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WSWS : News
& Analysis : 1998
Australian Elections
Australian miner runs for right-wing One Nation party
By a reporter
15 August 1998
The recent announcement by Darren Culley, a second-generation
coal miner, that he will stand as a candidate for the right-wing
One Nation Party in the upcoming national elections in Australia
immediately raises the following question.
How has it happened that a worker is standing for a party whose
platform is totally inimical to the interests of the working class,
and whose second-in-command, David Oldfield, describes himself
as a "national socialist"-the banner of the Nazis in
Germany in the 1930s?
Culley will run in the state of NSW for the seat of Hunter--right
in the middle of the northern coalfields which have for decades
been a bastion of the Australian Labor Party (ALP) and the mining
unions.
The local Labor MP has publicly admitted that support for One
Nation in the region is in the vicinity of 20 percent. Moreover,
a recent national poll conducted by the Construction Forestry
Mining and Energy Union (CFMEU) of its members found that 13 percent
intended to vote for One Nation.
Like other parties of the extreme right in Europe and the US,
One Nation has sprung into prominence by exploiting the widespread
alienation of voters from the major established parties--Labor,
Liberal and National--and their deepfelt concerns over rising
unemployment and deteriorating living standards.
The party won nearly a quarter of the vote in the recent Queensland
state elections. Its leader Pauline Hanson postures as a "rebel"
against the established political order, promotes flagwaving Australian
nationalism and blames Asian immigrants, Aborigines and welfare
recipients for the lack of jobs and services.
Trying to explain the phenomenon, CFMEU national secretary
John Sutton recently commented: "Our members are really worried
about job security and that runs with the One Nation line that
people are getting screwed everywhere, which we all know is true."
But Sutton fails to answer the obvious questions: in the first
place, who is responsible for "screwing" the people,
and second, why is One Nation, rather than Labor and the unions,
benefiting from the growing anger at the loss of jobs and declining
living standards?
The two issues are intimately connected. From 1983 until 1996
successive Labor governments held office. In tandem with the unions,
they imposed a program of economic restructuring every bit as
devastating as the policies carried out by Reagan in the US and
Thatcher in Britain.
At 32 years of age, Culley would have been just 17 when the
Hawke Labor government first came to power. For most of his working
life he witnessed first hand the cruel betrayal of his concerns
and hopes by the Labor Party and the trade unions.
In the coal mining industry, the ALP and the CFMEU insisted
that miners in Australia had to be made "competitive"
with those around the world. The upshot has been that under various
industry restructuring plans and enterprise bargaining agreements,
one third of all coal mining jobs have been destroyed in the last
10 years. Companies can now force miners to work rosters around
the clock, seven days a week. Safety standards have deteriorated
badly.
Similar measures have been implemented in industry after industry
with catastrophic results for the working class. In the Hunter
Valley, unemployment stands at 9.8 percent and in the town of
Cessnock, where Culley lives, is as high as 14 percent. Not only
have jobs been destroyed but social services and public education
slashed, and public hospitals shut down.
As far back as 1988, miners' frustrations with Labor's big
business agenda compelled the Miners Federation (now a division
of the CFMEU) to temporarily disaffiliate from the Labor Party.
Since then, workers in the region have voted for so-called independents,
for the Greens and Democrats, and even for the conservative Liberal
and National parties, in an effort to pressure Labor to alter
its course. But all these protests have been to no avail.
Culley embodies the hostility of hundreds of thousands of workers
to Labor and the unions. "I am a disenchanted miner who has
had every right stolen from me," he told a Sydney newspaper.
But the emergence of support for One Nation among a section
of miners and their families cannot be explained merely as the
outcome of the betrayals of the Labor Party. After all, it is
not the first time the working class has passed through such experiences.
In the 1930s Depression, the Laborites' implementation of the
program of the employers and the banks saw an entirely different
response. Broad sections of workers, especially in mining communities
like the Hunter Valley, moved to the left and took up the fight
for socialism as the answer to the crisis of the capitalist system.
Some joined the "socialisation units" formed in the
Labor Party to fight for "socialism in our time" while
others joined the Communist Party of Australia. The betrayal of
the hopes and strivings of this generation, and the subsequent
political experiences of the working class, provide a key to understanding
the origins of the ideological confusion that has provided the
basis for the growth of One Nation.
When tens of thousands of the most class conscious workers
joined the Communist Party of Australia in the 1930s, believing
it to represent the program of Lenin and the Bolsheviks, its programmatic
axis had already been shifted. The perspective of socialist internationalism
on which the Russian Revolution had been carried out had been
replaced by Stalin's nationalist doctrine of "socialism in
one country", representing the political interests of the
dominant Soviet bureaucracy.
"Socialism in one country" had its international
corollary -- the so-called "national road to socialism"
under which the Communist Parties were to collaborate with their
"own" capitalist class. In World War II, the CPA actively
worked with the Labor government to suppress all independent struggles
of the working class as party officials in the mining and maritime
unions joined government boards.
In the post-war boom, the perspective of socialism was undermined
in two ways: internationally it was identified with the bureaucratic
regime in the Soviet Union, while in Australia it was portrayed
as representing a continuation of nationalist traditions. From
the standpoint of the Stalinists, socialism would not be the outcome
of an independent political movement of the working class, but
would arise from the continuous extension of the regulation of
the economy by the national government.
The high point of this program of class collaboration came
during the 1980s -- the longest period of rule by a Labor government
in history -- when the Stalinist union officials in the mining,
maritime, metals and construction industries formed the chief
props for the Labor government's prices and income Accord, under
which all independent struggles for wages and conditions were
suppressed.
However, towards the end of the 1980s a growing revolt began
to develop. Amidst growing industrial action, the miners' disaffiliation
from the Labor Party was followed by demands for similar action
in other unions, as hostility grew to the Laborites program of
"restructuring" based on the destruction of jobs and
working conditions.
But in 1989, the long-developing crisis of political perspective
in the working class -- the lack of a broad-based socialist outlook
-- came to a head with the collapse of the Stalinist regimes in
Eastern Europe and the Soviet Union.
In the absence of an independent outlook and historical understanding,
the ideological campaign waged by the bourgeoisie -- that the
breakdown of these regimes signified the end of socialism -- had
a profound impact on the thinking of broad sections of workers.
If the capitalist market had triumphed, then, it seemed, there
was no alternative to the program of "international competitiveness"
being demanded by the employers and the Labor government and enforced
by the trade union bureaucracy.
The rising militancy of the late 1980s, of which miners were
a central component, collapsed in the face of far-reaching historical
and political questions for which it had no answers.
The absence of a worked out program, based on an internationalist
and anti-capitalist perspective, to fight the deepening attacks
on social conditions has created the confusion that has enabled
One Nation to strike roots amongst miners and other sections of
the working class.
That confusion will only be dispelled to the extent that the
most class conscious workers begin to make a critical examination
of the experiences of the international workers' movement with
the programs of Laborism and Stalinism. In other words, if the
betrayals of previous generations of workers created the conditions
for the political crisis which has now developed, an examination
of that history can and must form the starting point of the struggle
to resolve it.
See Also:
Australian politics in turmoil
[11 July 1998]
Extreme right-wing gains
in Queensland election
A critical turning point in Australian politics
[24 June 1998]
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