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WSWS : News
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NSW (Australia) election:
SEP candidates address Sydney election meeting
By our reporters
19 March 2007
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The Socialist Equality Party (Australia) held its final public
meeting yesterday in its campaign for the March 24 New South Wales
(NSW) state election. Before an attentive audience of students
and working people, young and old, the partys candidates
focussed on the central issues of political perspective raised
by the SEPs intervention in the election.
The keynote speaker was SEP national secretary and WSWS International
Editorial Board member Nick Beams, who is heading the partys
slate of 15 candidates for the Legislative Council (upper house).
Also speaking were the SEP candidates for the Legislative AssemblyJames
Cogan for the southeastern Sydney seat of Heffron, Patrick OConnor
in the inner-west seat of Marrickville and Noel Holt in the working
class city of Newcastle.
Chairing the meeting, SEP assistant national secretary Linda
Tenenbaum explained that the primary purpose of the SEPs
campaign was not to canvass for votes. It was to clarify, discuss
with and educate ordinary working people, and especially young
people, on the political tasks posed by war, escalating social
inequality and the never-ending encroachment on democratic and
civil rights, and to outline the alternative socialist perspective
needed to advance the independent interests and needs of the international
working class.
She observed that the mainstream mediafrom the Murdoch
and Fairfax newspapers to the government-run Australian Broadcasting
Corporation (ABC) and Special Broadcasting Services (SBS)had
refused to even mention the SEPs candidates. This was despite
admitting that voters faced a bleak choice in the
election, with opinion polls showing intense dissatisfaction with
both the state Labor government and its official Liberal Party
opposition.
Tenenbaum emphasised that the SEP was the only party in the
election refusing to allocate second-voting preferences to any
other party or candidate. Both the Greens and the so-called
Socialist Alliance have openly argued, along with the Sydney
Morning Herald, that Labor is the lesser evil
in this campaign and should, ultimately, be supported.
We refuse to lend our weight and support in any manner
to the bankrupt conception that voting Labor is preferable to
voting Liberal. Our campaign has made clear that for the working
class a complete political break from Labor and the two-party
system itself is long overdue. What is needed is the building
of an independent political movement of the working class on the
basis of a socialist and internationalist perspectivea perspective
that challenges the very foundations of the current social order,
not only in Australia but internationally. There are no other
means of averting the descent into another world war.
The first speaker was the SEP candidate
for Heffron, James Cogan, a staff writer for the WSWS, who joined
the Trotskyist movement after opposing the first US-led war against
Iraq in 1990-91. He said the SEP campaign was insisting that the
pre-eminent issue confronting the working class in Australia and
around the world was the eruption of US militarism.
This election is taking place under conditions of an
escalation of US military operations in both Afghanistan and Iraq,
and the steady build-up of US air and naval power in the Persian
Gulf targetted against Iran, he said. Each week witnesses
a new stream of propaganda from Washington, accusing the Iranian
regime of supplying weapons for use against American troops occupying
Iraq and of attempting to construct nuclear weapons.
The parallels with the months leading up to the US invasion
of Iraq, exactly four years ago this coming Tuesday, are both
obvious and ominous. The Bush administration is seeking to fabricate
a climate in which it can launch a third, criminal war of aggression.
Having already seized Iraq and the worlds second largest
reserves of oil, Iran is being targetted as it lies above massive
oil and gas fields and is the strategic intersection of Central
Asia and the Middle East.
Cogan continued: The SEP and the WSWS have stressed that
the war policy of the Bush administration is not the outcome of
a few deranged individuals in the White House. It is the inevitable
outcome of the fierce global competition that is raging between
the worlds major financial and industrial corporations,
and the national governments that serve them, for control over
resources, markets and profits. US imperialism is using military
force to establish hegemony over the key resource of modern economyoil
and gas...
The motive for the war is congealed in the draft oil
law that is being pushed by the puppet government the US has installed
in Baghdad. The law will put as many as 65 of Iraqs 80 known
untapped oil fields up for bid by foreign companies, on the most
lucrative of terms. American energy transnationals will be first
in line.
Cogan stated: An international mass working class movement
must be developed against militarism. Our campaign has been aimed
at clarifying the perspective upon which such a movement must
be built.
He illustrated the necessity for that axis by referring to
the political travesty that had occurred at the supposed
antiwar rally convened in Sydney the day before by the Stop the
War Coalition, which included the Socialist Alliance and a variety
of other protest groups that labelled themselves socialist.
