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Opinion polls provoke bewilderment in lead-up to Australian
election
By the Socialist Equality Party (Australia)
22 June 2007
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While the next Australian federal election is not due until
later this year, unofficial campaigning is well underway.
For the mass media, the primary issue of concern has been a
series of recent opinion polls indicating that the Howard government
is set to lose office. From the start of the year, the polls have
consistently shown the government to be more unpopular than at
any time since it came to power in March 1996. In April, its stocks
had fallen so low that Prime Minister Howard told his parliamentary
colleagues they faced electoral annihilation, and
that he had no rabbit in the hat to save them.
Politicians and media pundits alike have responded with perplexity
and bewilderment. By their reckoning the government should be
doing particularly well, given the relatively low official unemployment
and inflation rates, and continuing economic growth.
The Australians political editor Dennis Shanahan,
for example, referred to the conundrum [that is] confounding
political analysts ... it is not just commentators who are flummoxed
by the polls but the players [politicians] as well. Health
Minister Tony Abbott attacked the voters, complaining they were
unreasonable: ...nothing but the best is good enough from
Australian politicians and, the better it becomes, the more zealously
voters reserve their right to raise their expectations.
Howard wondered out loud whether perhaps the public was simply
playing a temporary joke on his government.
This inability to comprehend the popular sentiment expressed
in the polls underscores the enormity of the gulf that separates
the world of the ruling elite and the political and media establishment
on the one hand, and the one occupied by the vast mass of the
population on the other.
Opinion polls are a highly distorted reflection of political
reality, but the present trend does represent a definite political
shift. And it is one that goes well beyond the relative standing
of the two major partiesLiberal and Labor. It reflects a
far deeper sense of hostility and disgust towards official parliamentary
politics as a whole.
Whatever fluctuations may occur over coming months, one thing
can be definitely established: the current rise in its poll standing
indicates no political resurgence for the Labor Party. If Labor
wins the 2007 election it will be despite, not because of, its
policies. The past eleven years of the Howard government have
been marked by a degree of bipartisanship that is unprecedented
in Australias political history. And while Labor governs
in every state and territory, it does so under conditions of deep
dissatisfaction. Even as Labor governments were returned recently
in NSW, Queensland and Victoria, majorities in each state believed
they deserved to lose office.
The single most significant factor in the shift against the
government is the war in Iraqnot only the illegal invasion
and occupation, the catastrophe that has ensued, the tortures
at Abu Ghraib, the horrific toll on Iraqi lives and societybut
the broader processes of which it is a part. Millions of ordinary
people have become profoundly suspicious of the Bush administrations
war on terror and the Howard governments embrace
of it. They are aware of the lies and falsifications used by Howard
to justify both aggressive wars in the Middle East and his governments
assault on democratic rights at home, along with its accelerating
drive to militarise Australian society.
Yet, this suspicion and hostility can find no expression within
the parliamentary arena. Just as in the United States, where Bush
has enjoyed the complete support of the Democratic Party for the
Iraq war and the war on terror, so Howard has operated
with the full backing of the Labor opposition. In the last federal
election, held 18 months into the war, the Labor Party raised
no opposition to the invasion and spent the entire campaign trying
to avoid and suppress any discussion on the war. Today, while
Labor leader Kevin Rudd is keen to capitalise on the obvious widespread
popular opposition, his only disagreement with Howard is that,
while US troops should stay, some of Australias limited
forces should be withdrawn and sent to assist the US-led occupation
of Afghanistan.
One indication of the extent of this opposition was the recent
public outcry over the Howard governments collaboration
in the detention of Australian citizen David Hicks in Guantánamo
Bay. Since his capture in 2001, Hicks had been vilified as a dangerous
terrorist by both Howard and the Labor Party. But by last year,
public demand for his release from Guantánamo had developed
to such an extent that the government was forced to engineer a
deal, including his transfer to an Australian prison and his release
early next year.
There is also a deep sense of disquiet over the governments
failure to respond to global warming and climate change. So pronounced
has this become, that Howardwho for years denied the existence
of any climate problemnow suddenly claims he has the policies
to solve it.
For young people in particular, the eruption of war and militarism,
along with growing evidence of climate change, indicate the emergence
of a global crisis and of potential global disasters for which
the present political order not only has no remedies, but is directly
responsible.
Social inequality
The gap between official circles and the lives of ordinary
working people is nowhere more pronounced than in economic and
social life. According to the official line, the economic situation
has rarely been better. Growth has continued uninterrupted for
15 years, inflation remains low, the unemployment rate is the
lowest in more than three decades, consumer confidence is high
and there is a rising tide of prosperity. In the words of one
right-wing commentator, the working class relieved of its
chains has bought McMansions and speedboats.
