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NSW state election: SEP candidate speaks at Newtown forum
By Laura Tiernan
14 February 2007
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Patrick OConnor, the Socialist Equality Party (SEP) candidate
for Marrickville in the NSW state election, spoke at a candidates
forum convened by the Newtown Neighbourhood Centre on February
7, calling for the urgent development of an international movement
against the war in Iraq and US preparations for war against Iran.
The forum exposed the political gulf that exists between the
SEP and the entire official political establishment. It was addressed
by sitting Labor MP Carmel Tebbutt, who is Education Minister
in the NSW Labor government, Liberal Party candidate Ramzy Mansour,
and the Greens and Socialist Alliance candidates.
Billed as democracy in action, the forums
organisers, led by moderator and academic Eva Cox, attempted to
prevent any discussion on a socialist alternative to war and social
inequality.
Despite the SEP having made contact with forum organisers on
the Monday, they claimed it was too late for OConnor to
be included on the platform. When SEP campaign managers insisted,
the organisers finally relented, but arbitrarily declared that
OConnor would have only three minutes to speak, rather than
the six allocated for all other candidates.
Before the meeting began Cox made clear the politics behind
this bureaucratic suppression of debate, telling OConnor:
I hope youre going to speak about Marrickville, not
international issues. The SEP candidate replied that the
central question confronting working people in Marrickville was
the Iraq war and the eruption of US militarism, to which Cox cynically
retorted, thats why socialists have never gotten anywhere
in 150 years.
In presenting their platform and policies for the NSW state
election, each of the candidates suppressed any mention of the
escalating war in Iraq, despite opinion polls showing 70 percent
of the Australian public believes the Iraq war will be the most
important issue in this years federal poll.
OConnor opposed the conspiracy of silence, explaining:
I am standing in Marrickville for the Socialist Equality
Party in order to provide an independent political voice for the
working class and to advance a socialist and internationalist
program necessary to revive and reorient a mass movement against
the Iraq war and against Washingtons preparations for an
attack in Iran.
On January 10, President Bush announced that his administration
was escalating the Iraq war, dispatching more than 20,000 additional
troops. This was in direct defiance of the will of the American
people, as expressed in last Novembers Congressional elections.
The war has already seen an estimated 655,000 deaths, and 3.7
million Iraqis have been turned into refugees. Now the world is
facing the threat of an even bloodier conflagration, with an attack
on Iran being readied, including preparations for a nuclear strike.
The SEPs state election campaign, OConnor said,
was aimed at developing an independent political movement of the
working class. None of the pressing problems affecting ordinary
people in Marrickville and New South Walesescalating social
inequality, falling working and living standards, the environment,
deteriorating public services, and the erosion of basic rights
under the so-called war on terrorcan be addressed apart
from the development of an independent struggle against militarism
and war.
The Socialist Equality Party insists that this struggle
can only be advanced by workers and youth breaking with all the
parliamentary parties and building a party that genuinely represents
their interests, a party founded on socialist and internationalist
principles.
OConnor provoked jeers from supporters of Socialist Alliance
and the Greens when he insisted that political lessons had to
be drawn from the failure of protest politics. The historic
global antiwar protests in February 2003 ultimately failed to
halt the invasion of Iraqnot because of any shortage of
opposition to the pending warbut because the political perspective
of pressuring the Howard government, appealing to the Labor Party,
or France, Germany, or the United Nations was a futile perspective.
Contrary to the claims advanced by the Socialist Alliance and
other middle class protest groups, protests alone are insufficient
to stop war. What is required is a new perspective, one which
harnesses the immense strength of the international working class
and addresses the root causes of imperialist war and militarism.
By contrast, the contributions of Fiona Byrne from the Greens
and Pip Hinman from Socialist Alliance were devoted to lobbying
Tebbutt and appealing to the Labor Party. Hinmans opening
remarks were a political gift to Labor. Referring to a recent
health crisis in her own family, Hinman praised the wonderful
public health system we have here in Marrickville. She called
for a peoples movement to reverse the
course of neo-liberalism and said, we wish the Labor
Party would participate in that campaign.
