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How to fight militarism and war....
Nick Beams addresses SEP election meetings
By Nick Beams, Socialist Equality Party candidate for the
Senate in New South Wales
26 October 2007
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The following report was delivered by Nick Beams, national
secretary of the Socialist Equality Party (Australia) and a member
of the International Editorial Board of the World Socialist
Web Site to an SEP election meeting in Melbourne on October
21. Beams is heading the SEPs Senate ticket in NSW and is
the partys national spokesman in the 2007 federal election.
October 7 marked the sixth anniversary of the invasion of Afghanistan,
an operation codenamed Enduring Freedom. The result has been an
enduring and escalating disaster for the people of that country.
Next March will mark the fifth anniversary of the invasion
of Iraq. The consequences have been even more devastatinga
society destroyed, more than one million people dead, four million
people made refugees, more than 3800 American soldiers killed
and thousands wounded, many with horrific injuries.
Iraq has been destroyed and Afghanistan turned into a narco
state, run by warlords, who provide 93 percent of the worlds
illegal heroin.
But, like some kind of deranged pyromaniacs, the political
incendiaries in the White House, together with their allies in
Australia and other countries, are preparing new attacks on Iran.
The plans are well advanced. The only question, it seems, is what
will be the pretextthe claim that Iran is seeking to acquire
nuclear weapons, a retaliation for alleged attacks on US military
forces in Iraq or a combination of both.
Whatever the pretext, the consequences will be enormous. Just
how far reaching can be gauged from remarks made by President
Bush at a White House news conference on October 17. Bush suggested
that if Iran did acquire the knowledge to make nuclear weapons
it could lead to World War III. While the White House said later
the comment was rhetorical, the fact that it was made
at all shows the increasingly tense character of international
relations, in which the chief danger of global conflict comes
not from Iran, but from the United States.
In the five years since the invasion of Iraq all the pretexts
on which it was launched have been exposedthe lies about
weapons of mass destruction, the nuclear program, and the connections
of the Hussein regime with Al Qaeda.
But there is still lingering confusion over Afghanistan. This
is presented as the good war where the real fight
against terror is being waged. One of the major criticisms made
by the Labor Party of the Howard government is that the war in
Iraq has diverted resources from the struggle against terrorists
in Afghanistan.
The Bush administration, however, is not given to such distinctions.
Bush has insisted repeatedly that Afghanistan and Iraq are but
different theatres in the same global war, as no doubt any attack
on Iran will be designated.
Anyone with lingering illusions about Afghanistan need only
examine the events of the past few weeks to dispel them. Last
month, the president of Afghanistan, Hamid Karzai, the head of
the puppet regime installed by the US, made an extraordinary appeal.
He called on Mullah Omar, the leader of the Taliban forces, and
his warlord ally, Gulbuddhim Hekmatyar, to enter peace negotiations.
Addressing them as esteemed gentlemen, he said
there was no need for them to come to Kabul for discussions. If
he had their address he himself would travel to get in touch with
them. All he wanted was a settlement, in return for which the
esteemed gentlemen would be guaranteed a place in
the government.
Such an appeal could not have been made without the support
of the United States. So much for the war on terror.
Mullah Omar, the alleged protector of Osama bin Laden, will be
removed from the most wanted list, and even given
a place in the puppet regime itself, providing he recognises the
US occupation. Nothing could more clearly show that the invasion
of Afghanistan was not undertaken to hunt down terrorists, but
to advance the geo-political interests of the United States in
Central Asia.
Afghanistan invaded, Iraqi society destroyed and now Iran threatened
... and not so far in the background the danger of World War III.
Not since the days of the Hitler regime in the 1930s have we seen
such an eruption of imperialist gangsterism and such dangers to
the future of mankind. How is this to be explained?
In the 1930s, the aggressive military actions of the Nazi regime
were not simply a product of Hitlers fevered brain. They
were rooted in the struggle by German imperialism to establish
its place in the sun, to establish a base from which
it could compete with its two great rivalsthe British Empire
and the rising transatlantic power, the United States.
