Tag Archives: China

The Regimes Joining in Israel’s Genocide Are the Only Ones Claiming That China is “Persecuting Uyghurs”

Photo Above: Uyghur people perform a Uyghur cultural performance in a square in China’s Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region. The Uyghur people’s rich culture is flourishing in the Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region in China’s northwest.
Photo credit: China & Asia Cultural Travel website

The Firming of China’s Course Toward Socialism
Improves Uyghur People’s Lives

The Regimes Joining in Israel’s Gaza Genocide Are the Only Ones Claiming That China
is “Persecuting Uyghurs

  • Most of the world has refused to buy into the claim that China is “persecuting Uyghurs”.
  • The one and only state in the entire Middle East that has signed on to this lying anti-China claim is … the truly genocidal Israeli regime!
  • Uyghur people’s rich culture is flourishing in socialistic China.
  • The political battle taking place within Xinjiang is a contest between on the one side, that small proportion of Uyghurs who are either consciously pro-capitalist or religious fundamentalist opponents of women’s rights, together with their imperialist masters; and on the other side, pro-women’s rights, pro-communist Uyghurs and their pro-communist Han Chinese allies.
  • China’s vocational training schools are a more humane way of dealing with those who have had illegal, low-level association with banned terrorist groups than the Australian regime’s supermax prisons.
  • Excessive market reforms weakened ethnic relations within China for a two decade period.
  • In colloquial terms, because China has – in a zig-zagging way – become “more socialist” over the last decade and a half, Uyghur people’s lives have improved and ethnic harmony has been strengthened.
  • The well being of Uyghur people closely depends on the well being of socialistic rule in China.
  • Let us mobilise with all of our energy to defend the Chinese workers state against all the all-sided attacks that the imperialist ruling classes are unleashing against her.

3 April 2024: The Israeli regime is intensifying its genocidal massacre of the Palestinian people. In just the last six months, Israeli forces have killed more than 33,000 people in Gaza and hundreds more in the West Bank. Two-thirds of the people that the Zionist military have killed are women and children. The Israeli regime would not be able to commit these crimes without the massive support that it is getting from the U.S., Australian, British, German and other Western ruling classes. Do not be deceived by these Western imperialists’ appeals to their Israeli allies to “take greater care to minimise deaths of Palestinian civilians”. The imperialist rulers do not truly care one bit about the lives of Palestinian people. Their statements of “concern” are a cynical attempt to protect their self-created image as champions of “human rights”. They worry that their horrifying brutal nature is being exposed in the eyes of much of the world. Even while engaging in such window-dressing, the Western imperialist regimes are providing the Israeli forces with ever increasing military support. The Biden regime in the U.S. has sent Israel huge new caches of 155mm artillery shells and terrifying 900kg MK84 bombs – precisely the weapons that cause greatest destruction to Palestinian civilian lives and infrastructure. For its part, the Australian regime not only maintains its military ties with Israel, but greatly helps Israel direct its air and artillery strikes on Gaza through jointly operating – with its U.S. allies – the Northern Territory Pine Gap ground station for U.S. spy satellites. Australian troops have also joined those from the U.S. and other U.S. allies in a Red Sea operation designed to protect the Israeli onslaught by crushing actions in solidarity with the Palestinian people by Yemeni Houthi fighters.

The truth is that the capitalist ruling classes of the U.S., Australia, Britain and other Western countries are not only supporting Israel’s massacre of Palestinian people, they are participating in it. Yet these same ruling classes have the hide to attack China for supposedly persecuting her Uyghur minority that live in China’s northwest Xinjiang region. The Uyghurs are an ethnic group who speak a Turkic language and amongst whom the main religion present is Islam. Compared with China’s East Asian-looking Han majority ethnic group, Uyghurs generally have facial features and an appearance that somewhat more closely resembles those of white Europeans than do Han Chinese. In their most extreme allegations, the very same Western imperialists who are participating in the real genocide in Gaza claim that “China is committing a genocide of Uyghurs”. So, should we believe these claims? Let’s remember that the Western ruling elites that are spearheading the campaign to accuse China of persecuting Muslim Uyghurs are the very same people who have been lying through their teeth by telling us that Israel’s genocidal assault on Gaza is a “legitimate act of self defence”; and by deceitfully giving the impression that Israel’s onslaught against the Palestinian people began with Hamas’ October 7 attack and not with the murderous 1948 ethnic cleansing of Palestinians from their land. These Western ruling classes attacking China’s treatment of Uyghurs are the same ones who brand every act of resistance of the subjugated Palestinian people as “terrorism”. Twenty one years ago, these same Western ruling elites sold the world the lie that Iraq had weapons of mass destruction in order to justify their invasion of that oil rich country. During the course of that invasion and occupation of Iraq, the U.S., Australian, British and other Western militaries caused the deaths of over one million people. So we should not believe anything that they tell us! We should assume that everything that the Western imperialist rulers and their propagandists tell us is a lie … until proven otherwise.

It turns out that the Western capitalist rulers’ claim that “Communist China is committing a genocide of Uyghurs” has as much validity as their earlier claim that Iraq “has weapons of mass destruction”. That is none at all! China is not dropping bombs on Uyghur people, nor shooting Uyghurs. Not at all! Nor is China’s socialistic state killing Uyghur people in state custody – unlike Australia’s racist capitalist regime, whose cops and prison guards continue to kill, or otherwise cause the deaths of, Aboriginal people in custody with complete impunity. Realising that all this is obvious to most people in the world, imperialist propagandists then say that the “Communist Party of China is managing to genocide the Uyghurs without actually killing anyone.” To the people of Gaza who are actually suffering a genocide – whose children, mothers, sisters, fathers, brothers and friends are being blown to pieces by Israeli shells and bombs, whose homes are being flattened and who now face mass starvation – this line must seem especially ridiculous. Notwithstanding this, the imperialist propagandists and their puppets tell a story that “China is committing genocide by extinguishing Uyghur culture.” The truth however is that the Uyghur people’s rich culture is flourishing in socialistic China. Uyghur language, theatre, music, dance, art, wedding and funeral customs, dress and food are not only thriving in China’s northwest but are being given much state support and encouragement. Especially flourishing is the traditional Uyghur art of Muqam, which integrates songs, dances, and folk and classical music. Backed by Chinese government subsidies, Uyghur Muqam artists regularly perform during festivals and celebrations in Xinjiang, in Uyghur towns and villages and on tours to major Chinese cities like Beijing and Shanghai. Meanwhile, millions of Uyghur people have been lifted out of poverty in recent years. Indeed, right now, the economy in the majority Uyghur-parts of China (in the southern part of Xinjiang) is literally booming, with the result that the living standards of Uyghur people are now growing faster than those in the rest of China.

The Peoples Republic of China (PRC) has introduced measures that give Uyghur people greater rights in some important domains than other Chinese citizens in order to make up for the historical disadvantage faced by people living in the geographically challenging, desert lands in the southern part of Xinjiang. Thus, whereas all China’s children are granted free education for the nine years of China’s compulsory education, in southern part of Xinjiang (and in the Tibet Autonomous Region) education is free for the entire 15 years of education. That means that children living in the majority Uyghur lands in the southern portion of Xinjiang have the special right to be able to attend three years of pre-school without their parents paying any fees, as well having to pay zero tuition fees if they choose to attend the three years of senior high school. Such measures are in sharp contrast to what Aboriginal people continue to face in 21st century Australia. Here there remain laws that openly discriminate against Aboriginal people – such as laws that specially restrict many people living in several areas with high concentrations of Aboriginal people from having the right to decide how they spend their own incomes. Such compulsory “income management” measures targeting Aboriginal people were first imposed through John Howard’s 2007 Northern Territory (NT) “Intervention” and then expanded to other regions. Although the current Labor government has now made the scheme voluntary in some areas, it has imposed new measures that maintain (and even expand) draconian compulsory “income management” in several areas with high proportions of Aboriginal residents – including all of the NT, Cape York and Doomadgee in Queensland, the APY lands in South Australia and the Ngaanyatjarra lands and Kiwirrkurra Community in Western Australia.

The Western capitalist rulers’ accusations that “China is committing a genocide of Uyghurs” reached its height during the pandemic. This is no accident. Worldwide travel restrictions during the pandemic meant that people were much less able to travel to Xinjiang to verify what was really going on. That made China’s enemies feel that they could get away with making any claim about what was happening in Xinjiang. But now foreign tourists are once again travelling to China’s northwest. And these visitors are seeing with their own eyes what Xinjiang is really like. All this makes it harder for the Western rulers’ to sell their accusations about China’s actions in Xinjiang. So they have quietly, largely stopped claiming that China is committing a “genocide” of Uyghurs. Instead, they claim that China is “persecuting Uyghurs with the aim of extinguishing their identity”. If that were true, why would the Chinese state make a point of highlighting the Uyghur people’s particular identity by giving Xinjiang the official name of the Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region (XUAR)? Notably, for the last 44 years, every single chairperson of the Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region government has been an ethnic Uyghur. Uyghur identity is recognised in the leadership and official name of Xinjiang despite Uyghurs making up just 45% of the region’s population, with Han Chinese constituting a further 40% and non-Uyghur Turkic ethnic groups, Mongols, Persian-related Tadzhiks and the Muslim Hui group making up most of the remainder.

Above: Palestinian people observe yet another building destroyed by a deadly Israeli strike in the southern Gaza city of Rafah on 2 April 2024. Top: The joint U.S.-Australia spy base near Alice Springs pinpoints many of Israel’s genocidal artillery and air strikes on the people of Gaza. Through hosting and helping operate the Pine Gap satellite ground station, through contributing troops to the U.S.-led Red Sea operation against Yemeni actions in defence of Palestine and through military ties and two-way arms contracts with Israel, Australia’s ruling class is joining the U.S. and other Western powers in directly participating in Israel’s genocide of the Palestinian people of Gaza. Despite this, these very same Western capitalist ruling classes claim that it is China that is engaging in brutal oppression – supposedly by “persecuting” her ethnic Uyghur population and other traditionally Muslim ethnic groups that live in China’s northwest and “suppressing” their cultural identities. But the reality is very different! Below: Nearly 10,000 predominantly Uyghur-speaking people dance in local Dolan Maxrap folk style during a festival in the Awat county of China’s Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region.
Photo credit (top photo): Kristian Laemmle-Ruff @kristianlaemmleruff
Photo credit (above photo): Khaled Omar/Xinhua
Photo credit (below photo): China News Service


The Regimes Accusing Socialistic China of
“Violating Human Rights in Xinjiang”

The regimes spearheading the condemnation of China over her alleged “violations of the human rights of Uyghurs” are truly a who’s who of the countries that are supporting Israel’s war on the Palestinian people. They include the governments of the U.S., Britain, Australia, Germany and Japan. For a more detailed comparison between the countries accusing China and the ones supporting Israel’s onslaught, we identified the governments supporting Israel by those that voted for a pro-Israel amendment to a resolution at the 27 October 2023 UN General Assembly. That amendment, which was put by Canada, explicitly condemned Hamas and not Israel and sought to blame the suffering in Gaza on Hamas rather than Israel. This amendment was a despicable attempt to whitewash Israel’s slaughter of the Palestinian people. However, the amendment failed because it did not garner the required two-thirds majority to pass. Of the UN member states, 105 states did not vote for the amendment – either voting against, abstaining or not voting – while 88 voted for the pro-Israel amendment, including Israel itself.

So how do we identify the regimes supporting the claim of the Western powers that socialistic China is “violating the rights of Uyghurs”? To identify these states, we looked at the countries that signed a joint statement condemning China’s treatment of Uyghurs that was submitted to a UN committee on 18 October 2023. The statement, which was delivered by Britain, was signed by 50 countries (Fiji had initially been arm-twisted to sign but later withdrew its signature). That means that 142 countries refused to sign the China-bashing statement. Moreover, many of the states that did sign the statement are European and other states with very small populations. In population terms, the governments that signed onto the statement accusing China represent just 14% of the world’s population. Thus, although Australia’s mainstream media like to say that “the international community has condemned China’s treatment of Uyghurs”, it turns out that governments representing 86% of the world’s population have refused to buy into these false accusations. Moreover, in comparison with the regimes that have attacked China over the Uyghur question, a far greater number of states representing a far larger number of people have positively praised China’s treatment of Uyghurs. Most have done so after sending fact-finding trips to Xinjiang. This includes the majority of the governments heading Muslim-majority countries. Indeed, even several governments that are largely subordinate to the U.S. imperialists have hailed China for the rights and social progress she has brought to her Uyghur minority. Delegations of the Organisation of Islamic Countries and Muslim scholars from the World Muslim Communities Council have also praised China’s treatment of Uyghurs following inspection missions to the Xinjiang region. The Arab League has also denounced the attacks on China over “human rights” in Xinjiang.

It is notable that although the Western powers condemning China’s treatment of Uyghurs do so under the guise of “defending the rights” of a Muslim people, only one solitary government of a Muslim majority country is endorsing their claims. And that is the hopelessly Western-dependent regime heading the small European country, Albania. But the most striking feature of the regimes condemning China for supposed “human rights violations in Xinjiang” is that these regimes are also the strongest supporters of Israel’s genocidal war on the Palestinian people. Thus 48 of the 50 governments that signed the 18 October 2023 statement claiming that China was “violating the human rights” of Uyghur people went on to, just nine days later, vote for the pro-Israel, failed UN General Assembly amendment that disgustingly blamed Hamas and not Israel for causing the carnage.

The only two regimes that signed on to the 18 October 2023 anti-China statement that did not vote for the subsequent pro-Israel amendment at the UN were the ones heading the tiny countries of Eswatini and Liberia. It is noteworthy that the Eswatini regime is notorious for being not only the last African country to recognise Taiwan rather than the Peoples Republic of China as the legitimate rulers of China but for also being the last absolute monarchy on the continent. The last two and a half years has seen mass protests in Eswatini against the monarch – whose family live an opulent life in a poverty-stricken country where the average life expectancy is just 57 years. The Eswatini regime has attacked these protests with extreme brutality, killing over 50 protesters.

It should be noted that these only two states that signed the 18 October 2023 anti-China statement that did not also vote for the pro-Israel UN amendment did not actually vote against or abstain on that vote for the pro-Israel General Assembly amendment. Rather, they did not cast a vote at all. Given that these two regimes also did not cast a vote on the UN General Assembly resolution calling for an immediate ceasefire in Gaza that was voted on immediately after the pro-Israel amendment was defeated (unlike most of the other countries that did not vote for the Canadian-put pro-Israel amendment who instead overwhelming voted in favour of the ceasefire resolution), it may well be that the lack of a vote by the Eswatini and Liberian governments on the pro-Israel amendment was due to these regimes not being able to seat a representative at the UN General Assembly at the time rather than any conscious refusal to vote for the pro-Israel amendment. In any case, if one again compares the states that voted for the joint statement accusing China of “violating human rights in Xinjiang” with those that voted for the 27 October 2023 pro-Israel amendment but this time does so from the point of view of the populations that these governments represent, then 99.4% of those that signed the statement accusing China of “violating human rights in Xinjiang” voted for the pro-Israel UN amendment that sought to condemn Palestinian resistance forces rather than Israel. In other words, for all practical purposes, one can say that those regimes that attack China over her treatment of Uyghurs are made up entirely of regimes that support Israel’s onslaught in Gaza.   

Above: The voting record at the 27 October 2023 UN General Assembly on a Canadian-drafted amendment to a resolution on the war in Gaza. The failed amendment explicitly condemned Hamas and not Israel and sought to blame the suffering in Gaza on Hamas rather than Israel. By seeing who voted for this pro-Israel amendment we can see which governments are either explicitly or implicitly supporting Israel’s genocidal terror against the Palestinian people. Below: Nearly all the regimes, representing just 14% of the world’s population, that falsely accuse the Peoples Republic of China of “seriously violating the human rights of Uyghurs and other predominantly Muslim minorities in Xinjiang” voted for the 27 October 2023 UN amendment that despicably attempted to whitewash Israel’s slaughter of the Palestinian people. This includes the regime ruling the one and only Muslim-majority country whose regime has signed on to the attacks against China over treatment of Uyghurs, Albania.

Western Imperialism – Its Neo-Colonies and Semi-Colonies

It should be stressed that the fifty governments accusing China of “violating human rights in Xinjiang” is overwhelmingly made up of the Western powers in North America, Europe, Australia, New Zealand and Japan. Thus, and very tellingly, the one and only state in the entire Middle East that has signed on to this lying claim that China is persecuting Muslim Uyghurs is … the truly genocidal Israeli regime! The only other state in all of Asia to join the statement attacking China is the imperialist regime ruling Japan. In Africa, only the two previously mentioned governments of Eswatini and Liberia – who together represent less than 0.5% of Africa’s population – endorsed the statement attacking China’s human rights record in Xinjiang. Meanwhile, not one single state in South America signed onto the anti-China statement and just one state in Central America did – the U.S.-subservient regime of Guatemala. The only other states to sign onto the statement are four Pacific regimes that are neocolonial puppets of either Australian or U.S. imperialism.  This includes the government of Tuvalu, which in November effectively made the country an Australian protectorate, after agreeing to give the Australian regime veto power over Tuvalu’s security arrangements with any other country. Then there are the rulers of another Australian neocolony, Nauru. Since the start of the 21st century, the Australian government has turned Nauru into an extremely brutal detention centre for refugees from the Middle East, Africa and Asia who sought asylum in Australia. This followed Australian and British companies destroying the island through phosphate mining during the period of direct Australian colonial rule (nominally done in concert with Britain and New Zealand). With the island thus becoming unsuitable for the islanders earlier means of subsistence through agriculture and aquaculture, the tiny country became even more dependent on Australia’s capitalist ruling class. This allowed Australia’s rulers to make islanders reliant on payments from Canberra for enforcing the mandatory detention of refugees and which, in practice, gave the Australian regime control over Nauru’s external policy (with the number of refugees coming by boat into Australia having fallen and thus the Australian regime’s use of Nauru for refugee imprisonment having diminished, the blood money that Nauru’s governemnt receives from Canberra for imprisoning refugees has recently plunged, pushing the country’s leaders to start to assert a degree of independence – we do not know whether this will later result in a change in their stance on Xinjiang but in January Nauru finally swapped its recognition as to who are the legitimate rulers of China from Taiwan to the Peoples Republic of China). The final two signatories to the statement accusing China of “violating human rights in Xinjiang” are the tiny Pacific states of Palau and Marshall Islands. These two states are basically “protectorates” of the U.S. regime and relentlessly downtrodden ones. From 1946 to 1958, the U.S. conducted massive nuclear testing on several of the islands that make up the Marshall Islands after forcing residents to leave their homes. To this very day, the U.S. uses the Marshall Islands as a major missile testing site. Both the radiation from the nuclear testing and the forced relocation caused massive damage to the health of the country’s people, resulting in them dying on average at a notably younger age than those in neighbouring Micronesia. Today, through a colonial-style arrangement, with the Orwellian title, “Compact of Free Association”, the U.S. has complete control over both the Marshall Islands and Palau’s defence and security. The Marshall Islands, Palau, Nauru and Tuvalu signing onto the 18 October 2023 condemnation of China can hardly be considered independent acts!

The number of states that voted for the 27 October 2023 pro-Israel amendment at the UN General Assembly is considerably greater than the number that have signed onto the bogus attacks on China over human rights in Xinjiang. This is because a number of states that are dependent on the Western imperial powers and can be considered their semi-colonies – like India, Brazil and Mexico  – were pressed to vote for the Canadian-put, pro-Israel amendment. However, while the imperial powers have enough pull on these states to drag them into voting for an amendment that backhandedly excuses Israel’s bloodbath in Gaza, these states retain enough independence to avoid making a total mockery of themselves by signing onto an anti-China statement on Xinjiang that is so openly a load of rubbish.

Moreover, while the likes of India, Brazil and Mexico were pushed into voting for a pro-Israel amendment at the UN General Assembly, they have not been providing concrete military support to the Israeli military. The regimes providing actual material support to Israel’s war on the Palestinian people are exclusively the Western powers. These include Israel’s main backer the U.S. regime, the Australian regime, the German regime which has been providing Israel with huge stocks of arms over the last few months and the regimes participating in the U.S.-instigated Red Sea operation to protect the Israeli onslaught by attacking pro-Palestine actions by Houthi rebels. The latter include not only the U.S. and Australia but also Britain, Canada, Denmark, France, Italy, the Netherlands and Norway as well as the European Union (which includes most European states) – all of whom have forces in the Red Sea arrayed against the Houthis whether they be in concert with the U.S. or under independent national command. In summary one can say that, for all practical purposes, not only are all the regimes that falsely accuse China of persecuting Uyghurs supporters of Israel, these regimes that are spreading these anti-China lies are basically the only ones that are actually giving concrete military support to Israel’s war on Gaza. These are essentially also the very same regimes that invaded and occupied Iraq, that committed horrific war crimes during their failed two-decade occupation of Afghanistan, that brought disaster to Libya’s people through their brutal 2011 regime change war and that waged a brutal proxy war and then deadly bombing campaign in Syria. These Western regimes lying about China’s treatment of her majority Muslim, Uyghur population are also the very regimes that have regularly demonised and incited hatred against their own Muslim minorities whenever they have needed to find a scapegoat or diversion for their masses’ economic and social grievances.

What is Driving the Western Powers to
Both Support Israel’s Bloodbath and to Make
Lying Accusations Against China

To understand why support for Israel’s war against the Palestinian people and false accusations that China is persecuting Uyghurs go hand in hand, one has to examine the nature of the Western rulers who are guilty of both these crimes. Currently, in all the Western countries, economic and actual political power lies in the hands of a super-rich class that owns the banks, factories, mines, transport nodes, communication infrastructure and major retail and service enterprises. The wealth and power of this capitalist class is such that all the state institutions and governments serve their exclusive interests. In the modern world, the capitalists of the richer countries not only exploit the workers of their own countries but gain fabulous profits from exploiting labour in the poorer countries at an even greater rate. They loot the natural resources of these poorer countries, seize control of their markets and mercilessly leach interest payments from the peoples of these lands. Thus the ruling classes of the richer Western countries are not only capitalist ruling classes but also imperialist ruling classes. Australia’s capitalists for example gain huge profits from plundering the natural wealth of South Pacific countries and through broader profiteering in these and neighbouring southeast Asian and South Asian countries. To the most powerful imperialist ruling classes, the Middle East is especially important because of its oil wealth and its strategic location. That is why the, by far, strongest imperial power, the U.S., has enlisted Israel to be its enforcer in the Middle East. And that in turn is why the U.S. rulers back Israel. In protecting Israel they are protecting their reliable and vicious attack dog in a highly strategic region. The Australian rulers back Israel because they want to protect the power of their U.S. senior partner whose might is what underwrites Australian imperialist exploitation in the Asia-Pacific region. Similarly, smaller imperialist states such as Belgium, Denmark, the Netherlands, Norway, Portugal and Sweden are especially keen to do whatever it takes to uphold U.S. power, because not being militarily strong enough to single-handedly enforce their own imperialist plundering, they rely on U.S. might to maintain the Western-dominated world “order” that enables them to get a slice of the imperialist looting of poorer countries.

OK, so the above explains why the Western regimes back Israel. But where does China fit into all this? To answer this we first need to point out that a good part of what enables the imperial powers to rape the poorer countries is through their control of world markets, their ownership of capital and their jealously-guarded possession of the most advanced technology. This allows them to demand that developing countries hand over a big chunk of their income in order to get access to the markets, capital and technology that they so badly need to develop. And here is where China acts as a big disruptor. You see although there are unfortunately still capitalists operating within China, unlike in the West the capitalists do not rule China. Instead, albeit in an imperfect and indirect way, it is the working class that rules China – a rule that was established through a heroic toiling people’s revolution in 1949. As a result, in China, the backbone economic sectors – including all the major banks, the steel, aluminum, cement and glass industries, the energy and power sector, the major mines, the major infrastructure companies, the ports, the shipping lines, the three big telecommunications firms, the shipbuilding, train manufacturing, aircraft manufacturing and space sectors, the majority of the auto industry and more – are collectively owned by the people through public ownership. The success of China’s socialistic system means that China and her giant state-owned enterprises are increasingly able to offer developing countries the capital and technical expertise that they need, alongside access to China’s huge market. And here’s the key point, they are able to offer all this without ripping off the people of these countries. This is possible because China’s socialistic state-owned enterprises are fundamentally not profit driven. To be sure, China is not collaborating with developing countries out of charity. They benefit too from these exchanges. Chinese operations in the developing world bring additional employment prospects for Chinese engineers, technicians and skilled workers, brings opportunities for Chinese public sector enterprises to gain experience operating in different environments and allows Chinese companies to increase their scale of operations. Meanwhile, the cooperation with countries in Asia, the Pacific, Africa, the Middle East and Latin America helps China win more friends in the developing world. Moreover, by helping friendly poorer countries to improve their incomes, China is growing the market for its own exports while improving the capacity of these countries to supply the imports that China needs. The cooperation is indeed mutually beneficial. The key point however is that although China’s state-owned enterprises do seek benefits from their operations in developing countries, they are not pursing big profits. Indeed, many of the big infrastructure projects that China’s public sector companies have successfully delivered to developing countries have barely made any profit at all and sometimes even run at a loss. As a result, poorer countries are increasingly turning to socialistic China and her state-owned enterprises to help them develop. In doing so they are turning their backs on profit-driven Western companies or using the threat of turning to China to demand a fairer deal from Western investors. All this is causing Western corporate bigwigs, bank owners and investors to lose part of the profits that they had previously been able to plunder from developing countries. And this has these imperialist exploiters and the regimes that serve them hopping mad!

The China-caused loss of some of the exorbitant profits that they attain from plundering the poorer countries is more than annoyance to the ruling classes of the richer Western capitalist countries. With their own economies ridden by repeated crises – witness the soaring inflation and low or even negative economic growth in most of their countries right now – the imperialist rulers cannot stave off the collapse of their domestic capitalist economies without super-exploiting the developing world. Indeed, for their obsolete capitalist economic systems to survive, each of the imperialist ruling classes need to actually drastically increase the number of toilers that they exploit in the Global South and the amount of natural resources that they plunder from these lands. However, the continuation of socialistic rule within China prevents these imperialist ruling classes from exploiting workers in a country with nearly one in five of the world’s people the way that they super-exploit workers in the rest of the developing world. Therefore, whether it is through her mutually beneficial cooperation with developing countries (inadvertently) obstructing imperialist looting of these countries or through its workers state preventing China itself from being turned into a giant sweatshop for exploitation by Western capitalists, socialistic rule in China presents an existential threat to the rule of the imperialist classes. And that is why the capitalist rulers in the West are working tirelessly to crush socialistic rule in China. Their means range from funding and training anti-communist forces within China, to providing propaganda support for these groups, to placing restrictions on high-tech exports to China, to provocatively sending naval armada’s into China-claimed waters in the South and East China Seas, to threateningly engaging in massive military buildups aimed against Red China. To justify amongst their own populations these highly expensive means of exerting all-sided pressure on socialistic China, the Western capitalist ruling classes use every opportunity to demonise China. Their lie that China is brutally persecuting Uyghurs is one of their key means of slandering Red China. And Australia’s ruling elite are at the very forefront of disseminating this lie. Indeed, one prominent Australian ruling class think tank, ASPI has become the international spearhead of Western imperialism’s propaganda campaign against China over the treatment of Uyghurs. The Australian ruling class’ vigour in promoting these anti-China slanders is in proportion to the resistance that they are facing to their imperialist plunder of the Pacific and Southeast Asia as a result of socialistic China’s mutually beneficial cooperation with countries in these regions.

The Capitalist Ruling Classes’
All-Sided Campaign to Denigrate Red China

There is another, still more fundamental, reason why capitalist exploiting classes seek to denigrate China. With many working-class people in Australia and other capitalist countries ground down by unaffordable rents, steeply rising prices and growing homelessness, capitalist rulers fear that these people will look favourably upon China’s socialistic system that has lifted hundreds of millions of people out of poverty over the last few decades. Capitalist ruling classes are especially worried that workers in their own countries infuriated that their wages are not keeping up with prices will notice that, in the last fifteen years, real wages in China have almost tripled – with socialistic China’s workers enjoying a rate of real wage growth that in more than four times faster than that of any major capitalist economy! And the U.S.’s rulers, in particular, are scared that their own masses, frustrated at the high cost and inaccessibility of health care, will realise that average life expectancy in Red China is now two years higher than it is in the U.S. … after being 32 years below that of the U.S. (36 years then in China compared to 68 years then in the U.S.) at the time that China had her socialist revolution in 1949!  In short, the rulers of the capitalist countries are fearful that the obvious successes of socialistic rule in China will encourage the increasingly dissatisfied masses in their own countries to demand socialism at home. That is why capitalist ruling classes look for every possible opportunity to slander China.

