agreed to conduct a short interview with
Holt, which was broadcast the morning after the forum. Garth Russell,
the stations morning presenter asked the candidate why he
thought the SEP had been excluded from the forum. Holt referred
to the organisers 10 percent cut-off limit and
explained that this was part of general policy on the part of
the media and the official establishment to ignore minor parties
and deny them the right to participate in election events.
Under such conditions what chance is the SEP being given
to address the people of Newcastle? the candidate asked.
The SEP is the voice of the working class. But the working
class was denied the right to hear us speak.
Russell then questioned Holt on what percentage of the vote
the SEP had gained in previous elections. Holt replied that the
party had stood in both state and federal elections and the vote
it had received was not the point.
All parties should have been on the forums platform,
Holt declared. The message that we have is not the same
as the major parties.
The candidate continued: We are talking about the issues
facing the working class and the biggest issue is the war in Iraq.
The people on the forums platform behaved as if the war
did not exist. But this war will have a major impact on people
in Newcastle and everywhere.
At this point Russell interrupted saying we appreciate
you putting your point forward and abruptly brought the
interview to a close. Later, the station confirmed that its policy
was to give all candidates four minutes when being interviewed.
The interview with Holt lasted barely three.
See Also:
New South Wales state election: SEP candidate
prevented from addressing forum on dental health
[23 February 2007]
New South Wales state election
Socialist Equality Party (Australia) public meetings
[19 February 2007]
NSW state election: SEP candidate speaks
at Newtown forum
[14 February 2007]
Australia: the socialist alternative in
the New South Wales state election
Support the SEP campaign
[10 February 2007]
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