Far from reversing the course of neo-liberalism,
the Carr and Iemma governments have faced growing opposition from
nurses, doctors and the general public for their slashing of public
health services over the past decade. This agenda, including hospital
closures, lengthy waiting lists for essential surgery and overstretched
accident and emergency wards resulting in needless patient deaths,
has been duplicated nationally. It is in line with the demolition
of public health, education and welfare systems taking place on
a global scale as governmentswhether nominally social-democratic
or conservativehave adhered to the dictates of globally
mobile capital for the removal of all claims on profit and returns
on investment.
The comments of Greens candidate Fiona Byrne were mired in
nationalism, state-based parochialism and parliamentarism. The
Greens, she declared, were providing a new vision for NSW
so the state could become an economic and environmental leader.
While the Greens won support at the 2004 federal elections, especially
among young people who mistakenly believed the party was antiwar,
Byrne made no reference to the illegal occupation of Iraq and
did not call for the withdrawal of foreign troops. She claimed
that the far-reaching global problems associated with climate
change and pollution could be resolved via such measures as a
carbon tax and the doubling of subsidies for residents who purchase
backyard rainwater tanks. She also called for punitive Stage 4
water restrictions on households. Like Hinman, Byrnes election
campaign was directed to the ALP, with a pledge to lobby Tebbutt
on environmental issues in the aftermath of the March 24 vote.
Taking full advantage of the support given by the Greens and
Socialist Alliance, Tebutt declared the real choice is between
a Liberal and Labor government. Forum moderator Eva Cox
sought to confine discussion to precisely this framework, directing
a range of questions on local housing, public transport and industrial
relations reform to the Labor and Liberal candidates only. When
OConnor attempted to answer a question about election campaign
funding by pointing to the political significance of the ALPs
reliance on big-business donors and the collapse of any base of
support for Labor in the working class, Cox simply cut him off,
ruling his remarks out of order.
These attempts to bolster Labor and the two-party system amount
to damage control. Both the ALP and Liberals have suffered a wholesale
collapse of membership and are little more than bureaucratic shells,
held together by the trappings of office. In the 2005 Marrickville
by-election, the Greens came close to taking the seat from Labor,
while opinion polls published in late 2006 revealed one in three
voters would cast their vote against both the ALP and the Liberal-National
Coalition parties. The promotion of the ALP as a lesser
evil by the various middle class protest groups is aimed
at preventing the emergence of a conscious socialist opposition
among workers and young people to the two-party set-up, and to
the profit system that it defends.
After questions from the audience on US war preparations against
Iran and the role of the state Labor government in supporting
the Howard governments anti-terror laws, Cox again moved
to shift the axis of discussion. She demanded that audience members
address local issues only. You cant ask
that question, its too general, she told a member
of the audience who wanted to know how each of the candidates
was proposing to campaign against the federal workplace reforms
that have stripped workers of basic legal protections.
Coxs interjections were aimed at avoiding any discussion
of a socialist alternative. The insistence that only local issues
could be raised served this essential purpose. In reality however,
the decay of basic infrastructure, of public transport, schools
and hospitals and the growth of poverty and job insecurity, while
manifesting at a local level, all have a universal content. The
local problems confronting ordinary people in cities
throughout the worldfrom Sydney to Beijing, from Paris to
Chicagohave a common source in the contradictions and crisis
of the capitalist system itself.
At the conclusion of the forum, OConnor and SEP campaign
supporters stayed behind to discuss with members of the audience.
A young English-language teacher approached the SEP candidate
to express her support. Did you get the idea that they were
trying to censor you? she pointedly asked.
See Also:
Australia: the socialist alternative in
the New South Wales state election
Support the SEP campaign
[10 February 2007]
For an international mobilization
of workers and youth against the war in Iraq
[22 January 2007]
Australian PM outlines indefinite
military agenda in South Pacific
[18 January 2007]
Australian government
sets course for militarism and war
[7 September 2006]
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