For example, once it became clear that socialistic China had responded far more effectively to the COVID pandemic than the capitalist countries, capitalist ruling classes and their media went on a hysterical campaign to attack China’s COVID response. They promoted the “possibility” that COVID “could have” leaked out of a Chinese lab – a nutty conspiracy theory refuted by most genuine medical experts. They alternately claimed that China’s pandemic response was either way too harsh or way too lax … and sometimes even made both claims simultaneously! They did their best to hide or downplay the truth that socialistic China’s COVID death rate per person was way lower than in nearly all the rest of the world. And when they had to grudgingly acknowledge this truth, capitalist ruling elites claimed that this was only because China had severely restricted her people’s freedoms. The truth however was that China’s COVID success was because her socio-economic system – where the key sectors are dominated by public ownership and where even larger private companies are ultimately subordinated to the workers state – was able to organise mass COVID testing of people, build brand new hospitals and makeshift hospitals and produce PPE (personal protective equipment) and other pandemic response materials far more quickly and comprehensively than in the capitalist world. As a result, although the mainstream Western media tried to give people the impression that all of China was locked down for the entire three years of the pandemic, the truth is that China was able to very effectively protect her people from COVID death while ensuring that most people in the country were locked down for far shorter periods than in either Melbourne or Sydney. Indeed, the majority of people living in two of China’s biggest cities, Beijing and Guangzhou, never had to endure a single compulsory lockdown during the entire pandemic. That is why, almost uniquely in the world, socialistic China never went into recession during the entire pandemic. More importantly, China was one of the only countries in the world where workers enjoyed significant real wage growth during the pandemic.

The Western capitalist media has now switched the main focus of their efforts to make socialistic China seem a less palatable model from attacking China’s COVID response to claiming that her economy is “in deep trouble.” They have flooded their newspapers and TV news bulletins with accounts selectively focusing on the few sectors of the Chinese economy that are doing less well, while avoiding like the plague any mention of the sectors that are truly booming in China – like electric car manufacturing, wind and solar power projects, high-speed rail construction, shipbuilding and satellite launching. Notably, these Western mainstream media somehow “report” on the Chinese economy without actually mentioning its actual GDP (gross domestic product) growth rate – which is the most commonly used measure of an economy’s strength! There is a reason for that! For contrary to capitalist media reports, China’s economy is actually growing at an excellent rate. Last year, China GDP grew by an impressive 5.2%, which is nearly twice the growth rate of the other large country with a similar per capita income to China, Brazil. China’s 2023 GDP growth rate was also more than 50 times greater than the growth rate of the stalling British economy, infinitely higher than the growth level of the German economy, which, actually went backwards last year, and three and a half times faster than the 2023 economic growth rate in Australia. Notably, per capita incomes in China grew at a rate comparable to her economy, while they actually fell in Australia and Britain, which were both only prevented from falling into an official recession by population growth. Socialistic China was able to make these economic achievements while keeping her people’s living costs under control. Average prices rose just 0.2% in China last year, compared to a 4.6% rise in Brazil, approximately 6% rises in both Australia (it is only at the end of last year that inflation here has fallen to just above 4%) and Germany and a 7.3% surge in annual average inflation in Britain. As a result, unlike in Australia and many other capitalist countries where real wages plunged downwards, workers in China continued to enjoy surging real wages in 2023.

Despite her striking successes, China is still catching up from the terrible poverty of her pre-1949, capitalist days, when she was a subjugated neo-colony exploited by the imperial powers. As a result, average incomes in China are still some three to four times lower than in the richest of the imperialist countries. While this remains the case, the attractive power of China’ socialistic example to workers in, especially, the richest countries will be less than it would otherwise be. However, what if socialistic China’s economic growth continues to outpace that of the capitalist world for the next two or three decades? Then real wages in China will catch up to or even overtake that of the richest countries. Workers in the West will then see that a socialistic state is able to lift incomes in a once poverty stricken country to amongst the highest global levels and to do it in a way that leaves no one in poverty, provides an abundance of low-rent public housing and creates a society that is far more harmonious and far more filled with hope than in the capitalist world. What worker in the West would then want capitalism with all its lack of job security, its unaffordable rents, its rising income gaps, its growing homelessness, its social decay, its divisions and its bigotry? It is the fear that their own exploited working classes will come to this conclusion that capitalism should be replaced with socialism that terrifies the capitalist ruling classes. That is why their propaganda war against Red China has taken on an increasingly desperate, panicked and hysterical character. They realise that they may have only about two decades left to either smash socialistic rule in China or greatly curb its development. The ludicrous nature of their claims about China’s treatment of Uyghurs should be seen in this context. It is not some isolated campaign by the imperial powers but part of an all-sided crusade that they are waging against China – a crusade whose frenzy is proportional to the imperialist ruling classes’ awareness that failure in this crusade will spell doom for their own tyranny.

One of the latest campaigns of the Western capitalist ruling classes to make socialistic China seem like a less attractive model to their own populations is to claim that “China’s economy is in deep trouble”. In trying to sell this narrative, their media do their best to minimise any mention of China’s actual GDP (gross domestic product) growth rate – the most commonly used measure of an economy’s health. Even less do they mention China’s growth rate of per capita GDP, which is a measure of the change in average incomes of people in a country. There is a good reason for that! As the chart above shows, China’s per capita income surged upwards in 2023 at a fast rate, while it dived in Britain and Germany and especially Australia. China’s growth in per capita economic output was two and a half times that of the other large country with a similar per capita income to her, Brazil; and five times the growth in per capita GDP of the USA. Yet somehow “China’s economy is in deep trouble”!

The Means Through Which
Imperialist Propaganda is Disseminated

The wealthy capitalist classes ruling Australia and other imperialist countries have gigantic resources with which to spread propaganda. Firstly, they have the regimes that serve them. These capitalist regimes are not only able to disseminate propaganda through government institutions but through the schools and universities that they fund. The capitalist regime’s control of universities and thus of the staff that they hire ensures that students enrolled in subjects like politics, history, social science, journalism and economics are mostly taught by anti-communist lecturers. To maintain the pretence of balance, university administrators do hire a smaller number of nominally leftist intellectuals as well. However, control of the universities by capitalist regimes ensures that for such leftist intellectuals to hold down careers in university academia they must bend to the wishes of the capitalist class on the most crucial questions. The most effective way for a left-leaning academic in Australia, who teaches in a politics-related area, to show that they are ultimately loyal to the capitalist establishment and thus “worthy” of maintaining their well paying job is by enlisting in the imperialist propaganda campaign against socialistic China. And by giving such anti-communist propaganda a “leftist” colour – most tiresomely by denying China’s socialistic character – such nominally leftist academics can further emphasise their value to their university bosses by showing their ability to add “fresh” and “unique” perspectives to the anti-Red-China political campaign. For example, there are prominent left social-democratic academics in Australia who have been able to keep lucrative university positions and respect from the mainstream establishment, all while eking a certain political space to express a leftist viewpoint in fields not too damaging to the capitalist establishment, by proving their value to the latter through devoting themselves to “scholarly work” that helps popularize the myth that “China’s is oppressing Uyghurs.”

The capitalist regime is also able to disseminate their propaganda by the media that they own. In Australia, the regime owns SBS and ABC media outlets. The latter is notorious for recently sacking a journalist of Lebanese heritage, Antoinette Lattouf, because she merely made a social media post critical of Israel’s conduct in its war on Gaza; and for causing another of its reporters of Lebanese heritage, Nour Haydar to resign due to the broadcaster’s anti-Palestinian coverage of the war. As for the rest of the media, it is owned directly by the capitalists and often by some of its richest tycoons such as the Murdochs and Channel 7 owner Kerry Stokes. Capitalist billionaires also directly own the internet search engines and social media platforms. And given that the most used platforms – Facebook, X/Twitter, Youtube and Google – are all owned by people whose net wealth each exceeds $170 billion (!!), it is unsurprising that these platforms are biased to favour the dissemination of views favourable to the capitalist order and therefore hostile to socialistic rule in China! To be sure, these social media platforms allow some dissemination of alternate views. They do so in order to maintain their number of users. However, their algorithms are biased to favour the spread of Western imperialist propaganda and to retard the reach of ideas, information and users sympathetic to Red China. Furthermore, they ban outright many pro-China sites and postings. Meanwhile, capitalist regimes seek to censor any social media platforms that do not impose such pro-imperialist, anti-Red China bias. It is for this reason that feuding Democrats and Republicans in the U.S. are coming together to try and ban the Chinese-owned social media app TikTok. A year ago, the Albanese Labor government here banned Australia’s public sector employees from accessing TikTok on government devices. Encouraged by this censorship and Washington’s moves to ban TikTok, the right-wing Coalition is now pushing for a complete ban on the hugely popular, Chinese-owned app.

As well as through the media and social media platforms that they own, the Western capitalist classes also spread their lies through the “independent” think-tanks that they establish. In Australia, the original source for much of the attacks on socialistic China over her treatment of Uyghurs comes from these think tanks. These include the Lowy Institute controlled by billionaire Frank Lowy and his children and the Institute of Public Affairs (IPA). The latter was co-founded by Rupert Murdoch’s father in 1943 with the explicit aim of “resisting the trend towards socialism” and which in recent years has received a good part of its funding from Australia’s richest person, mining heiress Gina Rinehart. The think tank most fanatically attacking China’s treatment of Uyghurs is ASPI (the Australian Strategic Policy Institute). ASPI’s imaginative “work” in this field has made it the original source for many of the attacks on “China’s treatment of Uyghurs” by capitalist politicians and media outlets in the U.S. and other Western countries. This pro-war “independent” think tank is funded not only by the Australian and U.S. governments but by giant capitalist-owned defence corporations like Lockheed Martin, SAAB, Thales and BAE and by other capitalist companies, including Bill Gates’ Microsoft, Mark Zuckeberg’s Meta, an Australian subsidiary of the Amazon company owned by the world’s third richest billionaire Jeff Bezos, as well as by the Property Council of Australia. Yet it is not only rabid right-wing think tanks like ASPI that the capitalists fund. Australia’s most prominent “left-leaning” think tank, the Australia Institute, was also built up by filthy rich capitalists. Indeed its main source of funding was from none other than the sister of Rupert Murdoch, Anne Kantor and her children! With big-time capitalists behind it, it is little wonder that the Australia’s Institute’s “progressivism” never extends beyond schemes to tinker with the existing capitalist order. And it is also why the Australia Institute, while it may sometimes be at odds with the shrill Cold War tone of the likes of ASPI, nevertheless takes a negative attitude to Red China’s social system, including by echoing the lie that China is persecuting Uyghurs. It is telling that the founder of the Australia Institute and its head during almost the entire first half of its existence, Clive Hamilton, is today one of Australia’s most extreme China-bashing “public intellectuals”.

The role of pro-ruling class intellectuals like Hamilton in the capitalist propaganda system is enormous. Although they for the most part do not speak directly to the masses, it is they who provide the arguments and the distorted “facts” to arm the journalists, commentators, capitalist politicians and lecturers that in turn directly blast the masses with anti-communist propaganda. In return, the ruling class fetes these pro-capitalist-order intellectuals with huge “research” grants, a celebrated social status and lucrative positions in the upper ranks of think tanks, “research” institutes and university study centres. By granting such privileges, the ruling class not only rewards those who are doing great service for them but ensures that their crucial chief propagandists are kept conservatised and in the fold so that any social conscience that they may have does not lead them to politically “stray”.

These pro-capitalist-order intellectuals can be very sophisticated. The most effective make some acknowledgement of the weaknesses of the capitalist system in order to retain credibility. However, they all sell either one or both of two key points which the imperialist rulers absolutely need us to believe: that the revolutionary socialist overthrow of capitalism is either impossible or undesirable and that existing states created by the overturn of the capitalist order should not be supported. Thus a major role of these ruling-class intellectuals is to spread the blatant lie that workers revolution is “impossible” in the richer, Western countries because the masses there will supposedly always be too “comfortable” and bought off and thus their political consciousness cannot decisively change. Others focus on disseminating the line, some even while being very critical of the capitalist order, that as bad as the current system is, existing states created by the overturn of capitalism are even worse … or in fact merely a different form of capitalist state. Given that Red China is by far the biggest example of a state created through the revolutionary overthrow of capitalist rule and the one whose achievements in poverty alleviation are best known, pro-establishment intellectuals in the West are required to devote a great part of their energy to denigrating socialistic China.

Bogus “Human Rights” Organisations and
Irresolute Sections of the Far Left

Of all the different type of capitalist-funded think tanks and institutes where imperialist-apologising intellectuals operate, the most devious are the supposedly “independent”, “human rights” organisations. For while the political line coming out from the likes of ASPI, the IPA and the Lowy Institute is often obvious, the capitalist ruling classes’ “human rights” organisations are more able to clothe themselves in the cover of “even handedness”. The most influential and sinister of these “human rights” NGOs is Human Rights Watch (HRW). HRW has played a lead role in selling the lie that Red China is “persecuting Uyghurs”. Although HRW would like to portray itself as a “grassroots” organisation standing up for “human rights”, it is the very opposite of that. Headquartered in the U.S., HRW is a multi-million dollar operation funded by super wealthy Americans and other Western donors and corporations whose exact identities the shadowy organisation keeps secret.

From the very beginning, HRW’s main purpose has been to provide the “human rights” cover for Western imperialism’s drive to destroy socialistic states. Today, HRW not only targets Red China and the DPRK (North Korea) but devotes much energy to attacking socialistic Cuba who they accuse of having an “abysmal human rights record”. However, to give themselves credibility, HRW will occasionally also report on human rights violations by the U.S. and other Western ruling classes. But they will mostly only report problems that everyone already knows about and which have been substantiated many times over. That way their “expose’s” of human rights atrocities of Western capitalist regimes do minimal damage. In contrast, when HRW launches an attack on China, Cuba or other socialistic states they will produce either entirely new claims or spread, as fact, highly disputed claims made by others – all of which are usually completely unsubstantiated or simply plain lies. Moreover, whenever attacking supposed human rights violations in a workers state or other country in the firing sights of Western imperialism, HRW will not only use as extreme language as possible but will always make their shrill statements in the context of accusing the targeted state of having an “abysmal human rights record”. By contrast, whenever HRW feel compelled to acknowledge human rights problems in Western capitalist countries they use moderate language and emphasise that the issues occur in the context of the state having an otherwise “strong record of protecting civil and political rights”. This is how HRW and other pro-imperialist “human rights NGOs” deceive the people of the world!

Take a look at the HRW’s statements on Israel’s heinous war on the Palestinian people. With Israel’s genocidal attacks evident to most of the world, HRW knows that it will lose all credibility as a “human rights organisation” if it does not criticise Israel. However, HRW then deliberately muddies the waters by severely attacking Palestinian resistance forces and their allies in the Middle East. In this way, HRW pushes their audience to draw the conclusion that what is needed is not solidarity with the Palestinian people but a neutrality between the Israeli occupying forces and the Palestinian resistance. In the context of Israel committing genocidal mass murder of the people of Gaza, such apparent “neutrality” in practice means acquiescence to Israel’s genocide. In fact HRW’s agenda on the Palestine issue is even worse than a “neutrality”. Thus, despicably, HRW denounced the brave pro-Palestinian actions of Yemeni Houthis (who blocked Israel-linked shipping traversing the Red Sea) as a “war crime”. In doing so they provided the “human rights”, propaganda preparation to the airstrikes that would shortly thereafter be launched on Yemeni pro-Palestine forces by the U.S., British, Australian and other imperialist regimes. By its extreme denunciations of all Palestinian and pro-Palestinian resistance forces, HRW’s actual stance on Israel’s war on Palestine is not too dissimilar to the line taken by Washington and its allies. This should be little surprise. The same wealthy capitalists and other well-heeled Americans and other Westerners funding HRW are part of the same social classes that uphold the likes of Biden and Albanese and whom the latter serve. HRW’s attacks on Yemeni pro-Palestine actions and other pro-Palestinian resistance is ultimately driven by the same interests that guide them to make lying denunciations against socialist China over her treatment of Uyghurs; and over every other issue that HRW can twist into a “human rights” attack on Red China.

Echoing the lies about China’s treatment of Uyghurs spread by the imperialist ruling classes and their media, think tanks and NGOs are Australia’s three most active far-left groups, Socialist Alternative (SAlt), Socialist Alliance (SA) and Solidarity. To excuse such capitulation to the imperialists’ anti-China Cold War, these groups ridiculously claim that China is just another “capitalist” country. Sadly, many others on the Left also make take this same claim. Thus the Socialist Equality Party (SEP), which, in contrast to the likes of SAlt and Solidarity, correctly exposes U.S. rulers for “cynical championing of `human rights’ in support of right-wing, separatist tendencies in Xinjiang”, nevertheless claims that China is engaging in a “fiction that it is building `socialism with Chinese characteristics’”. Whereas for the likes of SAlt, SA and Solidarity, the claim that China is just another capitalist state becomes an excuse to support imperialist, anti-China narratives about Xinjiang, Tibet, Hong Kong and COVID, for the SEP it is a rationale to take only a perfunctory opposition to these narratives, while giving themselves the wriggle room to capitulate to the Cold War offensive when it gets too powerful to comfortably resist. The latter was the case during the anti-China uprising by pro-colonial, rich-kids in Hong Kong in 2019. At the height of Hong Kong’s anti-China riots that were being supported and egged on by the Western ruling classes, the SEP backed the anti-communist movement – albeit with less enthusiasm than the likes of SAlt, SA and Solidarity. They even joined a 30 August 2019 rally at Sydney University in support of the anti-Red China forces in Hong Kong – a demonstration that we in Trotskyist Platform counter-protested against – where the SEP distributed a leaflet providing critical support to the anti-communist Hong Kong movement. Three days later, an SEP statement on the Julian Assange case disgracefully compared China’s stance on the Hong Kong issue to the far-right Indian government’s brutal repression of the people of Kashmir, ranting that: “In China, the Stalinist regime, which defends the interests of the corporate elite and super-rich, is sending police to brutally attack protesters in Hong Kong.” It was only when the pro-colonial Hong Kong uprising started to wane and the Western propaganda hype in support of it diminished that the SEP retreated somewhat from its support to the anti-communist movement. Yet, to this very day, the SEP continues to join the imperialists in calling for “overturning the CCP regime”- which, in practical terms, means a call for the counterrevolutionary smashing of the Chinese workers state.

To be sure, those irresolute sections of the Far Left that, to a more or lesser extent, back anti-communists movements and propaganda targeting Red China do not cravenly capitulate to imperialism on every single issue. After all, if they did so they could not be considered part of the Left. For example, SAlt, SA and Solidarity, who all join the imperialist propaganda campaign against China over Uyghurs, have at the same time been working hard to build actions in support of Palestinian people against Israel’s Western-backed terror. However, by lining up behind imperialism’s political offensive against the Chinese workers state they are doing much harm to the Palestinian cause. Any weakening of socialistic China would leave the U.S.-led imperialists more unchallenged – and thus powerful – and therefore even more able to pour arms, money and political capital into their Israeli allies.

There is a reason that many Far Left groups are able to be on the right side of the fence on the Palestine struggle yet be squarely on the side of imperialism in its political war against Red China. The reason is that although Western propaganda excusing Israel’s war on the Palestinian people is thick, the political pressure pushing groups to bend to the anti-China Cold War is even stronger than that pushing them to side with the Israeli regime. For while backing their Israeli attack dog in the strategic Middle East is an important tactical imperative for the U.S.-led imperialists, crushing socialistic rule in China is an absolute necessity for these ruling classes. That is why in terms of harassment and repression that one can expect from the capitalist state, blowback from bosses (and sometimes politically backward individual workers) at the workplace and hostility from “average” public opinion – shaped as it is by the propaganda of the ruling class – it is even more difficult to be known as a supporter of the Chinese workers state than to be known as a supporter of Palestine. Yet those nominally Marxist groups who are not resolute enough to resist the anti-China Cold War pressures will have little hope of fulfilling the even more difficult mission that history has called on us Marxists to undertake – the mission to lead the toiling masses in the revolutionary overturn of capitalist rule in Australia and all other capitalist countries.

The issue of what stance groups take towards Red China is more than just a crucial test question for avowed socialists. The China question is one that will shape world history over the coming period. If the imperialist powers succeed in destroying socialistic rule in China then the worldwide struggle for socialist revolution will be set back decades. That is precisely what happened after the Soviet and East European workers states were destroyed by Western-backed capitalist counterrevolution in the 1989-1992 period. The extreme suffering that the Palestinian people are today suffering can be partly traced back to the weakening of Palestinian liberation forces and reduced international backing for the Palestinian resistance that resulted both directly and indirectly from the counterrevolutionary destruction of socialistic rule in the former Soviet Union and East Europe. On the other hand if, through solidarity from the workers movements in the capitalist world, Red China is able to resist the hostile pressure of the imperial powers and continue to catch up in economic strength with these powers, then socialistic China will become exactly what the capitalist powers fear that it will become – if only by the example of successful socialistic advancement that it provides – an existential threat to decaying, genocidal world capitalism.

Above: Activists gather on 7 October 2019 for a march through streets in central Sydney to celebrate the 70th anniversary of China’s socialist revolution. The action was held in the face of an intense anti-China propaganda campaign by the mainstream media and anti-Red China rallies held in Australia (in which irresolute sections of the Left treacherously participated in) in support of pro-colonial riots in Hong Kong spearheaded by Hong Kong rich kids. As well as calling on “Working Class People in Australia & the World to STAND WITH SOCIALISTIC CHINA!”, the 7 October 2019 march also called to “Defeat Hong Kong’s Pro-Colonial, Anti-Communist Movement!” The more than 60-strong action was built mainly by the Australian Chinese Workers Association and ourselves in Trotskyist Platform. Below: Participants at the October 2019 Sydney action listen to a speech by Trotskyist Platform chairwoman, Sarah Fitzenmeyer.

The Accusations Against China Over Treatment of Uyghurs
Just Don’t Stack Up

Those who have been somewhat swayed by the incessant claims by the Western ruling classes, their media and their NGOs about the situation in Xinjiang and are unsure what is really happening there should ask themselves a couple of questions. Firstly, if the PRC is so cruelly subjugating Uyghurs, why is there no propaganda from any sections of the PRC state or its broader ruling circles demonising the Uyghur people? This matters because when a ruling group oppresses a particular ethnic or community group it must both, on the one hand, incite its own state enforcement personnel to enforce this subjugation and on the other, justify this persecution amongst its own population. Therefore, no matter what the particular stripe of the rulers and the particular form of the regime that they run, they must accompany their oppression with intense racist propaganda vilifying the targeted community. For example, to motivate its horrific genocide of Jewish people, the Nazis portrayed Jews as “subhumans” responsible for all of Germany ills. Today, to justify their genocide of the Palestinian people of Gaza, Israel’s leaders spout extreme racist depictions of Palestinian people. In announcing a total siege of Gaza last October, Israel’s defense minister, Yoav Gallant branded the Palestinian people of Gaza as “human animals”. Similarly, when Australia’s colonial regime was openly mass murdering Aboriginal people through shooting massacres and poisonings it depicted Aboriginal people not as humans but as “flora and fauna”.

Today, as Australia’s ruling class continues to brutally oppress Aboriginal people, key figures and institutions of Australia’s capitalist establishment continue to portray Aboriginal people in a racist manner. Less than ten years ago, Australia’s then prime minister Tony Abbott disgustingly asserted that Sydney was “nothing but bush” prior to the arrival of the First Fleet – effectively erasing pre-1788 Aboriginal society and culture and thus implicitly justifying the genocidal colonial conquest of this land under the fiction that it had previously been “terra nullius”. During the lead-up to last year’s referendum on enshrining an Aboriginal “Voice” to parliament, right-wing forces within the ruling class hurled a torrent of disgusting racist insults at Aboriginal people. Conservative politicians and commentators in the Murdoch media used the cover of the “Voice debate” to spread, thinly veiled, racist portrayals of Aboriginal people as a people incapable of running their own affairs who are especially prone to violence against women and child abuse. At last August’s right-wing CPAC conference, attended by the leading conservative figures within Australia’s ruling class, one speaker referred to traditional Aboriginal owners of the land as “violent black men.” Meanwhile, a coronial inquest into the 2019 death of Warlpiri-Luritja Aboriginal teenager, Kumanjayi Walker, who was shot three times by a police officer revealed that not only did the police officer who killed the 19 year-old Aboriginal man make despicable racist insults against Aboriginal people in text messages, it showed that such abuse is very common within the NT Police. NT cops refer to Aboriginal people as “animals” and insultingly mock Aboriginal people by having a “Coo_ of the Year” award to officers for the “most Coo_-like behavior”!

The Australian ruling class also accompanies its oppression of other people of colour with statements and propaganda attacking those communities. In 2019, then NSW Labor leader Michael Daley incited hostility towards people of Asian heritage by dishonestly claiming that: “Our young children will flee and who are they being replaced with? They are being replaced by young people from typically Asia with PhDs … our kids are moving out and foreigners are moving in and taking their jobs.” And let us never forget how the then most listened to radio announcer in Sydney, 2GB’s Alan Jones, incited the 2005 white supremacist riot at Cronulla Beach against people of Lebanese and other non-Anglo backgrounds, even reading out a text message calling to “… get down to North Cronulla to support the L_b and w_g bashing day”. The question then is if China’s rulers are really oppressing Uyghurs, why has there never been similar calls from any section of China’s mainstream media for a “Uyghur bashing day”? Why have China’s ministers and police officers never referred to Uyghur people as “animals” or “human animals”? Why has Xi Jinping or other high-ranking Chinese politicians never blamed Uyghurs for social or economic ills or made comments erasing Uyghur people’s unique culture?  You can bet that if any one of these things happened in China, even once, to the slightest degree, the Western imperialist media would be hyping it up to the maximum and reminding us of the incident in high profile pieces for months and years on end!

Instead of offending Uyghurs and other minority peoples, China’s politicians and state-owned media make it a point of emphasising the existence and contribution of “Chinese people of all ethnic groups” in all major speeches. Just as the derogatory comments and scapegoating attacks that Australia’s ruling class often unleash against Aboriginal people – and residents of Asian, Middle Eastern and African backgrounds – and the insulting racist way that Israel’s ruling class refers to Palestinian people are both an “indispensable” driver and inevitable by-product of the Australian and Israeli establishment’s racist persecution of the targeted peoples, the complete lack of any such racist propaganda against Uyghur people from China’s politicians, media outlets, mainstream think tanks and police is a sign that racist, state-driven subjugation of Uyghur people in China simply does not exist to any sizable degree.

The second question that those who have been somewhat influenced by the imperialist narrative about China’s treatment of Uyghurs should ask themselves is, if China is in fact so brutally oppressing Uyghurs why is she encouraging people to travel to the Uyghur-majority parts of the Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region? If the accusations against China were in fact true, would she not instead try to hide what is happening by minimising the gaze of tourists, traders and transport workers? After all, the Australian ruling class does not encourage tourists to visit the parts of this country with high concentrations of Aboriginal people like Brewarrina, Bourke and Walgett in NSW, Cherbourg, Yarrabah and Palm Island in Queensland, the APY lands in South Australia and in NT, the Aboriginal Town Camps of Alice Springs. Australia’s capitalist rulers do not want too many people to see their failure to adequately provide these regions with the basic public facilities and services that they provide to other parts of the country. Nor do they want to draw attention to the lack of economic opportunities available to Aboriginal people and the grinding poverty with which Aboriginal people in these areas are forced to live with. If one argues that no tourist wants to see economic deprivation anyway – which is true – and that these Aboriginal-majority areas do not have much tourist facilities, then those two points are themselves a reflection of the severe oppression that Aboriginal people face.

Similarly, even before its renewed assault on Palestinian people these last six months, Israel has never sought to make Gaza or still Palestinian-occupied areas of the West bank centres of tourism! Quite obviously, they are trying to hide from the world what they are doing to the Palestinian people. And while Rafah in Gaza is usefully located as a gateway to Egypt, as is Jericho in the West Bank to Jordan, Israel has never tried to make those occupied cities centres of trade and transport. However, it is very, very different in the Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region. The PRC government made Kashgar, a city that is more than 85% Uyghur and which is considered to be the main centre of Uyghur culture, a special economic zone in 2010 – the first city in Western China to be granted this designation. Then just last November, Kashgar was made one of the three components of a new free trade zone in the Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region. For these reasons, very large numbers of traders and transport workers flock to Kashgar from both the nine countries that border the Autonomous Region and beyond, as well as from other parts of China.