One does not have to penetrate too far beneath the hype to
discover that the most striking feature of this prosperityfuelled,
to a large extent, by the boom in resource exports to Chinais
the growth of social inequality and a rapid rise in debt.
A small minority, at the apex of society, has become much,
much wealthier. For this social layerwhose views on life
and the economy find expression in the analyses presented
by large sections of the mediathings have never been so
good. The stock market is at record highs and still climbing,
corporate profits have grown by an annual average of 20 percent,
and executive salaries are skyrocketing. The latest Business
Review Weekly rich list survey revealed that the
richest 200 individuals in Australia have a combined wealth of
$128.6 billionmore than 50 percent higher than the equivalent
figure just two years ago.
These obscene levels of private wealth have come at the direct
expense of the working class. The share of national income going
to labour is just 53.8 percent, down from 56 percent in 2000.
The profit share rose from less than 24 percent to nearly 28 percent
over the same period. Until 2000, the profit share had never been
greater than 23 percent. To put that into context,
the Australian explained, business profits are now
about $80 billion a year higher than their long-term average.
Official unemployment figures have been kept artificially low
by the explosion of low-paid casual and part-time work. More than
30 percent of all jobs are estimated to be casual, leaving millions
of workers with no secure income. And those with full-time employment
face increased pressures as well. According to a recent study,
full-time male workers work an average of 45 hours per week, with
one-third wanting to return to the eight-hour day. For many people,
a significant proportion of the working week is taken up by unpaid
overtime.
Official inflation figures similarly fail to reflect the realities
of everyday life. Costs of living have increased in housing, transport,
health, education, childcare and recreation. Housing, in particular,
has become increasingly unaffordable for working families, with
average mortgage repayments in two cities, Sydney and Perth, more
than $3,000 per month, leading to an explosion in housing
stress. Household debt averages 165 percent of disposable
income. In working class areas, the number of home repossessions
is rapidly increasing, while bankruptcies occur at a rate nearly
three times higher than a decade ago, with 30,000 people declaring
themselves insolvent each year.
Hostility to the steady erosion of living conditions has found
expression in overwhelming public opposition to the governments
new industrial relations package, WorkChoices, which is aimed
at making further inroads into workers wages and conditions.
Demonstrations staged before the legislation went through parliament
were larger than any in Australias history, except for the
2003 antiwar rallies, and opposition has only intensified as WorkChoices
begins to directly affect increasing numbers of workers.
The role of Labor
Given the deepening of social, economic and political tensions
throughout its period of rule, the question that needs to be answered
is not why the polls are registering opposition, but why the Howard
government has been able to remain in office for the past 11 years.
The various media punditsboth left and right
winghave the answer immediately to hand. The secret of Howards
success, they maintain, lies in his uncanny ability to understand
and articulate the views of the average Australian.
This positiona variation on the theme that every voting
population gets the government it deservesexplains nothing,
least of all why opposition to the government, which has broadened
and deepened throughout its term of office, has been unable to
find any outlet within the official political structure.
The reasons for Howards electoral success can be found
not in the views of the so-called average voterwhich
are shifting and changing in this era of rapid economic, political,
social and cultural upheavalbut in the specific political
role played by the old organisations of the working classthe
Labor Party and the trade union leadership.
The Howard government came to office in March 1996 on a wave
of anger generated by the free market restructuring
policies of the Hawke-Keating Labor governments. While Howard
was the immediate beneficiary of this movement, his government
very soon confronted it.
In his first budget, in August 1996, Howard and his treasurer,
Peter Costello, launched a program of sweeping cuts to education
and living standards. It provoked mass opposition, culminating
in the storming of parliament house by thousands of workers. No
one was more opposed to this outpouring of popular anger than
the Labor and trade union leaders, who helped suppress the movement.
They then resolved to do everything they could to prevent any
repeat.
In the 1998 maritime dispute, which erupted over the government-backed
conspiracy to sack the entire waterfront workforce, the ACTU called
off industrial action and entered talks with the employers to
slash hundreds of jobs, right at the point where the conflict
with the government was beginning to extend to wider layers of
the working class.
In his campaign for the 1998 elections, held later that year,
Labor leader Kim Beazley offered no alternative to the Liberals
savage program, famously insisting that, in order to win, he had
to present a small target.
In the lead-up to the 2001 election, after trailing badly in
the opinion polls, Howard launched a scare campaign over refugees
and boat people, which the Labor Party fully endorsedattempting
to show it could be even more ruthless in attacking illegals-opening
the way, once again for the Liberals victory.
Then in 2004, having repudiated any opposition to the invasion
of Iraq and refusing to challenge the lies used to justify the
war, the Labor Party cleared the way for the Liberals to conduct
the election on their terms. Howard launched another scare campaignthis
time on interest ratesto which the Labor Party, having no
fundamental differences with the governments economic program,
could provide no answer.