The rally was not an antiwar rally. It was a vote
for Labor rally. Not only did Socialist Alliance and Green
figures implicitly call for support for Labor, one of the main
speakers was Labor MP Meredith Burgmann, the president of the
NSW upper house since 1999.
Organisations that claim to be socialist are promoting
the lie that Labor holds an antiwar position and can be pressured
to speak for the mass antiwar sentiment because [federal Labor
leader] Kevin Rudd has stated he will withdraw Australian troops
from Iraq.
What is the truth? In 2003, Labors only disagreement
with the Iraq war was that it was not expressly sanctioned by
a UN resolution, as the 1991 Gulf War was. Labor has given the
Bush administration a guarantee that it will support the ongoing
presence of American military forces in Iraq and will only withdraw
500 of the 1,400 Australian military personnel deployed there,
primarily to enable their redeployment to Afghanistan or the South
Pacific. Rudd declared on Friday he would support any increase
in Australian troop numbers in Afghanistan.
Labor is committed to the US alliance and US bases in
Australia and if it won government would protect Howard and his
cabinet from necessary war crimes prosecution. Moreover, Labor
is already on record lending support and credibility to the campaign
of lies and propaganda against Iran.
Cogan concluded: The Iraq war has the same significance
today as the German Nazi regimes militarist campaign in
the 1930s had for the generations who endured World War I and
II. It represents the initial stage in a desperate and reckless
attempt by the US ruling elite to use military force to retain
its diminishing global dominance. It threatens to unleash open
conflict between the major capitalist powers and ultimately, a
third world war.
The perspective spelt out in the election manifesto we
have been distributing throughout this election represents the
necessary political answer to the barbarism, inequality and injustice
that is generated by the profit system. We outline the basis for
the independent and international mobilisation of the working
class to bring an end to the destructive and irrational capitalist
market and nation-state and lay the foundations for resolving
all the great issues confronting humanity. I encourage you to
join our party and our struggle for a socialist future.
Militarism in the Pacific and war
at home
The second speaker was the SEP candidate for Marrickville,
Patrick OConnor, a history honours graduate who joined the
SEP in 2003 and since 2005 has worked as a WSWS correspondent
in the UK, US and France as well as Australia.
OConnor explained why, in
making the struggle against war and militarism the axis of its
election campaign, the SEP had placed particular emphasis on the
Howard governments US-backed aggressive military operations
in East Timor and the South Pacific. Quoting the SEP election
statement, he said: We completely reject the claim advanced
by the media and political establishmentincluding the Labor
Party, Greens, and Democratsthat Australian soldiers and
police are engaged in humanitarian work. They have
been deployed in order to secure the Australian ruling elites
domination of its own special sphere of influence.
Events in East Timor during the election campaign had vindicated
that analysis, he said. OConnor pointed to the Australian
forces killing of two men who were resisting efforts by
the occupying troops and the Timorese government to evict internally
displaced refugees from a camp outside Dili airport on February
23, and the killing of five East Timorese rebel soldiers on March
4, ostensibly in pursuit of former major Alfredo Reinado.
Canberra has demonstrated its readiness to eliminate
anyone in the region considered an obstacle to its agenda. Recent
events can be understood as something of a watershed, a moment
in which Australian imperialisms humanitarian mask slipped
and its true character was revealed for all to see.
OConnor asked why these killings had aroused no outrage
or protests in Australia. To understand, it was necessary to review
recent history, notably the enthusiastic support given by the
Greens and middle class protest movements to the Howard governments
dispatch of troops to Timor in 1999.
The speaker explained that the downfall of Suhartos Indonesian
military dictatorship in 1998 threatened Australias lucrative
arrangements with the Indonesian regime, which had signed the
1989 Timor Gap Treaty with the Hawke Labor government, giving
Australia the lions share of the oil and gas fields beneath
the Timor Sea.
The Howard government finally decided that the only way
in which the multi-billion dollar interests of Australias
oil and gas firms could be secured was by sending in the troops
to occupy the territory while overseeing its transition to formal
independence. This so-called independent state would then be under
Canberras direct domination, thereby advancing the economic
and geo-strategic interests of the Australian ruling elite.
Critical to Howards phony pretext of humanitarian
intervention was the support he received from national troops
in rallies, where organisers insisted that the only answer
to the violence wreaked by pro-Indonesian militias in East Timor
was to send in the Australian military.