Moreover, the PRC has made the entire Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region – including its Uyghur majority areas – a centre for tourism. For example, during last year’s May Day (International Workers Day) public holiday in China, the Uyghur people’s cultural centre, Kashgar received more than a quarter of a million tourists. That means that a quantity of tourists numbering nearly one-third of the city’s entire population visited Kashgar on just one public holiday alone! Meanwhile, during China’s eight-day public holiday for Chinese Lunar New Year, the entire Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region received an average of nearly one million new tourists per day! Despite the best efforts of Western mainstream media outlets to pretend that China wants to stop them showing the “true” Xinjiang, the truth is the very opposite. The PRC is actually going to great efforts to encourage people to visit and conduct trade in the Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region and using that to bolster the region’s anti-poverty and economic development campaigns. The PRC clearly thinks that they have nothing to hide in Xinjiang! Those swayed by imperialist propaganda about the region should go there and see for themselves!  

Top: Prominent National Party then federal MP, George Christensen speaks at a Muslim-bashing “Reclaim Australia” rally in Queensland’s Mackay on 19 July 2015. At the time of this white supremacist rally, Christensen’s Nationals were part of the Coalition government administering Australia. It is such official racism from ruling class politicians and the capitalist media that has emboldened more extreme violent racists. Above: A white Australian nurtured in Australia’s racist social climate, created by the capitalist rulers and their system, attacks a mosque in New Zealand’s Christchurch on 15 March 2019. In the course of his attack on two mosques, the Australian, anti-Muslim white supremacist massacred 51 people in the worst ever terrorist attack committed by an Australian individual. It is unheard of for a senior Communist Party of China official or mainstream media outlet in the Peoples Republic of China to engage in the kind of racism-inciting rhetoric that Australian politicians and ruling class media outlets have been spewing. Below: Chinese president Xi Jinping addresses the multi-racial community of Guyuanxiang, which is made up mostly of Uyghurs and other non-Han, traditionally majority-Muslim ethnic groups, in the Tianshan District of Urumqi, capital of China’s Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region. This visit was part of Xi’s July 2022 inspection tour of the Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region. Bottom: Xi poses with performers of the Manas while visiting the Museum of the Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region. The Manas are an epic poem of the Kyrgyz people, who like Uyghurs are a Turkic-based, traditionally majority-Muslim, ethnic group. Kyrgyz people are the majority ethnic group of Kyrgyzstan as well as being a sizable minority in the Kizilsu Kyrgyz Autonomous Prefecture of China’s Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region.
Photo credit (top photo): David Sparkes/ABC
Photo credit (below and bottom photos): Xie Huanchi/Xinhua

What is Really Happening in Xinjiang?

Faced with obvious truths about life in the Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region, more sophisticated, left-leaning opponents of the PRC will concede the China does not persecute Uyghurs in the brutal way that the Israeli regime subjugates the Palestinian people or the Australian regime oppresses Aboriginal people. However, they then claim that the PRC is quietly oppressing Uyghurs by trying to extinguish their ethnic and cultural identity as a people distinct from the ethnic Han majority of China. However, this claim also turns out to be false when one actually explores the real situation in the Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region. Take the crucial question of the status of Uyghur language. The fact is that all Uyghurs living in China’s northwest are able to speak their own language. Furthermore, as part of a bilingual education system, Uyghur children are thought their language in all schools in the southern Xinjiang region of China where most Uyghurs live. This is very different to capitalist Australia where the very real genocidal subjugation of Aboriginal people has meant that most Aboriginal people have been cut off from their own tongue and only a small percentage of Aboriginal children have the opportunity to learn their own languages at school. By contrast, China has several TV channels broadcasting in Uyghur language as well as dozens of newspapers, magazines and book publishers publishing in Uyghur. Indeed, even outside of the Uyghur people’s traditional homeland in China’s northwest, shop signs and other street signs (like signs pointing to the location of mosques) in those parts of China frequented by Uyghurs can be seen in the Uyghur language, which is written in a modified Arabic-derived writing system.

We should add here a little anecdote that gives a sense of the status of the Uyghur language in China. In all of China’s currency notes, Uyghur writing is used in the notes (to identify the issuer of the currency – the Peoples Bank of China), alongside that of Han Chinese and three other minority languages in China: Mongolian, Tibetan and Zhuang (the latter is a language related to Thai and Laotian spoken by the Zhuang people who live in the southern part of China). This is despite China’s Uyghur population of around 12 million making up less than one percent of the country’s entire population. By comparison, around 4% of people in Australia speak Chinese at home, 1.4% Arabic, 1.3% Vietnamese and nearly 1% Punjabi. But you won’t find any of those languages in any of Australia’s currency! Meanwhile, in the U.S., over 13% of the population are native Spanish speakers. Yet you won’t find a word of Spanish in any U.S. currency notes! But this doesn’t stop the U.S., Australian and other Western capitalist regimes ranting that “China is suppressing the Uyghur language”.

Even more significant than the recognition of the Uyghur language in Chinese currency is the fact that Uyghur (alongside Mandarin Chinese) is an official language of China’s Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region. That means that Uyghur is used in not only schools but in government departments and courts. Indeed, if one wants to speak of people not having language rights in the Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region, then this would definitely not be true of the Uyghur people but rather of the ethnicities with much smaller populations in the region. Due to their very small populations, these ethnic groups living in Uyghur majority parts of the Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region – like Tajiks, Xibo, Uzbeks and Russians – are often “forced” to learn the Uyghur language at school or to use Uyghur language when interacting with government departments. 

Claims by China’s enemies that she suppresses the rights of Uyghur Muslims to adhere to their religion also do not stack up. Those Uyghurs who are pious Muslims are able to go to mosques and practice their religion; and that is what they indeed do. To be sure, the Chinese workers state is a secular state. Very correctly, no religion is thought in Chinese public schools. All religions in China are pushed to adapt to her socialistic society by shedding those fundamentalist practices that contradict socialist principles of egalitarianism, unity between people of different ethnic and religious backgrounds and equality between women and men. The PRC state applies these policies with the assistance of the pro-socialist religious groups and congregations that exist amongst all the main religious denominations present in China – Buddhism, Taoism, Islam, Catholicism and Protestantism. The policies are applied to all religions in China – for example Christian churches are prevented from teaching Chinese children the anti-scientific myth of creationism.

Any truly unbiased observer who visited the Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region would realise that accusations that China has suppressed the rights of Muslims to practice their religion are false. For such an observer would immediately be struck by the widespread presence of mosques in the region. It is notable too that in Xinjiang, the government of the Autonomous Region has made four days official public holidays for the whole region to mark Muslim celebrations. Thus in the Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region, a one day public holiday is stipulated for the end of Ramadan Eid al-Fitr celebration (also known by Muslims in China as the Rouzi Festival), while people are given a whole three days off work and classes for Eid al-Adha (also known by Muslims in China as the Corban Festival).

It is worth comparing the language, autonomy and religious public holiday rights enjoyed by China’s, mostly Muslim, Uyghur minority with the situation in one of the Western countries accusing her of “violating the human rights of Uyghurs”, Bulgaria. The comparison between Bulgaria and China is made here because, alongside tiny North Macedonia, Bulgaria is the only country accusing China of “violating the human rights of Uyghurs” that like China also has a historically Muslim, ethnic minority that forms a large proportion of the population in a particular geographical region/s of the country. That is if we leave out Israel (i.e. occupied Palestine) … and we all know what happens there! Like with China’s Uyghurs, in Bulgaria the predominantly Muslim ethnic group that forms a big proportion of the population in a part of the country is also a Turkic-based people – the Bulgarian Turks. Thus a comparison between the respective treatments of the geographically concentrated, predominantly Muslim, ethnic minorities in Bulgaria and China is an effective way to rate how well the Western capitalist regimes accusing China of “violating the human rights” of her Uyghur people treats its own minorities in comparison with socialistic China. So what is the situation in Bulgaria? In two provinces of Bulgaria, Razgrad and Kardzhali, Bulgarian Turks form an absolute majority of the population. Yet in neither of these provinces does the pro-Western Bulgarian regime grant the Turkish language any official status whatsoever. Unlike in China’s Xinjiang, where Uyghur is an official language used in schools, courts and government departments, Turks in even the provinces and muncipalities of Bulgaria where they are a majority of the population must use Bulgarian. This is despite Turks making up over 8% of Bulgaria’s overall population in comparison to the less than 1% of the Chinese population made up by Uyghurs. Needless to say, Bulgaria’s Turks have no autonomy rights in even the provinces where they form an absolute majority of the population, whereas Uyghurs who make up only a plurality and not a majority of the Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region’s population have special autonomy rights. Indeed Bulgaria’s constitution specifically states that “no autonomous territorial formations shall be allowed to exist.” It follows that, unlike in the Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region, there are no public holidays for Muslim festivals in even the majority Muslim provinces of Bulgaria. Yet the Western-aligned, Bulgarian capitalist regime and its bosses in Washington and Berlin have the hide to accuse China of “violating the human rights of Uyghurs”. Then again if the genocidal Israeli regime and the Australian ruling class that so brutally oppresses Aboriginal people – and causes much of this country’s First Peoples to live in poverty – can make this accusation against Red China … so can anyone!

Opponents of Socialistic Rule
Within the Uyghur Population

Anti-communists claim that most of the Uyghur population resents being part of China and hates “Communist rule.” There is some opposition to the PRC within the Uyghur population. However such sentiments are present in only an ever dwindling minority of the Uyghur people. To this fact, Western propagandists retort that the existence of any significant opposition to PRC rule from within the Uyghur population is a sign that they are being “cruelly oppressed”. However, the truth is that these forces oppose the PRC not because Uyghur people are being oppressed but because they resent socialistic rule. The demand for separation from China is just a cover for these right-wing forces within the Uyghur population. What is really driving them is opposition to socialism. Thus, to the extent that they actually want to separate from the multi-ethnic PRC and establish a Uyghur state – or what they call East Turkestan – these anti-PRC forces want to do so mainly in order to escape from socialistic rule and establish a capitalist state. And for the majority of these anti-communist forces their aim is to establish a specifically, anti-secular, religiously fundamentalist form of capitalist state. For this quest they are getting massive backing from the imperialist ruling classes.

The Western capitalists will do anything to weaken socialistic rule in China and to exacerbate internal tensions within the workers state. The U.S. regime’s agency for foreign interference, the National Endowment for Democracy (NED), openly admits to providing some $A4 million every year to fund several “East Turkestan” anti-communist groups. This NED backing is dwarfed by the covert funding given to these groups by the U.S. and other imperialist states and by the even huger amounts directly poured into these counterrevolutionary groups by capitalist bigwigs around the world and by anti-communists within the affluent upper-middle classes of Western countries. Then there is the gigantic propaganda support that imperialist ruling classes provide to the “East Turkestan” anti-communist groups. This is not only through the media, think tanks and “human rights” NGOs that they own but through sinister, covert “misinformation” operations. Just three weeks ago, the pro-imperialist Reuters news agency had to admit that in 2019, Donald Trump ordered the CIA to conduct a covert campaign to turn public opinion against China. Three former U.S. officials proudly told Reuters that the CIA created a team of operatives who used bogus internet identities to spread harmful stories about the PRC government. They would also leak anti-China information to overseas news outlets using false covers. The operation not only sought to create hostility to the PRC state within China but targeted public opinion in Southeast Asia, Africa and the South Pacific. The CIA operation especially disseminated lies against China’s Belt and Road initiative claiming that it was a “debt trap”. You can bet that misinformation about “China persecuting Uyghurs” is also high on the list of the lies spread by this massive CIA operation. Reuters reported that two intelligence historians told them that when the White House grants the CIA covert action authority through an order known as a presidential finding, it often remains in place across administrations. In plain speak, this CIA operation to covertly spread lies that demonise Red China continues today under Biden.

Given how beholden the entire “East Turkestan” anti-communist movement is to imperialist support, you can be that if these forces succeeded in creating an “independent”, capitalist East Turkestan it would be hopelessly subordinated to the U.S. and other Western powers – just like for example Palau, Marshall Islands, Eswatini and Ferdinand Marcos Jr’s Philippines is. Thus the main question posed for the Uyghur people in northwestern China is not whether they will be part of China or nominally “independent”. Rather it is whether they will continue to live within a socialistic state – moreover one that has successfully lifted all Uyghur people (and all China’s other people) out of extreme poverty – or whether, through a capitalist counterrevolution in the region where they reside, they end up living in a pseudo-independent, imperialist-puppet, capitalist state, where millions would be returned to poverty and the social position of women would be cruelly driven back. We say that working-class rule, as incomplete and insecure as it currently is within China, must be defended within all parts of the PRC through any means necessary. The question of whether Uyghur people choose to live as part of socialistic China or in an independent Uyghur workers state is secondary. We defend the right of peoples to self determination, including the right of a geographically-concentrated minority people within a workers state to separate from that state and form their own workers state. However, this is not in the least what the imperialist-sponsored, current Uyghur separatist forces want. They are entirely about overthrowing socialistic rule. In that light, to raise the issue of national self determination when speaking about the current situation in the Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region can only divert from what the dispute between the PRC and the imperialist-backed “East Turkestan” anti-communists is actually about. To raise the issue of “national self determination’ in this context would only play into hands of those seeking capitalist counterrevolution.

It should be said that the Chinese government’s rhetoric has sometimes unwittingly helped anti-communist propagandists obscure what the quarrel between the PRC and the imperialist-backed “East Turkestan” groups is all about. For although Beijing very rightly points to the economic and social achievements made in the Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region since the founding of the PRC, the Chinese government has sometimes also posed opposition to the “East Turkestan” anti-communist forces as a question of “opposing separatism.” Similarly, in defending PRC rule over all of the Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region, the PRC government points to evidence of the area being historically part of China. However, to authentic communists – that is true Leninists – whose goal is the worldwide triumph of socialism and who defend the right to national self determination, whether or not a region was historically part of a particular state has no relevance whatsoever. And we have absolutely no objection per se to “separatism” – that is to a minority people living in a particular geographic area of another state wanting to breakaway and establish their own state. What we object to is to those seeking capitalist counterrevolution in a region of a workers state using the cover of “national independence” to push to breakaway in order to form a separate, capitalist state. That is what today’s East Turkestan “separatists” are all about! And that is the reason – and indeed the sole reason – why they must be resolutely opposed. Therefore, we call on the PRC government to present the question of the fate of the Xinjiang region entirely as a question of, socialism versus capitalism; and more precisely as one of, socialism versus anti-secular, imperialist-subjugated capitalism. The Chinese government’s sometimes incorrect presentation of the question is largely an attempt to win the acceptance of overseas capitalist states for PRC rule over the Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region. By not posing the issue as one of defending socialistic, working class-rule and instead speaking of opposing “separatism”, they hope not to offend capitalist regimes worldwide and gain the approval of these regimes. However, in doing so, they obstruct politically aware working-class activists worldwide – including in the imperialist countries – from being won to the defence of PRC-administered, socialistic rule over the Xinjiang region. Moreover, the PRC government’s wish to sometimes present the Xinjiang – and also Tibetan (Xizang) and Hong Kong – questions as matters of opposing “separatism” leads them to a wrong international policy of opposing “separatist” movements worldwide. This standpoint not only violates Lenin’s insistence on socialists defending the right to national self determination (provided the application of that right does not harm the overall interests of the international working class) but leads Beijing to wrongly oppose several just national liberation movements within capitalist countries – like that of the Eelam Tamils in Sri Lanka, the Catalans in Spain and the Kurdish people in Turkey. Most harmfully, by sometimes posing the question of what’s at stake in Xinjiang without making the class line clear (that is the line between a working-class ruled socialistic path and the tyranny of a small number of wealthy, imperialist-beholden capitalists) the Chinese government’s presentation makes the Uyghur masses more susceptible to being swayed, on a nationalist basis, by the propaganda of the counterrevolutionary “East Turkestan” forces. This danger is accentuated by Beijing’s assertions about the area being historically part of China. Such rhetoric can be offensive to Uyghur people, because it identifies with pre-1949, capitalist-semi-feudal Chinese rulers who – themselves subservient to the then Western imperialist overlords of China – often truly did treat minorities as second-class citizens. In contrast, if the PRC government made it clearer to Uyghur workers and cooperative and small individual farmers that their interests as a class – separate from and opposed to the class interests of Uyghur capitalists and would-be capitalists and their imperialist masters – lie with defending socialist rule, the Uyghur masses would be won over even more decisively to supporting PRC-administered, socialistic rule.

Anti-Communist “Separatism” and
Capitalist Counterrevolution

The use of the cover of “national independence” by those seeking to undermine a multi-ethnic workers state is far from a new strategy. It goes back to the days of the former Soviet workers state. Even in the early years of the Soviet workers state, when it was led by Lenin, Trotsky and other truly internationalist communists who fiercely opposed any concessions to “Great Russian” chauvinism, counterrevolutionary forces within minority ethnicities used the cover of “national independence” to try and restore capitalist rule to the areas where “their” people resided. They and their imperialist backers seized on the inequalities inevitably present in a country just beginning its path to socialism to win support for their cause. And they manipulated the mutual hostilities remaining from the earlier capitalist times, when the non-Russian peoples were indeed brutally subjugated by the racist, “Great Russian”-based, capitalist regime. Like their “Great Russian”-based counterparts, these counterrevolutionaries were mostly defeated by the Soviet Red Army during the 1918-1921 Civil War that followed Russia’s October 1917 socialist revolution. However, they gained a new relevance from the mid-1920s onwards when, under intense capitalist pressure on the Soviet Union, a more conservative layer was squeezed up into the political administration of the workers state and went on to implement more Russian-centred policies than the revolutionary internationalists whom they displaced. After this bureaucratic degeneration of the Soviet workers state, anti-communist “separatist” movements were able to point to – fluctuating – degrees of Russian-centredness in the Soviet government to build support for their cause. This is despite the fact that even post-1924, the Soviet workers state had a level of ethnic equality and harmony – especially in the three decades from the mid-1950s onwards – greater than any comparable capitalist country. From the late 1980s onwards, as the Soviet workers state started crumbling under decades of relentless imperialist pressure, the inequalities engendered by new pro-capitalist economic policies re-ignited long-suppressed feuds between ethnic groups. This enabled “Great Russian” chauvinists within the ethnic Russian population and anti-communist separatists within non-Russian peoples – like the Ukrainian Rukh movement and the Baltic separatist movements that harked back to the Nazi-aligned regimes that were swept away by the Soviet Red Army at the end of World War II – to become key forces in the drive for capitalist counterrevolution. With massive assistance from the U.S. and other imperialist powers, this push for capitalist restoration culminated in the destruction of the Soviet workers state in 1991-92. Similarly, extreme nationalists based on the different peoples of the former Yugoslavia became the main forces that destroyed the workers state there, while themselves becoming the putrid by-products of the counterrevolution. Meanwhile, in the former East European workers states, capitalist counterrevolutionary forces used the call for “independence” from the Soviet Union, which led the Warsaw Pact bloc of the East European and Soviet workers states, as one of the main mantras of their movements.

The U.S., Australian, British and other Western imperialist rulers are now using the same playbook that they used to destroy the Soviet and East European workers states in their drive to destroy socialistic rule in China. After Tibetan and Chinese communists and the PRC workers state helped Tibet’s serfs to overturn the brutal feudal system that existed in the previous Dalai Lama-run Tibet and liberate themselves in 1959, the CIA armed Tibet’s overthrown feudal exploiting class to wage an armed struggle to retake power. After this armed campaign was defeated, the Western imperialists funded and organised the overthrown serf owners and their descendants to wage a political campaign to regain power under the slogan of “Tibetan independence.” Meanwhile, ever since Hong Kong was returned to China in 1997, the Western imperialists have been backing “Hong Kong separatists” and those in Hong Kong who demand greater autonomy from China. These pro-colonial forces represent those sections of Hong Kong’s upper class and wanna-be-capitalist, upper-middle class youth who fear that the PRC workers state will eventually start implementing socialist measures in Hong Kong. Australia’s capitalist ruling is very active in backing these forces. This includes through media support, statements of encouragement by Australian government leaders – with a few visiting Australian politicians even marching in the anti-communist protests in Hong Kong – backing for exile Hong Kong, anti-PRC groups based in Australia and repression of pro-PRC Chinese students that campaign against the anti-Red China forces.

The Two Components of the
“East Turkestan” Anti-Communist Forces

Over the last decade, alongside the Hong Kong anti-PRC movement, the “East Turkestan” counterrevolutionaries have been the anti-communist force opposed to the PRC that has received the greatest level of imperialist backing. This force consist of two main trends that are united by their common hostility to socialism. One trend is relatively less religiously fundamentalist than the other. It is led by big-time Uyghur capitalist exploiters and would-be capitalists who long to overthrow socialistic rule over the Uyghur-majority parts of China so that they can become the capitalist overlords of their “own” people. The main organisation representing this faction of the “East Turkestan” anti-communists is the NED-funded World Uyghur Congress (WUC). By far the most prominent and main leader of the WUC is filthy rich capitalist, Rebiya Kadeer. Rebiya Kadeer is a favourite of former U.S. president and war-criminal, George W Bush. Through her real-estate and multinational trading conglomerate that was based in China’s Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region, Rebiya Kadeer leached an absolute fortune. She became China’s richest woman and one of her richest people overall. She was China’s Gina Rinehart! But given that the PRC is a workers state, Rebiya Kadeer – like other capitalists in China – came under pressure from PRC state authorities to give more back to the community, including by paying more tax and by reducing the amount of extreme profiteering in her business activities. This angered her and sent her into opposition to the PRC state. It made Rebiya Kadeer realise that attaining the full “freedom” for Uygur “entrepreneurs” to exploit the masses like capitalists have in capitalist states would require PRC rule over southern Xinjiang to be overthrown, or at least greatly weakened. She ended up in exile in the USA from where she led the WUC and received enormous backing from the U.S. and other Western ruling classes.

Ironically, Rebiya Kadeer is a walking refutation of her own claims. For example, despite the fact that Uyghur and other minorities were always allowed to have more children without financial penalty than China’s Han majority during the period of China’s one-child policy (now a three child policy), she claims that the PRC especially restricted the birth of Uyghur children through that policy. Except, Rebiya Kadeer herself has … eleven children! And all her eleven children were born in China! So much for that claim! Rebiya Kadeer also claims that the PRC suppresses the Uyghur language and forces Uyghurs to learn Mandarin Chinese instead. Yet Rebiya Kadeer herself, who grew up in China’s Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region, can speak Uyghur fluently but only speaks Mandarin in a broken way! As for her claim that Uyghur people face severe discrimination in China, that is undercut by the fact that she, a Uyghur person who cannot speak fluent Mandarin Chinese, was able to become China’s richest woman. Could you imagine say an Arab background woman here, who cannot speak fluent English, displacing Gina Rinehart to become Australia’s richest woman? Or could you imagine an Aboriginal woman who can speak Walpiri (the language of an Aboriginal people whose traditional land is in the Northern Territory area north and west of Alice Springs) perfectly but who is not fluent in English similarly becoming Australia’s richest woman? Very unlikely! Not given the racist nature of Australia’s capitalist society and the lack of economic opportunity that the Walpiri and other Aboriginal peoples have today! Much of Rebiya Kadeer’s life actually shows how much better the relative social status of Uyghur people in China is compared to that of Aboriginal people in this country.  

The second component of the “East Turkestan” anti-communist forces are extreme religious fundamentalists. The main reason that they want to secede from the PRC is because they oppose the secularism of the socialistic PRC and to the high status that it gives to women. They hate the reality that in the Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region women participate in mixed gender schools with their male counterparts, are able to attend universities, can choose to dress “immodestly” if they so choose, generally have full legal equality with men and can attain high office in government and industry. These ultra-right-wing reactionaries would be incensed by the fact that right now the highest government position in the Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region – the Director of the Standing Committee of the region’s People’s Congress – is held by a woman, Zumret Obul, who is a Uyghur native of Kashgar. They would no doubt be livid too that, like in the rest of China and unlike in some bordering countries, in the Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region women have the right to abortion on demand and lesbians and gays are able to conduct sexual activity according to their inclination without facing any criminal penalties. Moreover, the extreme anti-secular wing of this anti-communist movement opposes many of the expressions of Uyghur culture that are widely practiced in the Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region – including Uyghur traditional and street dancing, Uyghur music and Uyghur Muqam – especially when they are performed by women. All these they consider heretic. So much for the “East Turkestan” anti-communists’ claims to be defenders of Uyghur culture!

As the above makes clear, the political battle that is – and mostly we can now say was – taking place in the Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region is very different from how Western propagandists would like to present the issue: a clash between Uyghurs and the PRC state. Rather it is a struggle between on the one hand, those Uyghurs who are either consciously pro-capitalist or anti-secular opponents of women’s rights and on the other hand, communist Uyghurs. Or more fully we can say that the political battle taking place within the Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region is a contest between on the one side, that small proportion of Uyghurs who are either consciously pro-capitalist or religious fundamentalist opponents of women’s rights, together with their imperialist masters and their anti-communist Han Chinese allies; and on the other side, pro-women’s rights, pro-communist Uyghurs and their pro-communist Han Chinese allies. Ultimately this is a clash between conflicting class interests. The anti-communist side is fighting for the immediate economic interests of capitalist and wanna-be capitalist Uyghurs and most of all their imperialist masters; and the pro-communist side represents the interests of working-class Uyghurs and cooperative and small farmer Uyghurs, alongside with working-class Chinese people of all ethnicities.

Above: Director of the Standing Committee of the Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region Peoples Congress, Zumret Obul presides over a meeting of Communist Party of China members group of the Peoples Congress standing committee. Note the use of both Uyghur and Han Chinese writing in the title board of the meeting room.
Zumret Obul is a Uyghur women and native of the city of Kashgar. The position that she holds is the highest-ranked official position in the Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region. That a woman holds this position would be intolerable to the biggest faction of the “East Turkestan” anti-communist “separatists”, who are extreme religious fundamentalist opponents of women’s rights.
Below: Zumret Obul during a supervision trip within the Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region

Photo Credit: Standing Committee of the Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region Peoples Congress website

Imperialists Back Extreme Opponents of Women’s Rights

The most prominent group within the religious fanatic wing of the “East Turkestan” anti-communist forces is the East Turkestan Islamic Movement (ETIM)/ Turkistan Islamic Party (TIP). The ETIM has long-time close links with Osama bin Laden’s Al Qaeda and bin Laden provided much of the initial funding for the organisation. The ETIM/TIP later became an Al Qaeda affiliate. In a high-profile speech in 2016, then Al Qaeda leader, bin Laden’s successor Ayman al-Zawahiri, hailed the ETIM’s activities and urgent them to wage terrorist attacks on the PRC in order to combat “communist occupants”  and a “torrent of atheism”. The ETIM/TIP also had one-time close ties with the Afghan Taliban and remains closely linked with the Pakistani Taliban, the latter having its stronghold in northwest Pakistan’s North Waziristan District that borders Afghanistan. It is important to recall that Al Qaeda is a creation of Washington and its Saudi allies that was built up in 1988 to organise religious fundamentalists from Arab countries and beyond to join the Western-funded war against the then leftist Afghan government and its Soviet allies. The Taliban were one faction that emerged from this Mujahideen that turned on the other Mujahideen factions and seized power in Afghanistan in 1996. Thus the ETIM/TIP has been very closely associated with forces built up by the U.S. and other Western imperialist powers from the very start.

Then, as is well known, for a several-year period before and after the 11 September 2001 attack in New York and the Pentagon, the interests of Al Qaeda – and with it their then Taliban allies – clashed with those of their creators in the CIA. When the U.S., NATO and their Australian imperialist allies used the September 11 attacks as an excuse to seize Afghanistan, they ended up fighting against not only the Afghan Taliban and Al Qaeda but also to a small degree with the ETIM forces that the latter groups had been hosting and training in Afghanistan. The U.S. captured twenty-two Uyghur ETIM members and sent them to the Guantanamo Bay prison camp. Under China’s pressure, the U.S. Treasury department finally listed the ETIM as a terrorist organisation in 2002. Twenty-two years ago, when the PRC’s economy was much weaker relative to that of the richest capitalist countries than it is now, the imperialist ruling classes did not fear the rise of socialistic China anywhere near to the same extent that it does now.

