The best available government

September 17, 2010
Issue 

Australia now has a minority Labor Party government, backed by the Greens and independents. It is the best government available in the circumstances. It is certainly to the left of any government that would have resulted if either Labor or the conservative Coalition had won a majority at the elections.

The August 21 elections resulted in a hung parliament. In the 150-seat House of Representatives, Labor won 72 seats (a loss of 16), the Coalition 73, the Greens one and there were four independents of which one was a former Green. With pledges of support from the Green MP and the ex-Green independent, Labor soon had 74 seats.

But the other three independents (regional local heroes and conservatives who had dissented from the neo-liberal policies of the major parties) negotiated for 17 days before two of them joined the Labor-Green coalition to give the minority Labor administration 76 votes.

The result has opened up the country to more discussion of policies beyond neo-liberalism which is the official ideology of both Labor and the Coalition.

In economics, the Greens are social democrats and supporters of public intervention. The independents are “statist” in their approach, so much so that the Murdoch press calls them disparagingly — but not entirely inaccurately — “agrarian socialists”.

This election result has moved us beyond the “two parties, one choice” system. For the moment, neo-liberalism is no longer the unchallenged received wisdom.

This is the optimal government available. The Greens and the independents are in advance of Labor on three key issues: refugees, climate change and the war on Afghanistan.

The Greens and independents are in complete agreement with supporting humane treatment of refugees, most of whom are from Sri Lanka and Afghanistan, and who risk their lives in flimsy boats to reach Australia. They oppose Labor’s plan to ship these refugees to East Timor.

On climate change, the Greens and independents believe in an urgent response (no matter how flawed and inadequate) while Labor decided it could not support anything that was not corporate-friendly.

And on Afghanistan, the Greens and independents have demanded, and been promised, an urgent debate on Afghanistan once parliament reconvenes.

Interestingly, it was one of the four independents — former intelligence analyst Andrew Wilkie who in 2003 publicly quit over the fake intelligence that was used to justify the invasion of Iraq — who called the former majority Labor government’s case for the war in Afghanistan “the biggest lie of the election campaign”.

In one other — and no less important — respect, the minority government is optimal. In June, Labor’s right-wing faction leaders deposed the Labor prime minister Kevin Rudd and replaced him with the then-deputy PM Julia Gillard. This was immediately followed by a swing to the right in key areas.

The tax on mining super-profits was reduced from 40% to 22.5% and cut in at a higher level. Refugees were to be shipped offshore to East Timor.

Any action on climate change that the corporations opposed would not be contemplated in the next term of parliament. Labor’s right-wing argued that this shift to the right would restore its electoral fortunes.

In the event, these moves lost Labor any reformist sheen and prompted a swing against it — mostly to the Greens.

Labor’s vote fell from 43.5% to 38%, with the Greens rising almost 4% to nearly 12% and the other 1.5% going to the Coalition, which received 43.5%.

Not only did the shift to the right not have the promised electoral benefits, but the secret, backroom manner of Rudd’s removal also repelled many voters.

Rudd was PM one day and deposed the next. That old cliche — the night of the long knives — actually happened, leaving Labor looking morally shabby.

The opportunity now exists in the Labor Party to roll back the power and influence of the discredited right-wing faction bosses. What will act as an additional spur is the rise of the Greens who increased their share of the vote by 50% — mostly at the expense of rightward-shifting Labor.

The Greens will now have nine of the 76 seats in the Senate where their vote was another 2% higher than in the lower house.

With Labor having 31 seats, the Senate will have its first centre-left majority for more than three decades. (However, because of a peculiarity of the constitution, the new Senate does not take office until July 1, 2011.)

With Greens voters having risen from one in six of left-of-centre voters to one in four, Labor may now be tempted to tack to the left to recover and keep its voters.

How long this new, mildly reformist government lasts is an open question. This is the first time since 1940-41 that Australia has had a minority government at the national level. The country is used to having majority governments.

However, at the state level there have been minority governments relatively often over the past 20 years.

The economic conjuncture is also favourable. Australia is a political satellite of the United States, but an economic province of booming China.

On the back of record exports of coal, gas, iron ore and other minerals to China, India and Japan, the economy is growing at more than 3% per year, there is relatively full employment, the deficit is about 3% of GDP and the government debt is less than 10% of GDP.

For the moment, the Greens and the independents are driving the new government, insisting on (and achieving) promises of more debate in parliament, more consultation and more freedom to introduce legislation. The Greens are also demanding consideration of a higher super-tax on mining profits, withdrawal from Afghanistan, a price on carbon, same-sex marriage and a reduction of fetters on union action.

A still shell-shocked and grateful Labor leadership is entertaining all these proposals.

Nevertheless, the push-back from conservative forces inside and outside Labor’s ranks is taking shape.

The Murdoch press (which accounts for 70% of newspaper circulation in Australia) is ferociously opposed to the new government. The Coalition has confirmed its more right-wing leadership in place. And Labor’s right, while lying low, have not lost their positions.

The two Labor-supporting country independents, who represent traditionally conservative electorates, may also get cold feet.

There is also media pressure bearing down on the Greens to “moderate” (read abandon) its policies. Red-baiting has re-appeared with revelations, mainly in the Murdoch press, about the leftist and even ancient Stalinist associations of some of the new Green MPs.

Even the party’s inspiring but sober leader, Bob Brown, has been indicted for his “tomato red” economic views — on the front page of the liberal broadsheet, the Sydney Morning Herald.

But for the time being, political life is running in new channels in Australia.

This moment opens up new configurations and new balances of forces which are more hopeful for those who are campaigning for a good life beyond consumer capitalism, for the society of the free and equal, for sharing the wealth, for an economy which respects the environment, and for a break with US military adventures with their murder, wholesale killing, torture and enormous waste.

It might not be quite a political Spring, but it is an advance on the deeper winter that could have been.

[Reprinted from www.socialistresistance.org .]

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