Category: NSW

11 Jul

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Where is the alternative? The Tasmanian Greens join the deficit hawks

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Nick McKim faces protests over school closures

Political debate in Australia seems firmly hinged on a cognitive dissonance over questions about the economy. Setting aside the ever-present obsession of discussing economic questions as if they are somehow separate to political ones, we have a federal government simultaneously arguing the economy is strong and we are doing better than ever and that we need to accept an ‘age of austerity’ after wasteful spending and a lack of government planning. What we need, we’re told, is another round of ‘reform’ where public services are pared back, ‘overgenerous’ benefits to the disabled removed and hard work cemented as the organising principle of society.

This is a long way from former Prime Minister Rudd’s glory days where he damned ‘market fundamentalism’, and Labor members and voters were energised in the wake of the Kevin07 election. Workers would be given their workplace rights back, asylum seekers would be treated with dignity, and the welfare state would return after a long ‘retreat’.

Filed Under: age of austerity, ALP, Greens, NSW

05 Jun

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#nswisconsin: How the age of austerity came to NSW & what can be done about it

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Lest you thought the warnings raised on this blog about the “Age of Austerity” currently ravaging Europe and North America coming to Australia (see here and here, for example) were exaggerated, Barry O’Farrell has exceeded even our worst fears about the scale of attacks being planned in elite circles. What is being sold by the media as a case of reining in a spiralling public sector wages bill (and what right-thinking citizen could oppose that?) is actually the most significant attack on workers’ collective organisation in Australia in over a generation.

As liz_beths and I sat in (and periodically heckled from) the gallery of the Legislative Council yesterday, watching the non-debate around amendments to the new laws, it was noticeable that while Greens and Labor MLCs put cogent arguments, the government dealt with the laws as mere technical adjustments. Their message, in keeping with their pre-election “moderate” self-image, was at complete odds with the historic shift they were ramming through.

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31 May

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Barry O’Farrell: From modern managerialist to old-fashioned class warrior

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A funny thing happened on the way to Macquarie St.
Before the March NSW election, Barry O’Farrell was a seemingly banal, workmanlike and mild-mannered Liberal leader who spent years rebuilding his party’s broken morale, even at the cost of reining in powerful far Right factional elements. Rather than projecting the leader he would be and the government he would lead in terms of a vision, strategy, or program, he chose a smaller-than-small-target approach, highlighting the ALP’s corruption, incompetence and mismanagement in contrast to his own non-ideological style of can-do managerialism. This image at times seemed to the Left of the ALP on social issues, such as the state’s high rates of incarceration and its shocking lack of attention to mental health services.
Yet in recent weeks O’Farrell has played quite a different hand. After initial attempts to paint the state as having a Budget black hole blew up in his face (yes, Virginia, the ALP really were deficit hawks who let public services crumble to maintain their AAA rating), he has been scorned for a series of right-wing policies: The regressive shutdown of the Solar Bonus scheme, mandatory life sentences for people convicted of killing police, publicly speculating he would sell off the entire power industry, flouting promises for greater government transparency, and now announcing the most draconian attack on workers’ rights to collectively bargain in generations.