However, before long, Washington was reversing back towards support to the ETIM. Prisoners of the group were given favourable treatment at Guantanamo Bay. Instead of the ETIM prisoners being extradited back to China, within a few years they were cleared of all terrorism charges and set free in either the U.S. or allowed to go to Albania, Bermuda, Palau, Switzerland and Pakistan. Then came a pivotal event that shaped the attitude of the capitalist powers towards Red China – the late noughties Great Recession. That financial crash led to a deep recession in all the major capitalist economies. In contrast, the PRC stormed through the crisis with just a small temporary blip in her economy, achieving a fast annual GDP growth rate. The socialistic PRC’s strength relative to the capitalist powers gained a big boost. This reality, together with the glaring contrast between the performance of the capitalist and socialistic states during the crisis, made the imperialist ruling classes realise that the rise of the socialistic PRC and the potential that has to shape the political attitudes of the masses of the world would in future present an existential threat to their domination of the world – and indeed their own rule at home. Meanwhile, the fact that the PRC strengthened the socialist aspects of her economy in order to defy the Great Recession made imperialist strategists realise that their previous hopes that China would organically evolve in a capitalist direction were misplaced and that extreme pressure needed to be applied upon the PRC if socialistic rule was to be crushed there. Thus by the end of the noughties, imperialism’s new Cold War against the PRC was ramped up several notches. Alongside this, they returned more quickly towards support for the ETIM/TIP.

Alongside this, important events were happening in the Arab world in parallel. Following protests against the Syrian government of Bashar al-Assad in 2011, the U.S., France, Britain and other imperialist powers turned the initially diverse, multi-directional protests into an armed, imperialist proxy war to subjugate Syria – the least subordinated to Western imperialism and most pro-Palestinian of the Arab states. Initially, the Western imperialists backed the Free Syrian Army and other relatively less, religiously fundamentalist sections of the anti-government forces. But these forces were largely defeated in battles with the Syrian Army and proved to be ineffectual. The main military forces opposed to the Syrian government became extreme religious fundamentalists – in particular the Al Qaeda affiliated Al-Nusra Front (Jabhat al-Nusra) and their allies and the ISIS breakaway from Al Qaeda. Washington and Co. therefore provided huge amounts of weapons and training to allies of the Al-Nusra Front and sometimes, very secretly, to the Al Qaeda affiliate itself. Australia’s imperialist rulers provided political and diplomatic support for this proxy war against Syria. Meanwhile, longtime ETIM/TIP fighters and those in the Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region that they managed to newly recruit flocked to Syria’s northwest to fight alongside the Al-Nusra Front in imperialism’s proxy war against Syria. The ETIM/TIP’s participation in imperialism’s proxy war against Syria allowed the U.S. and its allies to more and more directly back these extreme right-wing, anti-PRC reactionaries. Given that much of the Western imperialists’ meddling in the Middle East and Asia was being done under the cover of the “war on terror” this is not something that they wanted to publicly broadcast. However, by the time that COVID ravaged the world – and the PRC’s far greater success than the capitalist countries in protecting her people (and economy) from the disease clearly revealed for all thinking people to see – the capitalist powers had become so terrified by socialistic China’s rise and therefore escalated their anti-PRC propaganda offensive to such a degree that they felt that they could justify supporting any anti-China force. Thus, in October 2020, the U.S. formerly dropped their designation of the ETIM as a terrorist organisation – a reflection of the reality that they had already been covertly backing the group for years. Here in Australia, the regime also does not proscribe the ETIM/TIP as a terrorist group. Instead, the Australian imperialist regime bans as “terrorist” two groups that, while we have a vastly different political outlook to them, we recognise as waging a just armed resistance against Israel’s genocidal subjugation of Palestine and violent meddling in Lebanon – Hamas and the Lebanese Hezbollah. The Australian capitalist state similarly also proscribes the Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK), which is waging a just struggle against the brutal national oppression of the Kurdish people by the NATO-inhabiting Turkish regime.

Western backing for the ETIM/TIP makes a mockery of these imperialist regimes’ complaints today about the oppression of women and minorities by the Taliban in Afghanistan. Given their stated positions and their affiliation with Al Qaeda, if the ETIM/TIP and their ilk were to seize power in what is today China’s Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region, they would even more brutally subjugate women and non-Sunni Muslims than the Afghan Taliban. However, such hypocrisy is the norm rather than the exception for these imperialist ruling classes! In 2011, among the most prominent of the forces that NATO brought to power when they violently overthrew the Gadaffi government were extreme religious fundamentalists and Al Qaeda supporters. Then, from 2012 onwards, they provided massive support to extreme anti-woman reactionaries in their proxy war against the secular Syrian government. And as for Afghanistan, the Western ruling classes only started pretending to be concerned about women’s rights there when their interests started clashing with those of the Taliban. They are the ones mainly responsible for the brutal oppression that Afghan women suffer today and have indeed endured for the last 32 years. In 1978, when the leftist Peoples Democratic Party of Afghanistan (PDPA) seized power in Afghanistan, they enacted not only land reforms in defence of the poor but instituted measures to protect women from forced marriage and to enable girls to be educated. Afghan women and girls then truly had hope in a brighter future. But the U.S. and other Western imperialists and their allies ruling conservative Arab states poured massive amounts of arms and money to back an insurgency against the PDPA government by fanatical, woman-hating reactionaries and big landowners who were incensed at both the advances made for women’s rights and the progressive land reforms. When the Soviet Union responded to a desperate request from the PDPA and rightly sent troops to back up the embattled leftist government, the imperial powers and their allies increased their support for the anti-woman fundamentalists even further. After the Soviet leadership sold out Afghan women and poor tenant farmers when they withdrew their troops in 1989, the Afghan leftists held on for a further three years. However, starved of all material support after the Soviet Union started fully collapsing in August 1991, the leftists were defeated by the Western-backed, Mujahideen reactionaries in 1992. This resulted in a gigantic deterioration in the social position of Afghan women – even before the Taliban faction of the Mujahideen gained the ascendancy four years later. Even after the U.S, NATO and Australian imperialists overthrew the Taliban in 2001 and occupied the country, most women remained cruelly subjugated in Afghanistan. After all, the Western powers had merely brought back the non-Taliban factions of the woman-oppressing, former Mujahideen to power. Yes, in some urban areas, largely for show, the imperialist occupiers and the puppet regime enacted some modest measures that improved the position of women relative to what it had been under the Taliban. However, in most of the country there was no improvement from the Taliban days. Moreover, the extreme cruelty of the war-crime-ridden Western occupying forces and the rampant corruption of the puppet regime caused many Afghan women to suffer even more than they did during the 1996-2001 Taliban regime. The imperialist occupying forces turned a blind eye as corrupt police and officials – and the warlords and big landowners that they protected – seized many young women to be sex slaves and bought and kept adolescent boys for sex and entertainment in the notorious ancient practice called bacha bazi that flourished during both the periods of pro-Western, Mujahideen rule.

The 1990s, Noughties and Early 2010s –
The High-Point of Anti-Communist Forces
Inside the Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region

Given the unpalatable nature of the religious fundamentalist wing of the anti-communist forces in Xinjiang, imperialist regimes, media outlets and NGOs try to downplay their significance. Indeed, they like to pretend that this wing of the anti-PRC movement does not even exist. However, the fanatically anti-secular factions of the Uyghur anti-communists have greater support than their, nominally, more secular counterparts. During the hay day of the anti-communist forces inside the Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region in the 1990s, noughties and early 2010s, it was the extreme religious fundamentalists who were more active. Among their actions were the assassination of communist Uyghur officials and the murder of Uyghur imams who did not adhere to their fanatical and warped interpretation of Islam. The ETIM and their ilk also carried out random terrorist acts on civilians – including through bombing buses, exploding car bombs and knife attacks. In the worst of the latter type of attack, in March 2014 a knife-wielding gang of religious fundamentalist, Uyghur anti-communists went on a rampage stabbing to death 33 people at a railway station in the southwest Chinese city of Kunming in Yunnan province. However, it was billionaire Rebiya Kadeer’s, nominally more secular, WUC that launched the biggest single act of terror against the people of China and her Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region. In July 2009, they incited right-wing thugs and supporters of the extreme fundamentalist wing of the anti-communist movement to unleash a horrific rampage against non-Uyghur civilians living in the region’s capital Urumqi. These rioters murdered over 150 civilians. The anti-communist rioters not only killed Han Chinese people but slaughtered at least eleven members of another Muslim minority in China, the Hui.

However, over the last fifteen years, the anti-communist forces have progressively lost more and more support amongst the Uyghur people. They have gone from having the allegiance of a significant minority of the Uyghur people to having the support of only a tiny minority of Uyghurs living in the Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region. Today, most of their support amongst actual Uyghurs is based on the Uyghur populations living in exile in Afghanistan and in Western countries. However, these exile populations are very small. This is despite the much more favourable treatment that Uyghur anti-communists seeking asylum and residency in the West are given compared to Tamil, Palestinian, Afghan, Iraqi, Somali and Sudanese asylum seekers. The last Australian census in 2021 found that there were only 1,674 people identifying as being of Uyghur ancestry living in the whole of Australia. Thus, despite the number of Uyghurs living in China being more than double the number of Palestinians living in Palestine and more than five times the number of Eelam Tamils living in Sri Lanka, the number of people in Australia identifying as being Uyghur is more than nine times less than the number of people identifying as being Palestinian and around 30 times fewer than the number of Eelam Tamils in Australia. The relatively tiny size of the Uyghur populations living in exile in the West – despite the huge size of the Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region’s external boundary with neighbouring countries that makes travel for those who want to leave China from the region very easy – is itself an indication that most Uyghurs living in China’s Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region either actively support, or accept, being part of the socialistic PRC.

Notably, there has not been a single terrorist attack in the Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region for the last more than seven years. One reason – although not the most important one – for this is that the PRC has implemented a successful program to re-orient and integrate into the PRC’s socialistic society those Uyghurs susceptible to religious fanaticism and other forms of anti-communist extremism. Those enrolled in the courses are taught the fundamentals of China’s pro-socialist constitution and secular and socialist values – including gender equality, egalitarianism, anti-colonialism, loyalty to the socialistic PRC and the need to treat with respect people who are either atheist or who have a different religious persuasion or different interpretation of Islam. Participants in the program are housed in boarding schools for the duration of the course and enjoy sporting and leisure pursuits as well as cultural activities involving both secular Uyghur culture and broader Chinese culture. As well as values education, a key aspect of the program involves providing vocational training to the students to improve their career prospects. The PRC, quite correctly, sees economic hardships and the lack of career prospects as a key factor that was driving some Uyghurs into the arms of the anti-communist, anti-PRC forces. Those participating in the constitution education and vocational training schools are also taught the national language of China – Mandarin – since this increases the opportunities for participants to both get jobs outside Uyghur-majority areas of the country and land jobs that require communication with firms and departments in non-Uyghur parts of China. It should be noted that the fact that many attendees even need to be taught Mandarin Chinese makes a mockery of the claim by anti-PRC propagandists that Uyghurs in China are prevented from learning their own language and as a result are only able to speak Mandarin Chinese.

January 2023: Thirty Muslim scholars from 14 Muslim-majority countries conduct an inspection of a constitution education and vocational training centre in China’s Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region. The scholars praised the work of the centres and found that they were not at all “detention centres”. They found that the centres housed the students in good conditions and a supportive environment. Every single international delegation that has inspected the Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region’s constitution education and vocational training centres with an open mind has come to the same conclusion – including every delegation made up predominantly of Muslims or participants from non-Western countries.

China’s Constitution Education and
Vocational Training Schools
Versus Australia’s Supermax Prisons

The imperialist ruling classes have created and spread a big lie that the Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region’s constitution education and vocational training schools are like prisons. However, every international delegation that has visited these schools without a pre-prejudiced mind has found the very opposite. These include representatives from the Organisation of Islamic Countries who visited China’s Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region last August; and a World Muslim Communities Council delegation of thirty Muslim scholars from fourteen Muslim-majority countries that conducted an inspection tour fourteen months ago. They have found that the schools house students in good, supportive conditions and allow students much freedom – including the opportunity to travel homes on weekends and receive visits from family members at any time. Most of the schools are headed by ethnic Uyghur principals.

Western governments, mainstream media and ruling class-funded “NGOs” promote the lie that participants in the constitution education and vocational training centres are “forced” into the program. However, the reality is that the overwhelming majority of participants enrol in the programs voluntarily. To be sure, many participants have experienced much pressure on them to attend the courses. However, this pressure comes not from the threat of legal persecution but from the considerable social and moral pressure that can be exerted by family members, friends, neighbours, Imams, teachers and community leaders. This is not fundamentally different to the social and family pressure that youth seen as wayward in any country may experience pushing them to finish school or attend vocational training colleges. Many who joined the courses did so after their family members, friends, neighbours or teachers determined them at high risk of being recruited into religious extremist terrorist groups after they exhibited behavior such as, preventing their children from joining singing and dancing activities at school, or, in the case of husbands, uncompromisingly forcing their wives to stay at home and not work. Many referred to the constitution education and vocational training centres had committed acts that are illegal under PRC law – like withdrawing their daughters from school (on religious extremist grounds) and preventing their wives from going outside their homes without being accompanied by them.

There is a small minority of participants in China’s training centres who are indeed forced to attend. These are people who have committed low-level, terrorism-related offences. They have not committed actual acts of terror (in which case they who would be imprisoned) but have instead committed relatively minor deeds in support of terrorist groups – such as donating to the groups, spreading their propaganda online or attending meetings of the banned terror groups. PRC authorities give such people the opportunity to avoid imprisonment by instead successfully completing a constitution education and vocational training course. Such forced “admission” into the training centres is actually a more humane “punishment” than the harsh sentences meted out to people who commit equivalent offences in imperialist countries. In Australia, many religious fundamentalist Muslims who have not committed or planned to commit any terrorist acts whatsoever but who associate with groups deemed terrorist – or provide them with low-level material or moral support – are being locked up for years in harsh conditions. Many are imprisoned at the notorious “supermax” prison in the NSW Southern Tablelands town of Goulburn. Most of these prisoners have been jailed for showing support for groups such as Al Qaeda and ISIS – that is the very same groups that the Uyghur-based ETIM/TIP terrorists are linked with. Many of these Muslim prisoners in Australia endure jail for periods much longer than their formal sentence, through the Australian regime’s use of an authoritarian Continuing Detention Orders (CDOs) scheme that allows courts to potentially lock up prisoners indefinitely through repeated imposition of CDOs. Others are subjected to repeated imprisonment through being hit with highly restrictive Control Orders when they are released from jail. These draconian Control Orders then provide trip wires for their subsequent imprisonment. For example, a 23 year-old Toongabbie man who was jailed for 18 months in 2019 for simply associating with ISIS – despite not having participated in any actual or planned terrorist attack – was re-arrested, only days after his release at the end of his sentence, because he allegedly breached a Control Order by merely browsing on the internet material deemed to be “violent extremist”. The man was then sentenced to a new term of two years and three months in prison. In China’s Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region such a person might not have spent even a week in prison. Instead he would have been referred for “forced” admission to a constitution education and vocational training school.

The comparatively harsher treatment that the Australian regime gives to Islamic fundamentalists who commit minor acts in support of terrorist groups compared to what the PRC does is one aspect of the discrimination that Muslim people are facing in Australia. Australia’s ruling class and its enforcers – from its politicians, to its media, to its police and ASIO secret police – often insinuate that Australia’s entire Muslim community are either especially prone to terrorism or are not doing enough to combat it. The Australian regime is subjecting Muslim people and organisations with absolutely zero connection to violent religious fundamentalism to over-bearing surveillance and infiltration.

The bias of Australia’s legal system against Muslim people is evident by comparing the sentences and judgements that alleged Islamic fundamentalist extremists have been hit with versus those meted out to violent far-right white supremacists. To illustrate this point, we compare some specific cases. In 2004, Australian Muslim man Faheem Lodhi was arrested and eventually convicted of terrorism offences for possessing a document in the Urdu language about how to make bombs, collecting two maps of the electrical supply system in Sydney and collecting information about the availability of materials that could allegedly be used to make bombs. He did not actually conduct any attack or make or acquire any bombs. If one was to accept the Australian regime’s contention that he intended to actually carry out an attack, it is apparent that this was to be an act of economic sabotage rather than an action aimed at killing civilians. Yet Faheem Lodhi was sentenced to 20 years in prison. Let us compare his sentence with that given to two of the neo-Nazi racists who have been charged with similar acts. One of the latter is white supremacist Michael Holt. Holt, who was arrested in 2015, had stockpiled a large number of firearms and other weapons and openly stated his wish to carry out racist violence and mass shootings at shopping centres and other sites. Despite making threats to directly murder large numbers of people, unlike Lodhi who only allegedly wished to damage infrastructure; and despite collecting a large arsenal of weapons – unlike Lodhi who only researched materials that could be used to make weapons – Australia’s courts handed neo-Nazi Holt less than one-third of the sentence that they hit Faheem Lodhi with. Indeed, Holt was not even charged under terrorism laws. Instead, he received a six year sentence under firearms laws (his total sentence was seven years due to an additional child pornography offence). Then last Thursday, Cameron Brodie-Hall, an Adelaide man known for making Nazi salutes and being part of a violent far-right group dedicated to “preserving white Australia” and who was found by police to be in possession of a book that detailed how to conduct assassinations and terror bombings was acquitted by a magistrate of one count of possessing a document for terrorist acts and one count of possessing extremist material. So while Muslim fundamentalist Faheem Lodhi received ten years jail out of his total 20 year sentence for possessing a document about how to make bombs, Nazi-supporting white supremacist Brodie-Hall got absolutely zero punishment for possessing a book that even more explicitly explains how to kill people through terrorist attacks.

The discriminatorily severe treatment being meted out in Australia to Islamic fundamentalists and the broader Muslim community is a reflection of not only the racist nature of the Australian regime but the very purpose of the Australian ruling class’ anti-terror measures. This purpose is quite different to the aims of the PRC’s crackdown on anti-communist terrorists in the Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region. For the PRC, its measures against the likes of the ETIM/TIP and its constitution education and vocational training centres are aimed at protecting people against terror attacks, defeating threats to ethnic harmony, rehabilitating those who have been drawn into the terrorist groups, preserving China’s territorial integrity and protecting the PRC’s socialistic system. In Australia, part of the regime’s crackdown on extreme Islamic fundamentalists is indeed aimed at stopping terror attacks. However, the Australian regime’s “war on terror” also has a very sinister purpose. By using the pretext of opposing the likes of Al Qaeda and ISIS to greatly strengthen repressive laws and boost the powers of the police and ASIO secret police, Australia’s ruling class is building up its weapons for future attacks against its main targets: militant workers rights activists and leftist opponents of capitalism and racist oppression. Already, the anti-terror laws that the Australian regime nominally brought in to combat violent Islamic fundamentalists has been used to convict three supporters of a progressive group: the Tamil Tigers. Although we have very different politics from the Tamil Tigers we acknowledge that they have waged a just struggle for the liberation of the oppressed Tamil nation living in the north and east of Sri Lanka.

The Australian regime’s high-profile crackdown on so-called “Islamic terrorism” is also in large part driven by the Australian ruling class’ wish to demonise the entire Muslim and Arab communities. Australia’s capitalist rulers want to divert the masses frustrations over unaffordable rents, insecure jobs and the high cost of living away from themselves and onto soft targets. Their regime’s overbearing “anti-terror” surveillance of the entire Muslim community and the excessively severe punishments it gives to those within the Muslim community with even a low-level association with terror groups cannot be separated from the plethora of statements made by ruling class politicians attacking the Muslim community and other Middle Eastern, Asian and African communities. Let us recall how opposition leader Peter Dutton, when he was immigration minister in the previous Liberal government, whipped up hatred against Muslim and Arab communities by disgustingly saying that it was a mistake to allow Lebanese Muslims to migrate into Australia.

All this official racism and discrimination against Muslim and Arab communities has incited more extreme, violent racists on the streets. This is what happened on 11 December 2005, when some 10,000 screaming racists at southern Sydney’s Cronulla Beach went on a rampage brutally bashing anyone of Middle Eastern or South Asian appearance that they could find. NSW Police, who today mobilise in huge numbers to violently protect Israel’s ZIM Shipping against pro-Palestinian protesters holding actions at Sydney’s docks, were conspicuous by their failure to mobilise adequate resources to protect non-white beach goers – despite it being obvious to all at the time that huge numbers of racists would be gathering that day with the intent of unleashing violence against darker-skinned people. About a decade after the Cronulla riot, white supremacists started holding hundreds-strong “Reclaim Australia” rallies throughout Australia that vilified Muslim people and other non-white communities. Several prominent parliamentarians from the then ruling Liberal-National Coalition and the far-right parties participated in – and even spoke at – the demonstrations.

The remorseless attacks that the Australian and other Western ruling classes have unleashed against the Muslim and minority communities in their own countries – and around the world – has not stopped them one bit from slandering the PRC’s treatment of Muslim Uyghurs. Their favourite refrain is that China is “forcibly imprisoning” a huge number of Uyghurs in re-education “camps”. As the imperialists become more and more desperate to vilify Red China, they keep on increasing the number of Uyghur people that they claim are “detained” in the “camps”! They have gone from saying that “hundreds of thousands” are detained there, to saying “one million” are detained to sometimes even, “two million”. These claims are completely ridiculous!  The amount of Uyghur people whom the imperialists claim are being “detained” in the re-education and vocational training centres amount to between 10% and 20% of the entire population of Uyghur people within the Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region. It would be simply impossible to forcibly detain such a high proportion of any particular ethnic group in areas of a country where they form the majority of the population – as Western propagandists claim that China is doing in the southern part of Xinjiang – without the practice leading to a revolt, or at least a massive social upheaval. This would be the case no matter which country this was happening in and irrespective of its political system. Yet during the last several years, which is when the imperialists say that such huge numbers of Uyghurs have been detained, there has been no sign of revolt or upheaval within the Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region. Moreover, if such a gigantic proportion of the working-age population were truly detained in “forced-attendance” schools it would lead to economic collapse – not only because of the huge numbers of people taken out of productive work but because of the gigantic number of personnel and resources needed to detain between 10% and 20% of the Uyghur population. This is doubly so because the main parts of the region’s economy – cotton farming, sheep herding, grain crops, oil and gas production, mining, metal smelting and pressing, renewable energy production and services – are sectors where labour and production cannot be carried out within campus grounds. However, the economy of the Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region has been undisputedly booming over the last several years. This fact itself makes the imperialists’ claim that ten to twenty percent of the Uyghur population is being detained in re-education camps completely implausible. 

By the end of 2019, most of the students at the Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region’s constitution education and vocational training schools had completed their courses, found meaningful work and been successfully re-integrated into the broader Uyghur community and Chinese society. Most of the schools have since been closed but a few continue to operate to re-orient and train new participants. It is useful comparing this reality with what is happening here in Australia. Details about the number of people jailed in Australia under accusations of involvement in Islamic fundamentalist terrorism are very hard to find. The justice system in supposedly “democratic” Australia is very opaque! However, a document released by the Australian government two years ago, titled Australia’s Counter-Terrorism Strategy 2022, indicated that at the time there were around 100 people in Australian prisons convicted or charged with terrorism offences – and we know that nearly all these people are people accused of involvement in Islamic fundamentalist terrorism. The Australian regime does not make available compiled statistics as to what proportion of these detainees are being jailed under accusation of the kind of very low-level association with terror groups that in China would allow them to attend a constitution education and vocational training school as an alternative to prison. However, an examination of a 2013 study by a University of New South Wales researcher that was published in the International Journal for Crime, Justice and Social Democracy showed that of the 26 people up to then convicted of terrorism-related offences in Australia, 11 had been convicted of only either being a member of a banned group or of providing funds to such a groups. They had not been involving in conducting or even preparing any terrorist attack. They made up just over 42% of the people convicted then. If we apply that same percentage to the approximately 100 people in Australia’s jails today accused of Islamic fundamentalist terrorism-related offences, then we can estimate that around 42 inmates are accused of these lower grade offences. Given that the people accused of such offences have varying degrees of involvement with the proscribed groups, we cannot say for sure that all of the estimated 42 such prisoners in Australia accused of these lower level terrorism-related offences would in China be given the option of avoiding prison through enrolment in a constitution education and vocational training centre. However, even if half would be given such an opportunity, we can estimate that there are about 21 Muslim fundamentalist people accused of very low-level association with terror groups who are languishing in Australia’s jails who in China could avoid jail through participation in a constitution education and vocational training course. And given that the total population of Muslim background people in China’s Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region is around 20 times that of the total population of Muslims in all of Australia, this number of about 21 Islamic fundamentalist prisoners unnecessarily imprisoned in Australia is in proportionate terms equivalent to 420 people in China’s Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region who would avoid prison through instead being “forcibly” admitted to a constitution education and vocational training school. It is very unlikely that this number is any less than the number of remaining students in the Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region’s constitution education and vocational training schools who are actually forced to attend. And these people in China who have committed offences of very low-level association with terror groups are only made to attend boarding schools – where they have the right to go home on weekends and holidays, the right to receive visits at other times, abundant sporting, leisure and cultural participation opportunities – whereas their counterparts in Australia are locked up under extremely harsh conditions in supermax jails.

Above: An inmate is locked in a cage in order to be allowed to make a phone call at Australia’s Goulburn supermax prison in southern NSW. Among those imprisoned for years in the Goulburn hell-hole are Muslims who have only had very minor alleged association with terror groups. In China’s Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region, such people would be given the opportunity to attend a constitution education and vocational training school as an alternative to prison – where they would study alongside the voluntary participants that make up the vast majority of enrolled students. Below: Students at a Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region constitution education and vocational training school in Kashgar during a Mandarin language class. Note that the photo was taken by a journalist from the U.S. government-controlled NPR news outlet who visited the school with the pre-determined intention to vilify the school as a “detention centre” and spread anti-communist, anti-China propaganda. Nevertheless, what the photo shows clearly looks like a typical classroom and not a detention centre! Note that one of the students at the front of the photo is wearing traditional Uyghur/Central Asian clothing as well as a nice-looking watch. Unlike any prison, the classes are mixed gender and students are wearing a variety of casual clothing rather than any uniform.
Photo Credit (above photo): website named “Criminal
Photo Credit (below photo): Rob Schmitz/NPR

Excessive Market Reforms Weakened Ethnic Relations
Within Socialistic China for a Two Decade Period

Enemies of socialistic China would argue that no matter how reactionary may be the anti-PRC forces within China’s Uyghur population, the fact that these forces have been able to win any significant popular support is itself a sign that Uyghurs are oppressed within China. However, such a line of argument has become, in good part, outdated. Much of the support that the anti-communist, anti-China groups had within the Uyghur population has disappeared. Nevertheless, it is true that the significant degree of support that anti-PRC forces once had within a significant minority of the Uyghur population reflected real grievances felt by a portion of the Uyghur population – grumblings that right-wing forces were able to exploit. Those grievances felt by some Uyghur people were mainly disgruntlement at the poverty and lack of decent job opportunities that they had and anger at their lower standard of living compared to other residents of China.

To understand why such economic hardships and inequality were faced by Uyghur people, we have to understand the political and economic course of the entire PRC. China’s toiling classes seized state power in a heroic anti-capitalist revolution in 1949. At the time, China was one of the poorest countries in Asia. More than hundreds years of subjugation by imperial powers and a form of capitalist rule impacted by many remaining elements of feudalism had combined to keep the Chinese masses in poverty, oppression and backwardness. In 1949, per capita income in China was only 53% of the per capita income of India. However, through building an economy centred on public ownership and central planning, the workers state created by the 1949 Revolution was able to greatly improve the lives of the Chinese masses. This is despite two periods of sharp economic setbacks – the late 1950s-early 1960s Great Leap Forward disaster and the most frenetic two years of the Cultural Revolution in 1967-8. By 1978, socialistic China had achieved a miracle in social progress. In less than three decades she had almost doubled her people’s life expectancy from 36 years in 1949 to 67 years. By 1978, average per capita income in China had caught up to that of India’s, while socialistic China had far surpassed that of capitalist India in terms of literacy of the people, average life expectancy, social position of women and level of industrial development. At the time, despite the bureaucratic deformations of the workers state, China, in terms of material standard of living, was then one of the most egalitarian societies (other than for hunter-gatherer tribal societies) that has ever existed in human history.