Just as it would be a serious mistake to employ a bad
Hitler theory of history to explain the crises of the 1930s,
so it would be equally erroneous to employ a bad Bush
explanation for the present-day political situation and the enormous
dangers it contains.
In any event, any such attempt collapses as soon as one examines
the role of the Democrats.
Despite receiving an overwhelming mandate from the American
people in the November 2006 congressional elections to end the
war in Iraq, the Democrats have voted hundreds of billions of
dollars to continue it. The leading Democratic presidential candidates
have all made clear that, so far as they are concerned, US troops
will remain in Iraq indefinitely. Anyone who tries to maintain
that the Democrats are opposed to the war is either deluding themselves
or trying to fool others.
On Iran, the Democrats are even more bellicose. Hillary Clinton,
the leading presidential contender, has declared that the use
of nuclear weapons against Iran cannot be taken off the table.
The historic decline of the United States
The eruption of US militarist violence is not a product of
individual politicians. It is rooted in the historical problems
confronting American capitalism, just as Hitlers wars of
aggression were bound up with the crisis of the regime he headed.
Militarism is the means by which the American ruling elites,
whatever tactical differences they may have among themselves,
are seeking to maintain US hegemony within the global capitalist
order.
In order to understand this phenomenon and its origins, we
must approach it historically.
The US emerged from World War II as the pre-eminent capitalist
power. To be sure, it enjoyed unsurpassed military might, but
in the final analysis, its domination was based on its overwhelming
economic superiority. Indeed, the very economic strength of American
capitalism provided critical support for the stability of the
world capitalist system.
What a far cry from the situation today. American industrial
supremacy, associated with names such as US Steel and General
Motors, is a thing of the past. Now the deep-going problems in
the American financial system, as revealed by the sub-prime crisis
and ensuing credit crunch, are a major source of instability for
world capitalism as a whole.
Desperate to maintain its position, the US ruling class has
turned to the one area where it still enjoys superioritymilitary
might. But the assertion of American military power takes place
under conditions where the old capitalist powers in Europe and
Asia, together with the new rising powersChina, Russia and
Indiaare seeking to establish their position in the global
order.
A global struggle is the result. We have entered a period not
unlike that in the first decade of the last century. Then, great
power rivalry led to the eruption of World War I, followed by
two decades of bloody conflicts, culminating in the even greater
destruction of World War II.
For more than four decades after the conclusion of that war,
international relations, at least among the major powers, were
more settled. They were regulated within the framework of the
Cold War and under conditions where the United States enjoyed
unchallenged supremacy. Now those conditions have gone and great
power rivalry has resumed.
This fact is openly recognised and discussed in ruling circles.
Let me point to an address by the French foreign minister Bernard
Kouchner to a meeting earlier this month organised by a well-known
American think tank, the Center for Strategic and International
Studies.
The landscape in the Middle East, Kouchner said, was one
of increasingly interdependent crises with increased tension
spreading out in an arc from Afghanistan to Lebanon, through Iraq,
Syria and the Palestinian territories.
Furthermore, the clock was ticking on the dreadful
alternative posed by French president Nicolas Sarkozy of
the Iran bomb or the bombing of Iran.
Transatlantic relations could not be discussed, he said, cut
off from the rest of the world, which was bubbling around
us. Emerging powers are flexing their muscles and
revisionist views are challenging the current orders. New
actors were emerging and there was a return to great power politics.
Becoming more specific he added: Every week, it seems
that Russia announces a new weapons system, and we have yet to
draw all the implications for our collective security on the anti-satellite
test performed by China on January 11 of this year.
The old framework of the Cold War had broken down but we
have not managed, as we did after 45 to create a new world
order or even to adapt the previous one satisfactorily.
In fact, he continued, rather than moving towards stability,
international relations were going in the other direction and
were marked by increased tensions.