O’Farrell wants to use legislation to cap public sector wage rises to 2.5 percent annually (apparently regardless of the inflation rate). The full 2.5 percent will only be available after workers have delivered agreed productivity gains — thereby pre-paying for their own wage rises by saving the government the money ahead of time, amounting to an effective wage cut. But if this were all that O’Farrell was doing then it would simply be a miniature version of the wage cutting that happened under the Hawke Government’s Accord in the late 1980s.
Much worse is the decision to remove the independent powers of the state’s arbitration body, the Industrial Relations Commission. This would effectively remove the right of the state’s public sector workers to bargain over wages and conditions — they would simply be set by government diktat.
At the same time O’Farrell announced changes to workplace safety laws, ending the onus of proof on employers over injuries and removing the unions’ right to prosecute. These have been softened in the Upper House, but they are still a major blow to workers’ rights against negligent bosses, and represent a win for Julia Gillard’s pro-employer “streamlining” of OH&S laws across the country.
In response to the attacks, the Public Service Association has implemented a ban on unpaid overtime, and other unions are formulating their own campaigns. Left Flank is aware that there has been serious discussion of the attacks in the fire brigades, teachers and health unions. So far the nurses union has only promised a marginal seats campaign, a pretty weak start given the massive majority the government holds. The police union has been angriest after having been given the impression by O’Farrell that there would be further sops to it under a Liberal government.
The Holy Grail of neoliberal governance
Curiously for some on the Left, O’Farrell had not previously seemed like an ideologically committed class warrior. Because his modus operandi was to depoliticise the party’s message into the narrow technocratic management-speak characteristic of the neoliberal era, he simply continued in that vein post-election, speaking soothingly of the whole thing as a technical exercise that public servants have no reason to fear. It was such language that lulled many on the Left into thinking a Coalition government couldn’t possibly be worse than the ALP’s trainwreck administration, an impression legitimised by the failure of both Labor and the Greens to articulate a serious critique of the Liberals.
To understand why the Liberals are carrying out these attacks it is necessary to look to an important material imperative — the desire by NSW capitalists to reverse their relative decline over the last two decades, mired in stagnant growth rates when compared with WA, Queensland and even Victoria, and seeing the strength of working class organisation in the public sector as holding back the kind of brutal restructuring they think will solve their problems. A prominent employer organisation has made clearer the motivations behind the attacks:
[T]he NSW Business Chamber said the changes would drag the NSW public sector out of its “1970s-style time warp”.
“For too long, successive governments have committed to wage restraint, but wage restraint was evaded by nebulous promises about productivity,” chamber chief executive Stephen Cartwright said.
Such views are not isolated. Right-wing pundit Paul Sheehan spent an entire SMH op-ed ranting that public servants were part of government “bloat” that had to be smashed, even calling the Industrial Relations Commission “expendable”. The SMH itself editorialised that “the exercise will help to break the culture of control that public sector unions have exercised over the NSW bureaucracy”.
With union density at historic lows in the private sector, the economic and political elites see breaking the relative resilience of workers’ organisation in the public sector as the Holy Grail of neoliberal governance. As Sheehan complains:
Real public sector wages in NSW increased 23 percent during the life of the government, a rate more than double the 11 percent increase in real wages in the private sector.
Between September 1997 and June last year, real public sector wages in NSW increased 10.6 percent more than real private sector wages.
This also outstripped real public sector wages in other states by 6.9 percent.
For some in the ALP, the fantasy of freeing the party’s parliamentary wing completely from accountability from its link with the workers’ movement has been at the heart of this project. Ross Gittins summarised it well during Iemma and Costa’s campaign to privatise electricity:
No one wants to say it but the strongest reason for privatising electricity is so the electricity unions can’t use political pressure to get at their employers.
The lack of an arms-length relationship between highly unionised public sector workers and a Labor government is one of the great obstacles to greater public efficiency at state level.
Why do you think the unions and their Labor mates are fighting so furiously to block privatisation? Because they’re desperately afraid they’ll lose their soft cop.

