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Socialist Equality Party in Australia achieves party registration
Statement by the Socialist Equality Party
26 September 2007
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The Socialist Equality Party in Australia has gained federal
party registration, allowing it to contest the forthcoming federal
elections under its own name. The SEP was registered by the Australian
Electoral Commission (AEC) on September 17, following a concerted
campaign by party members.
As a result, every SEP candidate in the House of Representatives
will have Socialist Equality Party listed beside his
or her name. Where the SEP fields candidates in the Senate, the
partys name will appear above the line on the
ballot paper distributed to all voters throughout the state. The
decision clears the way for a bold intervention by the party into
the 2007 federal election campaign in opposition to war, social
inequality and the growing assault on basic democratic rights.
Over the past two decades, as support for the Labor Party and
Liberal-National Coalition has plummeted, minor and third parties
have faced growing restrictions on their ability to contest elections.
Recent amendments to the Commonwealth Electoral Act mean that
without recourse to legal advice, a full-time staff, a large membership
and significant financial resources, the founding or registration
of a political party has become a near-impossible uphill battle.
At the same time, while the AEC has launched a public advertising
campaign proclaiming your vote is precious, the right
to vote is itself under attack. The Howard government recently
legislated to close electoral rolls on the day that federal elections
are announced, effectively blocking new voter enrolments and effectively
disenfranchising hundreds of thousands of particularly young voters.
Anti-democratic labyrinth
Under the Electoral Acts anti-democratic provisions,
name and address details for at least 500 members must be supplied
to the AEC for verification. Parties without 500 membersa
completely arbitrary numberdo not qualify for registration
as a party.
New and minor parties seeking registration face
a vicious catch-22 situation. How do they gain the
necessary hundreds of members required for a registration application
if they are effectively barred from contesting elections under
their own name, and thereby from attracting support?
And even if a party has 500 or more members, the methods employed
by the AEC to verify membership lists are highly arbitrary. Once
the names are submitted, a random sample of 20 members is selected.
Unless 19 out of 20 can be reached within three phone call attempts,
or respond to a subsequent letter, the partys sample will
fail.
It is not uncommon for membership samples from applicant parties
to fail on a first or even subsequent random check. So far this
year at least three partiesthe Human Rights Party, Brandon
Raynors Green Liberals and the Cheaper Petrol Partyhave
been refused party registration on the grounds that their membership
lists failed such random checks for membership fraud.
In the Australian Capital Territory the Australian Democrats have
been deregistered because they were unable to provide a minimum
of 100 members.
The SEP submitted its application for party registration on
August 1. A first membership sample of 20 was nearly failed when
two party members could not be reached. While the AEC would not
divulge the identity of these missing members, party
campaign workers soon located themthrough a lengthy process
of eliminationand discovered that the AECs call attempts
had not been entirely rigorous. One of these members, from Brisbane,
received a letter from the AEC on August 16 and immediately contacted
the SEPs national office, indignant that he had not received
any phone call from the AEC during business hours at his place
of work, despite having provided the contact details on his membership
form, which had been submitted, with all the others, by the SEP
to the AEC. Had the member in question failed to check his mailbox,
had he been away, or had the AECs letter gone astray, the
SEPs entire membership application would have been jeopardised.
The electoral laws are also highly invasive, containing innumerable
trip-mechanisms that can ensnare unsuspecting parties, leaving
them open to debilitating fines and even jail terms. In August
2003, Pauline Hanson and David Ettridge, leaders of the right-wing
populist One Nation party, were each sentenced to three years
jail without parole on charges of electoral fraud under the criminal
code. They were accused of supplying the names and addresses of
500 members whom a court later ruled, on the basis of an organisational
technicality, to be merely supporters. As the SEP explained, the
jailing of the two One Nation leaders constituted a warning
of the ruthless, underhanded and anti-democratic methods being
honed for use against parties which, unlike Hansons, advance
a genuine and progressive alternative to the entire political
establishment and to the capitalist profit system itself.
Hanson and Ettridge were subsequently freed after successfully
appealing their conviction.
Since then, further amendments to the Electoral Act have augmented
the anti-democratic provisions used to block third
or minor parties from contesting elections.
On 22 December 2006, the Australian Electoral Commission wrote
to 19 registered political partiesthose without present
or past parliamentary representationadvising that they would
be deregistered in five days. This unprecedented measure, legislated
by an amended schedule of the Electoral and Referendum Amendment
(Electoral Integrity and Other Measures) Act 2006 meant that at
the start of this election year there were effectively only 11
parties with federal registration: the ALP, Liberals, Nationals,
Democrats, Greens, Family First, Country Labor Party, Democratic
Labour Party, Nuclear Disarmament Party, One Nation and Peter
Andren Independent Group. And this in a country with nearly 21
million people!
The deregistered organisations were forced to reapply under
new naming provisions that widen the grounds on which
a challenge to their registration can be mounted.
The SEP was last federally registered in 1998, but voluntarily
deregistered itself in February 2002, as legal moves against One
Nations leaders were in full-swing. Having obtained comprehensive
legal advice on the scope of the recent amendments to the Electoral
Act, and their implications, the SEP launched a renewed campaign
for federal registration in May of this year.
The party submitted the names of more than 500 members and
completed all the other requirements under the Act. Its application
for registration was then advertised by the AEC in national newspapers
in mid-August, inviting public objections by no later than September
14. No public challenge was lodged and on September 18 the party
received confirmation that it had been officially registered the
previous day.
The SEP will shortly be launching its campaign, announcing
its candidates in both House of Representatives and Senate seats.
We urge all WSWS readers and party supporters to give their fullest
possible assistance to this campaign by joining local election
committees, helping to distribute the partys manifesto and
regular candidate statements in their local areas, donating generously
to the partys election fund and helping in this way to take
the genuine socialist alternative in the 2007 federal election
to the widest possible sections of the working class.
Click here
to offer your support to the SEPs election campaign.
See Also:
Socialist strategy needed to oppose war
and social inequality
[7 September 2007]
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