As campaigning for the March 18 election in South Australia gathers pace, state Labor treasurer Kevin Foley will be in for some unpleasant surprises.
Labors campaign will make general promises to improve the dismal state of South Australias public hospitals. But leaflets distributed by the Socialist Alliance throughout Foleys electorate of Port Adelaide will point to the real, underlying cause of the health debacle: Since being elected in 2002, the government of Labor Premier Mike Rann has cut state taxes on business by no less than $1 billion.
In Port Adelaide, the Socialist Alliance is running militant postal worker John McGill. As a delegate to SA Unions, the Socialist Alliance election material explains, McGill is one of the people leading the fight in South Australia against the Howard governments anti-union Work Choices legislation.
Ranns government has had the sense to see that giving in to pressures to put state employees on individual contracts is a guaranteed vote-loser. Rann also points out that his government is backing the High Court challenge to Howards new industrial relations legislation. But the ALPs veneer of opposition to Work Choices hides what is effectively a do-nothing strategy.
How do Rann and Foley propose to fight Howards attacks on workers? The answer is tacit but unmistakable: by getting Labor elected at the next federal election.
Contrast this with what McGill has to say: Only militant, on-the-job organising and struggle can beat back Howards attacks. We need people in parliament wholl stand with workers on the picket lines, not seat warmers who think they can fend off attacks by going to lunch with the Business Council.
If elected, Ill use the state parliament as a forum for publicising and defending workers struggles. And my office in Parliament House will be a base for organising the broad industrial campaigns needed to make the bosses back off.
The Labor government will also come under sharp criticism from the Socialist Alliance on the issue of this summers scandalous energy blackouts. The ALPs stock answer here has been to blame the Liberal opposition, which while in office in 2001 leased the electricity infrastructure company ETSA to private interests.
Socialist Alliance campaign material makes the obvious demand: Revoke the lease! Return ETSA to public control! That way, services to the public not profits for investors can be made the priority.
Particularly discomfiting for big-party candidates will be McGills pledge that if elected he will accept only the wage of an average worker. Kevin Foley pulls in more than $200,000 a year as state treasurer, McGill points out.
How can you stay in touch with the needs and concerns of ordinary people when youre on that kind of money? Living on a workers income, Ill continue to feel the pressures on working people directly.
The Socialist Alliance campaign in Port Adelaide will be officially launched at a fundraising function in the electorate on February 25. Campaign supporters are urgently needed to help with tasks such as letterboxing and the distribution of how-to-vote cards.
Contact the Socialist Alliance in Adelaide on (08) 8212 6706 or <adelaide@socialist-alliance.org>, or drop in to the Activist Centre, 34a Hindley Street, city.
By Renfrey Clarke
From Green Left Weekly, February 22, 2006.
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