Behind the drive to war
The processes to which Kouchner points have their origins in
the contradictions of the world capitalist system.
The globalisation of production, which has gone forward in
leaps and bounds and transformed the world economy over the past
quarter century, has raised to a new peak of intensity the fundamental
contradiction of world capitalism: that between the global economy
and the division of the world into rival capitalist nation-states.
In 1914, Leon Trotsky explained that, in the most fundamental
sense, World War I arose from the attempt of each of the capitalist
great powers to resolve this contradiction in its own interests,
giving rise to a conflict of each against all. Now this conflict
has erupted again, in an even more powerful form. It determines
international relations in every region of the world.
Consider the situation in this region. One of the motivating
factors for the series of military and police interventions by
Australiaranging from East Timor, to the Solomon Islands,
PNG and Fijihas been to maintain control over valuable raw
materials and resources.
But geo-political and strategic factors play a decisive role
as wellabove all the rise of China, which is transforming
international and political relations.
Take the all-important question of oil. Since the year 2001
it is estimated that some 40 percent of the increase in the global
demand for oil has come from China alone. The Chinese government,
as a matter of economic policy, must attempt to ensure stable
supplies by setting up agreements for pipelines, exploration,
and production with foreign governments. But this necessary economic
policy has political consequences.
According to former National Security Council policy adviser
on the Middle East, Flynt Leverett, this strategy, is rapidly
becoming a source of geopolitical tensions between China and the
United States with Chinas search for oil making it
a new competitor for influence in the Middle East, Central Asia
and Africa.
And we could add the South Pacific, because a necessary component
of the Chinese strategy to ensure supplies is the securing of
sea lanes. That raises the question of the development of a navy,
and a navy raises the question of naval bases, especially in Pacific.
American imperialism has already fought one war with a rising
Asian power for control of this region. Now another clash is in
the making.
It is within this global context that the Howard governments
military, police and political interventions in this region take
on their full significance.
The eruption of Australian militarism and colonialism is aimed
at ensuring that the small, but strategically important, states
in this region do not fall under the sway of China.
Government leaders have made this crystal clear. On December
31, 2006, Prime Minister John Howard warned that Australia could
not walk away from the countries of the South Pacific, where there
was a battle for influence going on between China and Taiwan,
because youll end up with these places being taken
over by interests that are very hostile to Australia. And,
as Foreign Affairs Minister Alexander Downer commented after the
recent APEC summit, China was entitled to have relations with
the countries of the South Pacific but it should reinforce
the work were doing there and not undermine it.
In every region of the worldfrom the South Pacific to
the North Polethere is a conflict between the major powers
for resources and markets, for strategic influence and control.
The conflicts in the Middle East are the most violent expressions,
to this point, of this global process.
Where is it leading? History provides the answertowards
another world war. Human civilisation survived the conflicts of
the twentieth century, although it was a close thing. World War
II ended with the use of nuclear weapons. Today, the use of nuclear
weapons against Iran is on the table.
Labor and the Iraq war
How is the plunge into militarism and war to be fought? How
can the growing threats to civilisation be defeated? These are
the issues which are at the heart of the SEPs election intervention.
The struggle against war and militarism cannot be waged as
some kind of single issue protestopposition to the war in
Iraqbecause that war is only part of a broader conflict.
Nor can it be conducted as a protest to the ruling class, or
as a campaign to replace one capitalist party with another by
means of the ballot box. It has to be based on the fight for a
socialist program which has as its goal the unification of the
international working class in a political struggle to end the
profit system and the division of the world into rival nation-states.
The purpose of the SEPs election campaign is first and
foremost to begin the development of such a movement and to build
the party necessary to lead it.
This movement cannot be developed through a few simple slogans
or agitation. It requires more painstaking work, above all, the
clarification of the role of all the parties and tendencies that
work, in one way or another, to subordinate the working class
to the existing order.
This means exposing, not only the role of the Labor Party,
but of all those parties and organisations that work to keep the
working class trapped within Labors orbit.
