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Australia: Growing dissatisfaction with Rudd Labor government
By Mike Head
12 June 2008
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Just six months after Rudd Labor came to office, the new government
faces growing dissatisfaction among broad layers of the population
over price rises, interest rate hikes and wages.
The Australians Newspoll reported on June 3 that
Labor Prime Minister Kevin Rudds satisfaction level had
fallen seven points to 56 percent, the lowest level in his
tenure as Prime Minister. The poll followed what media outlets
dubbed a horror week in federal parliament in which
the government came under fire for offering nothing, apart from
a token FuelWatch price-monitoring scheme, to lower petrol prices.
While the poll and the media coverage was largely orchestrateddesigned
to send a sharp warning to the governmentit reflected a
definite shift in public sentiment. Rudds six-month honeymoon
as Australias most popular ever prime minister
had finally come, according to the press, to an abrupt end.
For millions of ordinary people, Rudds declaration that
his government had done all it can to curb soaring
petrol prices came as a rude shock. Apart from expressing contempt
for the plight of financially-stressed working people, Rudds
comment was a blunt statement that Labor was unwilling and unable
to in any way challenge the capitalist market system, even as
the oil and mining companies were enjoying multi-billion dollar
bonanzas at workers expense.
Just half a year after the defeat of the Howard government,
the new PMs declarations were reminiscent of John Howards
refrain that ordinary families had never had it so good
under conditions of rising interest rates and record levels of
household debt.
Rudd went to the polls last year criticising the Liberals for
reneging on pledges to keep interest rates low, and held out the
prospect of a Labor government taking real action to curb petrol
price hikes. Six months on, official interest rates have risen
twice morewith further increases threatenedwhile petrol
prices have jumped nearly 20 percent over the past year, food
is up by almost 6 percent and inflation has hit a 16-year high
of 4.2 percent.
Under pressure from below, public sector unions at both federal
and state levels have been forced to submit pay claims of around
5 percent for a wide range of workers, including firefighters,
train drivers, nurses, health workers, teachers and public servants.
Some industrial agreements have already expired, while others,
including in the federal governments Centrelink, Medicare
and Australian Tax Office, are about to end. The National Tertiary
Education Union, which covers academics and other university employees,
has submitted a claim for 9 percent annual rises over three years.
Over the past month, however, the Rudd government and its state
Labor counterparts have handed down budgets that seek to impose
real wage cuts throughout the public service. The May 13 federal
budget allowed for pay increases averaging just 2.3 percentat
least two percentage points below the inflation rate. Last weeks
New South Wales budget produced a $268 million surplus by setting
a pay rise limit of 2.5 percent for all public sector employeeswhile
handing employers payroll tax cuts worth $1.9 billion over four
years.
Union leaders, who have been desperately working to prevent
confrontations with both state and federal Labor governments,
warned last week that their pay limits were inflammatory. Unions
NSW secretary John Robertson said the state Labor government was
treating workers with absolute contempt by expecting
them to take pay cuts. Community and Public Sector Union national
secretary Stephen Jones said the federal and state government
wage targets were unsustainable.
Likewise, the Australian Council of Trade Unions (ACTU) has
been attempting to prevent any challenge to Rudds demand
for wage restraint. The peak union body intervened
to stop strike action by Qantas engineers against the airlines
insistence on a 3 percent pay limit, and the unions have scurried
back into negotiations with Qantas. They were forced, however,
to allow overtime bans to commence last week, causing several
flight disruptions. In Victoria, the Australian Education Union
is confronting resistance in imposing a sell-out agreement on
teachers who have taken industrial action to demand substantial
wage rises, smaller classes and limits on the employment of contract
teachers.
Discontent is building on other fronts as well. The federal
budget handed down in May triggered protests from pensioners over
the fact that it left them living in poverty, with the single
pension rate remaining at just $273 a week. Public servants were
angered by the planned elimination of 4,100 jobs from key welfare
and service agencies, including 445 from the human services department,
200 from Centrelink, 171 from Medicare, 269 from the families,
housing, community services and indigenous affairs department,
and 179 from health.
