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Socialist Equality Party challenges Greg Combet to debate
industrial relations
By Terry Cook, Socialist Equality Party candidate for Charlton
31 October 2007
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Last week, the Socialist Equality Party (SEP) issued an open
letter challenging Labors candidate for the federal seat
of Charlton, Greg Combet, to debate industrial relations and other
vital issues facing the working class. The letter was handed to
Combet personally as he entered his election launch at the Wallsend
Bowling Club.
With the Howard government unleashing a wholesale assault on
hard-won working conditions and workers rights under its
new WorkChoices legislation, clarification on exactly where each
political party stands on industrial relations is of vital concern
to ordinary working people.
One would expect, therefore, that Combet, the former secretary
of the Australian Council of Trade Unions (ACTU), who claims to
be a leading campaigner against Howards hated IR laws, would
have welcomed the opportunity to outline Labors position.
Combets reaction to the invitation, however, demonstrated
the opposite. Within minutes of him receiving our open letter,
Labor and union functionaries sprang into action, attempting to
intimidate me and other SEP members campaigning outside his launch,
and trying to stop us from distributing copies of the letter to
people going inside.
A group of Labor stewards, led by Newcastle Trades Hall Council
secretary Gary Kennedy, confronted me and ordered me to leave
the club premises. A cordon of stewards then moved to block the
main entrance.
When the SEP team continued to campaign in the car park, Kennedy
insisted that this was not allowed. But he backed
off when it became clear the team would not be intimidated. Nevertheless,
he kept approaching SEP campaigners, claiming people were being
harassedwithout being able to cite a single complaint.
The incident sheds light, not only on Labors attitude
to open debate and discussion during an election campaign, but
to democratic rights in general. The Labor Partys attempt
to prevent the SEP from distributing its material constitutes
a violation of one of the most basic principles of genuine democracythe
right to provide and receive information.
This was evident, as well, in the very organisation of Combets
launch. The affair was not open to the general public. On the
contrary, it was restricted to a hand-picked audience of around
300 people, made up of party functionaries, union officials and
Labor faithfuland, of course, the media.
To ensure that ordinary people were kept away, details of the
event were only released the day before. One SEP supporter who
telephoned Combets election office to ask for details was
told the launch had been booked out weeks in advance and was,
in any case, only a media event.
The reason any meetings held by either the Liberal or Labor
parties are so highly vetted is to shield their candidates from
any unexpected questions or deeper probing of their policies or
challenge that might puncture the official hype churned out in
their election propaganda.
For Combet, whose spin doctors work overtime to present him
as a champion of workers rights, such protection is essential.
He could not defend, before any remotely critical working class
audience, his unreserved support for Labors industrial relations
platformthe misnamed Forward with Fairnessbecause
it is identical, in all essential aspects, to Howards WorkChoices.
Labors platform pledges to retain the Howard governments
Australian Workplace Agreements (AWAs) until December, 2011. These
are the individual work contracts that underpin WorkChoices and
that have allowed employers to tear up longstanding working conditions.
Forward with Fairness also contains the very same anti-strike
provisions outlawing strikes and other forms of industrial action,
except during the limited negotiating period for a new enterprise
agreement, and imposing mandatory secret ballots before
a strike can take place.
As well, Labor promises to crack down on unauthorised
strike action, secondary boycotts and pattern or industry-wide
wage contract bargaining. In other words, it will ruthlessly act
against any attempt by working people to take industrial action
over pressing issues, such as the Iraq war, or against repressive
industrial relations laws, or in support of other workers, or
to defend conditions or basic rights in collaboration with other
workers.
The unions under a Labor government
One further point needs to be made. The unions, of which Combet
was, until recently, the national leader, unanimously endorsed
Forward with Fairness at Labors national conference
in April this year. They are now offering their services as industrial
police and enforcers for a future Labor government. Precisely
the same standover tactics used against SEP members at Combets
launch will be carried out with even greater force to suppress
all opposition to Labors attacks on working and social conditions.
The unions past collaboration with a Labor government
were the subject of the speech by the keynote speaker at Combets
launch, former Labor Prime Minister Paul Keating. During his address,
Keating referred to notes he had archived of a meeting he held
in May 1995 with former ACTU secretary Bill Kelty, and leading
union officials, Martin Ferguson and Jennie George.
Hatched at that meeting was what was to be the final Accord
between Labor and the ACTU before the Keating government was swept
from office in 1996in the greatest swing ever recorded against
Labor in working class electorates. Under the previous Accords
from 1983 to 1996, wages were suppressed, working conditions axed
and jobs destroyed wholesale.
The unions also collaborated in the ruthless disciplining of
the working class, which involved strike breaking, union busting
and the smashing of the most militant sections of workers. The
labour movement was, for all intents and purposes, gutted and
demolished under Labor.
Under the 1995 Accord with the Keating government, the unions
agreed to continue suppressing wages in order to keep the inflation
rate down to 3 percent. Unions were the progenitors of low
inflation in this country. They were the inventors of the 2 to
3 percent [target], Keating boasted.
To rapturous applause, Keating went on to attack Howard, not
for his support for the criminal war in Iraq, his assault on democratic
rights or for his attacks on jobs, through the escalating casualisation
of the workforce. Nor did Keating assail the prime minister for
undermining working conditions, public health and public education.
His criticism of Howard was that he presided over the biggest
wages explosion in postwar history, during his time as treasurer
in the Fraser government in 1982. In other words, Keatings
beef with Howard was that the latter failed to deal with the working
class.
Keatings remarks, and their enthusiastic reception by
his audience, should serve as a dire warning to all working people.
A Rudd Labor government, will, with the assistance of the unions,
implement the demands of big business for an acceleration and
deepening of Howards assault on the economic and social
position of the working class.
Authorised by N. Beams, 100B Sydenham Rd, Marrickville,
NSW
Visit the Socialist Equality
Party Election Web Site
See Also:
Australia: Victorian Labor government
uses Howard's WorkChoices against nurses
[25 October 2007]
Australia: Rudd tries to fudge Labor's
agreement with WorkChoices
[19 October 2007]
Socialist Equality Party (Australia)
2007 federal election statement
A socialist program to fight war, social inequality and the
assault on democratic rights
[16 October 2007]
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