Let us start by dispelling the remnants of the still lingering
illusion that the Labor Party, in some kind of ill-defined way,
has opposed participation in the Iraq war.
In 2002 and 2003, when the invasion was being prepared, the
Labor Party repeated all the claims about Iraqs weapons
of mass destruction when, as millions of people around the world
knew, they were lies.
Here is the current Labor leader speaking on the television
program Lateline on September 24, 2002: There
is no debate or dispute as to whether Saddam Hussein possesses
weapons of mass destruction. He does.
Labors only objection to the war was that it should be
carried out under a UN mandate. But once it was launched, Labor
swung behind it, on the grounds that it was necessary to support
the troops.
In January 2004, just ten months later, there was not even
an item on Iraq at the Labor Partys national conference.
And when Western Australian Labor left Carmen Lawrence,
at that time ALP national president, was asked by SEP member Terry
Cook whether she was going to move a resolution calling for the
withdrawal of all American and Australian forces, she walked away
claiming not to know what Terry was talking about.
Later that year, then Labor leader Mark Latham dropped a remark
in a radio interview about the troops being home by Christmas
if Labor came to power. But in the 2004 election campaign, the
Iraq war was barely mentioned, a fact Howard said later had caused
him some surprise, and, no doubt, relief.
Under Rudds leadership, the Labor policy stands for a
negotiated, staged withdrawal of Australias combat
forces from Iraq. This involves about 550 troops out of
the total 1575-strong Australian force in and around Iraq.
That is, around 1000 troops of the present force will remain
and the withdrawn combat forces will be replaced by hundreds of
training troops, which, while stationed outside Iraq,
will be involved in training the forces of the puppet Maliki government.
This means that under a Labor government there will be at least
the same number of Australian forces, and possibly more, supporting
the US occupation as there are at present. And troop numbers in
Afghanistan, which Rudd claims is the real theatre for the war
on terror, are likely to increase.
Far from opposing militarism, Rudd emphasises that Labor is
the party of war. Addressing the question of whether he could
make the decision to send young people to war, he declared: Labor
in government ... has led this country through the bulk of the
First World War, the bulk of the Second World War and also we
were in government when we committed troops to the first Gulf
War.
The differences between the Howard government and the Labor
Party on Iraq are of a minor, purely tactical, character.
On the sweeping legal changes accompanying the war on
terrorlaws that have vastly increased the power of
the state and eroded long-established basic democratic rightsthere
is complete agreement.
Likewise on the deployment of the military in the Northern
Territory, the persecution of Dr Mohamed Haneef, the racist exclusion
of Sudanese refugees ... and the list goes on.
Such is the degree of collaboration that new terms have had
to be invented, such as bear hug politics and me-tooism.
But even these do not fully capture the degree to which any differences
between Labor and Liberal have been obliterated.
What are the reasons? We cannot resort to a bad Rudd
explanation. Such a process must have deep social roots. And these
are to be found in the deep alienation from, and hostility to,
the entire political establishment felt by broad sections of the
population. These sentiments are compelling the major parties
to draw closer and closer together.
No one should delude themselves by thinking that Labors
coalitionism is a clever ploy by Rudd to ensure election, after
which things will change. Rudds me-tooism is
a declaration to the ruling elites that a Labor government will
be committed to implementing their demands, no matter what the
consequences. Far from being a lesser evil a Labor
government will be more militarist, and more socially regressive,
than the Liberals.
The role of the Greens
Labors positions have propelled numbers of people towards
the Greens, on the basis of the illusion that they, somehow, represent
an alternative, especially on the question of Iraq. The Greens
program does call for an immediate end to the occupation
of Iraq. But this is far from an antiwar party.
The Greens do not oppose the occupation of Afghanistan. In
fact Greens leader Bob Brown supports the deployment of
additional US forces to that country.
The Greens opposition to the Iraq war has always been
based on what they regard as the real interests of Australian
imperialismwhich, according to them, lie in the South Pacific.