Confirming this worldview, Costa’s hysterical polemic in the Australian Literary Review last December was centred on the premise that “NSW Labor is fearful of confronting entrenched public-sector union power”.
The only conclusion to draw from these opinions, then, is that the real problem with NSW Labor was not its corrupt dealings with developers, its obsession with rolling out disastrous public-private partnerships, its conscious decision to preside over the slow-motion collapse of infrastructure (especially public transport), its nepotistic embrace of big end of town, or its scandalous running down of the health system. No, it was its inability to pummel public servants’ wages and working conditions in the name of “efficiency”.
The Limits of O’Farrellism
Free of any direct connections to the union movement, and more than a little drunk on claims of a mandate to do whatever he wants (whether he announced it before the election or not), O’Farrell seems to think he can do the job Labor couldn’t because its hands were tied. Yet he faces problems that he cannot wish away.
The very strengths of O’Farrell’s pre-election strategy leave him with limited room to manoeuvre. He rode to power on a wave of revulsion against a Labor Party that sold itself to the worst of modern capitalism, but to do so he had to promise a kinder, gentler future. In other words, he had to forget about gaining office with anything akin to a political program. Yet despite presenting an unthreatening blank slate where Conservative ideology was supposed to sit, a poll just before the election showed that only 24 percent of voters thought the Coalition deserved to win. This helps explain how quickly his honeymoon has evaporated despite the sheer humiliation Labor received. Entering into a major industrial battle without having prepared the ideological ground risks disrupting his claims on office even further.
His attack on public servants faces three other important hurdles. Firstly, the fact that the government directly employs almost 400,000 workers makes it the biggest employer in the state, accounting for some 11 percent of all employees (60 percent of them in health and education), and to take on a workforce so large and diverse risks opening battles on a number of fronts simultaneously and thereby rapidly generalising opposition. Attacking the police union in this context seems especially foolish, since they will also be called on to control any militant protests against the reforms.
Secondly, a number of the unions involved have bucked the trend of retreat and demoralisation and won important, if partial, victories over the last 15 years. Some of them are dominated by more militant leaderships, in particular the teachers and fire fighters. Even the electricity unions were willing to bring the Iemma government to its knees despite their intimate ties to the ALP.
Finally, for even the most craven union bureaucrats, the threat to arbitration and therefore collective bargaining may prove a step too far. After all, if there is no bargaining, just managerial prerogative, what purpose is there for trade unions at all? O’Farrell’s seemingly non-ideological and technical solution is in fact to propose the elimination of the process of negotiation, which lies at the heart of union leaders’ social role. Because O’Farrell is staking so much on crashing through, it will be hard for those union bureaucrats to find a compromise position (their preferred outcome) that doesn’t render them irrelevant, short of forcing him into a significant and humiliating backdown.
None of this is to say that the outcome of any struggle over the public sector reforms is predetermined. The political problems suffered by the working class are legion after 30 years of retreat and quiescence. But the foundations for any elite offensive are at least as shaky, worsened by the failure of the neoliberal project to resolve long-run structural weaknesses in Australian (and NSW) capitalism, and exacerbated by more recent fears of unsustainable domestic imbalances and the knock-on effects of a global crisis still wreaking havoc across the rich nations of Europe and North America.
In describing likely outcomes of the hung parliament in the immediate aftermath of the 2010 federal election, Overland editor Jeff Sparrow presciently suggested that whoever formed government would be “nasty but weak”. It is a sign of the depth of crisis faced by the entire political class that a Premier with one of the biggest electoral margins in Australian history could well be described that way also. 

09 May

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The balance of forces

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by Dr_Tad and liz_beths

Since the NSW election discussion among many readers of Left Flank has been dominated by the battle over Marrickville Council’s BDS policy. The Left inside the party has just had to face down the combined forces of the Murdoch media, Barry O’Farrell, Kevin Rudd, various sections of the pro-Israel lobby, and the party’s own national leader, Bob Brown. This is not to mention the use of the mainstream media to attack pro-BDS Greens and state Greens policy by Upper House MP Cate Faehrmann and Marrickville Councillor (and until very recently Bob Brown staffer) Max Phillips.

The Marrickville Councillors who stood firm to support the BDS did so under enormous internal and external pressure, well documented in the major daily newspapers. What you can’t read is that many NSW Greens members continue to support a strong stance on Palestine, in favour of the BDS. Moreover, missing from much analysis is that the adoption of the BDS was democratically decided by the NSW Greens, and is a political position held by many progressive forces globally.

From what we’ve heard about the Greens NSW State Delegates Council held in Balmain over the weekend, tensions have run high in the wake of the election and BDS controversy. We understand that the party has not backed away from its support for the BDS, and the use of media outlets to wage internal arguments has not been allowed to slide. This is enormously important both in terms of the internal BDS campaign, and because it should give courage to Councillors (as well as candidates, NSW MLAs and MLCs, and Federal Senators) that they should continue to support and promote democratically-decided policy even when faced with the enormous criticism of the forces discussed above.

This is not simply a case of taking the principled stand of a martyr: the international BDS campaign is a live and real issue, and the plight of Palestinians in Israel and the occupied territories is critical. Some Greens have argued that the party should take a pragmatic position on questions like the BDS. This seems quite strange to us. For years the Greens held principled positions on climate change even when these were called mad, fringe and unreasonable. Why should the BDS be any different?  

Isn’t there also a wider issue for the Greens itself at stake here: will the Greens continue in its tradition of being the progressive voice willing to take principled stands even in the face of criticism from mainstream politicians and the MSM?