And now the pattern is being repeated in the lead-up to the
2007 election. The Labor Party has completely aligned itself with
the governments war on terror, its aggressive,
neo-colonial military interventions in East Timor and the Pacific,
and its attacks on democratic rights. The plethora of anti-terror
legislation passed by the Howard government has been supported
by Labor in the federal parliament and backed up by parallel legislation
in the Labor states.
On every social issue, Rudd expresses agreement with the governments
free market agenda, proudly describing himself as
a fiscal conservativein line with his role as
an operative in the Queensland Goss Labor government, where he
earned the nickname Dr Death for slashing thousands
of public sector jobs.
The Labor Party agrees with Howards tax cuts for big
business and the wealthy and supports the private health rebate
system, under which private companies receive multi-million dollar
handouts and the health system is steadily privatised. Taking
his cue from his state Labor colleagues, Rudd advocates so-called
public private partnerships that allow major corporations
and investment banks to profit from the development of schools,
hospitals, roads and other infrastructure development.
Labors much-vaunted opposition to WorkChoices is no exception.
On the contrary, it is an expression of the same process.
When huge protest meetings and marches erupted against the
introduction of WorkChoices last year, the trade union leadership,
from the ACTU down, worked to ensure that the campaign
was channeled, not against the Howard government, but behind the
Labor Party. Only by returning a Labor government, they argued,
could the legislation be overturned.
For his part, Rudd has pledged to scrap WorkChoices contracts
in the future, while retaining the hundreds of thousands which
already exist. At the same time, however, he has committed a Labor
government to an industrial system that, just like WorkChoices
itself, meets the demands of business for flexibility.
Millions of ordinary people have opposed Howards legislation
out of a recognition that it will destroy living standards and
social conditions, not only for themselves but for the next, and
future, generations.
The perspective of the Labor Party and trade unions is very
different. As far as they are concerned, their anti-WorkChoices
rhetoric is part of a campaign aimed at establishing their credentials
to the corporate and financial elites. Only a partnership between
a Labor government and the trade union apparatus is capable of
initiating the next round of economic restructuring.
Only such a partnership can impose the measures that will become
necessary once the China boom winds down or collapses.
In this, Rudds Labor team is responding to
repeated criticisms of the Howard government by the corporate
and financial elites, reflected in editorial columns in the Australian
and the Australian Financial Review. According to them,
the government has pulled back from implementing further far-reaching
economic reforms. Indeed, the Australian has
commented more than once that more was achieved in this area by
the Hawke-Keating government than under Howard.
But the achievements of Hawke and Keating were
predicated upon the collaboration of the trade union bureaucracyfrom
the implementation of the prices and incomes Accord in 1983, to
the smashing of the Builders Labourers Federation in 1986, through
to the use of troops in breaking the airline pilots strike
in 1989 and the introduction of so-called enterprise agreements,
which laid the basis for the trade-offs of basic conditions
that form the basis of Howards industrial relations regime.
So the Labor and trade union leaders insist they must be called
upon once again. And politically-sensitive sections of the upper-middle
class sense that, this time, a Labor government could win. Suddenly
a host of celebrities and union bureaucrats has emerged
to offer themselves as new Labor candidatesjust as numbers
of coalition MPs announce that it is now time to retire.
Socialist alternative
An election campaign can be a decisive experience for millions
of people, especially youth. If it is to contribute to a genuine
development in political education and understanding, some basic
truths must be established from the outset.
The first is that the Labor Party represents no political alternative
to the Howard government. Anyone who argues that it does, or that,
at the very least, it should be supported because it constitutes
a lesser evil, is either naïve or engaged in
conscious deception.
Drawing the historical balance sheet on the role of the Labor
and trade union bureaucracy is well overdue. Far from representing
the working class, these organisations, and their nationalist
programs, have become mechanisms for subordinating its interests
to the demands and dictates of the financial markets and corporations.
The Socialist Equality Party (SEP) will be the only party speaking
for the working class in the 2007 federal elections. The central
axis of the partys campaign will be the need for working
people to advance their own independent political perspective
against war and militarism, in defence of democratic rights, and
for genuine social equality.
There can be no solution to the problems confronting millions
of ordinary people within the existing political set-up. Workers
and youth must carry out a decisive political break from all the
establishment parties and take up the political struggle for the
perspective of socialist internationalism. Only through the revolutionary
reorganisation of society, placing social need above the accumulation
of private wealth and profit, can the basic needs of the vast
majority be met. We urge all supporters and World Socialist
Web Site readers to contact the SEP and to join us in the
struggle to build it as the new mass party of the working class.
See Also:
Australia: Labor endorses Howard government's
"fairness test" fraud
[13 June 2007]
Australian budget: massive
vote-buying accelerates "free market" agenda
[9 May 2007]
Australia: Labor conference
outlines pro-war agenda
[3 May 2007]
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