AUSTRALIA
Coalition drops opposition to 'abolition' of AWAs
Graham Matthews
22 February 2008
Federal opposition IR spokesperson, Julie Bishop, formally announced that the Coalition had dropped its opposition to the Labor governments plan to abolish Australian Workplace Agreements (individual contracts) on February 19.
After apparently being rolled by her shadow-cabinet colleagues who argued that the oppositions previous plan to try to force the government to keep (pre-Work Choices) AWAs was a dud Bishop announced that the Coalition would now support the Workplace Relations Amendment Bill, while making one amendment.
Bishop announced that the Coalition would move an amendment which would see the life of the governments AWA clones Interim Transitional Employment Agreements (ITEAs, which may be used by bosses who employ just one employee on an AWA be increased from two years to five, to ensure greater flexibility for employers. If the amendment is not accepted by the government (and it has indicated it wont be), the Coalition will support the legislation anyway, after it passes a senate committee in May.
Labor has made merry with the Coalitions dithering. PM Kevin Rudd said weve had flip, flop and flap when it comes to the whole question of WorkChoices and the future of AWAs. I gather were up to the flap stage, after the backflip was announced.
The Coalitions change of heart reflects the sympathetic reception given to the transitional legislation by big business. While the government has claimed that its legislation is abolishing Work Choices, it actually leaves many of the worst aspects (particularly attacks on unions) in place.
The plan to allow ITEAs to run for a further two years, to strip awards and insist that all awards and Enterprise Bargaining Agreements contain a flexibility clause (allowing workers to individually trade-off conditions with bosses) and the insistence on retaining common law individual contracts, gives bosses back most of the flexibility they lose with the formal repeal of AWAs.