The BDS has also been used as a stalking horse in relation to Senator-elect Lee Rhiannon, seeing her accused of factionalism. While some of our readers have encouraged Left Flank to write on these claims, even a cursory look at the MSM will show that any factional behaviour has been on display in public and is not at the hands of Rhiannon. Indeed, if there’s any criticism to be made of the Left inside the NSW party it’s that it has too often put party unity ahead of political clarity and coherence, leaving space for more conservative forces to go on the front foot.

NSW members were greeted at their State Delegates Council meeting this weekend by this story from Saturday’s Canberra Times. The story suggests anything but a cooling off after the state election and BDS upheaval. If anything, things are only just starting to heat up:

Greens leader Bob Brown is behind a push to completely nationalise his party and pull state divisions into line so that they more fully recognise the national leadership.
The Australian Greens are currently a confederation of parties, with all states branches aligning to the national constitution but also having their own constitutions and autonomy.
Senator Brown and a significant portion of the Greens’ membership across Australia want both the national and state constitutions changed to give more authority to head office.
The nationalisation issue has simmered inside the Greens for a decade but intensified following recent embarrassing episodes where the NSW and Victorian branches defied Senator Brown’s advice. He rebuked the NSW Greens for promoting a highly publicised campaign to boycott Israeli goods.
The campaign led to the Marrickville Council passing a motion in support of the boycott last month before being forced to back down.
Senator Brown was also annoyed at how the Victorian Greens handled the state election in November.
During a closed-door meeting in Canberra last month, staged by party think-tank the Green Institute, Senator Brown spoke in favour of moving from a federal structure to a completely national party.
One attendee said Senator Brown spoke “passionately and positively” about the need to make the transition and that he was warmly applauded by the hundred-strong audience.
“Bob said there were problems still arising in the state branches and that they needed more support around election times … no one spoke against it,” the source said.
The meeting, at the Australian National University on April 16, was a day-long gathering of party members to discuss where they wanted the Greens to be in five years’ time. The feeling was that the party had to appear to be more united and professional.
Other party sources say Senator Brown spoke diplomatically but was privately outraged at how the branches were embarrassing the Greens brand. “Bob has spent years positioning the party as a serious and moderate player, but NSW has always been a problem … It has always been the block to reform and change,” one source said.
Another party source said mismanagement of the Israel boycott issue had spooked some inside the Greens because it made the party look like a bunch of radicals who were happy to fight with each other.
Senator-elect Lee Rhiannon, who dominates the NSW Greens, had repeatedly spoken in favour of the boycott.
“Bob is genuinely concerned about Lee Rhiannon going into the Senate,” the source said.
“He doesn’t want to see everything he’s worked for collapse and he knows there is one or two of his federal team that could be vulnerable to be people like Lee.”
The reform to nationalise the Greens structure could take a year or more to succeed. The NSW and the West Australian branches are expected to be the most resistant…

Filed Under: Bob Brown, Greens, NSW, Palestine

03 May

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Green Fear: staying out of the ‘no-go zone’ of Australia-US-Israel relations

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Marrickville Council may have backed off supporting the Israel BDS campaign but by highlighting the plight of the Palestinians, the Council’s initiative in this area, and the pro-BDS stance of the NSW Greens, has ensured that this will only be the beginning of the debate, not least of all within the Greens themselves. The Australian Greens may pride themselves on confronting the “inconvenient truths” of climate change but when it comes to exposing the inconvenient truths of the plight of the Palestinian people (as the BDS campaign does), some in the party are ducking for cover.

