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Australia: Why you should vote for the SEP in the New South
Wales election
By Nick Beams, SEP candidate for the NSW Legislative Council
23 March 2007
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The NSW election campaign has again revealed the ever-widening
chasm between the major political parties and the concerns of
the broad masses of ordinary working people.
Four years ago this week the United States, with the full support
of the Australian government, launched its invasion of Iraq, defying
all precepts of international law, and committing the same war
crimes for which the Nazis were indicted at the Nuremberg Trials.
That decision marked a turning point in world history. It signalled
a return to the kind of militarism and wars of aggression that
characterised the 1930s and eventually gave rise to World War
II.
In the four years since the invasion, Iraq has been turned
into a hellish nightmare. More than 650,000 people are dead as
a direct result of the war and another 4 million have been turned
into refugees or displaced from their homes. But even as the carnage
continues, the US is drawing up new plans to attack Iran as part
of its agenda of seizing control of the entire Middle East and
the vast oil resources there.
In the course of the NSW election campaign, however, there
has been no mention of the war in Iraq: Likewise the attacks on
basic democratic rights, widening social inequality and the worsening
social conditions for millions of ordinary people.
The major parties, together with the Greens and the Democrats,
have sought to restrict any discussion to the narrow framework
of so-called local or state issues, while the so-called
Socialist Alliance dutifully trots along behind, insisting that
the Labor Party represents the lesser evil.
The Socialist Equality Party has stood candidates in order
to raise before ordinary working people the necessity for a break
from Labor, the Greens and the entire framework of official politics,
and the construction of a new mass socialist party of the working
class that fights for the total re-organisation of society. Only
through the development of such an independent political movement
can the struggle against war and social inequality be tackled.
Given the longer-term nature of this task, we have often been
asked the question: what is your practical alternative for the
situation today? What immediate action do you propose to address
the undeniably urgent problems confronting ordinary people?
The very way the question is framed points to the basic political
issues that have to be tackled.
There exists among broad layers of working people and youth,
widespread alienation from the entire political establishment,
combined with the sentiment that, while things need to change,
nothing much can be done. Ordinary people are powerless. They
have no say and this election, like previous ones, wont
change a thing.
These positions are the sharpest expression of a deep-going
crisis of political perspective. And it is precisely this crisis
of perspective, not a lack of action, that is the
source of the present political problems.
One only has to recall the period leading up to the invasion
of Iraq. Hundreds of millions of people around the world opposed
the war aims of the United States, saw through the lies about
weapons of mass destruction, and understood that the war was motivated
by a drive to grab the vital oil resources of the Middle East.
Tens of millions of people demonstrated against the war in the
largest international protests in history.
But the demonstrations were impotent because the perspective
guiding them failed to go beyond a protest to the powers-that-be,
combined with the vague hope that the pressure of public opinion
would force the Bush administration and its allies to change course.
The recent mid-term Congressional elections in the United States
raised the same issues. Millions of people set out to vote against
the US war on Iraq and the militarism of the Bush regime, resulting
in the return of a Democratic majority in both houses. But in
the five months since the elections, the Democrats have made clear
that they will not only take no action to end the war, they will
back an attack on Iran.
This experience will no doubt be repeated in the federal elections
in Australia, due by the end of this year. Millions of ordinary
people will give vent to their deep-seated hostility to the Howard
government. But the election of a Labor government will not end
support for the US militarist agenda and the so-called war
on terror. It will merely result in certain adjustments
in troop numbers: a reduction of forces in Iraq matched by an
increase in Afghanistan.
The antiwar movement can only be revived to the extent that
it is based on a conscious recognition of the need to take action
independent of and against all the parties of the political establishment.
And that requires a new perspective, grounded on the understanding
that, like the militarism of the 1930s, the US-led wars on Iraq
and Afghanistan are the outcome, not simply of the Bush administration,
but of an historic crisis of the capitalist order. In other words,
the struggle against war must be based on a revolutionary perspective.
In this election campaign, the Socialist Equality Party has
outlined a clear program to meet the pressing needs of working
people for decent wages, health care, education and social services.
But such a program will not be implemented within the existing
economic and political order, where all social needs are subordinated
to the drive for profit.