In February 2003, during the mass demonstrations protesting the
imminent invasion of Iraq, Brown insisted that Australian forces
should not be deployed there but, instead, in our
region.
Having already backed the Australian intervention in East Timor
in 1999under the guise of humanitarianismthe
Greens were extending their horizons. Australian forces were needed
in the Solomons, Brown declared. Three months later, in June 2003,
his demand was met when the Howard government, in collaboration
its New Zealand counterpart, sent in the RAMSI force to the Solomons.
The positions of Brown and the Greens are part of an international
tendency. In 1999, when the humanitarian military
intervention was being planned in East Timor, the German Greens,
then part of the Schroeder governmenttheir leader Joshcka
Fischer was the foreign ministerprovided the crucial rationale
for military intervention in the Balkansthe old stamping
ground of German imperialism.
In July 2003, New Zealand Greens leader Keith Locke welcomed
the involvement of that countrys police and military in
the Solomons and proposed to extend it.
A peacekeeping school should be set up in New Zealand,
he said, which would increase our ability to do this peacekeeping
work and to be able to work with other police and other military
in our region towards resolving situations like we see in the
Solomons today.
What a perspectivea school for humanitarian
colonialism!
Four years on, the RAMSI forces are still operating. Their
so-called peace-keeping role has not been to assist the people
of the Solomons but to ensure the semi-colonial domination of
Australia and New Zealand in their old sphere of influence.
Before we leave the Greens we should examine their record on
the anti-terror laws. The Greens are adept at making denunciations
of the Howard government in regard to these laws, which have had
a certain resonance because of the absence of any opposition from
the Labor Party.
Their real position was revealed on November 3, 2005, however,
when the Howard government reconvened parliament in an emergency
session to pass far-reaching new laws.
Brown attacked the Labor Party as a compliant opposition
and insisted it was necessary for a democratic parliament
to defend rights, privileges and freedoms. Here was the time and
place to do just that.
NSW Greens Senator, Kerry Nettle declared the anti-terrorism
laws were aimed at secret arrests, secret detention, secret
interrogation, by secret people. Fine words. But the Greens
voted in favour of the legislation.
The orientation of the radical protest groups
One question that often comes up is the following: why cant
the various groups calling themselves socialist all come togetherat
least for the elections? Surely, the argument goes, this would
present a much broader based opposition to the establishment parties.
Arent you all fighting for the same thing?
The short answer is no. Our differences are not over words,
but express fundamentally opposed class interests. Nowhere is
this law of politics more clearly demonstrated than in the case
of the so-called Democratic Socialist Perspective (DSP), publishers
of the Green Left Weekly and the main component of the
Socialist Alliance.
A sure test of the class basis of any tendency is the attitude
it takes to the military actions of its own government,
especially when those actions are undertaken on humanitarian
grounds. At such times, socialists are responsible for exposing
the real motives behind military action, no matter what popular
support there may be for it, and in that way for politically arming
the working class.
In 1999, the Australian troop deployment in East Timor was
presented as a necessity to prevent a massacre of the Timorese
people by the armed thugs of the Indonesian military. Normally,
the government has to wind up its propaganda machine to churn
out its humanitarian line. In this case that role
was assumed by the DSP.
Here is what they wrote in a statement issued by the partys
national executive on September 6, 1999: If the United Nations
Security Council continues to argue that an international military
force cannot be sent to East Timor without the Indonesian governments
agreement, then the Australian government should act unilaterally
and send its armed forces into East Timor to end the TNI/Polri-organised
terror campaign.
The DSP campaign did not go unnoticed or unappreciated within
ruling circles. As the Australian Financial Review noted
at the time, the call for troops in had, for the first
time in decades, given broad legitimacy to the proposition
that Australia should be able to intervene militarily outside
its territory.
This policy was no mistake. Eight years on, the DSP leaders
and their allies in the Socialist Alliance defend it, insisting
that it advanced the national liberation struggle of the East
Timorese at the time, and forced the government to act against
its will.