Led by elements in the Victorian Greens and the national Greens leadership, the move is on to force NSW Greens to back away from its BDS policy. There are those who genuinely feel the BDS campaign is counterproductive, imperilling the achievement of peace between Israelis and Palestinians, those who are afraid the issue will divide the party, and at its most basic level, those who fear a loss of votes.  For many in the party, the BDS campaign is trouble, and that is enough. The Victorian Greens are trying to limit the debate to the question of process — the extent to which NSW is out of step with national policy and decisions. There is resistance to discussing the merit of the BDS issue itself.
But the Great Fear emerging among some in the Greens is wider than the BDS. It is the fear of the political cost involved in breaching the “separation wall” and entering the “no-go zone” established by the major political parties, the defence and foreign policy establishments, and elements in the mainstream media. That no-go zone is any attempt at realistic or insightful criticism, or analysis, of the Alliance between Australia and its best mate Uncle Sam, and as part of that deal, any principled criticism of the actions of Uncle Sam’s best mate, Israel.
The demonstration of this lies not just with the inner-party reaction to BDS but the Afghan War debate in parliament last year. That five Greens senators and one Greens MHR could get up in the parliament and not criticise the Australia-US alliance, the whole reason Australia is in Afghanistan, was somewhat bizarre.[i] Notwithstanding some good political points made in the speeches, this was akin to holding a debate about global warming and not mentioning carbon. The speeches in some respects were not at odds with continuing support for the US Alliance, with the Iraq and Afghan wars, like Vietnam before them, seen as “mistakes” imperilling the alliance’s effectiveness.
To understand what the Greens are up against, we need an appreciation of the entrenched nature of the Australia-US-Israel relationship, which has protected it from critical analysis in Australian politics and sections of the mainstream media. Historian Peter Edwards has pointed out that the Australia-US alliance  “has become a political institution in its own right comparable with a political party or the monarchy”[ii]. It has certainly become a part of Canberra’s constitutional landscape, with Australia’s military-intelligence complex clustering around the Australia-American memorial at Russell and holding down one of the points of the parliamentary triangle.
Following US policy in privileging Israel in its conflict with Palestinians is part of this architecture. This was demonstrated by the Australian government falling into line and helping the blocking in the UN of the Goldstone Report on the 2008-9 Israeli invasion of Gaza, an egregious act in no way justified by Goldstone’s recent reservations, repudiated by his report’s co-authors.[iii] And this stance was earlier demonstrated by Australia’s official response at the time of the Gaza assault, by then Acting Prime Minister Julia Gillard, which singled out Hamas for criticism but made no comment on the disproportionate use of force by Israel.[iv] To Gillard and the Labor government, following the US on Gaza meant accepting Uncle Sam’s realpolitik, and underlying racial prejudice: a Palestinian life is not worth that of an Israeli. And of course not a peep out of the Australian government when the US recently used its veto to protect Israel from criticism in the UN Security Council over West Bank settlement expansion.
Support for both the US Alliance, and the US’s pro-Israel stance, is reinforced by Australian participation in the closed door, “Chatham House Rules”-based Australian-American Leadership Dialogue and Australia-Israel Leadership Forum.[v] Participation of politicians past and present in these secretive dialogues, aimed at providing discursive and cultural support for US foreign policy, and for Israel, is predictable. But it is shameful that Australian academics and journalists participate in contradiction with the ethics of transparency and open debate that are supposed to be at the core of their professions.
The McCarthyite campaign of ignorance and vilification directed at NSW Greens over the non-violent BDS campaign shows the fate that awaits those who seek to breach this “separation wall”, and for some in the Greens seeking to enter the no-go zone has too high a political cost. But there are those in the Greens, in NSW in particular, who are unlikely to back down, as demonstrated in Marrickville Mayor Fiona Byrne’s courageous, dignified and principled stance, along with two other Greens councillors, in resisting her council’s retraction of support for BDS.
The “blue” within the Greens is just beginning, but the Palestinians are unlikely to wait for the Australian Greens or anybody else to decide what’s good for them. The remarkable Arab Awakening is influencing the Palestinian territories, most recently in pushing Hamas and Fatah into some sort of agreement. It is unlikely to stop there, promising a new popular uprising against Israeli occupation and blockade. This may spread to the Palestinian population within Israel itself, and who knows, maybe also to those non-Arab Israelis who are resisting what Israeli academic, and BDS supporter, Neve Gordon has labelled the “proto-fascist mindset” of the Israeli government.[vi] Indeed it could even begin within Israel. If and when this uprising comes, it is likely to be a game-changer.

[ii] Peter Edwards, “Permanent Friends: Historical reflections on the Australian-American Alliance”, Lowy Institute, 2005: http://www.lowyinstitute.org
[vi] “BDS campaign wants Israel to abide by international law”; http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2010/jul/11/israeli-academic-boycott-commentary

Filed Under: Greens, imperialism, NSW, Palestine

11 Apr

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Last rites for the Labor Party? Part Two: An impasse for post-materialist Greens politics

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What’s the real problem here?

