Benutzereinstellungen

Neue Veranstaltungshinweise

Indonesia / Philippines / Australia

Es wurden keine neuen Veranstaltungshinweise in der letzten Woche veröffentlicht

Kommende Veranstaltungen

Indonesia / Philippines / Australia | Miscellaneous

Keine kommenden Veranstaltungen veröffentlicht

“Vote Howard out!”

category indonesia / philippines / australia | miscellaneous | opinion / analysis author Friday November 23, 2007 10:56author by Melbourne Anarchist Communist Group - Anarkismoauthor email macg1984 at yahoo dot com dot au Report this post to the editors

Great idea - But who do we vote “for”?

Article by Melbourne Anarchist Communist Group (MACG) about the upcoming federal elections in Australia, in Saturday, 24 November. 2007. Published in “The Anvil” No 4 (Nov.-Dec. 2007)

John Howard, Liberal Party Prime Minister of Australia, is on the nose with workers and could very well lose the election on 24 November. Like the rest of the working class, we'd be delighted to see the back of him. And if the Liberal Party can be demolished in a landslide, so much the better.

There is a problem, however, with the strategy of voting Howard out. You have to vote “for” a given candidate or party, not against, so to vote Howard out requires voting for somebody else - and this means endorsing them as the appropriate government of Australia. So let's think this through.

First cab off the rank, of course, is the ALP. Rather than recount its appalling history, we'll just concentrate on the present and warn against viewing the past with a rosy nostalgia. The present, however, is ugly enough.

What is Kevin Rudd, ALP leader, doing? Acting like the leader of an Amateur Liberal Party, that's what. Apart from a selected handful of policies, he completely lines up with Howard. Virtually every time Howard says something reactionary, Rudd stands up immediately and says “We totally agree. Our policy is identical”. Support for rich private schools? Totally agree. An environmentally destructive pulp mill? Totally agree. Locking up refugees? Totally agree. Invading Indigenous communities in the Northern Territory, stealing their land, garnisheeing all welfare payments and smearing the entire Indigenous population as child molesters? Totally agree. And the list goes on.

The most unpopular policy of the Government is Work Choices and the ALP is promising to keep most of it. Virtually the only changes they propose are a phasing out of AWAs and a partial re-introduction of protection against unfair dismissal. Crucially, our right to strike remains so restricted as to be virtually useless and the union-busting Australian Building and Construction Commission remains in place. Finally, on the Iraq War and on climate change, the differences between Liberal and Labor are far less than the similarities - they both support the imperialist “War on Terror” and rely on free markets and “clean coal” to save the planet from global warming.

Many workers, disgusted by the ALP, are turning to the Greens. While they are better than Labor on the policies above, however, the Greens have problems of their own. Because they still support capitalism, their solutions to the world's problems will have to be paid for by the workers. The massive reductions in greenhouse emissions necessary to stop global warming, for example, will have to be paid for somehow. Under capitalism, the working class will pay the bulk of the bill, since business has the power to evade or pass on the costs. Thus capitalism can play no part in a sustainable future, so the Greens, despite their intentions, are peddling dangerous illusions.

And finally, voters in some electorates might be able to find a socialist on their ballot paper. In terms of practical policies, they are mostly similar to the Greens. The most obvious exception is foreign affairs, where they are more consistently anti-war. Their major difference is that, unlike the Greens, they put forward socialism as an ultimate solution. The problem with voting socialist, though, is that you can't get it through Parliament. A “socialism from above” would be no socialism at all. The new bosses would wear a government uniform - double the authority and accountable only to themselves.

What, then, is to be done? We have to recognise that “Who should we vote for?” is the wrong question. The ruling class will never let itself be voted out of power. Capitalism and its masters are global and will continue to attack wages, rights and conditions and tear up the planet in endless pursuit of profits. And finally, whoever we vote for will use those votes against us, claiming legitimacy for their anti-worker agenda.

Workers should instead ask “What should we do?” We need to build grassroots resistance to the Government (whichever party is running it) by organising in our communities, our streets and, most importantly, our workplaces. Further, we need to learn the law of solidarity, that an injury to one is an injury to all, and to organise on the basis of federalism and direct democracy.

We, the working class, are the alternative. In the short term, our grassroots struggle is the only thing that can extract real gains under any government. In the long term, the movement we build will make a revolution and the values on which we build it will become the values of the new world, a stateless society of liberty, equality and solidarity.

Let's vote for ourselves.

Melbourne Anarchist Communist Group (MACG)

This page can be viewed in
English Italiano Deutsch

Indonesia / Philippines / Australia | Miscellaneous | en

Fri 19 Apr, 17:16

browse text browse image

textRacist riots in Sydney 06:44 Wed 14 Dec by dmitri 0 comments

Based on various pieces in Melbourne and Sydney Indymedia etc

textDiscussing the Centre-periphery Model of Class Struggle Apr 29 by Iswed Tiggjan 0 comments

The Centre-Periphery model of class struggle, as elaborated by FARJ (Anarchist Federation of Rio de Janeiro) in Social Anarchism and Organisation (2008), has been a much debated topic within ACM. This article will seek to explain the concept by analysing FARJ’s source for the concept in Rudolf De Jong’s ‘Some Remarks on the Libertarian Conception of Revolutionary Change’ (1975) before discussing the possible uses and applications for anarchists within so-called Australia.

imageThe Plague Apr 11 by Melbourne Anarchist Communist Group 16 comments

The Melbourne Anarchist Communist Group calls on Anarchists to start rank and file groups in the unions to fight for a workers’ response to the coronavirus pandemic. Workers need to use workplace power to force the closure of non-essential industries, adequate protection of health and safety and the provision of a living income for all. If a groundswell for these demands gains strength, the officials will have either to give in to the rank and file, or be swept aside. In the course of this struggle over immediate issues, workers will raise broader demands, both about the management of the pandemic (e.g. civil liberties) and the sort of society we want afterwards. And it is in the context of this struggle that we can begin to win the argument for Anarchist Communism and to build the movement for a workers’ revolution that can create it.

textTowards an Anarchism in the Philippine Archipelago Apr 03 by Simoun Magsalin 0 comments

The politics in the Philippine archipelago is dominated by hierarchical and alienating politics as represented by reformism and National Democracy. Against these the paper forwards the liberatory politics of anarchism. The paper introduces anarchist concepts such as egalitarian organizing, mutual aid, and direct action for people unfamiliar with these concepts. After situating anarchism in the anti-authoritarian struggles in the archipelago, the paper also argues for a shift in the anarchist politics of the archipelago from an autonomist anarchism towards a revolutionary politics as a social movement.

Sorry, no press releases matched your search, maybe try again with different settings.
© 2005-2024 Anarkismo.net. Unless otherwise stated by the author, all content is free for non-commercial reuse, reprint, and rebroadcast, on the net and elsewhere. Opinions are those of the contributors and are not necessarily endorsed by Anarkismo.net. [ Disclaimer | Privacy ]