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Australia: Unions use anti-privatisation rally as leverage
for negotiations with Labor government
By our reporters
6 May 2008
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About 1,000 workers and supporters demonstrated on Saturday
against the New South Wales Labor governments plan to privatise
the states electricity network. The protest was organised
by Unions NSW and its "Stop the Sell Off" protest organisation.
The trade unions have postured as opponents of the sell-off in
response to overwhelming opposition among ordinary people and
members in the power industry who are threatened with major job
cuts. However, Saturdays event again demonstrated that they
have only placed themselves at the head of the anti-privatisation
movement in order to more easily strangle it. Above all else,
the union bureaucracy is determined to prevent a genuine industrial
and political campaign against the state government of Premier
Morris Iemma and the federal Labor government, which has lent
its full support to the sell-off proposal.
At the same time, union officials recognise that much is at
stake in the privatisation plan, with the inevitable job losses
potentially impacting upon their membership and revenue base.
They are pleading with the state Labor government to come to the
negotiating table and agree to a deal that protects their sectional
interests. Unions NSW secretary John Robertson and his colleagues
have made clear that their opposition is not directed against
privatisation per se. Rather they object to the Iemma governments
failure to follow the usual consultation procedures and its attempt
to ram through the sell-off without offering sufficient guarantees
to the unions and without recognising their position in the industry.
Robertson was the main speaker at Saturdays demonstration,
which was held outside the Labor Partys state conference.
His comments underlined the fact that the demonstration had been
called in order to strengthen the unions' negotiating position
with the government, not to initiate a political struggle against
it.

After protestors were encouraged to sign a petition requesting
Iemma to back down, he declared: Morris Iemma and [Treasurer]
Michael Costa need to understandthat they ignore the will
of the people at their peril. We need to make sure that they get
the message today. We need to make sure that on Monday they get
the message that if they say they wont proceed [with privatisation]
they will have the full support of the people of New South Wales.
They also need to understand thisif they decide to proceed
and ignore the will of the people inside here, if thats
the way the vote goes, and ignore the will of the people of New
South Wales, they will pay the ultimate price. People will exercise
their democratic right to vote [at the next election due in 2011].
As it turned out, Iemma and Costa ignored the unions' message
and did not even wait until Monday to restate that their intention
of proceeding with the sell-off. On Sunday afternoon, while the
party conference was still in session, Iemma told the media that
he was committed to the power privatisation irrespective of party
delegates rejection of the plan by 702 votes to 107 on Saturday
evening. He offered to hold further discussions with union officials
about his plans, which Robertson immediately welcomed.
Robertson had previously warned demonstrators that the government
could ignore the conference vote. If this happened, he said: We
need to make our voices heard today and you will need to make
your voices heard on Monday if they decide to proceed. We need
to stay strong, we need to build our support and continue to grow
that support in the community and make sure these politicians
get the message.
The union leadership, however, had made no effort to mobilise
their members for the anti-privatisation rally. Many protesters
were aligned with the Greens and various protest organisations,
and only a few union banners could be seen among the crowd. The
relatively small turn-out came despite an earlier decision by
the Sydney May Day committee to accept Unions NSWs proposal
to change the date of the traditional May Day rally to coincide
with the anti-privatisation protest. The May Day march
consisted of a short route around the Darling Harbour Convention
Centre, where the Labor Party conference was being held.
Opinion polls have indicated that 85 percent oppose the sell-off,
while Iemmas personal approval rating has plummeted to just
28 percent. The governments power privatisation has acted
as a touchstone for mounting discontent among workers, including
over decaying social infrastructure in health, education, and
transport, as well as rising costs of living, particularly for
housing. Many of the handmade banners at the demonstration referred
to Labors privatisation plans for other sectors, particularly
Sydneys ferries: Power, ferries, lotto, and water
for sale, Keep power, Sydney ferries in our hands.
Other banners included: Dont sell the silver, polish
it, Keep the lights on, no electricity privatisation,
Hide the sale as a lease? Cant hide the price increase.
Significantly, Robertson and the protest organisers made no
reference to the federal Labor governments role. No mention
was made of Prime Minister Kevin Rudds public support for
Iemmas plan, nor that of the former Australian Council of
Trade Unions secretary and new Labor MP Greg Combet. Treasurer
Wayne Swans interview with that Saturdays edition
of the Australianin which he described the privatisation
scheme as central to Labors economic reform agendawas
similarly ignored. There was a concerted effort to focus peoples
anger on Michael Costa, as if the state treasurer was personally
responsible for the state Labor governments right-wing agenda.
Costa featured on many of the union-made banners, while protest
organisers led anti-Costa chants.