However, the PRC still faced big political challenges then. The lack of genuine workers democracy in the socialistic state stifled the creativity of workers. It also made it harder to motivate workers to work hard for the socialistic society – especially given that workers knew that the workers state was (rightly) guaranteeing every one of them a secure full-time job. Moreover, in the absence of socialist revolution having spread by then to the richest countries, the disastrous Sino-Soviet split had cut-off the PRC from access to advanced technology via the Soviet bloc. In response to these challenges, the bureaucracy administering the workers state decided to introduce pro-market reforms at the end of 1978 in a policy dubbed “reform and opening up.” To stimulate innovation and hard work, greater income differentials were to be permitted. Each workplace and region would be able to keep more of the income generated in their terrain for themselves rather than returning it to the public coffers for shared use by the entire socialistic society. The emergence of a limited capitalist private sector was allowed. Eventually foreign capitalists were allowed to set up factories within China, initially in joint ventures with PRC state-owned firms and later, in some cases, wholly by themselves.

The bureaucrats decision to introduce pro-market reforms in the late 1970s was not entirely driven by the desire to boost the productivity of the Chinese economy. They also knew that given their privileged position they and their children would be in prime position to take advantages of the greater inequality being permitted by the reforms and the limited allowance of capitalists that the reforms allowed. Nevertheless, the “reform and opening up” policy did to some degree spur production. However, it is very wrong for some to claim that China’s economic miracle is only because of the pro-market reforms. Indeed, in the two years leading up to the start of the reforms being implemented in 1979, China’s GDP grew at a very fast 7.6% and 11.7 % per annum respectively – faster than her economy grew in the first several years after the pro-market reforms commenced. Nevertheless, the reforms did bring benefits. In particular, the factories established by the capitalists from the richer countries allowed the workers and technical staff of China to acquire new skills and for the PRC to gradually learn the technology of the more advanced imperialist countries.

The cost of the “reform and opening up” was much greater inequality within China. Moreover, the emergence of a small new class of capitalists as well as a layer of executives and managers who had acquired affluence through being the enforcers of the interests of Western, Hong Kong and Taiwanese factory owners within China, created a social stratum that pushed for still greater openings for capitalist investors. Backed by right-wing sections of the CPC bureaucracy closest to them, this layer managed to push the reforms further than they had originally been intended to go and certainly much further than was needed for the social and political health of the workers state. To be sure, China remained a workers state – as it still is today – where the backbone sectors of her economy are still under socialistic state public ownership. But unemployment had re-emerged in China as had the exploitation of workers in some enterprises. Moreover, while overall the PRC continued to pull people out of poverty as she had been doing since 1949, smaller numbers of other people were now being pushed into extreme poverty.

The increased role of the market in determining production and investment meant that areas with favourable geography got richer in comparison with other areas. In particular, coastal areas, with their more moderate climate and their easier access to shipping to bring in raw materials and transport finished products, got richer than more remote interior areas. The Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region was the latter and so became poorer relative to coastal and other parts of China with a more favourable geography. In 1992, before the market reforms had taken their full effect, socialist planning, which favoured more disadvantaged regions, had ensured that the average per capita income in the Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region was actually 6% higher than the average for all of China. However, as figures from China’s National Bureau of Statistics show, by 2009 average per capita incomes in the autonomous region had fallen to 25% below that of China as a whole. Moreover, even within the Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region the market reforms increased disparities in wealth depending on how favourable is the geography and climate. These natural conditions are unkind to the economic well being of the Uyghur people, who have always mostly lived in the southern part of the region, where the desert landscape dominated by the Taklamakan Desert is even drier and with fewer river sources of water than the northern part of the autonomous region, where a greater proportion of Han Chinese, Hui Muslims and Kazakhs live. As a result, relative to other ethnic groups within the Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region, the standard of living of the Uyghur people fell. For example, in the poorest of the Uyghur majority prefectures (districts), Hotan, the average per capita income relative to that of the Han-majority prefecture that includes the regional capital of Urumqi, fell from nearly 30% of Urumqi prefecture incomes in 2005 (the earliest year that we could find statistics for) to around 24% of Urumqi prefecture incomes in 2011.

To be sure, Uyghur people as a whole were still slowly being lifted out of poverty during this period. However, especially given that a sizable proportion of the Uyghur people still lived in poverty by the late noughties, the market reform-caused, growing inequality in standard of living within both the Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region and within all of China led to the lower-income Uyghur people developing resentments towards the Han, Hui Muslim and other better off ethnic groups. These were seized upon by anti-communist groups brandishing the banners of “East Turkestan independence” or extreme religious fundamentalism. Still more harmfully, as is the case all over the world when there are marked differences in economic strength of people of different ethnic groups, the deteriorating relative economic position of Uyghurs led to better-off ethnic groups developing a condescending and arrogant attitude towards the Uyghur people. Han chauvinist attitudes towards Uyghur people among China’s Han Chinese majority emerged. Meanwhile, the fact that there was now less job security than in pre-“reform and opening up” China and the fact that the atmosphere in the new, profit-driven private sector was less friendly only heightened the intensity of mutual suspicions and resentments.

It was indeed an awful display of Han chauvinism that was the trigger for the horrific July 2009 Urumqi riot by far-right Uyghur gangs. In late June, a false rumour that Uyghur workers at a Hong Kong-owned toy factory in the southern Chinese city of Shaoguan had raped a young Han co-worker was spread online by a Han man disgruntled that he had been turned down for a job in the factory and that hundreds of Uyghur workers from Xinjiang had instead been given jobs in the factory at the insistence of CPC authorities. The false rumour led to a despicable attack on Uyghur workers by some prejudiced Han Chinese workers. In the ensuing brawl, two Uyghur workers were killed and dozens of workers of both ethnicity injured. Capitalist tycoon Rebiya Kadeer and her World Uyghur Congress greatly exaggerated the death toll and spread the lie that PRC police had refused to protect the Uyghur workers. The WUC used such means to help them prepare and incite the July 2009 Urumqi slaughter of Han Chinese and Hui Muslim people. In fact, completely contrary to the WUC’s claims, PRC police stopped the Shaoguan factory attacks soon after they arrived on the scene and cracked down hard against the rampaging Han Chinese attackers. One of the offending Han workers was later executed, another Han worker given a life sentence and others given lengthy jail sentences. Nevertheless, the Shaoguan toy factory incident showed the extent to which the pro-market reforms and the intrusion of a degree of capitalism into the Chinese workers state had harmed ethnic relations, fostered Han Chinese chauvinism and played into the hands of right-wing counterrevolutionary forces within the Uyghur community. Moreover, although the CPC does make efforts to curb Han chauvinism within the PRC government machinery, given that these efforts are not high profile, public campaigns and given that the CPC’s membership makes up almost one in ten of China’s adult population, it is inevitable that Han chauvinist attitudes within the broader Han population, to some degree, seep into the CPC and into PRC state organs.

Uyghur Peoples’ Lives Improve and Ethnic Unity
Strengthens As China Becomes “More Socialist”

The most dangerous aspect of the excessive implementation of the PRC’s “reform and opening up” was that it strengthened the forces pushing for outright capitalist restoration in China. A new class of capitalist exploiters had been created in China who constantly lobby for the “right” to freely exploit as in other “normal” – that is capitalist – countries. Alongside them, a bigger upper middle class layer has emerged who have benefited from the inequality fostered by the market reforms – many of whom want further reforms allowing still greater inequality. This layer includes managers, lawyers and financial advisers working for Western, Hong Kong, Taiwanese and local capitalists, self-employed brokers, lawyers and accountants whose practices have been lucky enough to succeed; and those academics, economists and other “experts” close to or in awe of the new capitalists and their affluent, upper-middle class side-kicks. Indeed, if the PRC leadership’s pro-market reforms had gone unchallenged it would have already led to a capitalist counterrevolution in China. This is not because those implementing the policies actually wanted capitalist restoration. No, the PRC’s leaders saw pro-market reforms, at least to some extent, as an indirect means to enhance China’s drive towards socialism. However, by creating a class of capitalists and a larger, pro-capitalist upper-middle class layer surrounding this new class, excessive market reforms created the social forces that were pushing for still greater openings to capitalism. With every concession to the demands of these forces their numbers and influence would have increased, allowing them to lobby still harder for more pro-capitalist policies. Just as happened in the former Soviet Union in the late 1980s and early 1990s, a downward spiral strengthening pro-capitalist forces would have occurred that would have eventually allowed them to grab state power.

However, politically aware Chinese workers and leftist intellectuals within the CPC had other ideas. When the CPC leadership began a scheme of mass privatisations of smaller and medium-sized state-owned enterprises in the mid-late 1990s, workers unleashed a wave of strikes and protest against the privatisations and against the job cuts and loss of pension benefits that resulted from them. Many of the protest marches were headed up by portraits of Chairman Mao, reflecting workers nostalgia for the pre-reform period of greater job security and more favourable workplace culture for workers. As a result of these actions, the PRC bureaucracy did not go as far in the privatisations as their more right-wing elements wanted. Then in May 1999, after the U.S. bombed the Chinese embassy in Belgrade, Chinese leftists within and outside the CPC held mass protests within China. They not only denounced the bombing but denounced the Western imperialists and any softness towards them. As a result, the influence of those Chinese leaders seen as accommodating of the Western capitalists and of capitalism more generally was weakened – especially that of China’s then number three-ranked leader, rightist premier Zhu Rongji. Five years later, agitation by Chinese leftists within the CPC and academia resulted in an important victory: the PRC government headed by Hu Jintao banned management buyouts of state-owned enterprises, which had often been the main means of privatisation.

The tide was turning in China. By the mid noughties, the pace of the rightist economic reforms had slowed. Nevertheless, there remained a slow growth in the size of China’s capitalistic private sector relative to that of the socialistic state sector. However by the end of the noughties that trend started to reverse and the PRC moved decisively to the left. There were multiple reasons for this – each feeding into each other. For one, when anti-communists in Western countries held anti-PRC protests to disrupt parades of the Olympic torch relay for the 2008 Beijing Olympics, tens of thousands of PRC international students in Australia, Britain and other countries mobilised to defend the torch relay. This gave encouragement to leftists within China. Then the PRC ‘s successful hosting of the 2008 Olympics and her continuing economic resilience in the face of the capitalist world diving into their deep, late noughties Great Recession increased the confidence of Chinese communists in the socialist path. Moreover, in order to protect China’s economy from the global economic crisis, the PRC leadership was compelled to enact measures – like increasing investment by state-owned enterprises and greatly boosting state-led infrastructure construction – that had the effect of strengthening the socialist foundations of her economy. However, what most pushed PRC government policy in a pro-socialist direction in this period were several militant, mass struggles by workers against privatisation. Most spectacularly, when there was a July 2009 attempt to privatise a steel plant in the city of Tonghua in northern China’s Jilin Province, thousands of workers took over the factory in protest and beat the greedy new capitalist boss to death, leading to the cancellation of the privatisation.

By the late noughties, all significant privatisation in China had stopped. When the U.S.-based Carlyle private equity group bought out a PRC state-owned construction machinery manufacturer, Xugong, opposition by Chinese leftists within the CPC – which we in Trotskyist Platfom are proud to say that we took action here in solidarity with – revoked the privatisation. What started happening in China instead of privatisation was significant nationalisation – and often renationalisation – of private-owned firms. Such nationalisations especially took place in the coal-mining, steel and dairy industries. For a period of several years from the late noughties onwards, it was the PRC’s socialistic state-owned enterprises that were growing relative to that of the capitalistic, private sector. Meanwhile, the Hu Jintao government’s massive program to increase the amount of low-rent and low-cost public housing was significantly improving the lives of low-income, urban dwellers.

However, in 2012, buoyed by the partial recovery of major capitalist economies, right-wing factions within the CPC pushed back. They were able to get the most openly leftist, CPC Politburo member, the CPC leader of the southwestern Chinese city of Chongqing, Bo Xilai removed from office on corruption claims. The Right within the PRC bureaucracy seized on Bo’s public humiliation to begin to reverse the leftist course of the previous few years. The right-wing inclination continued into the first few years of Xi Jinping’s leadership of the party that began in late 2012. The entry of minority private stakes into state-owned enterprises was then being pushed. 

But in the mid-noughties a new strike wave by workers in private and Western and Japanese-owned factories started to reverse the political direction once again. At the CPC party congress conducted at the end of 2017, the mood was noticeably to the left of the congress held five years earlier. Reducing the income gap and accelerating the drive to reduce poverty were emphasised. To achieve both these goals, the socialistic state sector was called on to play the lead role. The system of “pairing” – where particular large state-owned enterprises were made responsible for poverty alleviation in particular regions of poverty – was given extra emphasis and political support. Without being openly stated, this represented the PRC’s reversion to greater use of socialist planning as opposed to allocation of resources on largely market – that is profit – principles. Given that the rates of poverty were higher in the Uyghur-majority areas of the southern part of the Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region than the average in China, the Uyghur people especially benefitted from the “pairing” and poverty alleviation campaigns. Sacrificing the opportunities for greater profits elsewhere, the PRC’s state-owned firms established numerous urban and rural industrial operations in southern Xinjiang as well as Uyghur cultural and handicraft enterprises. Similarly, the PRC’s giant state-owned policy and commercial banks financed infrastructure construction, water conservation, renewable energy and housing development projects in the Uyghur majority areas of the Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region. Meanwhile, given that a main route of the PRC’s Belt and Road Initiative to establish infrastructure connectivity with, especially developing, countries to China’s west passed through Uyghur-majority cities like Kashgar, Uyghur-majority cities were especially boosted by the state-led investment associated with the Belt and Road Initiative.

Through these socialist methods, China successfully lifted all her people – including all her Uyghur people – out of extreme poverty by the end of 2020. Meanwhile, the absolute standard of living of the Uyghur masses, alongside that of the rest of the Chinese masses, continued to improve. By 2022, average real wages in urban workplaces of the Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region had more than tripled from what they were just fourteen years earlier. With the most basic needs of nearly all Uyghur people now being met and Uyghur youth now having hope in their future career prospects and confidence that their standard of living would continue to improve, resentments and grievances amongst Uyghur people naturally became less intense. Crucially, the PRC’s greater emphasis on poverty alleviation and the increased relative economic role of her socialistic state sector over the last few years has also reduced income disparities. Uyghur people have especially been the beneficiaries. This can be seen by comparing the change in average GDP incomes in the three prefectures of the Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region where most Uyghurs live relative to that in the rest of China. In the poorest of these three prefectures, Hotan, the average income has gone from just 16% of average incomes in all of China in 2008 to 22% of China-wide incomes in 2021 (the last year that figures are available) and on a decidedly upward trend. In the most populous of the Uyghur-majority prefectures, Kashi, the average income has gone from 26% of average incomes in China in 2008 to 36% in 2021. And in the wealthiest of the Uyghur-majority prefectures, Asku, the average income has gone from 47% of average incomes in China in 2008 to 77% in 2021. Notably, the average income in the Uyghur majority, Aksu prefecture (which has a population of over 2.7 million) has now caught up with that in the Han-majority, Urumqi prefecture that includes Xinjiang’s thriving regional capital. It is this dramatic, both absolute and relative, improvement in the standard of living of the Uyghur people and the greater hopes that they have in their future prospects that has most undercut the support for anti-communist forces operating within the Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region. The PRC’s constitution education and vocational training centres have also played a role but only a supplementary one. Put in crude, colloquial terms, because China has become – in a zig-zagging way – “more socialist” over the last decade and a half, ethnic harmony has been strengthened.

The per capita GDP of Aksu Prefecture, one of the three main Uyghur-majority prefectures in the Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region, relative to that of the per capita GDP in all of China. Market reforms excesses led to the economy of the prefecture falling backwards relative to that of the rest of China in the 1990s and earlier part of the noughties. However, as leftist Chinese workers and CPC members became more assertive in the late noughties, the role of state-owned enterprises and socialist planning was boosted. This reduced income gaps. This trend was someone reversed when rightist forces pushed back hard in 2012, with the right-leaning momentum continuing for another few years. Some right-wing economic reforms were again implemented. However, by the middle of the last decade, the political winds again reversed direction. By 2017, the role of state-owned enterprises and socialist planning was again emphasised and a renewed focus was given to poverty alleviation and the egalitarian drive for “common prosperity”. As a result the relative standard of living in Aksu prefecture and other poorer parts of China again grew sharply. The absolute and relative improvement in the standard of living of the Uyghur people and the greater hopes that they have in their future prospects has undercut support for anti-communist forces operating within the Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region, undermined Han chauvinist attitudes and improved ethnic harmony within China.

The Well Being of Uyghur People
and the Well Being of Socialistic Rule in China

It should be noted that the relative economic standard of living of Uyghur workers is better than per capita GDP income figures for Uyghur-majority prefectures show. The outsize role of the PRC’s socialistic, state enterprises in the Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region’s development means that workers’ wages relative to that of per capita GDP is higher in the region than in the rest of China. Thus, while per capita income in the whole of the Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region is about 18% below that of the China-wide average, average urban workers’ wages in the region are just 10% below that in all of China. Notably, in the poorest of the Uyghur-majority prefectures, Hotan, although per capita GDP was 22% of the China average in 2021, average Hotan workers wages in the same year were 81% of average wages in all of China. Nevertheless, the figures comparing the average per capita GDP for the Uyghur-majority prefectures with that of the China-wide average also show that there remains a long way to go to achieve complete regional and ethnic, economic equality in China. And as long as there are significant differences between the standard of living of different ethnic groups – in other words as long as China has not reached complete socialism – then there will not be complete ethnic harmony within China.

At the same time, given that China is not ruled by an exploiting class that has an interest in scapegoating minorities for the hardships caused by their own exploitation, as long as the socialist foundations of China’s economy continue to be strengthened and income disparities thus continue to be reduced, ethnic harmony in China should continue to improve. However, whether this more strongly pro-socialist course will continue is a question that is still being fought out in an intense political contest. This is a bout with many rounds left to go! Even in the last four years this contest has swung from one side to the other. In mid-late 2020, the PRC moved decisively even further to the left in the start of an exciting new period. The PRC’s much greater success in protecting her people from COVID than the capitalist countries, the fact that she had been able to do so, almost uniquely, without going into recession and the key role that state-owned enterprises had played in the COVID response effort gave much encouragement to Chinese leftists. They called for curbing profiteering by capitalist corporations and restricting exploitation of workers in the tech sector. The PRC top leadership responded to these calls. They launched a crackdown on prominent capitalists in the tech sector. This included a famous bringing to heel of one of China’s richest people, Alibaba founder Jack Ma. The PRC hit privately owned tech companies with huge fines and restrictions on their operations. Meanwhile, several years before Australian governments even mooted such measures, the PRC instituted laws guaranteeing a minimum wage and greater rights for food delivery workers and other gig economy workers in China. The slogans of the CPC leadership was then, “curbing the irrational expansion of capital”, which meant restricting excessive profiteering and influence of Chinese capitalist firms; and “common prosperity”, which meant boosting the incomes of lower-income groups and curbing excessive incomes of the super-rich. However, by early 2022, the right-wing of the PRC establishment – including private sector bosses, liberal academics and pro-private sector elements within the CPC – pushed backed hard. They demanded that “unfair” prosecutions of private sector “entrepreneurs” stop. They also called for a “level playing field” for private firms with that of state-owned firms – which to us communists is an obscene concept since privately owned companies operating for the profits of a few wealthy individuals should never be considered the equal of state-owned enterprises in a workers state that are collectively owned by all the people. But the right-wing push back had some success. The PRC leaders quietly dropped the call to “curb the irrational expansion of capital” and now speak less often of “common prosperity”.

The content of the PRC’s annual parliamentary sitting of the National Peoples Congress a few weeks ago showed that the two basic sides in China – the one’s pushing for a stronger pro-socialist orientation and the other for greater openings to the private sector  – are at the moment fighting each other to a stalemate. The outcome of the congress had measures that both sides could take comfort from. For the Right, there was a promise to allow a “level playing field” for the private sector and greater openings for this sector. For the Left, there were measures to significantly boost state-led investment and a further emphasis on public housing as well as a promise to support rural collectively-owned enterprises. Overall, given the previous pro-socialist measures, the trend in the PRC is still towards the strengthening of the socialistic state sector relative to the capitalistic private sector. For 2022, the last year that figures are available for, the revenue of state-owned firms listed on the Shanghai Stock Exchange (which made up 83% of the revenue of the listed firms) grew by 7% as against 5% for privately owned listed firms. Today, these socialistic state-owned enterprises continue to outgrow their private counterparts. Thus, for the first two months of this year, total fixed asset investment by the PRC’s state firms grew by 7.3% year on year, as against just 0.4% for the private sector. Moreover, the dominance of the socialistic enterprises in the real estate sector has been consolidated. Just two years ago, although state-owned enterprises made up six of the ten biggest real estate enterprises in China, private firms took up three of the top five positions, including the top two. Today, state-owned enterprises make up eight of the top ten real estate firms, including all the six biggest ones.

Nevertheless, as long as their remains a significant private sector in China and as along as the richest countries of the world remain under capitalist rule there is an imminent danger that China’s course towards socialism could be reversed and, more disastrously, that outright capitalist counterrevolution could occur. That is why we call for staunch communists in China to fight for urgent measures to decisively strengthen the socialistic state sector at the expense of the private sector. Although a limited private sector can be utilised in some sectors during the transition to socialism – especially in order to learn new technology from investments by high-tech firms from more advanced countries – the private sector should be limited to those areas where they are absolutely needed. We say that the internet, big retail and light manufacturing sectors should be confiscated from the capitalists and brought them into public ownership. No more tax and financial concessions for private capitalists! For state takeover of promising small enterprises in financial trouble!

The increased role of the socialistic sector, with its focus on serving the people, will necessarily reduce income disparities and thus improve ethnic relations. However, this alone will not be sufficient. The PRC also needs to wage a conscious and very public crackdown against any signs of Han chauvinism. Those committing harmful acts of Han chauvinism should face harsh punishment and others committing more minor offences should be admitted into political re-education schools. In this way the PRC will not only curb the form of ethnic chauvinism – which as the chauvinism of the majority ethnic group – that is the most harmful but also gain the authority among ethnic minorities to more firmly stop anti-communist groups claiming to stand for them (like the World Uyghur Congress and the ETIM).

The Fate of Chinese Socialism and the Uyghur People
Will Be Ultimately Decided in the International Arena

For leftists in Australia and other imperialist countries concerned about the wellbeing of Chinese socialism and the rights of workers and ethnic minorities in China, our number one task is not the advocacy of particular policies within China – as much as it is an internationalist duty for communists everywhere to take an interest in what policies communist abroad should fight for. Rather, our central task is to relieve the immense hostile pressure being exerted on China from the capitalist classes that rule our “own” countries. The best way to do this is by advancing towards the removal from power of these imperialist ruling classes by the revolutionary action of the working class. On the way to doing so, we must do everything possible to counteract the hostile external capitalist pressure bearing upon China and to support committed Chinese communists in their endeavours to defend socialistic rule. We in Trotskyist Platform are working hard to fulfill this mission. When the 70th anniversary of the PRC occurred in 2019, during the midst of the anti-PRC, rich kid revolt in Hong Kong and massive anti-PRC propaganda in the mainstream media, we joined with the Australian Chinese Workers Association (ACWA) in building an action that saw over 60 people march through the streets of Sydney behind the slogans: “Working Class People in Australia & the World: Stand With Socialistic China!” and “Defeat Hong Kong’s Pro-Colonial, Anti-Communist Movement!” When Chinese communists hear of such solidarity it gives them greater strength and confidence to push for a strengthening of China’s course towards socialism.

On the other hand, every bit of hostility that socialistic China receives from abroad, strengthens those internal forces within China seeking to steer her away from a socialist path. For it allows right-wing elements within and outside the CPC to say: “See, if we keep to our same course we will be surrounded by hostile forces – we cannot continue on the same path, we must accommodate the powerful capitalists that rule the world.” Any greater influence gained by such forces would hurt especially hurt the Uyghur masses. For the resulting weakening of socialistic state-owned enterprises and the undermining of planning of production based on need would lead to greater income disparities, a rollback in anti-poverty measures and setbacks for regions – like southern Xinjiang – faced with unfavourable geography. Many Uyghur people would be driven back into poverty and their standard of living relative to other people in China would fall. As a result, Han chauvinist attitudes towards Uyghur people would increase. Moreover, in order to present the Uyghur question in a manner that accommodates the now more powerful Chinese capitalists, the Chinese state would be compelled to refer less to the advances made by socialistic rule in Xinjiang and to instead appeal more to pure, non-socialist-based Chinese nationalism – which given that China is more than 90% populated by the Han people will inevitably be alienating to Uyghurs and other minority peoples. All this means that the imperialists – and the irresolute sections of the Far Left echoing them – who use feigned concerned about Uyghur people to attack the PRC are in fact exerting anti-communist pressure that would actually worsen the position of the Uyghur people.

More fundamentally, if hostile imperialist pressure and the agitation of China’s own internal capitalists succeeds in destroying the Chinese workers state, it will not only be a disaster for all the masses of China but be an especially awful catastrophe for the Uyghur people. While a small number of filthy rich capitalist Uyghurs like Rebiya Kadeer would re-enter the region and make a greater fortune by buying up big chunks of her economy, huge numbers of the Uyghur masses would be thrown back into poverty. And most of the economy of Uyghur majority regions would end up being taken over by the Western imperialists, who would again become the defacto masters of all of China as in the pre-1949 days. Meanwhile, ethnic and national oppression of Uyghur people would greatly intensify. We only have to look at the fate of national and ethnic minorities in Asia’s other hugely populous country in Asia, capitalist India, to see this.

In capitalist India, the Sikh people living in the north are denied their right to self determination. Although Sikhs form an absolute majority of the population of the Indian provincial state of Punjab, there is no Sikh autonomous region in India unlike the Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomus Region for Uyghur people in China. In 1984, the Indian Army, with secret assistance by British imperialism, infamously stormed the holiest site of the Sikh people, the Golden Temple in the city of Amritsar to target Sikh activists. India’s military killed thousands of civilian Sikh pilgrims in the attack. Then four months later, after two of the then Indian prime minister, Indira Gandhi’s Sikh bodyguards assassinated her in protest at the attack on the Golden Temple pilgrims, racist gangs in Delhi and other parts of India went on a killing spree against any Sikh people they could find. Incited and organised by leaders of the ruling Indian Congress Party and supported by the police, the mobs slaughtered over 10,000 Sikh people. Very, very few of the perpetrators were ever punished. Today, the Sikh people continue to be brutally oppressed by India’s capitalist rulers.

India’s Kashmiri people have faced still more violent oppression. Like the Uyghur people in the southern part of China’s Xinjiang, India’s Kashmiri people are a Muslim-majority ethnic group in a non-Muslim majority country, who have their own distinct language and who form a majority of the population in a particular region of the country that they reside in. Therefore, understanding the plight of the Kashmiri people in capitalist India is important for understanding the fate that awaits the Uyghur people should capitalist counterrevolution occur in China. The Indian regime has responded to the decades-long struggle by the Kashmiri people for independence from India with extreme brutality. On 21 January 1990, Indian paramilitary troops opened fire on unarmed Kashmiri protesters who were shouting pro-independence slogans. The troops killed over 100 people in what became known as the Gawkadal massacre, which triggered the start of a civil war in the region. The Indian regime followed up this crime with several other horrific massacres in subsequent years. Then in 2019, to further subjugate the Kashmiri people, the Indian capitalist regime revoked the partial autonomy that the Kashmiri people previously had in the provincial state of Jammu and Kashmir. The region was put under the direct rule of the Indian central government. To quell unrest to the draconian move, the Indian regime imposed a stay at home curfew in the region, cutoff phone communications and completely cutoff the internet – the blackout lasting for a year and a half! During the course of the Kashmiri people’s 35 year-long militant independence struggle, India’s security forces have killed some 50,000 Kashmiri civilians – many of whom have been shot execution style and then dumped in unmarked graves. This is where the real genocidal oppression of a Muslim-majority people in Asia (if one excludes Israel) is occurring – not in China’s Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region!