This continuing political line-upLabor, the Greens and
Socialist Alliancebehind Australian militarism bore the
responsibility for the fact that working people in Australia were
yet to grasp the full significance of the Howard governments
commitment to escalate military operations throughout the Asia-Pacific
region, as part of Canberras global alignment with Washington
against its emerging rivals, such as China.
OConnor concluded: The Socialist Equality Party
is the only party contesting the NSW election which opposes Canberras
predatory operations in the South Pacific. We seek to clarify
the driving forces behind these operations and explain the objective
necessity for a united and independent political struggle of Australian
working people and the impoverished masses of the South Pacific
against our common enemythe Howard government and all its
accomplices in the political establishment.
The re-emergence of Australian colonialism in the Pacific
is being accompanied by a wholesale assault on democratic and
constitutional rights at home. Democratic forms of rule are ultimately
incompatible with a state of permanent military mobilisation.
Australian society is already being thoroughly militarised, with
young people facing the prospect of being dragooned into the military.
Demands for conscription will inevitably intensify as recruitment
targets continue to go unfulfilled.
Meanwhile, the media and major parties will step up their
ferocious ideological offensive which has already coalesced around
the bipartisan promotion of Australian values. Every
form of nationalism, anti-Muslim chauvinism, and backwardness
is being whipped up in order to divert opposition and create a
political and social climate conducive to war and militarism.
But these methods have definite limits and there is no
doubt that these limits are already being reached. There is enormous
opposition towards, and disgust with, the entire political and
media establishment. The critical question, however, is how these
oppositional sentiments can find a genuine and progressive political
outlet. Our insistence that what is required is the establishment
of the political independence of the working class, on a socialist
and internationalist program, is being met with a serious and
thoughtful response, as this meeting itself testifies. I encourage
you all to read the World Socialist Web Site, support the
partys campaign in the final week, and give serious consideration
to joining our international movement.
The third speaker was the SEP candidate
for Newcastle, Noel Holt, a Telstra worker for 41 years, who actively
opposed the Accords signed by the trade unions with the Hawke-Keating
Labor government to cut real wages and conditions and joined the
SEP in 1996. Holt explained the connection between militarism
abroad and the domestic assault on the working class and young
people.
This election is being held in a time of the rapid escalation
of militarism and war in the Middle East and rivalry between the
nation states over global resources and trade. At the same time
a war is being carried out against ordinary working people at
home.
Around the world social programs such as health, education,
public housing and social welfare are being starved of much needed
funds while billions of dollars are being diverted from the public
purse to pay for massive increases to military budgets.
In Australia, while public funds are being diverted to
the military and police, workers and their families are forced
to queue for hours in bulk-billing medical clinics
or wait on a hospital admission list for weeks, months, or in
some cases, years to get medical treatment. Meanwhile their children
are forced to attend schools with overcrowded classrooms and in
many cases in gross need of maintenance work. In NSW, the maintenance
budget for public schools is estimated to be $100 million under
funded.
The people of Newcastle have been hard hit by big business
restructures. Over the past two decades, large industrial companies
like BHP, Commonwealth Steel and shipbuilding yards have closed,
eliminating tens of thousands of jobs.
Thousands of coal mining jobs had also been destroyed through
mine closures, new open cut extraction processes and the introduction
of 12-hour shifts, with the agreement of the unions. Over the
same period, 42,000 Telstra workers had been forced out the door,
starting under the Hawke-Keating government.
With a teenage unemployment rate of 28.9 percent Newcastle
is now facing huge social problems, particularly among the youth.
In Windale, a Newcastle suburb with a large proportion of public
housing, the total unemployment rate is a staggering 37 percent.
Holt denounced the local media, aided and abetted by Labor,
the Liberals and the Greens who jumped onto a law and order
bandwagon to divert attention away from the resulting social problems.
These politicians have saturated all media outlets by
trying to outbid each other with promises to increase police numbers,
open up closed police stations and bring in more severe penalties.
The SEP is the only political party pointing out that the issues
of poverty and social inequality, with their root cause in the
profit-driven market system, must be addressed...
The social imbalance between the rich and ordinary working
people is growing wider every day. At least 3.5 million Australians
live in households earning a combined income of less than $400
per week, while at the top end of town the wealthy 200 individuals
have a combined income of $101 billion, up by an extraordinary
22 percent since 2005.
Holt concluded: Against the pro-market policies of all
the existing parliamentary parties, the SEP advances definite
measures to ensure well-paid, decent jobs for all. Instead of
boosting corporate coffers, and diverting billions of dollars
into war and militarism, this money must be injected into urgently
needed public works in areas such as housing, health, education,
childcare and public transport...