 

If you need any proof that the Greens did reasonably well in last month’s NSW election it would have to be the tide of opinion telling us just how badly they did. Such commentary was almost inevitably accompanied by “advice” for the party to moderate its “hard Left” policies/stick to the environment/disappear altogether. If the Greens really were past their use-by date, why bother with such a frenzied and hysterical campaign?

In particular the attacks have focused on the state party’s support for the BDS, as a handy MacGuffin with which to construct a narrative about its inherent extremism and inability to relate to mainstream voters (whoever they are). More ominously, they have been accompanied by a series of public attacks on state party campaign strategy — waged through the MSM — by leading “moderates” in the party, from Bob Brown to Drew Hutton and even Cate Faehrmann, herself an influential member of the State Election Campaign Committee. One should contrast Brown’s consistent support for the Victorian Greens last year, where their state vote fell below their federal result (from 12.66 to 11.21 percent on primaries) with his repeated public criticisms of the NSW party after a result that was relatively stronger vis-à-vis the federal performance in the state (essentially unchanged from 10.24 to the latest figure of 10.3 percent).

Nevertheless there is an important question that arises from this result, and that is the party’s ability to break larger sections of the ALP’s constituency to itself. The result was partly, as I argued last time, due to the de-politicisation of Labor’s crisis, its framing in terms of morality or competence rather than social interests. The Greens played along with this by not wanting to be associated with a “toxic” ALP brand, even refusing to recommend preferences on this basis. The party would not come out and name the Coalition for the interests it really stood for, and thereby couldn’t name Labor’s failure for what it was — a betrayal of the interests it claimed to stand for (but of course didn’t).

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27 Mar

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Rock-bottom redux: Last drinks rites for the Labor Party? Part One

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As a party able to offer itself as a viable government, Labor is not just under existential threat. It is finished. Unless, of course, it can engineer an extraordinary resurgence. Labor’s looming death as a stand-alone political entity is the biggest story in contemporary Australian politics.
—Peter Hartcher, Sydney Morning Herald, 19 March 2011
How the mighty have fallen.
Last October Left Flank wrote about the miserable state of the NSW Labor Party as it languished on a state Newspoll primary vote of just 23 percent, with even the Greens at 17 percent. At the time, cocky Victorian ALP ministers were publicly sledging the allegedly monolithic “NSW Right” for the disastrous federal election result, among other crimes against humanity. If only those not-so-faceless union bosses could have control of the party wrenched from their grip, peace would return to the land.