Other speakers at the demonstration, including Robin Banks
of the Public Interest Advocacy Centre and Kate Fairman of the
Nature Conservation Foundation, raised various issues related
to the privatisation, including the threat of higher prices, more
disconnections for low income people, irregular power supply,
and unchecked greenhouse gas pollution. Two power workers, Amanda
Lane and Les McAllister, spoke of their fears of widespread job
losses in the industry. Linda Everingham, from the Penrith area
Your Rights At Work committee, which campaigned against
the former Howard governments WorkChoices industrial relations
legislation, noted that the Iemma government was dead in
the water before the next election and had only been re-elected
due to workers fears over the Liberals industrial
laws.
Members of the Socialist Equality Party distributed several
different leaflets at the demonstration, including Australian
unions seek to accommodate on NSW power privatisation,
which warned: Above all, the unions want to prevent any
conflict with the federal Labor government, which has unequivocally
backed the plan as part of its pro-market economic reform
agenda, and keep working people trapped within the framework of
the Labor Party... NSW power privatisation is only one instalment
of the ferocious attacks on the conditions and rights of working
people being prepared at both the state and federal levels. Left
in the hands of the unions, every struggle against these attacks
will be betrayed and defeated as they have been under every Labor
government over the past three decades.
* * *
World Socialist Web Site reporters interviewed several
workers at the demonstration, as well as Labor Party delegates
and observers at the state conference.
Glenn Newcombe
has worked at the Wallerawang power station near Lithgow, about
120 kilometres west of Sydney, for 26 years. He participated in
the protest rally outside the ALP conference on Saturday and then
stood near the front entrance for several hours, wearing his yellow
anti-privatisation t-shirt to display his opposition.
He said he was taking a stand, not simply out of concern for
his own job and conditions. They are selling a public asset,
and that is of more concern than anything, he said. To
me, before they sell anything from the public, it should come
to a referendum. Its the publics, and the public should
have a say in it, not just Iemma and Costa, whom the people voted
in thinking they werent going to sell it off. If they can
sell it off without the public, then we have no hope of having
a decent society.
Workers fought for years for the conditions we have got,
such as the nine-day fortnight and safety. All that wont
be there after today, if they sell the electricity industry. I
really dont know why a lot of us voted for Rudd, because
he is backing Iemma. When we voted for Iemma, he told us he wasnt
going to sell off the industry. I think they all say something,
and do the opposite. I dont know who to vote for in the
future.
Its not just Michael Costa. Hes just the
man they throw in wherever theres going to be troublethe
railways, transport, you name itto carry things through,
and give us the thumb. Labor looks like its going a bit
Liberal. Its all for big business. I dont think they
care about us little people, or want to care about us. Its
all for profit and money, money, money. It looks like the ALP
is a lost cause.
Jimmy Williams works for Sydney Ferries and
is a member of the Maritime Union of Australia. I came along
to oppose the selling off of the power system, he said.
It is a utility which we paid for in our taxes, and the
government has no right to sell it off to private enterprise.
They cant play with it as a toy to fix up their own [financial]
bottom line. I work for Sydney Ferries and I think our heads are
on the chopping block next. I cant understand the sell-off.
I cant understand the Labor Party over the last few years.
I dont know what the agenda is...
We have to resist it. For starters by coming down to
this protest. Anyone can come down to Sydney Ferries and we will
explain it to people. Pensioners wont be getting on ferries
for $2.50 under privatisation. The operators will just appeal
to the tourists and it wont be a public service anymore.
Im confident that this privatisation of the electricity
will be stopped. If not Ill have to think about it and act
accordingly.
Anne Faraday, a member of the Liquor, Hospitality
and Miscellaneous Workers Union and the ALP for 30 years, had
travelled from Goulburn, some 200 kilometres south of Sydney,
to attend the protest rally and the conference. She said she was
furious about the sell-off plan.
The ALP should be the party for the working people, but
Iemma and Costa appear to be for business. I feel very betrayed.
If they go ahead despite a vote against today, they should be
sackedI mean Iemma and Costa. I would support that, very
much so. She said she could be disciplined by the Labor
Party if she expressed her full views. Nevertheless, she voiced
some distrust in Rudd. I think Rudd supported the sell-off
and didnt want it on the agenda until after the federal
election last November. Now hes trying to distance himself.
See Also:
Australia: NSW Labor Premier prepares
to privatise electricity despite party conference defeat
[5 May 2008]
Australia: Labor rank
and file meetingno perspective to fight electricity
privatisation
[19 February 2008]
Australia: Prime Minister Rudd
backs NSW state power sell-off in face of growing opposition
[15 February 2008]
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