Although the Muslim-majority Kashmiri people are oppressed in India as an ethno-linguistic group, other Muslims in capitalist India also face discrimination and violence. Just four years ago, far-right thugs incited by India’s ruling Hindu chauvinist Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) attacked Muslim shops and neighbourhoods in Delhi, shooting, hacking and burning to death up to 50 Muslim people. India’s police largely stood by as the slaughter took place and in some cases even joined in. Exploiting their own toiling classes and acting as agents for the powerful Western imperialists who exploit Indian labour and manipulate the markets for both Indian exports and imports, India’s capitalist rulers seek to make Muslims the scapegoat for the extreme poverty and economic despair that their rule causes. India’s current prime minister Narendra Modi, when he was chief minister of Gujarat state, personally encouraged and abetted India’s worst anti-Muslim pogrom – the 2002 Gujarat riot. Then fascistic Hindu mobs beat and burned to death over 2,000 Muslim people as police looked on or assisted the attackers. They committed the most horrific atrocities during this highly organised pogrom. Shouting Hindu chauvinist slogans, the far-right thugs burnt a large number of Muslim children alive and conducted mass gang rapes of Muslim women before burning to death their victims. Ten years earlier, the BJP and its even more extreme allies led a large group of Hindu fanatics to tear down the 16th-century Babri Masjid mosque in the northern Indian city of Ayodhya. This sparked inter-communal rioting between Hindus and Muslims in which thousands of, mainly, Muslims were killed in highly organised pogroms launched by fascistic Hindu parties. Now, a lavish Hindu temple has been built on the site of the demolished mosque. In January, in a move that highlights the brutal oppression that Muslims in today’s India face, prime minister Modi opened the new Hindu temple in a reception featuring some of India’s best known tycoons, Bollywood stars and cricket legends. Effectively, they were celebrating the tearing down of the mosque and the horrific anti-Muslim slaughter that occurred 32 years earlier!

In Asia’s next most populous country, Muslim-majority Indonesia, it is Christians and other non-Muslims who face persecution and violence. Also especially targeted is Indonesia’s Chinese minority. In May 1998, after the then Suharto government was rocked by huge protests against food shortages, massive unemployment and corruption, Indonesia’s ruling capitalist elite moved to make the Chinese minority the scapegoat. They organised for thugs to go on a rampage killing Chinese people and burning Chinese homes, shops and religious shrines. Over a thousand ethnic Chinese people were killed and over 400 Chinese women and girls raped. Indonesia’s current president elect, Prabowo Subianto, when he was head of the Indonesian Army Strategic Reserve Command, was the main person who facilitated the anti-Chinese pogrom. Meanwhile, in a manner similar to India’s subjugation of Kashmir, the Indonesian capitalist regime cruelly oppresses the independence-seeking Melanesian people of the West Papua region. This includes through the large-scale torture and execution of Papuan youth and children and the burning of homes, crops and livestock in villages accused of having sympathy for the Papuan rebels.

Regardless of which particular religious or ethnic group is in the majority, capitalist rule spells brutal persecution of minority ethnic groups and nationalities. When the perpetrating regimes are acting as agents or part-agents for the rich Western imperialist overlords, their terror is all the more ruthless. In Buddhist majority Sri Lanka, it is non-Buddhists who are persecuted – often in violence partly incited by Buddhist monks. The most violently oppressed community there are the Tamils living in the island’s north and east. In the mid-1950s, fearing a powerful and burgeoning multi-ethnic working-class and socialist movement, Sri Lanka’s capitalist rulers consciously created a plan to divide the country’s working-class by setting the majority Sinhalese community against the Tamil people. Their governments introduced laws that very openly discriminated against Tamils in language, employment and education. When Tamil people resisted – eventually through fighting for a separate Tamil state – the Sri Lankan regime put down the struggle with heinous terror. They killed some 150,000 Tamil civilians during the course of the country’s 26 year-long civil war that erupted after the July 1983, regime-incited anti-Tamil pogrom.

Even in Asia’s richest country, Singapore, ethnic and racial oppression takes place. There it is non-Chinese people – especially the Indian and other South Asian communities – who face discrimination in the Chinese-majority country. To be sure, Singapore’s fortuitous wealth – that comes from being a country with a tiny population whose location allows it to become a shipping, banking and tourism hub that creams off part of the wealth generated by workers in neighbouring populous countries – does round off the sharpness of ethnic conflicts. Nevertheless, in capitalist Singapore the country’s Indian and other South-Asian based communities face discrimination in hiring, job promotion and housing. As a result, they have a second-class economic and social status despite living in the same geographical area as the majority Chinese community. Ten years ago, this oppression led hundreds of Singaporean and migrant labourers of Indian and Bangladeshi background to rise up in militant actions against Singapore police after an Indian construction worker was run over and killed by a bus in Singapore’s Little India district.

The brutal oppression of Kashmiris and Muslims in capitalist India, West Papuans in capitalist Indonesia and Tamils in capitalist Sri Lanka give a taste of what the Uyghur people would face should capitalism be restored in China. Even if capitalist counterrevolution in China were to be accompanied by a break-up of China into separate countries along ethnic lines, this would hardly mean peace for the Uyghur and other peoples of the region. Instead, each of the new, inevitably Western-subordinated, ruling classes would need to whip up aggressive nationalism and xenophobia against both neighbouring states and their own internal minorities in order to deflect mass grievances over the poverty caused by the new system based on capitalist exploitation. This would lead to fratricidal war between neighbouring states and pogroms against internal minorities – just like the horrific wars and inter-ethnic bloodbaths that erupted in the former Yugoslavia and the former Soviet Union as a result of the early 1990s capitalist counterrevolutions there. Moreover, given that Uyghur people are far outnumbered by Han Chinese, a future separate Uyghur capitalist state would be on the losing end of any conflict with a future Han Chinese capitalist state.

So there are very good reasons why many Uyghur people in China support socialistic rule and proudly call themselves communists. We must stand with them and with all the people of China fighting to defend socialistic rule. Capitalist counterrevolution and all the poverty, inequality, wars and inter-ethnic violence that it will bring must be prevented. Our role as leftists living in an imperialist country is critical in this regard. Despite the PRC’s huge population and growing strength, the reality is that if the international working class does not relieve the intense imperialist pressure on the workers state through either sweeping away capitalist rule in their own countries or seriously counteracting the capitalist pressure on the PRC, then China will succumb to capitalist counterrevolution – just like the also once powerful Soviet Union did. On the other hand, if the workers in the imperialist countries can come to the defence of the Chinese workers state and thus allow the PRC to catch up to the per capita incomes of the imperialist countries, then, just as the Western rulers fear, socialistic rule in China and the example it will offer will make her an immediate existential threat to capitalist rule. We badly need such an existential threat to capitalism! The Western-supported genocidal massacre of the Palestinian people in Gaza, the plunder of the ex-colonial countries by the Western imperialists, the brutal oppression of Kashmiris, Sikhs and Muslims in the world’s now most populous country, capitalist India and the skyrocketing rents, unaffordable prices and lack of secure jobs for youth in Australia, all prove this.

So let us mobilise with all of our energy to defend the PRC workers state against all the all-sided attacks that the imperialist ruling classes are unleashing against her. Let us build mass actions to demand: U.S./British/Australian militaries get out of the South China Sea! End Western military assistance to China’s rogue, capitalist-ruled province of Taiwan! Down with the U.S./Australia military build up targeting China! U.S. bases out of Darwin! Scrap AUKUS! End imperialist funding and assistance for forces opposing socialistic rule in China – whether they be anti-communist, pseudo-“pro-democracy” activists, Hong Kong pro-colonial anti-PRC forces or the WUC and TKIP Uyghur anti-communists. Down with the lying imperialist propaganda vilifying China over Taiwan, her treatment of Uyghurs, Hong Kong, COVID, Tibet and a whole lot of other issues!

27 Jan 2022: Uyghur people perform the Muqam at the International Grand Bazaar in Urumqi, capital of China’s Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region. The Muqam, is a marvellous, traditional Uyghur art form that integrates songs, dances and folk and classical music. Backed by support from the PRC workers state and boosted by a now booming economy in the Uyghur-majority parts of China, the Uyghur people’s rich and distinct culture is thriving in China’s Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region.
Photo Credit -Photos/VCG

Turn the Pro-Palestine Marches into a Movement of Intransigent Opposition to the Australian Ruling Class!

Photo Above: Tens of thousands of people march in Sydney in defence of the Palestinian people. This 25 February 2024 action was one of the large protests organised by the Palestine Action Group that have been held in Sydney every weekend since Israel escalated its terror against the people of Gaza last October.
Photo credit: Sydney criminal Lawyers

THE AUSTRALIAN CAPITALIST REGIME
IS PARTICIPATING IN ISRAEL’S GENOCIDE

Turn the Pro-Palestine Marches into a Movement of
Intransigent Opposition to the Australian Ruling Class!

9 March 2024: Israel has been mass murdering the Palestinian people. Now, by massacring people queuing up to receive food, destroying infrastructure and blocking aid trucks, Israel is also murdering Gaza’s people through starving them to death. We must build militant, mass actions to demand: Israel stop your terror now! Israel out of Gaza and the West Bank! Stop the massive support being given to Israel by the U.S., Australian, British and German imperialists and their puppets in the Bahraini and Taiwanese regimes! Let’s support the brave Palestinian resistance! Let’s support Yemen’s blocking of Israeli, U.S. and British ships in the Red Sea! No to business as usual while genocide is being committed!

The U.S. and Australian rulers now try to look concerned about Palestinian lives. They fear that those sections of their own populations outraged at Israel’s crimes could turn on them. Knowing that the Western powers’ bogus claim to be the guardian of “human rights” is a crucial propaganda weapon aimed at socialistic rule in China, the U.S. and Australian governments worry that it’s simply being blown to pieces by the hypocrisy that’s there for all to see in their backing of Israel’s brutal killing spree. So, U.S. vice president Kamala Harris now publicly calls for a “ceasefire”. Except she demands that Hamas accept Israel’s “ceasefire” conditions! This shows how simply calling for a “ceasefire” without taking the unambiguous side of the Palestinian resistance can play into the hands of Israel’s backers who mean “peace” based on the still more intensified subjugation of Palestine. Such talk of “peace” is a con! The truth is that the U.S. is providing Israel with as much military support as ever! By providing Israel with 21,000 precision guided munitions, other weapons and intelligence support, it is U.S. backing that makes Israel’s massacre in Gaza possible.

Under the same pressures as Biden, in December the Albanese government voted for a ceasefire. After this, some speakers at pro-Palestine rallies started describing Canberra’s position as “neutral”. The Greens claimed that the ALP government had been dragged into taking a better stance. But this is absolutely all not true! That the ALP government has suspended funding to the UN agency providing food to Gaza shows just how firmly they are on Israel’s side. Most significantly, the Australian regime greatly assists Israel to direct its air and artillery strikes through helping operate the NT-based Pine Gap ground station for U.S. spy satellites. As a result of this, the political support that ALP government ministers have given for Israel’s killings of Gaza’s civilians and the fact that Australian governments have approved 322 defence exports to Israel since 2017, more than a hundred lawyers in Sydney have referred Albanese and his cabinet to the International Criminal Court as acessories to genocide. Moreover, the Albanese government – egged on by the Liberals – is one of only eight other countries to participate in the U.S.-led strikes aimed at crushing pro-Palestinian actions in Yemen. Let us demand: Close the Pine Gap base that’s helping direct Israel’s massacres! U.S. and Australian militaries: Get out of the Red Sea! Down with Australian arm sales to Israel and Australian government purchases from Israeli arms suppliers!

STANDING BY PALESTINE REQUIRES WAGING
POLITICAL WAR AGAINST THE AUSTRALIAN
CAPITALIST RULING CLASS THAT BACKS ISRAEL!

Some say that “all powers [presumably including not only the Western powers but China, Russia and even South Africa and Indonesia] are complicit in Israel’s genocide”. But saying this equates those that are actually joining in Israel’s genocide with those who are in fact verbally opposing Israel’s onslaught but need to more courageously challenge the U.S. superpower and the other Western imperialists behind Israel. And let’s get this straight, when we say the Western imperialists, we actually mean the imperialists … full stop! Because, today, the Western capitalist rulers are the only imperialists in the world. Therefore, portraying all powers as the same gets these imperialists behind Israel off the hook. To do that is especially disorientating here in Australia. For this is a country ruled by one of these imperialist ruling classes!

Many believe that Australia’s rulers back Israel because of their cowardice in the face of U.S. dikdats or because of Zionist lobbying. If either were true, we would only need to exert more pressure than Washington and the pro-Israel lobby and the government would swap its stance. However, the real reason that Australia’s capitalist rulers back Israel is because Israel is the USA’s enforcer in the strategic Middle East and Australia’s capitalist exploiters need U.S. dominance to be protected because they need U.S. power to guarantee their imperialist exploitation of PNG, East Timor and other South Pacific and Asian countries. Moreover, since Israel’s rulers are already despised by most of the world, Israel is vital for conducting missions that are too embarrassing for other Western powers to openly undertake. During Apartheid, when South Africa’s rulers were facing a communist-influenced black revolt, the imperialist powers delegated Israel and another of their attack dogs – the rogue Taiwanese regime that is also hated by most of the peoples of Asia, the Middle East and Africa – to help the Apartheid regime acquire nuclear weapons. Today, the Israeli regime continues to prop up the Taiwanese regime (while Taiwan is one of Israel’s most rabid supporters). This work is of great service to the imperialists. For a beefed-up capitalist Taiwan is crucial to their drive against the Peoples Republic of China (PRC). Meanwhile, it appears that Israel joined Taiwan – and likely the U.S. and Australia – in fomenting the 2021 riots in the Solomon Islands against the Sogavare government that has dared to defy the Australian and U.S. imperialists by establishing friendly ties with the PRC. In the midst of these riots, amongst the pro-Western mobs demanding that the government switch their recognition back from the PRC to Taiwan was unfurled a huge Israeli flag! In short, Israel is a both an indirect and direct enforcer of the interests of the imperialists – including the Australian ones. And that is why they back Israel. Thus, while some pro-Palestine protesters have depicted Albanese as a puppet of the U.S., the truth is that Albanese supports Israel because he is actually a puppet of Australia’s own capitalist class.

To make the Australian government retreat from a position that is in the interests of the class that they serve will take a movement that is both intransigently opposed to the capitalist rulers and that has the power of the workers movement behind it. Obstructing the latter is the reality that most of our workers unions are currently led by supporters of the ALP, who stifle struggles that challenge the ALP government and mislead workers into backing the foreign policy goals of the capitalist class. However, fury at unaffordable rents, falling real wages and the lack of secure jobs can drive working class people into alliances with other victims of this ruling exploiting class. Moreover, the core human material for the type of movement needed is already there within the large, weekly pro-Palestine protests. These actions also have some elements of the unyielding opposition to the ruling class that is needed. Thus, one of the slogans that we have been chanting is the very apt: “Albanese You Can’t Hide – We Charge You with Genocide!” However, the overall line of pro-Palestine protests in Sydney is still to appeal to Australia’s rulers – even while sharply criticising them – to come over to the side of Palestine, rather than opposing Australia’s rulers as an enemy themselves. The Greens and those left-wing groups soft on the Greens have especially pushed this strategy. Thus, they have promoted appeals to Australia’s rulers to join the ICJ action against Israel, strongly “speak up for peace” and “implement sanctions against Israel”. But while we can force the Australian regime to stop doing the terrible harm that it is doing, it is impossible to win them over to being an actual ally of the Palestinian cause. To appeal to them to do so only serves to whitewash what the Australian regime is actually doing (note that there was an open letter that included such appeals that on two news sites incorrectly listed us in Trotskyist Platform as a signatory). For it makes out that they are a wavering neutral power just needing to be pushed over to the right side when they are actually knee-deep in Israel’s bloodbath. The main reason that we oppose making such futile, positive appeals to Australia’s imperialist rulers is that such appealing impedes pro-Palestine movements from developing into movements of intransigent opposition to the ruling class. And only if the movements develop in this direction will Australia’s capitalist rulers feel threatened enough to retreat from their participation in Israel’s genocide. Therefore, we call on consistent anti-imperialists to join us in waging a conscious struggle within the workers and pro-Palestine movements to oppose all illusions in the potential benevolence of Australia’s ruling class, to resist the agendas of the ALP and Greens and to steer the pro-Palestine movement into a force that is uncompromisingly opposed to the Australian capitalist ruling class that is participating in Israel’s genocide.

OPPOSE GENOCIDE-SUPPORTING IMPERIALISM
ON ALL ITS BATTLE FRONTS!

Israel is not the only attack dog of the imperialists. They have also turned Ukraine into their proxy to weaken Russia – which while also capitalist is too unsubdued for the imperial powers to tolerate. Meanwhile, the imperialists are backing all number of proxies as part of their drive to strangle socialistic China. These include the anti-working class Taiwanese regime, pro-colonial Hong Kong rich kids and a small right-wing faction of the Uyghurs who speak of “national rights” to mask their anti-communist agenda. If the imperialists lose on any of these fronts, they will be weakened and thus less able to wage war on others. A very helpful event for the Palestinian people would be the defeat of the NATO/Australian proxy war against Russia. Unfortunately, many groups active in Palestine solidarity – including Socialist Alternative (SAlt), Socialist Alliance (SA) and Solidarity – support the imperialists in many of their other battle fronts. SAlt and SA not only support imperialism’s proxy war against Russia but welcome the huge Western arms supplies to Ukraine. And all three of these groups support the imperialist-backed forces arrayed against socialistic China – from supporting the Hong Kong anti-communist rich kids to retailing the blatant lies that China is persecuting Uyghurs (claims that not only have all the Muslim majority countries of Asia, the Middle East and Africa refused to endorse but which most – including Palestine – have completely rejected by instead signing onto statements positively praising China’s treatment of Uyghurs). In doing so these groups are harming the Palestinian cause. While these groups pretend that these issues are “separate”, the imperialists know that they are not! Biden is seeking to push through a bill that would simultaneously give Ukraine, Israel and Taiwan a total of $A144 billion in new U.S. military assistance. In light of this, it is now a matter of fact that anyone who supports U.S. arms supplies to Ukraine will, effectively, also be supporting the export of weapons that are to be used in the ongoing genocidal onslaught on the people of Palestine.

Of all the non-Middle Eastern battles that the imperialists are waging, the one that Palestine supporters should most want them to lose is their Cold War against socialistic China. Although China’s leaders futilely seek “peaceful coexistence” with imperialism, the PRC’s character as a workers state can push her into an anti-imperialist stance. Two weeks ago, China went further than any other major power in backing Palestine when she told the ICJ that “Palestinian people’s use of force to resist foreign oppression” is an “inalienable right.” This stance was hailed by Palestinian resistance groups. We call on the PRC to now go further and resume the training of Palestinian fighters that it was actually engaged in during the 1960s and 70s.

The Hague, 22 February 2024 (Above): Chinese Foreign Ministry legal representative Ma Xinmin tells an International Court of Justice hearing that: “Palestinian people’s use of force to resist foreign oppression and complete the establishment of an independent state is [an] inalienable right. This recognition is also reflected in the International Convention for example, the Arab Convention for Suppressing of Terrorism of 1998 affirms I quote, ‘the right of peoples to combat foreign occupation aggression by whatever means including armed struggle in order to liberate their territories and secure the right to self-determination and independence’, end of quote. Armed struggle in this context is distinguished from acts of terrorism.” By backing the Palestinian people’s right to armed resistance, Red China has gone further than any other major world power in backing the Palestinian people. We now appeal to socialistic China to go a step further and provide arms and training to the Palestinian resistance forces. This is what Red China indeed did in the period from the mid-1960s to the late 1970s. China provided these arms and training in China to PLO fighters for no cost. Below: Armed PLO fighters at a training camp in Jordan in 1970 read “Quotations from Chairman Mao Zedong” (also known as the “Little Red Book”). By the early 1970s, three quarters of the PLO’s arms came from China. If China were to resume such urgently needed military support to the Palestinian resistance she would be following in the footsteps of her socialistic North Korean neighbour and ally, which has laudably been providing arms to both Palestinian and Yemeni Houthi fighters.

Photo credit (above photo): Foreign Ministry of the People’s Republic of China
Photo Credit (below photo): Rolls Press – Popperfoto

Yet, Red China can contribute to Palestine liberation in a still more decisive way. Although China’s transition to socialism is precarious and as yet incomplete, the fact that she has so successfully lifted people out of poverty and increased workers’ real wages means that if China’s per capita income were to catch up with that of the imperial powers, the restive masses in these countries will soon be demanding socialism too. Imperialism will be overthrown from within and the genocidal Zionist regime will fall with it. That is why every true supporter of the Palestinian people must stand for the unconditional defence of socialistic rule in China against all the threats that the imperialists are unleashing against her – from their naval incursions into the South China Sea to their Taiwanese puppets to the anti-communist groups that they back within mainland China and Hong Kong. Let’s unite this struggle with the direct fight to defend Gaza’s people as part of turning the vibrant pro-Palestine protests into a movement of intransigent opposition to the genocide-supporting Australian capitalist rulers. Defend the Palestinian people! Down, Down Israel! Down, Down, U.S. and Australian imperialism!

Free Di Sanh Duong!

Photo Above: The act of charity that has seen the Australian regime disgustingly jail 68 year-old Chinese-Australian Di Sanh Duong for two years and nine months. At the height of COVID, Duong donated more than $37,000 to the Royal Melbourne Hospital to help it purchase pandemic response materials. Duong made the 2 June 2020 donation which was collected from his Oceania Federation of Chinese Organisations for Vietnam, Cambodia and Laos in a ceremony involving then immigration minister Alan Tudge.
Photo credit: James Ross/AAP

Free
Di Sanh Duong!

Free the Three Cold War Political Prisoners in Australia!

29 February 2024: Australian citizen of Chinese descent, Di Sanh Duong, today became the first person jailed under Australia’s “Foreign Interference” laws. The Australian regime sentenced 68-year-old Duong to two years and nine months jail for making a charitable donation to a Melbourne public hospital during the height of the pandemic. Yes, you read that right! The act for which Doung has been jailed is the making of a public donation to the Royal Melbourne Hospital in a ceremony with then immigration minister, Alan Tudge. The Australian regime and its courts deemed this to be illegal in a largely secret trial. Their allegation boils down to a claim that by giving himself a good name through the donation, Duong was “preparing” to in future advance the interests of the Communist Party of China (CPC) – the party that administers the Peoples Republic of China (PRC). What Duong is really being punished for is the fact that although he is certainly no leftist (Duong was actually a long-time member of the Liberal Party!), the group that he led, the Oceania Federation of Chinese Organisations for Vietnam, Cambodia and Laos, has signed (from a Chinese patriotic point of view) public statements showing some sympathy for the PRC. By jailing Di Sanh Duong, Australia’s capitalist regime is seeking to threaten others, especially members of this country’s Chinese community, that they should not express any positive views about the PRC. They are also demonising Duong in order to try and create an anti-communist, anti-China hysteria amongst the population. The Australian ruling class wants to justify to the masses its rabidly enthusiastic participation in Western imperialism’s all-sided political, economic and military campaign to destroy socialistic rule in China.

The charge under which Duong has been jailed is so ridiculous that Duong was not even convicted of “foreign interference”. Instead, he was convicted of “preparing to commit an act of foreign interference”. As we explained in an article titled, “Resist the Cold War Repression” that was written a few months before Duong’s trial late last year:

“Federal prosecutors claim that Duong’s donation to the hospital charity was a means for him to `interfere’ with then immigration minister Tudge – presumably by presenting Duong in a good light to the minister. Yet if that logic is followed consistently, there would literally be tens of thousands of other donors being arrested: for every single person who makes a donation to a charity in a public way is doing it to win themselves credibility with others and gain the influence which that brings. Yet the Australian regime is fine with nearly all others who make public donations to charity. Indeed, when a billionaire tycoon publicly donates to a charity a tiny fraction of the wealth that they have leached from the masses, the regime gushes with praise. But when the leader of a Chinese organisation that is somewhat sympathetic to the PRC makes such a donation, Australia’s regime screams that that this is a sinister act of `foreign interference’ on behalf of the CPC. Such a claim is a crystal clear example of McCarthyism. McCarthyism, the name given to the 1950s anti-communist witch-hunt in the U.S. and Australia, is based on the premise that those who either support communism or are even mildly sympathetic to a socialistic state should be treated with suspicion and denied the rights accorded to others … in this case even the right to publicly donate to a local public hospital!

Yet even when compared with the hysterical zealotry of the 1950s McCarthyist witch-hunt, today’s lengthy prison sentence handed down to an elderly man – who suffers from glaucoma and cataracts as well as diabetes and high blood pressure – for merely making a public donation to a hospital to aid their pandemic response comes off as especially fanatical. Today’s sentencing judgement by judge Maidment was full of vitriolic denunciations of the Chinese Communist Party and it’s supposedly “pervasive foreign influence program”. Basically the judge has decided that an Australian person, who has even vague links to organisations associated with the Chinese Communist Party, who advocates a political position and happens to take the same stance as the Chinese Communist Party is definitely engaging in “foreign interference” rather than that person happening to share the same belief on an issue as the PRC government that is led by the Chinese Communist Party. Moreover, the Cold War extremist judge’s sentencing judgement practically insists that anyone who has any relations with people who are members of the Chinese Communist Party and who does not declare those associations before making any political advocacy is engaging in “a significant breach of trust” using “covert methodology”. Do Australians who have friends in, or links with, the Liberal or Labor or Greens or One Nation parties here – or say the Republican or Democrat parties in the U.S. – always declare their friendships or connections with those parties every time that they advocate something to a political figure or community organisation?

Despite the sentencing judge’s rantings, the truth is that the Communist Party of China conducts almost no direct interference in Australia’s politics. The foreign state that interferes in Australian political processes the most is the USA. But even U.S. influence operations on Australian politics are today of secondary importance. By far the biggest interferers in Australia’s “democracy” are the wealthy capitalist tycoons and the corporations that they own. These ultra-rich capitalists make very public charity donations to gain a positive reputation in order to influence political decisions according to their agendas – as Di Sanh Duong  is alleged to have done – but on a scale far, far bigger and wider than a person like Duong collecting from members of his grassroots community organisation would ever have any hope of doing. This big end of town uses far more direct and potent methods to control political life in this country to an extent that is in great disproportion to their small size. They do so through direct donations to political parties, through the corporate and bosses organisations that they fund, through the corporations that they own being able to entice politicians and high-ranking bureaucrats with the prospects of future lucrative careers in their companies, through using their control of the economy to effectively hold government and other state institutions to ransom; and through the lobbyists that they hire, the media that they own and the NGOs and “independent” think tanks that they establish (like the Lowy Institute, the Institute for Public Affairs and the Australia Institute). Many of these influence operations involve truly “covert methodology” with their media and think tanks making the completely false, lying claim that they are “independent”, unbiased publishers of news and opinion. And while some of their direct political donations are reported – albeit usually many months after they first make them thus diminishing the impact of the disclosure – much of it is concealed through paying big payments to attend super-expensive fundraising dinners or through being funnelled through third parties. Yet none of these corporate bigwigs and their henchmen are even threatened with imprisonment for engaging in such interference in this country’s political system! That is of little surprise – the ruling capitalist class always intended Australia’s “democracy” to be a “democracy” that is controlled exclusively by their class, making sure that their so-called “democratic” system was organised and administered in such a way that would be most conducive for the political interference of the rich in it to continue unabated and largely unhindered.

Resist the Cold War Repression!

Di Sanh Duong’s sentencing judge has slapped a very severe jail term on a person who has had no prior convictions for a supposed “offence” that involved no violence, had no victim and was not even alleged to have done any damage unless you believe that helping hospitals treat COVID is damaging! By contrast, last ANZAC Day when a Brisbane man shouting racist abuse against Chinese people assaulted several Asian-Australians fishing on a pier, he was not only not given a jail term but he was not even given a criminal conviction. He was, instead, merely given a small civil fine. This is despite the fact that his assault using a metal object as a weapon could have been fatal had he succeeded in knocking one of the victims into the water after debilitating them through a blow with his weapon.  That slap on the wrist to a violent anti-Chinese racist when contrasted with Duong’s outrageously heavy sentence shows the extreme anti-communist and racist bias of Australia’s legal system and judiciary.

Sunny Duong, as he is affectionately known, has today become Australia’s third Cold War political prisoner. Of the other two current political prisoners, one is pilot Daniel Duggan who has been imprisoned for the last sixteen months under harsh conditions for merely training Chinese pilots to fly more than ten years ago! The Australian regime is seeking to extradite Duggan to the U.S. to face charges as nothing he did is illegal by Australian laws. Meanwhile, Alexander Csergo has been jailed for the last eleven months accused of violating Australia’s “foreign interference” laws for merely looking up open source politics and defence affairs articles on the internet and passing their contents over to a Chinese think tank!