The historical record shows otherwise. As the American historian
Andrew Bacevich recounts, the Clinton administration was anxious
to secure stability in East Timor, fearing that Indonesia could
slide into chaos, but was wary of taking direct responsibility.
Accordingly, Washington sought a partner willing to take
a lead in restoring order to East Timor, with US forces playing
an essential backup role. The government of Australia dutifully
volunteered. Canberra, Bacevich continued, could claim the
lions share of the credit for the success of the intervention
but it would never have got off the ground had Washington
not provided communications, intelligence, transportation and
logistics (Andrew Bacevich, American Empire, p. 157).
In addition to military aid, the Clinton administration played
the decisive role in clearing the way for Australian troops by
threatening to crash the Indonesian economy if the
Habibie government opposed their entry.
In other words, the DSP functioned as nothing less than a secondary,
but nonetheless politically important agency of US and Australian
imperialism, revealing the chasm that exists between its opportunist
politics and the program of genuine socialism.
In the Melbourne electorate we are standing against a candidate
from the Socialist Party, the organisation led by Yarra Council
member Stephen Jolly, who first came to prominence in radical
circles with the occupation of Richmond Secondary College in 1992.
Shortly after the Socialist Equality Party published its list
of election candidates, we received an email from the Socialist
Party proposing a discussion on the campaign in the seat of Melbourne.
We rejected the proposal because there are deep and unbridgeable
differences between the politics of the Socialist Party and the
SEP.
These differences go to the most essential question of the
day: how to undertake the construction of a new mass party of
the working class.
The Socialist Party is in favour of a new party. No matter
who wins the election, it writes, the Socialist Party will push
harder for the creation of a new mass leftwing workers party
in Australia. This party must involve the trade unions,
community groups and activists with a clear left wing, anti
neo-liberal program.
Notice that this mass party is not defined as socialist. It
is described as leftwing, progressive and anti neo-liberal. The
characterisation of its program is left deliberately vague and
this speaks volumes about the perspective of the Socialist Party.
Leon Trotsky always insisted that a fundamental requirement
of a genuine revolutionary tendency is to state what is. The characteristic
feature of all opportunist tendencies is to fudge over and obscure
the most vital questions of program and principle.
This is precisely what the Socialist Party does. This is no
mistake but the modus operandi of the international organisation
to which it is affiliated, the so-called Committee for a Workers
International (CWI), led by Peter Taafe.
Taafe sets out the CWIs opportunist method of party-building
in an article published on October 5, written as the introduction
to the Portuguese edition of his book Marxism in Todays
World.
There he points out that the CWI has never perceived
the creation of mass parties as a panacea or an end in itself.
Any new mass party today represents, from a political point of
view an arena of ideological clarification and struggle; for the
working out of a program to rearm the working class for the coming
battles.
The CWI claims to follow in the path of Lenin and Trotsky.
But the method outlined here is diametrically opposed to the Marxist
conception of party building, which insists that the only way
of establishing the political independence of the working class
is the continuous exposure of the role of all those tendencies
which, in one way or another, seek to subordinate it to the capitalist
order.
According to Taafe, the program develops out of the party.
Trotsky insisted on the exact opposite conception.
The revolutionary party, he wrote, begins
with an idea, a program, which is aimed against the most powerful
apparatus of class society. It is not the cadre that creates the
idea, but the idea that creates the cadre.
Of course the masses do not come to the revolutionary party
as a result of some kind of pedagogical exercise. As Trotsky explained,
they undergo their own experiences that permit them to choose
and to progress along the revolutionary road, but on condition
that they find a vanguard that, at every stage of the struggle,
explains the situation to them, shows them the objectives to be
obtained, the methods to use and the ultimate perspectives....
Without that, even the most numerous aggregation of workers would
have no future (Trotsky Writings 1933-34, p. 292).