That is why the realisation of these policies depends upon
the development of an independent mass political movement of the
working class, which has as its goal the taking of power and the
establishment of a workers government, committed to ensuring that
economic activity is organised to meet social needs, not private
profit. In other words, the most important immediate practical
activity is to educate working people and youthto raise
their understanding of the nature of the task that confronts them.
What is the alternative? Certainly it does not reside in the
trade unions. These organisations have not only ceased to function
as defence organisations of the working class, their leaderships
have played the central role in imposing cuts in jobs, wages and
conditions over the past quarter of a century.
The transformation of the unions is the outcome of far-reaching
economic processes. The globalisation of production, which has
transformed the world economy over the past three decades, has
rendered completely anachronistic the old program of trade unionism,
which sought concessions for workers by means of militant trade
union struggle aimed at pressuring the national state.
Consider the statistics on the level of industrial action carried
out over the past 20 years. They show a marked decline in industrial
disputes across the various economic sectors between 1985 and
2004, ranging from a 95 percent fall in mining to a 53 percent
drop in education, health and community services. In 1985 the
number of working days lost per 1,000 employees each year was
223. In 2004 it was just 46. The Australian Chamber of Commerce
and Industry (ACCI) has welcomed the decline as representing a
major change in Australian workplace relations since workplace
reform commenced and a sign that employers and employees
were getting on with business.
In fact, the fall in industrial stoppages is not the product
of rising living standards and increased social equality. Inequality
is actually escalating. In the period from 1996 to 2003, the share
of income received by each of the bottom four quintiles, representing
80 percent of the population, declined. The top quintile, representing
the top 20 percent, increased its share of national income from
37.3 to 38.3 percent.
According to a paper published by the Catholic social welfare
agency, the St Vincent de Paul Society, more than 8 million people,
some 42 percent of the population, had a disposable income of
less than $21,000 per year, while 4.5 million of them (23 percent
of the population) were in households with an aggregate income
of less than $400 per week.
The agency concluded that Australia was on a headlong
dash into the chasm of inequality with the Gini coefficient,
the widely recognised measure of inequality, rising from 0.296
in 1996-97 to 0.309 in 2002-2003.
Notwithstanding the hopes of the ACCI, the virtual disappearance
of trade union activity does not mean that class conflict has
ended. It means that the inevitable eruption of class struggles
will assume new and more explosive forms. Anger is growing over
myriad issues, including the Iraq war, the growth of militarism
and the deepening attacks on democratic rights. The large shift
in public sentiment on the detention of David Hicks at Guantánamo
Bay is an expression of the process that is underway.
Herein lies the significance of the fight to develop socialist
consciousness, which forms the core of all the work of the Socialist
Equality Party. This does not mean trying to convince workers,
by means of agitation and slogans, that they should fight against
capitalism. Rather, it proceeds from the scientific understanding
that the ever-deepening contradictions of the world capitalist
economy, expressed in the eruption of militarism, war and deepening
social inequality, and the increasing instability of the entire
economic and financial system, will inevitably give rise to enormous
social and political struggles.
The crucial issue in determining the outcome of these struggles
will be the development of a politically educated and conscious
mass movement, guided by a political leadership with a historical
understanding of the contradictions of capitalism and the social
and political relations produced by them, and able to develop
the necessary revolutionary strategy.
The widespread alienation from, and hostility to, the existing
political establishment, the deep dissatisfaction with the present
social order, the general feeling that there must be a changethese
sentiments, themselves an expression of the historical malaise
of capitalist society, constitute the starting point of political
struggle. But only the starting point. They must be transformed
into a conscious mass socialist movement.
This is the SEPs perspective. And this is why we call
on all WSWS readers in NSW to vote for our party in this election
Every vote constitutes a small, but important, step. It signifies
a conscious choice to reject all forms of bourgeois and nationalist
politics and to embrace the necessity for the genuine socialist
and internationalist alternative. Most importantly, we urge all
WSWS readers to study the policies and program of the SEP and
our sister parties around the world, and take the most important
practical step of all by joining our ranks.
See Also:
SEP Election Web Site
New South Wales March 24 election:
How to vote for the Socialist Equality Party (Australia)
[22 March 2007]
Australia: the socialist alternative
in the New South Wales state election
Support the SEP campaign
[10 February 2007]
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