The anti-China hysteria surrounding all this Cold War repression – especially the persecution of ethnic Chinese Di Sanh Duong – will only further inflame anti-Chinese racism in Australia. It is a call out to all the filthy racists. It will lead to more people of Chinese appearance being abused in public transport and shopping centres, being bullied at school and being physically attacked on Australia’s streets. Moreover, these Cold War prosecutions have helped produce such a “national security” obsession that it is being used to intensify the repression of those targeted for matters not directly related to the Cold War. Thus, there is no doubt that the repressive political atmosphere created by the new McCarthyist witch-hunt has contributed to the prosecution of whistle blower, David McBride. McBride was convicted last November of “unlawfully disclosing Commonwealth documents” after he gave to the media information detailing the horrific and very widespread war crimes that were being committed by the Australian regime’s forces during their participation in the NATO occupation of Afghanistan.  Now, he too faces imprisonment. The entire Left and all genuine defenders of democratic rights in Australia must demand: Drop the Charges against David McBride! Free Di Sanh Duong now! Free Daniel Duggan and Alexander Csergo! Scrap Australia’s draconian “Foreign Interference” laws! Down with the new McCarthyist witch-hunt!

21 September 2023, Eastwood, Sydney: Leftists and progressive members of the Chinese community rally to oppose the Cold War Witch-Hunt in Australia and the stigmatisation of Australia’s Chinese community that has accompanied the ruling class’ Cold War drive against socialistic China. The action was initiated by Trotskyist Platform and the Australian Chinese Workers Association. Below: One of the slogans carried at the action called for the scrapping of Australia’s new McCarthyist, “Foreign Interference” laws.

As part of their Cold War drive to destroy socialistic rule in China, the Australian and other imperialist ruling classes seek to attack the PRC over “human rights”. However, the truth is that unlike Australia’s capitalist regime the PRC does not jail people for donating to public hospitals! We should stress that the imprisonment of Di Sanh Duong here has very little in common with the former imprisonment of Australian citizen, Cheng Lei, in China and the current jailing of another Chinese-Australian in China, Yang Hengjun. Cheng Lei was jailed for illegally supplying state secrets overseas – a form of spying. Notably, Cheng Lei confessed to the crimes – although she has tried to walk back and obscure her confession after returning to Australia after serving her sentence. For his part, Yang Hengjun was found guilty of espionage. It is important to understand that not only were Cheng Lei and Yang Hengjun convicted of offences that would be considered very serious in any country, from the point of view of the interests of the working class of Australia and the whole world their actions truly are crimes. For they weaken and undermine a workers state – a workers state in the form of socialistic China. Their actions are as abusive towards the working class masses as a person who crosses a picket line to scab on a strike but with potentially even more damaging consequences. Unlike the Cold War political prisoners that Australia has imprisoned here, Cheng Lei and Yang Hengjun were not jailed for merely donating to a public hospital or teaching people (apparently civilian pilots) how to fly planes or passing on the results of Google searches!

Today, the claims of the Australian and other Western capitalist rulers that they stand for “human rights” are being thoroughly exposed by their active support for Israel’s heinous war on the Palestinian people. Through hosting and jointly operating the joint U.S.-Australia spy base at the Northern Territory’s Pine Gap – which pinpoints a large number of Israel’s air and artillery strikes on Gaza – and through joining the U.S.-led Red Sea operation against Yemeni actions in support of Gaza, the Labor Party-administered Australian regime is directly participating in Israel’s genocide of the Palestinian people. This shows that whether administered by the right-wing Liberal-Nationals, the social democratic ALP or any other party, Australia’s capitalist-serving state will use the cruellest means possible to protect the interests of this country’s ruling class – that small but powerful class of people that obtain their massive wealth through exploiting the labour of others. And that includes putting people sympathetic to Red China who publicly donate to hospitals in jail!

Today’s imprisonment of Di Sanh Duong underscores the importance of the demonstration that Trotskyist Platform and the Australian Chinese Workers Association conducted in Sydney’s Eastwood last September that called to “RESIST THE COLD WAR WITCH-HUNT!” That action also opposed the marginalisation of Australia’s Chinese community that has accompanied the ruling class’ Cold War drive against socialistic China. During the protest march, we loudly chanted, “Resist, Resist, the Cold War Witch-hunt!” and “Di Sanh Duong, Drop His Charges Now!” We now need to urgently build on that action and grow and strengthen the movement. We need to build a mass united-front movement of anti-Cold War leftists, pro-PRC members of the Chinese community and the most advanced sections of the workers movement to demand: Free Di Sanh Duong! Free Australia’s three Cold War political prisoners! Scrap Australia’s draconian “Foreign Interference” laws! Down with anti-Chinese racism! Down with the Western capitalist ruling classes’ Cold War offensive against socialistic China that is the root cause of this repression!



打倒新的麦卡锡主义政治迫害!

打倒新的麦卡锡主义政治迫害!

  • 我们要求立即停止在新冷战背景下对澳洲华人社区歧视和污名化
  • 释放因与中国及其机构保持务实关系而被残酷监禁或起诉的任何种族的澳大利亚人!打倒新的麦卡锡主义政治迫害!
  • 停止攻击那些有权利对中国持同情或中立立场的华人社区组织。
  • 反对冷战式地攻击与中国机构保持关系的人士!
  • 消除对有华人(或其他亚洲人)外表的人的粗暴袭击和恐吓!
  • 反对政府计划限制人们访问中国社交媒体平台——包括微信和抖音!
  • 停止企图压制那些在社交媒体上发表同情中华人民共和国(中国)评论的人!
  • “言论自由”必须包括对社会主义中国表达同情或中立立场的权利!工人权利的支持者必须能够自由地推动他们认为澳大利亚需要的类似中国的政策,例如广泛的公共住房以及燃料和电力部门的公有制。

2023年10月1日

Energetic Protest Opposes the
Australian Rulers’
Cold War Witch-Hunt

Energetic Protest Opposes
the Australian Rulers’
Cold War Witch-Hunt

26 September 2023: Two days ago, about forty people participated in a determined protest against the stigmatisation and marginalisation of Australia’s Chinese community that has accompanied the ruling class’ Cold War drive against socialistic China. Witch-hunting in Australia associated with the U.S. and Australian rulers’ new Cold War has specifically targeted that majority section of the Chinese community that has a friendly attitude towards the Peoples Republic of China (PRC). Sunday’s action also opposed the broader Cold War repression in Australia. This repression is increasingly targeting even non-Chinese people who continue to maintain pragmatic relations with the PRC and her institutions. Even people with no particular political sympathy for China are being persecuted.

Sunday’s protest in the Sydney suburb of Eastwood has special importance. Since the Australian ruling class began aggressively persecuting the PRC-friendly section of the Chinese community nearly six years ago and started targeting others in this witch-hunt too, this was the very first action whose main focus was pushing back at this Cold War repression. And it was the first demonstration to in any way call-out such Cold War witch-hunting since the campaign to free pro-North Korea, then political prisoner in Australia, Chan Han Choi, culminated nearly two and a half years ago when Choi was freed from the clutches of capitalist Australia’s “justice” system.

The September 24 rally and march was reported on by the popular Chinese-language Australian news site, Sydney Today and picked up by many other Chinese-language news sites. Reflecting the deep concerns of Australia’s Chinese community, the article about the rally had one of the highest number of readers’ comments of any article published by Sydney Today on the day that the report was issued.

The main banner of the demonstration called to “RESIST THE COLD WAR WITCH-HUNT!” The other banner slogans included, “Free the People of Many Ethnicities That the Australian Regime is Cruelly Prosecuting for Merely Engaging with China’s Institutions!”, “Stop the Marginalisation of the Chinese Community!”, “Resist the Attacks on Social Organisations Friendly to China!” and “Stop the New McCarthyist Witch-hunt! `Free Speech’ Must Include the Right to Express Positive Views about Socialistic China!”

The September 24 rally was proudly multiracial in composition bringing people of white Australian background together with people from Chinese, Korean and other Asian and Middle Eastern ethnicities. It was endorsed by the Australian Chinese Workers Association (ACWA), ourselves in Trotskyist Platform, Anti-War West Sydney and, in an individual capacity, by well-known peace activist Nick Deane who is both the convenor of the Marrickville Peace Group and a member of the Independent and Peaceful Australian Network (IPAN). For the ACWA, it took particular courage to participate in this action. Since the Cold War witch-hunt threatens all Chinese community organisations that have either a friendly or neutral attitude towards Red China – that is all Australian-Chinese groups that refuse to enlist in the capitalist rulers’ PRC-bashing campaign – the ACWA is itself one of the groups in the firing line.

Each of the endorsing entities had representatives speak at Sunday’s rally. The formal part of the demonstration began with an address by one of the two co-chairs of the event, ACWA chairman, David Chen. Introducing the action David stated:

“Thank you everyone who has come here to support this important action to oppose the marginalisation of the Chinese community in Australia and to stand up against the new Cold War witch-hunt.

“I want to start by acknowledging that we are gathering here on the land of the Wallumettagal clan of the Eora First Nations people.

“My name is David Chen and I am the chairman of the Australian Chinese Workers Association. I will be co-chairing this event together with my friend Sarah Fitzenmeyer who is the chairwoman of Trotskyist Platform, the Australian-Chinese Workers Association’s partners in initiating this event.

“My remarks will be focussed on one important symptom of the marginalisation of the Chinese community. That is Ryde City Council’s decision to name a big chunk of Eastwood without properly consulting the Chinese community or the broader community at all [Editor’s note: According to the latest census, people of Chinese ethnicity are by far the biggest ethnic group in Eastwood and make up 49% of the suburb. However, recently the local council that covers Eastwood has decided to rename a big chunk of the suburb as `Koreatown’ without consulting the Chinese community. This has provoked outrage among some who see it as a symptom of how marginalised the Chinese community in Australia has become]. Sarah and other speakers will then talk about the many other aspects of Cold War repression in Australia which has seen Chinese social organisations slandered, people of various ethnicities jailed or charged for having connections to China and violent racist forces being encouraged on the streets.”

In calling to “suspend the construction of the Koreatown project” until a proper consultation has taken place, the ACWA chairman stressed that his group’s stance has nothing to do whatsoever with rivalry with the Korean community or even disapproval of the existence of a “Koreatown” within Eastwood per se but is based on opposition to the Ryde City Council’s lack of consultation with the Chinese community and lack of openness around the Eastwood naming issue. He concluded by calling for Ryde to become “a model multicultural community where all ethnic groups live together in peace, friendship and equality.” Indeed, it was notable that several people of Korean ancestry joined the September 24 protest.

Above: Australian Chinese Workers Association chairman David Chen, one of the two rally co-chairs, makes his opening remarks to the September 24 action. Below: the Chinese language banner carried by demonstrators. It’s main slogan was “We Demand an Immediate Halt to the Marginalisation and Stigmatisation of the Australian-Chinese Community in the Context of the New Cold War“. The Chinese banner’s additional slogans were: “Free Australians of Any Ethnicity who Are Being Cruelly Imprisoned or Prosecuted for Maintaining Pragmatic Relations with China and Her Institutions!”, “Suspend the Recent Naming of a Big Part of Eastwood Which Was Rammed through without Consulting the Suburb’s Most Numerically Significant Community – the Australian-Chinese Community!”, “Stop the Attacks on Chinese Community Organisations That Exercise Their Right to Have a Sympathetic or Neutral Stance towards China!” and “Down With the New McCarthyist Witch-hunt! Stop the Attempts to Repress People who Make Social Media Comments Sympathetic to the People’s Republic of China!”

“For All Working-Class People and
Nearly All Middle-Class People Too,
the Cold War Witch-hunting is
Completely Against Our Interests”

Next to speak, was the other rally co-chair, our Trotskyist Platform chairwoman Sarah Fitzenmeyer. Sarah began her speech by stating:

“We are gathering here today on the stolen land of the Wallumettagal clan of the Eora First Nations people. This country’s current political order is built on the brutal dispossession of Aboriginal people. Alongside this, the regime here has often engaged in persecuting Asian people – especially Chinese people. This started from the mid-19th century gold rush and then continued on into the White Australian Policy after Federation.

“Anti-Chinese racism has come back with a vengeance over the last few years – driven not only by the long-standing racist xenophobia but also the jingoism surrounding the Australian rulers’ participation in the Western regimes’ Cold War drive to destroy and ultimately annihilate socialistic rule in China. To justify their Cold War, the Australian ruling class have created a fear of China. They have been slandering sections of the Chinese community as supposed “agents” of “foreign interference” from Red China. Such propaganda inevitably creates hostility towards the Chinese community.

“To stifle any opposition to their Cold War drive, Australia’s capitalist rulers use repression to silence people – both within the Chinese community and the broader community – anyone who dares to express a positive view on the Peoples Republic of China.

“In the face of this increasing stigmatisation, we say that the Chinese community should not have to stand alone. It is the duty of Australians of other ethnicities, especially white Australians, to strongly oppose the attacks on the Chinese community and – in particular – the attacks on that large section of the Chinese community that has positive views about the Peoples Republic of China. Taking such a stance is a big part of what today’s demonstration is all about.”

Sarah then listed some of the “examples of how the Australia’s rulers’ Cold War, China-bashing campaign has caused great harm to both the Chinese and the broader community” and recalled the 1950s McCarthyist witch-hunt in the U.S. and Australia (that saw many communists and others deemed sympathetic to then most powerful socialistic state – the Soviet Union – being sacked from their jobs and in many cases imprisoned):

“Five years ago, all of Australia’s parliamentarians from all political parties voted to introduce repressive, so-called Foreign Interference laws. The true purpose of these authoritarian laws is to prevent certain groups of people from expressing views that are positive about socialistic China.

“The following year, the then NSW Liberal state government, pressured by the Greens, banned the China-connected Confucius Institutes from teaching Chinese language in NSW schools. The politicians ludicrously claimed that this language teaching would be used by China to conduct foreign interference.

Around the same time, Australia’s ASIO secret police unleashed threatening interrogations against Chinese international students who had become involved in political activity. In August 2019, the students had organised a large pro-China rally against the pro-colonial, anti-China rioters in Hong Kong. While the Australian ruling class were overtly backing the anti-communist, anti-China forces holding rallies here, when pro-Peoples Republic of China activists did the same, they were hit with terrifying intimidation by Australia’s secret police….

“In November 2020, the leader of the Chinese community group, the Oceania Federation of Chinese Organisations, Di Sanh Duong, became the first person charged under Australia’s Foreign Interference laws. Ridiculously, the Australian regime claimed that the charity collection that he organised for a public hospital was an act of `Foreign Interference’. Can you believe it?

“The Cold War repression has reached such a level that many non-Chinese people are now also being targeted.

“The NSW state MP, Shaoquett Moselmane, in 2020, was subjected to an intense media attack after he made the manifestly true statement that China had responded effectively to the COVID pandemic. Both the AFP and ASIO unleashed a massive raid on Moselmane’s home to supposedly investigate `foreign interference’….

“The neo-McCarthyist witch-hunt has reached such proportions that even people without the slightest sympathy for China but who have had pragmatic relations with PRC entities are being persecuted….

“In one of the most outrageous persecutions of this entire neo-McCarthyist campaign, Australian citizen and former U.S. fighter pilot, Daniel Duggan, is facing extradition to the U.S. simply for training Chinese, most very likely civilian, pilots in South Africa …. For this Duggan has been languishing in harsh conditions in NSW prisons for the last ten months. The prosecution of the 54 year-old pilot has little to do with upholding the law. In the context of the crazed Cold War drive against socialistic China, Duggan is a convenient object for the U.S. and Australian rulers to create a show trial to hype up the supposed `Chinese military threat.’

“If we do not push back against this Cold War repression it’s going to get even more intense. Earlier this year, the Albanese government banned public sector employees from accessing the popular Chinese, short-video platform, TikTok, on government devices. Last month, a parliamentary committee further demanded that TikTok and WeChat be subjected to requirements that could provide the basis for completely banning these platforms in Australia.”

The rally co-chair stressed that “for all working-class people and nearly all middle-class people too, the Cold War witch-hunting is completely against our interests”:

“This Cold War witch-hunt is helping to foster an unhealthy, hysterical national security obsession. It is this climate that has enabled the Australian regime to persecute the courageous whistle blower, David McBride, the former Australian Army lawyer who exposed the Australian regime’s horrific war crimes in Afghanistan.

“The main aim Western rulers’ have for their new Cold War is of course to crush socialistic rule in China. This would be completely catastrophic for more than 90% of the people of Australia and the entire West.  To ensure that this future does not come true what is most badly needed is for socialistic rule in China to succeed and flourish…. While people in Australia are ground down by unaffordable power, fuel and food prices because of the greed of the oil, gas and electricity company owners, we need to be able to point to the existence and reality of what public ownership is capable of [in the PRC], how China’s energy and power sectors are publicly owned and thus price gouging does not exist there.

“Sisters and brothers this is what we must do, we need to oppose in entirety the political, economic, propaganda and military campaign which is being waged against socialistic rule in China. And this means that we must oppose all Cold War witch-hunts that are being used to promote the war drive and to silence any opposition to it.”

Next to speak was anti-war activist Nick Deane. Recalling how he had campaigned against the Vietnam War and then against the U.S. invasion of Iraq, Nick Deane expressed his fear that the U.S. and its allies would actually unleash a war on China. He explained that China is no threat at all to any country and that Australia actually does not have any external threats whatsoever. Instead the real threat is the climate crisis. The peace activist emphasised the need to oppose Australia’s planned acquisition of nuclear submarines under the AUKUS pact.

Demonstrators at the September 24 action listen to a speech by anti-war activist Nick Deane.

“We Have to Resist the Coming New Fascism
by Resisting the New McCarthyist Repression Today!”

Samuel Kim then spoke on behalf of Trotskyist Platform. He began by skewering the persecution of Di Sanh Duong and the so-called “Foreign Interference” laws that Di Sanh Duong has been charged under: Take the case of Melbourne Vietnamese-Chinese community leader, Di Sanh Duong, known as Sunny Duong. Three and a half years ago, Sunny arranged for a community group to collect over $37,000 for a Melbourne Hospital to treat COVID patients …. You would think that this act of charity would win Sunny’s organisation praise. Instead he has been arrested and charged with foreign interference. The reason that Sunny is being targeted is because his group has a friendly attitude towards China. Donating money to a hospital could see Sunny Duong facing up to ten years in jail!

Sunny Duong was charged under Australia’s draconian, so-called, “Foreign Interference” laws brought in five years ago. Under the cover of these authoritarian laws, a very large number of office bearers of Chinese social organisations that have a friendly attitude towards Red China have been subjected to intimidating interrogations by Australia’s ASIO secret police. This Gestapo style secret police then threaten people not to talk about the interrogations. Therefore, it is not publicly known who had been interrogated! The combined ASIO intimidation, repressive laws, and media lies have pressured many Chinese social organisations to reduce their public activities.

Samuel warned of how the new McCarthyist witch-hunt is threatening to persecute ever more people: A couple of months ago, the likes of far-right Liberal MP James Patterson and Greens MP David Shoebridge even demanded that the police arrest people who make strong social media comments defending China against anti-communist, anti-China activists. If we are not careful, in the future even people here who criticise the Cold War and extremist Sinophobes, or who advocate for the public ownership of the banks and key sectors – may be accused of “foreign interference”…. Like a cancer, the Cold War witch-hunt in Australia is spreading. The whole parliament from parties that are neo-fascist like One Nation to the Liberals, Labor and the Greens join the Cold War as they all serve the ruling class. Many non-Chinese are now also being targeted.

During his speech, Samuel Kim briefly addressed the Eastwood naming issue noting that he is a person of Korean background: With Chinese voices silenced by the Cold War no wonder that the Council renamed part of Eastwood “Koreatown” without consulting the Chinese community. As a Korean person, I was shocked, because I knew Eastwood is overwhelmingly Chinese, and not Korean. If there should be a Koreatown, it should be in the southern part of Lidcombe where Koreans are the main ethnic group. But what has happened here in Eastwood is not about Koreans. This is a symptom of the growing attacks on the Chinese community.

The Trotskyist Platform spokesman not only re-asserted the basic point that the Cold War repression in Australia is aimed at ensuring the population’s subservience to the capitalist rulers’ drive to crush socialistic rule in China but explained why the capitalist rulers are hell-bent on this quest and why we must defend socialistic rule in China: Despite China’s transition to socialism being incomplete and bureaucratically deformed from hostile pressure, China is proving that socialism can greatly improve the lives of the masses …. This will encourage the struggle for socialism here…. Capitalist rule in Australia is leading to homelessness and unaffordable rents …. Meanwhile workers real wages are plummeting, all whilst corporate profits soar, the prices of food, fuel and electricity are surging and society is becoming more toxicly racist and cannibalistic due to capitalist individualistic savagery and brutality. So it is crucial that socialistic China succeeds and societies learn from her socialist-owned banks, property, and enterprises. Working-class people here must do whatever is possible to defend socialistic rule in China. We demand U.S. and Australian navies get out of the South China Sea! Down with the acquisition of long-range missiles and nuclear subs! Scrap Western support for the anti-working class Taiwanese regime! Challenge the propaganda against China – over COVID, Hong Kong or treatment of her Uyghur minority – for they are lies like the Iraq WMD allegations that lead to war, took lives, and wasted trillions of dollars!

In the context of the Cold War repression in Australia, Samuel responded to the demands by Australia’s capitalist media that prime minister Anthony Albanese attack the PRC “over human rights” when Albanese has his expected meeting with the PRC president in China later this year: When prime minister Albanese meets Chinese president Xi Jinping later this year he has absolutely no right to criticise China about “human rights”. In fact, we appeal to Chinese president Xi Jinping to ask Albanese to scrap Australia’s draconian, so-called, Foreign Interference laws and to stop the intimidating ASIO interrogations…. We also appeal to Xi to demand that the Australian regime drop the charges against those imprisoned here or facing jail on charges related to the Cold War witch-hunt.

The Trotskyist Platform representative concluded his speech by urging resistance to the new McCarthyist witch-hunt in Australia warning that it if this Cold War repression is not resisted it could become a springboard to something even more horrifying: As the capitalist order decays, there are far-right forces strengthening who want nothing less than to impose a Nazi-style or Mussolini-style fascist version of capitalism to maximise profits and quell dissent. In the U.S., Europe and to some degree Australia, these forces are growing. We have to resist the coming new fascism by resisting the new McCarthyist repression today …. Workers, students, out-of-work people of all ethnicities, religions, and background have to step up and struggle …. Let’s demand: Stop the attacks on Chinese social organisations friendly to China! Drop the charges against Di Sanh Duong! Free Daniel Duggan! Free Alexander Csergo! Stop the Cold War marginalisation of Australia‘s Chinese community! Stand with socialistic China!

Alongside the speeches of our spokespeople and the leaflets that we distributed, Trotskyist Platform supporters promoted a perspective of working-class based opposition to the Cold War repression through the placards that we carried at the rally. Among our many signs at the demonstration were ones that called to: “Resist the Push By Australian Politicians to Repress People Who Make Strong Social Media Comments Sympathetic to the People’s Republic of China!”, “Resist the Australian Regime’s Attempts to Silence Positive Opinions About Socialistic China! With Working-Class People Here Suffering Unaffordable Rents, Insecure Jobs and Plunging Real Wages We Badly Need to Hear About China’s Socialistic Alternative” and “A Strong Socialistic China is Good for Australian Working Class People. Australian Workers: Defend the PRC Workers State!” Additionally our ethnic Korean supporters carried bilingual English and Korean placards with messages such as: “Working-Class Korean-Australians Say: Stop Discrimination Against Australia’s Chinese Community!”

Some of the rally participants gather together prior to beginning their march through the streets of Eastwood.

Sabotuers Rebuffed,
the Pro-PRC Chinese Community Given Confidence,
the Resistance is Energised

After several speeches in English, ACWA chairman David Chen addressed the Chinese-speaking people present at the rally by reiterating in Mandarin Chinese the points made in his initial introductory speech. The rally then marched west down Eastwood’s Rowe Street mall and then snaked through the shop-crowded streets of Eastwood in a loop that took us past the main entrance to the suburb’s railway station. Here is a video of a part of the march taken by the Australian-Chinese online newspaper, Sydney Today:

Immediately after the march, a message of solidarity to the action was read out from Wayne Sonter, the leader of activist group, Anti-War West Sydney. The messaged expressed “strong opposition to this governments attempts to intimidate and suppress all those who may have links with, or express views supportive of the PRC.” The solidarity statement stressed that:

“Anti-War West Sydney supports the concepts of a global community of nations, a global green new deal and aspirations for an ecological civilisation.

“We support and advocate a pathway to peace, progress and sustainability, not a road to endless war, destruction and catastrophe.

“We, or our governments cannot choose to do both. The Australian government, by these acts of intimidation and a host of associated commitments shows to the Australian people that it has chosen the wrong path and is on the wrong side of history”

During the march, participants loudly chanted “Resist, Resist, the Cold War Witch-hunt!” and “Di Sanh Duong, Drop His Charges Now!” Chinese-speakers on the march also chanted in Mandarin, calling to unite against the discrimination targeting the Chinese community. The march attracted a great deal of interest and sympathy from onlookers in the local Chinese community and from the broader Eastwood community. Indeed, throughout the whole event we met with few signs of hostility (aside from some drunken rednecks who chanted “We want nukes” as we marched past a pub that they were patronising).

However, in the days leading up to the demonstration, there was a concerted attempt by hostile forces to sabotage the action. A small number of representatives of two Chinese business bosses’ groups – the Eastwood Chinatown Chamber of Commerce and the Northwest Chinese Business Association – that had both hastily scrambled together their formation in the three weeks leading up to the rally, tried to bully the ACWA into pulling back from the September 24 action. Most harmfully, they spread disinformation within the Chinese community implying that Sunday’s demonstration would be deemed illegal by the police. We would not call these disgusting acts of sabotage a “betrayal”. Rather, it is a case of capitalists and their henchmen acting in their own class interests – the interests that is of a class that extracts its income from plundering the fruits of their workers’ labour. To be sure, as in every other political dispute, personal factors like ego come into the equation. However, at bottom, certain business bosses and their avaricious upper-middle class henchmen were acting against the September 24 rally because they feared that the explicitly pro-working class initiators of the action – the Australian Chinese Workers Association and Trotskyist Platform – could gain greater authority and that this could eventually lead to their own workers becoming more assertive of their rights and better connected with the broader Australian trade union movement. Or, to put it another way, a few of the local business bosses feared that the activism of the groups that spearheaded the September 24 rally could eventually threaten the level of profit that they can gain by exploiting their own workers. For in the end, a capitalist in Australia is a capitalist – regardless of whether they have white European, Chinese, Korean or any other ancestry! To be sure, even capitalist Chinese in Australia suffer discrimination as a result of the explosion of anti-Chinese sentiment incited by the Cold War witch-hunt. However, at the same time, the fact that this present socio-economic order upholds their very privileged economic and social position makes them zealously loyal to the current order and suspicious of any protest against the pro-capitalist authorities upholding it. Thus the particular capitalist elements within the Chinese community that attempted to undermine the September 24 rally objected to the “combative” approach to governments of the protest initiators. They counterposed to this their “positive” attitude to governments in dealing with both the Eastwood naming issue and the much more serious attacks faced by the Chinese community. Of course, these forces would be the first to grab for themselves any concessions to the Chinese community that the authorities make in a response to the activism of the likes of those of us who conducted the September 24 protest.

In many ways, the conduct of those upper-class elements within the Chinese community that sought to undermine the September 24 rally can be compared to the attitude that several Indian-Australian community groups took to protests in the late noughties against the wave of violent racist attacks on Indian students that were unleashed in Australia at that time. Although these Indian community groups included people in all classes within them (unlike those who sought to sabotage the September 24 action), it is upper-class and upper-middle class elements who – through their ability to make big donations and the often greater eloquence that flows from their greater opportunities to access high-quality education – have gained a stranglehold on many of these Indian-Australian community groups. As a result, even though the leaders of these groups’ own children may have been subjected to racist bullying at school – and on the streets – as part of the wave of anti-Indian violence, they downplayed the racist attacks on Indian, mainly international, students and condemned the spirited anti-racist protests of these students. They proved that they would rather accept, albeit with a heavy heart, racist attacks on Indian international students and even the threat of such attacks on their own children, than risk any damage to the authority of the social order that upholds their very privileged economic and social status. This attitude of the wealthy leaders of some Australian-Indian community groups provoked understandable outrage back in India. Today, certain of their class compatriots within the Australian-Chinese capitalist class are following in their footsteps with respect to the Cold War stigmatisation and marginalisation of the Chinese community today.