Since then, of course, the Victorians have suffered an ignominious defeat and the Gillard government has lurched from misstep to misstep, culminating in an all-time low primary of 30 percent for the ALP. In a remarkable article, the Sydney Morning Herald’s chief political writer Peter Hartcher has argued that the ALP is caught in an impossible bind: simultaneously leaking progressive, white-collar inner-city votes to the Greens on social and cultural issues on one side, and socially conservative “working class” votes to the Coalition on the other.
Most dramatically of all, yesterday the NSW opinion polls turned out to be mostly correct, but with an extra sting in the tail for the Left: The Keneally government was bundled out of power with a historic swing against it of over 16 percent, accompanied by a very small swing to the Greens and their possible failure to pick up a single lower house seat (Balmain remains too tight to call).
As results rolled in the Liberal spokesperson on the ABC News 24 coverage, Gladys Berejiklian, was shifting the party’s message from this being a vote against a rotten government to a vote giving Barry O’Farrell a clear endorsement (and therefore mandate). It was not long before the allegedly modest Tory leader was promising, “We’ll deliver the confident, limitless future we all [want] for ourselves and our children” and immediately invoking memories of John Howard’s mantra of governing “for all of us” when he said he would reject “sectional interests” to “govern for all people”. Already the Liberals are hinting they have supplanted the ALP as the party of the working class — in Sydney’s West and South-West as well as in industrial centres like Newcastle and the Illawarra.
Social conservatism and neoliberal politics
As I stood on a polling booth handing out for the Greens in Keneally’s seat of Heffron, the mood of voters sullen and indicative they were coming to treat the ALP to some “baseball bat” action. One of the Labor campaigners was a Keneally staffer. He told me that the notion the working class is “socially conservative” is hegemonic inside the party.
The mindset inside the ALP was on display from Gillard as she tried to define herself in a recent interview, describing her views on gay marriage, euthanasia and religion (recall she is an atheist) as “conservative”:
HOST: You sound a traditionalist. You sound very much a traditionalist, talking now. A cultural traditionalist.
PM: Well, I think in many ways that’s right, Paul. I had a pro-union, pro-Labor upbringing in a quite conservative family, in the sense of personal values. I mean, we believed in lots of things that are old-fashioned in the modern age. We believed in politeness and thrift and fortitude and doing duty and discipline. These are things that were part of my upbringing. They’re part of who I am today.
Earlier she had been challenged on her apparent capitulation to the Greens:
I know there’s some commentary to suggest I’ve only recently discovered a difference between the Labor Party and the Greens, what a load of old cobblers […]
To our right, we have the Liberal Party. In the modern age, climate change deniers and in denial about the power of markets.
To our left, we have the Greens, who do not have an economic philosophy about reform or about growth.
We drive mainstream change. That will play out in the climate change debate. Look at the CPRS. That didn’t go through the parliament because the Coalition under Tony Abbott didn’t care about climate change and because the Greens didn’t sufficiently care about jobs.
We were there in the mainstream. We’ll continue to drive the change this country needs for its future. That’s Labor heritage, Labor tradition.
The Left/Right definition here is carefully worded. The Right and Left are economic soulmates (both deny the “power of markets” the modern ALP worships); it’s just that Abbott is a climate denier and Bob Brown has contempt for ordinary people’s livelihoods.
At one level this could merely be a cover for the lack of a coherent program held by the ALP, and there is a large element of truth to this proposition. When you’re stuck for a way forward you simply claim you’re offering the safe middle ground. Yet as Left Flank has argued from the day we started, there has been a “flight from the centre” of politics that threatens any such centrist strategy. The polarisation of politics reflects a polarisation not so much along cultural lines demarcated by John Howard and largely accepted by a disoriented ALP (and the Greens), but along class lines produced by 30 years of neoliberalisation.
It is no wonder that the ALP finds itself in such a historically traumatic spot: It sees its version of looking after workers as more neoliberal economic reforms, ostensibly to protect and create jobs. Those very same reforms have delivered rising inequality, privatisation of public goods, cost of living pressures and the growing intrusion of market pressures into every sphere of life, starting from the workplace itself. These processes have hollowed out both Labor’s politics and social base. Yet even ALP and progressive commentators call for “reform”, and still more “reform” along these lines. It speaks to the absolute surrender of the mainstream Left to the neoliberal project that this could be seen as a solution to Labor’s woes.
Whatever happened to class?
Outside the elite echo chamber, things are somewhat more complicated (or perhaps less). In an important 2007 paper (pdf, starting page 401) of the effect of neoliberalism on public policy and popular opinion in Australia, “Neoliberalism, Inequality and Politics: The Changing Face of Australia”, Western et al concluded (among other things):
Alongside a major decline in union membership we see a decline in the view that unions have too much power, accompanied by an increase in the view that private business has too much power. The belief that redistribution of income and wealth should favour ordinary people and that surplus should be spent on social services rather than reducing taxation are two views that have increased in strength over the last two to three decades.
This chimes with the Australian Social Attitudes surveys carried out in the last decade, which also show that on “economic” (i.e. class) questions the public has moved substantially to the Left over the last 20 years, just as their political representatives have moved to the neoliberal Right. This Leftward shift includes questions of service delivery, where the opposition to user-pays, privatisation and cutbacks in health, education and transport runs very high.
It is not by coincidence that Barry O’Farrell ran a campaign that treated economic questions at a technocratic, anti-political level. He even sank the ALP’s power sell-off — despite considerable big business pressure to support it — on the basis that this would not be a “good deal” for NSW, not by ruling out support for privatisation in general. Iemma and Costa’s inability to ram through the sale was the beginning of the end for the government — precisely because the sale was a betrayal of any remaining core social democratic principles the party may have clung to. Into the vacuum O’Farrell could project the idea that his “moderate” politics could not possibly be worse than the ALP’s mess.
In this he was assisted by a mainstream media that depoliticised the class basis of Labor’s crisis, reducing it to issues of party “disunity”, or “Sussex Street games”, or a “toxic brand”, or “incompetence”, or more often a generalised moral critique of its decline as minister after minister exited in less than savoury circumstances. It was reminiscent of the last years of the UK Tory government in the 1990s, when the ruling class and its media machine turned on their favoured party by focusing on its scandals rather than the Thatcherite policies that really drove its electoral disintegration. It allowed Tony Blair to take office riding a wave of anti-Thatcherism only to simply continue her legacy.
Unable to seriously play the “class card” because of its continued obsession with securing some kind of electricity sale, the ALP was powerless to mount a challenge to such attacks on morals and “values”, and in fact Keneally mostly accepted them. Even the last minute attacks on O’Farrell’s hidden right-wing agenda had no teeth because the ALP had been implementing the same right-wing agenda for most of its 16 years in office, although the fear of the Liberals unleashed may have driven some potential Greens voters back to Labor.
This is the great contradiction at the heart of yesterday’s election. It was the Liberal Party that posed (falsely) as the progressive economic alternative to one of the most right-wing, pro-business state governments in living memory. To do this it had to tone down its deep commitment to neoliberal reform and its nasty social conservatism. Already some on the Left are bemoaning the lack of class consciousness among workers who seemingly voted against their material interests. But it was the way that class issues were depoliticised by the elite discourse that no major party (the Greens included) spoke directly to class interests — and even if Labor had wanted to, their record spoke louder than their words.
The voters of NSW have repudiated 16 years of economic rationalism. The problem is that there is no political party speaking for them.
Part 2 will look more closely at the Greens and whether Labor can recover