Such a socially progressive program is inconceivable
without challenging the very framework of the private profit system.
The overriding task facing working people is the building of a
mass party to fight for the reorganisation of society on the basis
of new prioritiesto meet social need not corporate profit.

Nick Beams, the final speaker, reviewed the underlying economic
contradictions, particularly the declining position of US capitalism,
propelling the major powers toward military conflicts. He examined
the critical lessons to be drawn from the pro-war role of the
US Democrats and the Australian Labor Party and the failure of
the mass antiwar protest movement of 2003 to halt the drive to
militarism. Finally, he tackled the resulting conception that
nothing can be done, explaining that the political
movement of the international working class could go forward only
on the basis of a socialist strategy to reorganise the global
economy to provide for human need, not corporate profit (see Nick Beams outlines socialist perspective
to fight war and militarism).
Questions and discussion
After the speakers, a generous collection raised more than
$800 for the SEP election fund. During question time, numbers
of important issues were raised. One question asked about the
SEPs attitude to Richard Dawkinss The God Delusion.
As part of his reply, Nick Beams urged members of the audience
to read the WSWS review of the book.
Another question, about why the SEPs name would not appear
on ballot papers, led to a discussion of the anti-democratic laws
passed by the established parliamentary parties in recent years
to block the registration of new parties.
One regular reader of the WSWS asked a series of questions
about what immediate practical steps the SEP advocated,
as distinct from providing the analysis published on the WSWS.
The questioner said he agreed with the speakers exposure
of the role played by the other parties, but wanted a concrete
plan of action.
In the course of their replies, Nick Beams and other speakers
explained that the essential political problem facing working
people was not an inability to take action but the lack of a clear
alternative perspective. They emphasised that the turn to war
meant there would be no shortage of political convulsions and
mass struggles in the coming period, as there had been at critical
points of the twentieth century.
Already, deep disaffection existed toward the old parties,
but this had to be translated into a conscious political break
from their entire framework. What was needed was the development
of a new mass socialist movement, grounded on a scientific internationalist
outlook. The key issue was clarifying the working class and young
people about the political lessons of the previous century and
the need for an independent, socialist and global perspective
to transform society.
After the meeting, an international exchange student from Malaysia,
studying a business degree at University of Technology, Sydney,
spoke to the WSWS. Asked what he thought were the main reasons
for the US drive to war in the Middle East, he said: They
are trying to control China. They cannot fight them economically,
where China is strong, and too big, so they are trying to control
Chinas resources. Most of the oil comes from Iraq and around
the region. The US is trying to control the oil so it can control
the world.
The student had not been very aware before the meeting of the
extent of Australias military involvement in East Timor
and the south Pacific region, and how that related to Australias
support for US imperialism. Australias intervention in East
Timor was also about controlling resources, he said.
He commented that in the 2003 antiwar demonstrations, a
lot of people participated but nothing happened actually,
and governments were not getting the point. When told
about the International Students for Social Equality (ISSE) emergency
conference being held at Ann Arbor in the US at the end of this
month, he replied that this was good as, it is only the
Americans who can stop America from doing what it is doing.
He said Bush and those responsible for the Iraq war should be
criminally punished before a tribunal.
Maxine, a young German-born student from Newcastle, said the
meeting was enjoyable and most interesting. She said
she came to the meeting because she wanted to have a clearer picture
of what was happening politically, not just in Australia but internationally.
Usually you dont find that when you go to a meeting.
What was said about the Solomon Islands, for example,
was quite new to me. Without the information that I received today,
I dont think I would have conceived that the Australian
intervention was something in the political interests of Australia,
rather than something to help the local people.
In Germany I used to support the SPD [Social Democratic
Party] but they were the ones who, in coalition with the Greens,
sent German troops overseas for the first time since World War
II. The general conception in Germany is that the troops have
been sent to Afghanistan not for Germanys interests but
to help the people, under the cover of humanitarian reasons. Members
of society are quite mis-educated. This meeting clarified some
things for me.
See Also:
SEP Election Web Site
Australia: SEP candidate Noel Holt raises
vital issues at Newcastle business forum
[17 March 2007]
Australian state election: Major parties
ignore public school decay
[16 March 2007]
Australia: Labor and Liberal plan NSW
public sector job cuts
[14 March 2007]
Socialism and the struggle against US
militarism
[6 March 2007]
Australia: the socialist alternative
in the New South Wales state election
Support the SEP campaign
[10 February 2007]
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