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Australian election debate: Howard and Rudd compete as economic
conservatives
By Patrick OConnor, Socialist Equality Party candidate
for Grayndler
22 October 2007
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Last nights sole debate between Prime Minister John Howard
and Labor leader Kevin Rudd was, in many ways, a microcosm of
the entire official election campaign. The two major partiesLabor
and Liberalvied with each other over which would more effectively
implement the next wave of pro-big business economic reform. No
other parties or candidates were allowed to participate.
The so-called debate was held in the Great Hall of parliament
house in Canberra, before a few hundred handpicked spectatorsexactly
half selected by Rudd and the other half by Howard. Even in this
highly vetted forum, no-one in the audience was allowed to make
a sound, let alone ask questions of the two contenders. At one
point, after a few people could be heard laughing, the moderator,
Sky Newss David Speers, castigated them, insisting everyone
remain silent.
The debate consisted of opening statements from
Rudd and Howard, followed by responses from each. Then five representatives
of the mainstream media, including Paul Kelly, political editor
for Murdochs Australian, and Laurie Oakes from the
Packer familys Publishing and Broadcasting Limited, were
allowed to ask one question of each of the candidates, as well
as a follow-up. Then Howard and Rudd asked each other three questions.
The whole tedious affair lasted 90 minutes.
Prior to the debate, Howard insisted that the worma
feature of election debates over the past few yearswould
not be allowed during the broadcast. The worm is a moving line
that appears at the bottom of the television screen, indicating
the immediate collective responses of a live studio audience to
what is being said. In the last two debates, the worm has been
decisively anti-Howard.
Despite the prime ministerial ban, Channel Nine
decided to use the worm in its live coverage of the debate, monitoring
the ongoing reactions of around 100 swinging voters.
But this, apparently, proved too much. Twice during the course
of the event, Nines video feed from the ABC was cut, amounting
to an extraordinary act of censorship.
In the debate itself, not one of the most critical issues confronting
ordinary people was discussed. From the outset it became a contest
between Howard and Rudd over who could more rightfully claim the
mantle of economic conservative.
Howard took personal credit for Australias recent economic
growthdue, in fact, to the China-fuelled boom in resource
and mineral prices and the explosion of private debt. The prime
minister defended his governments pro-market record, and
sought to whip up fears of higher interests rates under an inexperienced
Rudd government. Perhaps sensing that this line of argument might
not appeal to working people hit by five successive interest rate
rises since the 2004 election, Howard appeared defensive and uncertain.
Rudds central contention was that Howard had squandered
the opportunities opened up by the resources boom and had failed
to advance the necessary pro-business reforms. He boasted of his
economic conservative credentials and stressed what
he called the history of great economic reform in this country
in the period from 83 to 96, when this countrys
entire economic orientation was turned on its head.
Rudd was referring to the assault on the social position of
the working class carried out by the Hawke and Keating Labor governments,
in the name of integrating the Australian economy into the global
capitalist market. The free market measures introduced
by Labor resulted in an unprecedented transfer of wealth from
working people to the ultra-wealthy and generated immense anger
and resentment, leading to Howards landslide election victory
in 1996.
That Rudd wholeheartedly embraces this legacy is a warning
of the ruthless agenda he will implement, on behalf of corporate
Australia, if Labor wins the election. Moreover, Rudd pointedly
referred to the critical role played by the trade union bureaucracy
in enforcing Hawke and Keatings policies, suggesting that
the large number of former union officials in his leadership would
do likewise.
In response, Howard also solidarised himself with the Hawke-Keating
reforms, but insisted that Rudd Labor would not be up to the task
of continuing them.
Rudds attempts to appeal to the millions of workers under
increasing financial pressure were a cynical fraud. He referred
to the crisis in public health and education, but failed to explain
why he had just matched Howards election promise of a massive
tax cut rather than allocating billions to critically needed public
services. Under both the Liberal and Labor plans, the benefits
will go overwhelmingly to the rich.
The Labor leader also tried to tap into widespread animosity
to Howards WorkChoices industrial relations legislationquestioning
Howard over the fate of workers who are made redundant. Howard
avoided answering, because under his new laws, such workers will
have no right to redundancy pay. But again, Rudd failed to mention
that his own industrial relations regime would also allow employers
to forego redundancy payments in certain circumstances.
Despite overwhelming opposition to the Iraq war, the issue
was first raised more than one hour into the debate, and then
only in the context of whether it had increased the risk of terrorism.
Rudd tried to distance himself from the war, not on the basis
that it represented a massive war crime that had led to the destruction
of Iraqi society and the deaths of more than a million people,
but because it was a tactical error that has inflamed the terrorist
threat to Australians.
The suppression of any genuine discussion on the eruption of
US militarism and its driving impulsethe escalating great
power rivalries now wracking every part of the globeis one
of the central features of the official election campaign. The
debate did not even mention the word Iran, despite
evidence that both Howard and Rudd have already signed off on
any US-led attack on that country. Nor was the South Pacific raised,
despiteor rather, because of, both parties commitment
to Australias indefinite neo-colonial occupation of East
Timor and the Solomon Islands.
Rudds promise to withdraw Australian combat forces is
another sham. The so-called staged withdrawal will affect just
one-third of Australias total military commitment to Iraq
and the Persian Gulf, and the troops involved will be redeployed
to the other theatre in the same, illegal war: Afghanistan.
Stressing his full support for Australias alliance with
US imperialism, Rudd ominously declared: We will calibrate
our decision [on Australian troops in Iraq] in consultation with
the Americans and our allies about what happens not just in Iraq
but in the wider region.
Howard maintained his full support for the indefinite occupation
of Iraq and warned of the dangerous consequences were the
prestige of the United States to slip. He added that he
understands that there are many people who disagree
with him and attacked Rudds hypocrisy on the issue, declaring:
The reality is Mr Rudd wants to convey an impression to
the Australian public that hes all against the involvement
but wants to say to the Americans and others, Im not
really, Im only half against it.
This point was the one convincing moment of Howards performance.
The official debate confirmed that broad layers of working
people, students, and youth have been effectively disenfranchised,
with their interests and concerns finding no expression whatsoever
in a political system monopolised by two parties of big business.
The Socialist Equality Party is standing 13 candidates, in New
South Wales, Victoria and Western Australia, in order to advance
the genuine, socialist alternative in the 2007 electionsagainst
militarism and war, social inequality and the ongoing assault
on basic democratic rights. We urge all those who agree with our
program to support and participate in our campaign.
Authorised by N. Beams, 100B Sydenham Rd, Marrickville,
NSW
Visit the Socialist Equality
Party Election Web Site
See Also:
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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