If every major difference is, in the final analysis, a class
difference, we must pose the question: what class interests are
served by the CWIs opportunist theory of party building.
The clearest answer to that question is provided in Latin America.
Under conditions where the traditional parties have become discredited,
and support for them has disintegrated, the ruling elites are
increasingly reliant upon left formations to block
the movement of the working class.
In Brazil, the section of the CWI, along with other radical
tendencies, used to operate in the Workers Party (PT) of Lula,
holding out the prospect that its coming to power would represent
a step towards socialism. Since Lula has become president, the
PT has become the chief mechanism for imposing the dictates of
the financial and corporate elites.
The PT has become so discredited that new mechanisms are required.
And so the Brazilian section of the CWI is now repeating its earlier
role, when it promoted Lula and the PT, this time as a component
of the Party of Socialism and Libertythe new, updated, amalgam
of various radical groupings.
These experiences should not be looked upon as some kind of
isolated development, confined to Latin America. At a certain
point ever-growing alienation, dissatisfaction and anger will
lead to a revolt against the entire political establishment, and
the stability of the capitalist order will depend on the creation
of precisely the type of opportunist mass workers party
advocated by the Socialist Party.
The SEPs campaign
Let me bring this report to a close by focusing on the essential
character of the Socialist Equality Partys campaign.
The 2007 election is taking place amidst a growing political
shift involving millions of people the world over. There is deep-going
concern about the eruption of militarism and the growing danger
of even more terrible wars. Climate change threatens to unleash
catastrophic events, vital infrastructure is in a state of decay,
there is unending and ever-deepening social polarisationthe
accumulation of fabulous wealth at one pole and the growing indebtedness
of working class families at the otherworsening attacks
on democratic rights ... and the list goes on.
But this movement can find no expression within the existing
political framework.
In the United States, millions voted against the war in Iraq.
But the war goes on, while attacks on Iran are in the making.
There is a movement against the Howard government. But if this
movement results in Howards defeat, the outcome will only
be the installation of an even more right-wing and militaristic
Labor government.
Here is one of the crucial points of difference between the
SEP and the various radical tendencies. We reject their contention
that the Labor Party represents, in some way, a lesser evil.
In fact, in conditions where the Howard government is visibly
disintegrating, the return of a Labor government is the preferred
option for significant sections of the ruling class.
The last Labor government, which came to power with the collapse
of the Fraser government in 1983, carried out an onslaught against
the social position of the working classsomething the Liberals
were unable to implement. And when the call came for the first
Gulf War in 1990-91, the Hawke-Keating Labor government was one
of the first to sign up.
A Rudd Labor government will ruthlessly implement the measures
demanded by the ruling elites. This is the real significance of
the parachuting of a series of trade union officialsGreg
Combet, Bill Shorten and Doug Cameroninto top positions.
The prices and incomes accord of the Hawke-Keating government,
through which national income was redistributed from wages to
profits, was policed by the union leaders. And when Howard came
to power, largely as a result of the hostility generated by the
policies of the Labor government, the ACTU and union leaders played
the key role in suppressing opposition to it. Now they are about
to be brought onto the front bench, to implement new attacks under
Rudd.
The crucial question confronting the working class is not the
defeat of the Liberals, but the development of a genuine socialist
and internationalist movement through which it can articulate
and fight for its own independent interests.
That involves not only a break from the Labor Party, and all
those who work in one way or another to prop it up, but a break
from electoralism, and the conception that real social and political
change can be brought about through the parliamentary system.
The SEP is fighting for votes at this election. But our campaign
has a much wider purpose. It is aimed at developing an independent
political movement of the working class and building the party
to lead it.
On that basis I urge that you support our campaign in every
possible way and give the most serious consideration to joining
our party to prepare for the immense struggles that lie ahead.
Authorised by N. Beams, 100B Sydenham Rd, Marrickville,
NSW
Visit the Socialist Equality
Party Election Web Site
See Also:
Socialist Equality Party meetings launch
federal election campaign
[26 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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