The unions in NSW last month cancelled protest rallies against
the state governments privatisation of the states
electricity industry in order to avert an open conflict with both
Iemma and Rudd. The sell-off of power stations and retail electricity
companies is an integral part of the Rudd governments pro-market
reform agenda.
Concerns about Rudd
The June 3 Newspoll was accompanied by an editorial in the
Australian, Rupert Murdochs national flagship, which
declared that Rudd had made a mistake in seeking to appease anger
over petrol prices. Instead, the prime minister had to focus on
the big-picture itemsfurther pro-market reformthat
he promised to big business in the lead-up to last years
election:
As Labors biggest electoral asset, Kevin Rudd is
on notice that he must do more to distance himself from the cut
and thrust of day-to-day political concerns such as the rising
cost of petrol. The failure to do so detracts energy from the
big-picture reforms he is trying to promote. By engaging in fights
he cannot win, the Prime Minister is reduced in the eyes of voters
to just another politician who cant keep his promises.
The editorial voiced concern that Rudd was wasting the
opportunity to push ahead with unpopular economic measures
in his first year in office, with no election due until 2010.
Mr Rudd may argue that his vision is much bigger than petrol
prices and grocery bills. He has talked a lot about reforming
the federation and improving the nations productivity and
infrastructure. The Australian supports Mr Rudds
ambitions, many of which have come out of this newspapers
annual conferences, co-sponsored with the Melbourne Institute.
Rudd was a keynote speaker at the most recent such Australian-sponsored
gathering, titled New Agenda for Prosperity, held
in Melbourne in late March, where members of the corporate elite,
senior Labor and Liberal politicians, and various right-wing think-tank
representatives all agreed on the need to suppress wages, slash
social spending and extend free-market relations to social infrastructure,
health and education.
The editorial concluded that Rudd should take some advice from
the last Labor governmentPaul Keatingswhich
implemented a swathe of pro-market measures. Mr Rudd must
heed the words of Paul Keatings former senior adviser Don
Russell and decide whether he is a pleaser or a doer.
Other articles in the Australian weighed in with the
same message, including the regular column by the liberal
Philip Adams, one of Rudds most unabashed promoters. Adams
complained that Rudd was doing far too much pleasing and
appeasing. Pointing out that the opposition Liberal-National
Coalition was in ruins after the Howard years, Adams
insisted: Kevs got more political capital than ANZ
(Bank) has cash. So he should be making decisions on national
needs rather than the wild fluctuations of the polls... The next
election is years off, not next week.
Rudd came to office with the backing of key sections of business,
which had become increasingly critical of the Howard governments
failure to carry through further restructuring, following the
extensive de-regulation and privatisation programs pursued by
the Hawke and Keating Labor governments from 1983 to 1996. In
particular, Rudd pledged to use cooperative federalism
with his state counterparts to dismantle state-based regulations
and schemes that major corporations regarded as barriers to their
operations.
Like the Hawke-Keating governments before it, the Rudd governments
policies are based on delivering an historic transfer of income
from the working class to corporate boardrooms, in the name of
making Australian business internationally competitive.
Hidden in the May 13 budget documents were Treasury projections
that, under Rudd Labor, the wage share of the economy
would fall to the lowest level ever recorded.
By the end of this financial year, according to budget forecasts,
the wage share will fall to just 46.9 percent of GDP, lower than
any previous record, and by June 2009 to 43.1 percent. Economics
professor Don Harding pointed out that the forecasts implied that
$11 billion of national income would be transferred away from
working families this financial yearfollowed
by another $58.5 billion in 2008-09and largely end
up in an even bigger profits share.
See Also:
Australia: Rudd rewrites history as he
announces "withdrawal" from Iraq
[6 June 2008]
Australia: Rudd Labor's budget
delivers for business and the wealthy
[14 May 2008]
Australia: Inflation soars
and thousands more face losing their homes
[26 April 2008]
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