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Australia: SEP candidate Noel Holt raises vital issues at
Newcastle business forum
By Terry Cook, SEP candidate for NSW (Australia) Legislative
Council
17 March 2007
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Noel Holt, the Socialist Equality Party (SEP) candidate for
Newcastle in the March 24 New South Wales state election, raised
vital issues facing working people and small businesses when he
spoke at a candidates forum convened by the Hunter Business
Chamber on March 14.
Out of a platform of nine candidates from two Hunter region
electorates, including Labor, Greens, the Christian Democratic
Party and two independents, Holt was the only one to raise the
dangers posed by the war in Iraq and growing US belligerence against
Iran.
The SEP is standing in the election to advance a socialist
and internationalist program to fight militarism and war, social
inequality and the growing attacks on democratic rights,
Holt explained. He said the eruption of US militarism was the
pre-eminent political issue facing people internationally
and warned that the resulting breakdown of the world order threatens
a global catastrophe.
Holt, a former Telstra worker, then addressed the topics set
by the forums organisers, including health and safety regulations,
infrastructure, the skills shortage and tax.
As I said, ours is a socialist program. Im sure
everyone here will immediately think we advocate the immediate
nationalisation of everything, including small and medium sized
businesses. This is not the case. We do advocate the conversion
of all large industrial, service, pharmaceutical, mining, and
agricultural corporations, together with the banking and financial
institutions, into publicly owned enterprises, with full compensation
to small shareholders, and transparent and fully accountable negotiations
with other investors.
Holt said small and medium businesses, however, played a vital
part in the economy, providing many jobs and essential services.
They were being squeezed from all sides, leading to
enormous pressures on owners and their families.
Under a rationally planned socialist economy, such enterprises
would receive government support, he explained, including
ready access to credit at reasonable rates and more stable market
conditions, provided they guarantee decent wages and working conditions.
Help would include government assistance to ensure a
safe and healthy work environment to end the current situation
where the full responsibility for health, safety and insurance
costs in small business devolves on the owners themselvesto
meet the demands and profit requirements of the major insurance
companies, he said. Workers compensation, for
example, and safety training should be fully funded by the government.
Holt said a uniform tax regime should be established throughout
Australia to end the current dog-eat-dog battle by state
governments to attract investment away from their competitors
by granting tax concessions to large business investors through
the destruction of social conditions.
He called for the abolition of all regressive taxes such as
the Howard governments Goods and Service Tax (GST) that
shifts the burden of tax from high-income earners to ordinary
working people and the state payroll tax, which is
a regressive tax on small business.
Instead a progressive tax should be made on large corporations
that extract billions of dollars in profits, in order to fund
social programs and the development of social and public infrastructure,
Holt stated.
Newcastle, once a major industrial centre, has been hit over
the past two decades by massive plant closures and the slashing
of jobs in mining and steel in particular. Teenage employment
in Newcastle stands at 28.9 percent, while the vast majority of
jobs created are low-paid, part-time and casual positions. There
exists a deepening crisis in chronically under-funded services
and social and public infrastructure.
Holt pointed out that the current shortage of skilled workers
was one of the major consequences of three decades of spending
cutbacks by Labor and Liberal governments. He called for
a program to provide free high-quality education at all
levels with job training, apprenticeship programs
and higher education made available to all who want them.
The gulf between the policies of the SEP and those of other
candidates became even clearer during question time. Asked to
state their position on law and order, every other
candidate declared the central problem was a lack of police.
Their response was completely in tune with a frenzied media
campaign over the past two weeks highlighting a number of late
night altercations in inner Newcastle and wild claims that thugs
and bashers control the streets.
All the well-publicised Newcastle candidatesLabors
Jodie McKay, Liberals Martin Babakhan, the Greens
John Osborne and independents Bryce Gaudry and John Tateare
on record calling for a massive increase in police numbers to
crack down on youth and outsiders coming into the
city. At a previous forum, Osborne called for the reopening of
all closed police stations.
Holt was the only candidate to oppose these calls. The
media hysteria on law and order, supported by all the official
political parties, is a diversion from the real causes, which
have their roots in the staggering levels of social inequality
presided over by both Labor and Liberal governments.
Holt explained that the social problems could only be addressed
by a program to create well-paying decent jobs and by pouring
billions of dollars into funding education, health and other social
infrastructure.
Given that every candidate had referred to problems with infrastructure
and services, a member of the audience asked them to state their
positions on the Liberal pledge to slash 20,000 public sector
jobs and Labors plan to axe 5,000.
While decrying the Liberal plan, Labors McKay reiterated
her earlier position that Labors elimination of 5,000 jobs
was responsible trimming. Independent candidate Gaudry
said the shedding of 20,000 workers, would decimate services
and the destruction of 5,000 jobs would also impact on frontline
services.
Gaudrys concern would have been more believable if not
for the fact that he served as the Labor MP for Newcastle for
19 years and only quit the Labor Party when it failed to re-endorse
him as its candidate. During that time, Gaudry happily went along
with the axing of many thousands of public sector jobs in rail,
electricity and other vital areas.
Holt rejected outright any cuts to public sector jobs, saying
they were vital to the provision of essential services, which
were being continually gutted. These services are being
sacrificed to make funding available for decaying infrastructure,
which should have been addressed years ago and to
provide tax breaks and concessions to big business.
Unlike every other speaker, Holt made clear that the issue
of jobs, crumbling public infrastructure and cuts to social services
could be addressed only by making deep inroads into private ownership
by big corporations.
Large corporations must be turned over to public ownership
and genuine democratic control, allowing the massive profits made
by such enterprises to be used to provide adequate public and
social services, he said. This would provide for many
more decent-paying jobs, because we would need more public sector
workers, not less.
See Also:
SEP Election Web Site
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]
The NSW state elections and the climate
change debate
[9 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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