07 Dec

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Michael Costa, George Megalogenis & the strange death of ‘reform’ politics

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Now also cross-posted to ABC’s The Drum website.

The last fortnight saw the release of two significant contributions to the post federal election debate on the state of official politics, and more specifically its intimate connection with the fortunes of the Australian Labor Party. The first, the new Quarterly Essay by George Megalogenis of The Australian, is a detailed attempt by a senior journalist to go beyond the usual trivia proffered by the major parties and media hacks. The second, by former NSW Labor Treasurer Michael Costa, is a withering attack on ALP traditions, structures and policies.

What is fascinating is not the extent of contrast between the two accounts, one leaning Left and the other firmly pursuing a right-wing agenda. Rather, it is the shared set of assumptions that animates both.

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25 Oct

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NSW Labor — Degeneration versus resilience

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[Continued from the last post]

The erosion of the ALP’s long grip on the working class vote in NSW has been spectacular, reflecting the long-term processes that Left Flank has repeatedly drawn attention to. Yet it can still rely on a significant party organisation, and even more so the active endorsement (or at least passive acceptance) of trade union leaders, organisers and delegates to carry its base.

By focusing almost exclusively on the inner-party struggle in Power Crisis, Rodney Cavalier ends up acknowledging but downplaying the importance of how workers in unions helped deliver large ALP votes in NSW in the 2007 state and federal elections, but also how their alienation underpinned Iemma’s destruction and Labor’s electoral collapse in the years since. Iemma won in 2007 in large part because his campaign dovetailed with the powerful Your Rights At Work movement in its portrayal of the Liberal opposition as privileged, nasty, pro-Workchoices Tories. Power privatisation, on the other hand, like Rudd’s later abandonment of climate action, represented a deep betrayal of the hope vested in a party that had already been struggling to prove its relevance to traditional supporters. In both cases Labor “blew its last chance”.

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Filed Under: ALP, Greens, NSW, trade unions

23 Oct

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Last drinks for the NSW Labor Party?

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It is now received wisdom that the NSW branch of the ALP is responsible for everything that is wrong with Labor politics in Australia. Even smug Victorian state ministers have felt comfortable parroting this line publicly. In particular, the argument goes, the NSW Right are a bunch of unaccountable thugs who singlehandedly destroyed what should have been a cakewalk federal election win and who are the last vestige of that familiar dinosaur, “union power”. They will also be responsible for the state party’s near-certain electoral routing next March because they humiliated Morris Iemma when he attempted to deliver power privatisation.

There is a left-wing variant of the argument, often heard in Greens circles, that the ALP has moved so far Right it is no different from the Liberal Party. This is often tied up with either a naïve hope that the Greens can leapfrog the ALP to become the main party of the centre-Left, or despondent mutterings that a likely Liberal landslide will reflect the deep conservatism of the working-class western suburbs of Sydney where the Greens have struggled, or both.

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Filed Under: ALP, Greens, NSW