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Government campaign launch
Howards desperate appeal to big business
By Patrick OConnor, Socialist Equality Party candidate
for Grayndler
13 November 2007
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The official launch of the coalition governments federal
election campaign in Brisbane yesterday saw Prime Minister John
Howard, Treasurer Peter Costello and Deputy Prime Minister Mark
Vaile issue a desperate plea to big business to allow them another
term in office. The three leaders insisted they were the only
true economic conservatives and that Rudds right-wing,
pro-business pronouncements could not be trusted.
The stage managed media event, held before a handpicked audience
largely comprised of Liberal and National Party parliamentarians
and staffers, epitomised the unreal character of the entire official
campaign. Why, one might well ask, did the government wait more
than four weeks into the six week campaign to hold its launch?
Because parliamentarians can continue to spend public money covering
their airfares, accommodation, office expenses, and other campaign
costs up until the day of the official launch. That is why all
the parliamentary parties postpone these events for as long as
they possibly can. That way they can siphon the maximum public
funds for their electioneering. Labors official launch will
be held tomorrow.
Yesterdays event demonstrated the degree to which the
government has been unnerved by the Labor Partys largely
successful efforts in winning media and corporate support on the
basis of outflanking Howard from the right.
Labor leader Rudd has criticised the government for not going
further in pushing through economic reforms; and, heeding the
advice of the Murdoch press, has promoted himself as a Blair-style
Labor moderniser. The Howard government has attempted
to counter this by insisting that the opposition leader does not
really mean what he says. Thus yesterdays truly bizarre
spectacle of Costello and Vaile trying to redbait Rudd by associating
Labor with socialism and communism.
[Labor] would have you believe there were never reds
under the bed, just economic conservatives, Costello declared.
Poor economic conservatives, just wanting to be free. It
is absurd. It is a pretence to see them through to government.
The treasurer also referred to Labor deputy leader Julia Gillards
membership of Socialist Forum in her university days.
Costellos diatribe was followed by Mark Vailes
description of Rudds so-called education revolutiona
series of meagre promises on higher education spendingas
something you hear about in a communist country, not in
Australia.
These remarks underscore the mounting panic within government
ranks.
The official campaign launch coincided with the publication
in the Australian of yet another opinion poll showing Labor
ahead on a two-party preferred basis 55 to 45 percent. None of
the governments manoeuvres this year, or its campaign spending
promises, has managed to shift the polls even slightly. Moreover,
there is growing evidence that the Australian ruling elite is
preparing to swing decisively behind Rudd.
Howards speech consisted of a series of right-wing nostrums
concerning individual responsibility and the family, boasts about
the state of the economy and new promises of more public subsidies
for private schools and day care facilities.
Remarkably, none of the central themes of Howards previous
election victories was even mentioned. The word terrorism
was not uttered, nor refugee or border security.
Similarly, Iraq and Afghanistan were only indirectly referred
to in the context of Howards tribute to Australian troops
working in many trouble spots around the world. The
silence on all these issues reflects the overwhelming hostility
of ordinary people to the Howard governments lies on foreign
policy, terror threats and children overboard.
Howards speech centred on a plea to be given more time
to advance his agenda. I want to complete the transition
of this nation from a welfare state to an opportunity society,
he declared.
This message was clearly directed towards the ruling elite.
By welfare state the prime minister means any public
support for the most impoverished and vulnerable layers of the
working class, including Aborigines, the disabled, single mothers,
refugees and the unemployed. Under Howard, these social layers
have been subjected to a series of punitive measures and forced
into low-paid and menial work. This is what Howards opportunity
society means for millions of ordinary peoplea life
of constant economic insecurity, debt, housing stress and unaffordable
health and education services.
Howards aversion to the welfare state does not extend
to the doling out of billions of dollars worth of public subsidies
to major corporations and the wealthy. He announced yesterday
that the government would pay the existing 30 percent rebate for
childcare fees directly to childcare companies rather than to
parents through tax returns. This will potentially see billions
directly handed over to the private childcare operators, who are
already making enormous profits. Howard claimed that parents would
see fees drop once the reform is introduced. What will in fact
occur is that the childcare companies will pocket the new subsidies,
while continuing to ratchet up fees. This is what the private
health insurance companies have repeatedly done ever since the
government brought in a 30 percent rebate for their services.
Howard also announced that parents would be granted an education
tax rebate worth $400 per primary student and $800 per secondary
student. This money, he said, could be used for any education-related
expenseincluding private school tuition feesand could
be claimed by anyone, irrespective of their income. The new rebate
provides another means through which the government can funnel
public money into private schools, while continuing to deliberately
run down the public education system.
The prime minister also pledged to create savings accounts
for people looking to buy their first home. These accounts would
be tax-free, with those wealthy enough to put aside $1000 a year
eligible for a tax deduction. Howard claimed these measures would
help address the national housing crisis, in which few working
people can afford to purchase a home in any of Australias
major cities. In reality, the governments plan will do nothing
to resolve a crisis that has been caused by the near-complete
destruction of public housing development and the domination of
the free market over every aspect of urban planning.
Howard combined these spending promises with the governments
usual rhetoric concerning Australias supposed unprecedented
prosperity. This ideaechoed by the media and all the parliamentary
partiesreflects the enormous chasm now separating the milieu
of the political, media, corporate and celebrity elite from the
lives of ordinary people. The China-driven resource boom has enriched
a narrow layer that has profited from the property and stock market
boom, while broad sections of the working class have been hit
by higher costs of living through rising interest rates and higher
fuel, groceries, and housing costs. Escalating social inequality,
poverty, and debt have not been mentioned by any of the major
parties.
This grotesque distortion found its apotheosis in Howards
speech yesterday when he boasted of meeting young people in Penrith,
a working class suburb in western Sydney, who had just finished
school and are literally bubbling over with enthusiasm about
getting into the labour market knowing that they can confidently
not only get a job but also get the job they want. The reality
is that youth unemployment remains chronic in many areas of western
Sydney and, together with a lack of basic social and recreational
infrastructure, leads to a widespread sense of despair and hopelessness.
Young people in places like Penrith, looking for a job with a
high school diploma, would be hard pressed to find even low-paid
casual or part-time contract employment.
The Howard governments efforts to use its campaign launch
to resecure big business and media backing fell rather flat. Most
of the official commentary centred on the possible inflationary
impact of the prime ministers promises. The Sydney Morning
Heralds front page story, headlined Granddaddy
of all splurges, estimated that the measures announced yesterday
would cost $9.2 billion, making total government spending promises
during the campaign a hefty $64 billion.
The Reserve Bank again raised interest rates last weekthe
first time this has ever happened during an election campaignand
warned that excessive public spending will lead to further increases.
Criticism is mounting of the Howard governments reckless
efforts to win re-election through major spending promises. Mr
Howard is not offering a return to more disciplined, smaller government,
despite his warnings of the need for caution by voters because
of economic turbulence ahead, the Australians
lead editorial complained today.
Rudd demonstrated his economic conservative credentials
by pledging that Labors spending commitments would be considerably
lower than the governments.
Authorised by N. Beams, 100B Sydenham Rd, Marrickville,
NSW
Visit the Socialist Equality
Party Election Web Site
See Also:
Industrial relations and the trade unions
under Labor: from Whitlam to Rudd
[12 November 2007]
Rudd and Murdoch: the fashioning of a
Blair-style Labor moderniser
[10 November 2007]
Why both Labor and Liberal
will provide billions for tax cuts, but not for social services
[29 October 2007]
Australian election debate:
Howard and Rudd compete as economic conservatives
[22 October 2007]
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