Those who sought to sabotage the September 24 action did have some success. With Australian-Chinese people who considered attending the rally only too aware that they are in the Cold War firing line of the authorities, fear of the likelihood of a police attack on the protest that was deviously spread by the saboteurs did indeed cause some Chinese people who were planning to join the action to decide to stay home. However, the saboteurs’ campaign against the 24 September action only made the core cadre in the ACWA more determined. As a result they, Trotskyist Platform and the other rally supporters were able to successfully conduct the action. The demonstration received much sympathy from onlookers who saw it and others who later heard about it, as well as important coverage in the Australian-Chinese media. Most importantly, the ethnic Chinese people who participated in the September 24 protest were invigorated by the action; as were the many non-Chinese people who took part. A huge step has been taken in conducting the very first action in Australia to directly oppose the Cold War marginalisation of the Australian-Chinese community and broader Cold War repression. Momentum for follow-up actions has inevitably been created. Those who hesitated in participating this time but heard of the successful conduct of the action, will be keen to join next time.

As rally co-chair Sarah Fitzenmeyer stressed in her concluding remarks:

“We must push back against this Cold War repression even though it is not going to be easy. The witch-hunting climate is intense and is accompanied by rabid propaganda by the mainstream media pushing the `China Threat’ and `Chinese Foreign Interference’ hoaxes. But history is made by the brave and not by the cowardly and today’s rally is an important step forward. It is indeed the very first action that has directly opposed the overall McCarthyist witch-hunt in Australia. So well done everyone who has come here to support this action….

“I hope the Chinese community, especially the section sympathetic to the People’s Republic of China, gets the message from today’s action that they are not alone. It is vitally important that those Chinese-Australians with a sympathetic view about socialistic China feel that they are not alone. Because we need you to be able to express your views …. We need you to tell other Australians about what the People’s Republic of China is really like and how much she has achieved in poverty alleviation and in improving the lives of her people. We need this because we know that this will help undercut support for the dangerous anti-China war drive that our rulers are hell-bent on pushing.

“So, with courage and perseverance, let us resist the Cold War repression in Australia and demand: End the Cold War witch-hunt! Free the Cold War political prisoners in Australia! Scrap the authoritarian foreign interference laws! Stop the ASIO raids! Stop the attempts to silence social media users sympathetic to socialistic China! Let’s resist our rulers’ political, military and propaganda campaign against socialistic China that is the root cause of this new Cold War repression!”

Resist the Cold War Repression!

Photo Above, 26 June 2020: Some of the dozens of ASIO secret police and Australian Federal Police (AFP) officers that raided the home of then NSW Labor MP, Shaoquett Moselmane. The upper house state MP was witch-hunted because he had weeks earlier made the manifestly true statement that China had responded effectively to the COVID pandemic. Moselmane was politically lynched by the mainstream media after authorities gave the media pre-warning of the raid to enhance the witch-hunt. However, later, after Moselmane’s reputation had been trashed, the AFP finally confirmed that he had no case to answer … and that they never intended to charge him!

OPPOSE THE PERSECUTION OF AUSTRALIAN-CHINESE COMMUNITY ORGANISATIONS AND INDIVIDUALS
WHO ARE SYMPATHETIC TO RED CHINA!

RESIST THE COLD WAR REPRESSION!

26 August 2023: Di Sanh Duong is a respected member of Melbourne’s Chinese community. The man in his late 60s, known affectionately as “Sunny”, is the president of the Oceania Federation of Chinese Organisations. The group represents people of Chinese descent that have roots in the Chinese minority communities of Vietnam, Cambodia and Laos. In June 2020, in front of the then immigration minister Alan Tudge, Duong made a donation of more than $37,000 on behalf of his organisation to the Royal Melbourne Hospital to help the latter treat COVID patients. This big donation to a hospital made by Duong’s organisation during the height of the pandemic would be an act that would win most people in most countries respect for themselves and their organisation. But not for an ethnic Chinese person in present day Australia, during the midst of the anti-China, anti-communist Cold War! And especially not for a prominent member of a Chinese organisation that – as is the case with Duong’s organisation – has “failed” to enlist in the U.S. and Australian ruling classes’ propaganda war against Red China! For his “terrible deed” of making a large public donation to a hospital on behalf of a Chinese community organisation that is mildly sympathetic to the People’s Republic of China (PRC), Di Sanh Duong is facing ten years jail for breaching Australia’s draconian “Foreign Interference” laws. Duong is the first person charged under these 2018 laws. He is currently on bail awaiting trial.

How on earth can Australia’s capitalist regime claim that a person making a donation to a public hospital is engaged in “foreign interference” on behalf of the Communist Party of China (CPC)?!! Well, that would be hard to sell. So, the authorities have instead charged Duong with “engaging in conduct with the intention of preparing for, or planning, foreign interference.” If that sounds like a very vague charge that could be used to target any political opponent … it’s because that is precisely what it is! Australia’s capitalist state wants to persecute Duong for daring to lead an organisation that has a somewhat positive view of socialistic China. The Oceania Federation of Chinese Organisations has apparently signed petitions opposing the Western powers’ provocative interference in the South China Sea issues. Not that Sunny Duong and his organisation are any kind of communists. Indeed, Duong was a member of the Liberal Party and only resigned from it after his arrest. Duong’s soft sympathy for China is likely based on a patriotic pride that an ethnic Chinese country that until seven decades ago had been ground down and humiliated by Western imperial powers has, since the foundation of the PRC, become a highly successful country. Moreover, as a businessman whose company’s operation, providing graveyard stone memorials, has a main client base amongst the Chinese community, Duong is no doubt shaped by the reality that having a positive attitude towards the PRC plays well with customers.

Federal prosecutors claim that Duong’s donation to the hospital charity was a means for him to “interfere” with then immigration minister Tudge – presumably by presenting Duong in a good light to the minister. Yet if that logic is followed consistently, there would literally be tens of thousands of other donors being arrested: for every single person who makes a donation to a charity in a public way is doing it to win themselves credibility with others and gain the influence which that brings. Yet the Australian regime is fine with nearly all others who make public donations to charity. Indeed, when a billionaire tycoon publicly donates to a charity a tiny fraction of the wealth that they have leached from the masses, the regime gushes with praise. But when the leader of a Chinese organisation that is somewhat sympathetic to the PRC makes such a donation, Australia’s regime screams that that this is a sinister act of “foreign interference” on behalf of the CPC. Such a claim is a crystal clear example of McCarthyism. McCarthyism, the name given to the 1950s anti-communist witch-hunt in the U.S. and Australia, is based on the premise that those who either support communism or are even mildly sympathetic to a socialistic state should be treated with suspicion and denied the rights accorded to others … in this case even the right to publicly donate to a local public hospital!

Ironically, the “Foreign Interference” laws that Duong is being persecuted under were instituted under the guise of defending Australia’s supposed “democratic system” against the influence of “authoritarian powers” – principally the PRC. Yet the reality is that while China’s authorities have never threatened to jail a single one of her 1.4 billion residents merely for donating to a public hospital charity, their Australian counterparts want to do precisely this merely because the donor has dissenting foreign policy views to their regime! Now that is authoritarian! So is the fact that part of the evidence brief in Di Sanh Duong’s trial has been withheld from him, his lawyers and the media on the supposed grounds of protecting “national security information”. Even more worrying are suggestions that part or even all of Di Sanh Duong’s trial will be held in secret. These concerns have been amplified by the fact that there has been no media reporting whatsoever on his trial’s direction hearings that had been scheduled for earlier this year and no reporting on when Duong’s exact trial date is. Moreover, online links to certain more recent media articles on his case have been broken. All this suggests that the courts have placed a partial gag order on more current reporting on the case, including the outcome of directions hearings and the exact trial date.

Melbourne, 2 June 2020: The act of charity that has Di Sanh Duong facing trial on a charge that carries a ten year sentence. In the presence of then acting minister for Immigration and Multicultural Affairs, Alan Tudge, Duong made a $37,450 donation to the Royal Melbourne Hospital on behalf of his Oceania Federation of Chinese Organisations. Australia’s capitalist regime has ridiculously branded the donation “conduct with the intention of preparing for, or planning, foreign interference” on behalf of China!

SOCIALISTIC RULE IN CHINA:
GREAT FOR THE WORKING CLASS OF AUSTRALIA BUT
AN EXISTENTIAL THREAT TO THE CAPITALIST RULERS

Despite how truly bizarre this persecution of Sunny Duong is, the mainstream Australian media have reported on the case as if the prosecution is perfectly rational. So why is the entire Australian ruling class intent on persecuting a hospital charity donor? A big part of their motivation is to manufacture a fear of China amongst the population. They want to present China as an evil power – a devil that secretly “interferes” in Australia’s internal affairs with sinister motivations. This helps the ruling class to mobilise the population behind its participation in the U.S.-led campaign to strangle socialistic rule in China through all-sided political, military, economic, diplomatic and propaganda pressure. That begs the question of why the hell a ruling class wants to suffocate its biggest trading partner. And why would it want to spend half a trillion dollars of public money acquiring nuclear submarines in order to threaten a country whose huge purchases of Australian exports had, for three decades, single-handedly prevented this country’s economy from spiralling into deep recessions. However, it turns out that although their participation in the new Cold War against socialistic China is very harmful to the overwhelming majority of Australia’s population, it makes sense from the greedy point of view of the capitalist class that rules this country. For socialistic China’s mutually beneficial cooperation with developing countries is allowing these countries to pry out greater independence from the rich capitalist powers that plunder and subjugate them. In the South Pacific, the likes of the Solomon Islands, PNG, East Timor and Vanuatu are able to leverage their cooperation with Red China to either slowly squeeze out the predatory Australian regime and the Australian-owned corporations that the regime serves or force them to offer these countries a fairer deal. As a result, just like their American, British, Japanese, German and French counterparts, Australian capitalists are losing big money as a result of socialistic China’s engagement with Western imperialism’s former colonies! In decaying capitalism’s current stage, the capitalist bigwigs in the richer countries actually face an implosion of their economies unless they can make up for the increasing chaos of their domestic economies by, within the ex-colonial countries, super-exploiting labour, looting natural resources, seizing markets and leaching interest payments on debt. Therefore, to the extent that China’s collaboration with the ex-colonial countries is inadvertently impeding all this, she is indeed a “threat” to the Western capitalist ruling classes.

However, the capitalist powers see still greater threats posed by China’s rise through a system dominated by socialistic public ownership of the strategic sectors of her economy. For one, what if her successes inspire the toiling classes of other developing countries to also grab power and wrest their country onto a socialist path? Then, just like China, these countries would also become genuinely economically independent of the imperial powers. That would cause the Western capitalists to suffer huge losses to their imperialist super-profits. Most worrying for the capitalist powers is the prospect that socialistic China’s rapidly developing economy will see her per capita incomes catch up to those of the richest countries within the next three decades. For the capitalist ruling classes in Australia, the U.S., Britain and France know that with their “own” masses seething over unaffordable rents, falling real wages, inadequate infrastructure and all manner of social malaise, their own working classes will be soon demanding socialism if they see that a socialistic giant like China can deliver her people comparable incomes while ensuring wide access to low-rent public housing, ever-improving infrastructure, freedom from the painful boom-bust economic cycles of capitalism and a happy and largely harmonious society. Therefore, the Western capitalists understand that their quest to crush socialistic rule in China is a necessity for the maintenance of their supremacy over their own countries. This truth is not substantially altered by the reality that China’s course towards full socialism remains unfinished and working class rule there is deformed and weakened by external and internal capitalist pressure. Those realities only give the capitalist powers and the supressed capitalists within China encouragement in their quest to overthrow socialistic rule. However, the ruling classes of the capitalist powers also understand that if they fail to accomplish this task within the next three decades, or at minimum suffocate the PRC enough to prevent her from catching up to the per capita incomes of the richest countries, then they, the capitalists, will be toppled from power by their own resurgent working class masses.

Final inspection line at the electric car workshop of China’s GAC Aion New Energy Automobile company in Guangzhou. Like most of China’s auto manufacturing giants, GAC is state-owned. The Western capitalist rulers fear that the successes of China’s socialistic system based on public ownership of the strategic sectors of the economy – the property system through which working-class people can rule society – will eventually inspire the toiling classes in their own countries to also demand socialism.
Photo credit: Deng Hua/Xinhua

So, when the Western ruling classes shout that “Communist China is an existential threat” they are right. But not at all for the reason that the capitalist rulers’ present to their own populations: that China is an “aggressive” power. Red China has absolutely no intention whatsoever of invading Australia or of coercing other countries. Let’s remember that it is not China that invaded and killed hundreds of thousands of people in Iraq. It is not the Chinese military that occupied Afghanistan, executed civilians there and massacred Afghan onion farmers. And it is not the PRC that is today pouring huge amounts of deadly weapons into Ukraine to push Ukrainians to fight to the last drop of Ukrainian blood in a brutal proxy war against Russia. It is not China that orchestrated a bloody late 20th century war against the people of Bougainville in order to defend the huge profits of a ruthless Australian mining company or that twice occupied East Timor in order to create a political order there that would facilitate the plunder of that country’s seabed gas resources by Australian corporations or that invaded Tonga in 2006 to brutally crush a pro-democracy, anti-monarchy uprising. No, all these acts of predatory militarism were the work of the Australian imperialist ruling class and its U.S. senior partner. In stark contrast, the PRC has not fought a single shooting war in the last 45 years and has never fought a war within countries that do not directly border her.

As we explained, the real “existential threat” posed by Red China is the threat to the capitalist order that would arise should the exploited masses in the capitalist world become impressed with socialistic China’s successes in poverty alleviation. Yet it is precisely the capitalist order that is hitting the masses with unaffordable housing costs, ever-more insecure forms of employment, worsening poverty levels and increasing racist persecution of minorities and First Nations peoples. Any encouragement of the struggle for socialism resulting from awareness of the achievements of socialistic rule in China boosts the struggle of the downtrodden of Australia and the world for their liberation from capitalism. On the other hand, if the capitalist powers and capitalist counterrevolutionary forces within China succeed in jointly overthrowing socialistic rule there, workers’ wages in China would drastically plummet. China would be turned into a giant sweatshop for capitalist exploitation that would pull down workers’ rights in every country on the planet in a race to the bottom. That is why the working class of the world have a clear interest to resolutely defend socialistic rule in China. We must fight to: Oppose the U.S./NATO/Australian military build-up targeting Red China! Resist the expansion of military bases in Darwin! Stop the Australian military’s acquisition of long-range Tomahawk cruise missiles! Torpedo the AUKUS nuclear submarine deal! Get the U.S. and Australian navies out of the South China Sea! Resist Western military and political support for the anti-working class Taiwanese regime! Oppose the U.S. and Australian ruling classes’ financial and political support for forces seeking to destroy the Chinese workers state – whether they be lobbyists for greater “rights” for the capitalist private sector, pro-colonial opposition forces in Hong Kong or anti-communist, pseudo-“pro-democracy” activists! Combat the lying anti-communist propaganda attacks against China – whether over COVID or treatment of her Uyghur minority! Repel the Australian regime’s aggressive anti-China diplomatic offensive in the South Pacific! Resist the new McCarthyism in Australia – Don’t let them silence those who advocate against the anti-China Cold War! Drop all charges against Di Sanh Duong!

RIVAL PRO-CAPITALIST FACTIONS STANDING TOGETHER TO PROSECUTE THE NEW MCCARTHYIST CAMPAIGN

Despite the capitalist rulers’ fears about Red China’s “existential threat”, Beijing does not promote socialist revolution internationally. On the contrary, it pledges its respect for the capitalist ruling class of other countries “choosing the system that suits its own country’s needs.” This is another way of Beijing saying that it is happy to see capitalist exploiters continue to maintain their stranglehold over the currently capitalist countries as long as they allow China to practice socialistic rule within her own country. As supporters of the exploited of Australia and the world, this is a policy that we criticise. It is the duty of workers states – especially ones as powerful as the PRC – to support the struggle for workers’ liberation in the currently capitalist countries. The PRC must openly throw its political weight behind the struggles of the oppressed in the capitalist world. She must loudly declare solidarity with strikes for workers rights within Australia, with protest actions here in defence of public housing and with First Nations people’s resistance against racist state terror. The masses of Australia badly need this kind of “Chinese interference”! Taking such a stance is not only a matter of practicing communist internationalism. It is also a question of defending socialistic rule within China itself. For if most of the world remains under capitalist rule and if the workers movements within the capitalist powers do not rise to such a level that they mobilise in defence of the Chinese workers state as part of resisting their own rulers, socialistic rule in China will inevitably crumble under the incessant pressure of the combined West. This will be the case despite China’s gigantic size. Let’s never forget how the seemingly invincible Soviet workers state was destroyed by imperialist pressure.

Yet despite Beijing’s insular policy, Australia’s ruling class still scream of “rampant Chinese foreign interference”. If one examines closely all their accusations of “Chinese interference”, one will see that even these hyped-up allegations are never ones of China trying to alter Australia’s political system. Rather, all their claims are about alleged PRC efforts to nudge Australian politicians to take a less hostile stance towards China and for Australian elites to take a more positive view of the PRC. This alleged kind of “interference” is simply what every diplomatic service of every country openly seeks to do through its embassies! However, when Australia’s ruling class hear of any effort to portray socialistic China in a positive light, they see red! This exploiting class is so frightened about the widespread discontent amongst their own masses that they fear – quite rationally from their point of view – that any spread of sympathy for the biggest socialistic state could set off a pro- communist, left-wing radicalisation within Australia.

As this chart from the Global Wage Report 2022-2023 proves, workers in the People’s Republic of China have enjoyed by far the fastest growth rate in real wages of any large economy in the world – either “Advanced” or “Emerging”. Since 2008, real wages in China have close to tripled. No other G20 country has had even a quarter of this growth rate in real wages (Turkey also had a fast growth rate in real wages for a period but these real wages have since plummeted in recent years as inflation sky-rocketed). Unlike the few capitalist countries that have also had fast economic growth in this period, like India, the benefits of China’s growth have flowed mostly to working-class people and the poor.

Of course, the ruling class also cynically hype up claims of “Chinese interference” to “justify” their Cold War. All the political factions that support their rule have been doing this from the far-right One Nation and United Australia Parties to the conservative Liberal-National Coalition to the Teal “Independents” to the social-democratic ALP to the progressive-liberal Greens. Although these political forces have many – sometimes bitter – differences with each other, when it comes to crucial questions concerning the basic survival of capitalist rule, they unite as one. And given that the entire capitalist class understand that the growing successes of a socialistic giant in Asia will ultimately inspire a threat to their own rule, all the factions upholding the capitalist “order” have come together to both combat the socialistic power and to whip up the “CPC interference”-scare that they use to justify their anti-PRC campaign. For example, look at the positions taken by the different pro-capitalist factions when Australia’s “Foreign Interference” laws were brought before parliament in 2018 by the former right-wing Turnbull government. The main aim of these “Foreign Interference” laws is to suppress expressions of positive views about the PRC – especially from within Australia’s Chinese community – by criminalising certain means of expressing such views and thereby intimidating those sympathetic to the PRC. Although there was dissent from the Greens and other Senate cross-benchers about certain aspects of the proposed laws, in the end, every single member of both the House of Representatives and the Senate voted for the laws.

To be sure, particular factions have been especially rabid in promoting the new McCarthyism. Leading the charge are people on the hard right of the Liberal Party, like shadow home affairs minister, James Paterson, and shadow defence minister, Andrew Hastie (the latter notorious for having led the white supremacist cause celebre for special “refugee status” for rich, white South African farm bosses). Yet, Labor MPs Deborah O’Neill and Peter Khalil have been just as extreme. And although the Greens have opposed the AUKUS nuclear submarine plans, sections of the Greens have been the most fanatical McCarthyists of all. Thus, it was Greens senator David Shoebridge – when he was a NSW MP – who successfully spearheaded a campaign to drive out the Chinese language-teaching Confucius Institutes from schools. Shrieking that the institute was a tool for Chinese “foreign interference”, Shoebridge even attacked the then NSW Liberal government from the far right, accusing them of being slow to crack down on the Institute.

OPPOSE THE COLD WAR MARGINALISATION OF AUSTRALIA’S CHINESE COMMUNITY!

It is no surprise that the neo-McCarthyist witch-hunt has first targeted the Chinese community. Fears that this White European outpost in Asia would be “over-run” by the hundreds-of-millions-strong Chinese populations to our north runs deep within Australia’s racist mythologies. During Australia’s mid-19th century gold rush, Chinese immigrants were beaten and killed by racist mobs. Then, immediately upon federation in 1901, the new parliament passed the White Australia Policy act. This notorious law restricting non-white immigration was mainly aimed at keeping out Chinese people and Pacific Islanders. Today, such “yellow peril” racism is being slyly used as a fuel by those stoking anti-communist “Red peril” fears. To be sure, the China-bashers would claim that they are only opposed to the CPC and not to Chinese Australians. But they are not stupid. When they promote their Red peril agenda by warning of a Communist “Chinese invasion” or of harmful “Chinese influence”, they know that they are appealing to “yellow peril” racism.

Those who appeal to anti-Chinese racism, necessarily reinforce it. They are causing the upsurge in racist violence against people of Chinese appearance that has accompanied the intensification of the West’s Cold War against the PRC. Even a survey by the conservative Lowy Institute found that last year alone, a staggering one in seven Chinese-Australians were either violently assaulted or physically threatened because of their ethnicity. In one attack on ANZAC Day this year, several Asian Australians in Brisbane were attacked by a man believing that they were Chinese. Screaming anti-Chinese insults, he assaulted the Asian-Australians fishing on a pier with metal crutches used as a weapon.

Other than being a soft target, there is another reason why the ruling class have made the Chinese community the main target of their new McCarthyist witch-hunt. That is because they know that the more astute of the masses will want to verify whether the China-bashing propaganda they have been fed is true and in order to do this they will logically turn to Chinese-Australians for feedback. Given that there are some 1.4 million people in this country of Chinese ancestry, Chinese- Australians can have much impact in shaping the broader population’s views about China. This terrifies the capitalist class. For they know that the majority of Chinese-Australians have a positive view of the PRC, especially the nearly 800,000 first and second generation migrants from mainland China. The ruling class would like to put this down to their conspiracy theory that Beijing’s “influence operations” are “manipulating” Chinese Australians. The truth is a lot simpler. Most Chinese Australians have a far better idea of what the PRC is really like than the rest of the population. This is especially the case for relatively recent migrants from mainland China or for those who regularly visit there or are still in close contact with family and friends. They know how much people have been lifted out of poverty through the PRC and how quickly the country’s infrastructure has improved. Although they are aware of China’s issues too, most migrants from mainland China have an overall positive view of the country – especially working class Chinese-Australians. Therefore, Australia’s ruling class is obsessed with stopping pro-PRC Chinese-Australians from sharing their opinions about China with the broader population. Their “Foreign Interference” laws, their persecution of Di Sanh Duong and their media’s hyped-up propaganda that Beijing is working through the Chinese community to “interfere” in Australia are all aimed at intimidating pro-PRC Chinese-Australians into silence.

The ruling class have still more sinister methods of silencing Chinese people who are sympathetic to the PRC. In June 2020, the ASIO secret police raided the homes of Chinese journalists working in Australia. Australia’s secret police subjected the journalists to heavy-handed interrogations and seized their computers and smart phones. They then demanded that the journalists not report the raids. Since then, very credible reports have emerged from within the Australian-Chinese community that many members of Chinese social organisations have been subjected to intimidating interrogations by ASIO as part of supposed “Foreign Interference” investigations. The number of people said to be interrogated is very large – at least in the dozens but possibly in the hundreds. In true totalitarian fashion, Australia’s secret police demanded that those interrogated keep silent about what was done to them. Therefore, it is not publicly known exactly who has been raided or even to which particular organisations they belong. Nevertheless, the effect of this sinister intimidation combined with the “Foreign Interference” laws and the media witch-hunts has been to cause most of the Chinese organisations that have either a sympathetic or neutral attitude towards the PRC to greatly reduce their activities. If one looks at the website of what was once one of the most popular Chinese community organisation in Australia, the Australian Council for the Promotion of the Peaceful Reunification of China (ACPPRC), one can see that since it held a January 2020 fundraising dinner for the NSW rural fire brigades, the ACPPRC has held no public events whatsoever. Given that the ACPPRC has been a prime target of media red-baiting and was seven months ago coercively hit with an Attorney-General’s Department “transparency notice” declaring it to be “a foreign government related entity”, one can presume that officers of this group have been amongst those interrogated by ASIO.

Given that, reflecting community views, most social organisations based upon mainland Chinese immigrants are either sympathetic to or neutral in their orientation towards the PRC, the Australian regime’s Cold War campaign has decimated Chinese community life. Not only has it silenced the bulk of the Chinese community from publicly expressing their views about the PRC, it has diminished the voice of Chinese community members about other issues. This was evident in a recent local government decision to name a portion of the Sydney suburb of Eastwood as “Koreatown”. Given that people of Korean ancestry make up less than 9% of Eastwood, the decision to name a part of this nearly 50% ethnic Chinese suburb without consulting the suburb’s Chinese residents has provoked anger within the Chinese community. As a joint statement by the Australian-Chinese Workers Association and Trotskyist Platform pointed out:

… even if the Koreatown project was not itself aimed at sending the provocative message to the Australian-Chinese community that if it does not adhere to the China-bashing agenda it will be further marginalised, it nevertheless reflects the fact that the Australian-Chinese community has already been shoved so far to the margins that mainstream political actors think that its concerns can be simply ignored….

“… The hardening of White Australia racism that has occurred through the Cold War witch-hunt of the Chinese community ultimately targets all people of colour in this country. Therefore, given that ethnic divisions are poison to working class struggle, it is in the interests of working class activists of all ethnicities as well as people of Asian, African, Middle Eastern and Islander backgrounds to oppose the marginalisation and stigmatisation of the Chinese community. As Samuel Kim [a prominent Trotskyist Platform central committee member of Korean descent] stressed: many fellow ethnic Koreans in Australia have been physically attacked and abused by racists assuming that they were Chinese [including two of the Asian people who were attacked on a Brisbane pier while fishing on ANZAC Day].”

ANZAC Day 2023, Brisbane: A racist (wearing the light blue shirt) armed with a weapon violently attacks Asian Australians of Korean and Thai background while screaming racist insults against Chinese people. Those who have appealed to racist “Yellow Peril” racism to boost their “Red Peril” anti-communist agenda have been responsible for fueling an alarming rise in racist attacks on people of Chinese and other East Asian backgrounds.

THE AUSTRALIA RULING CLASS DISTORTS THE
VIEWS OF THE AUSTRALIAN-CHINESE COMMUNITY

By silencing through intimidation the pro-PRC voices within the Chinese community, Australia’s capitalist rulers are enabling the ramblings of the smaller, anti-communist section of the Chinese community to be heard louder. This distorted presentation of the views of the Chinese community is evident in the media sphere too. In the past, all peoples of colour were greatly under-represented in the news media. The media is notorious for this colour bar. And given the fact that the Australian media is owned by either big-time capitalists or by the capitalist regime, it is unthinkable for an ethnic Chinese supporter of the PRC to be given a prominent role as an Australian news presenter or even be given serious airtime in an interview. However, given the propaganda value for the ruling class of having ethnic Chinese people speak out against communism, those few Chinese-Australians that either happen to be anti-communist or are willing to sell out any principles to further their own careers (in other words, people of the type who would sell their own grandmothers!) are allowed to not only break through the media colour bar but are even assisted to leap-frog their white counterparts into prominent roles. ABC News, in particular, now has a posse of high-profile ethnic Chinese journalists spewing out anti-communist propaganda. As a result of both this practice and the silencing of the voices of pro-PRC and even neutral Chinese organisations, non- Chinese Australians are being deceived into thinking that most Chinese-Australians oppose the PRC and her system. And that is exactly what the capitalist ruling class wants us to think!

With the voices of those whose connections enable them to accurately tell fellow Australians what is happening in China increasingly suppressed, the Australian regime is able to get away with throwing out there ever more fanciful claims about China. Thus, over the last few days, the ABC ran a campaign to convince us that “China’s economy is in deep trouble.” The real fact however is that the PRC economy grew last quarter at the highly impressive rate of 6.3% year on year – the highest growth rate of any major economy in the world – and most crucially did so while continuing to boost her workers’ real wages and keep inflation at literally zero!

China today has one of the fastest economic growth rates of any major economy in the world, with a year-on-year growth rate in the last quarter triple that of Australia’s. Despite this, Australian-regime owned ABC and other mainstream media are somehow trying to claim that China’s economy “is in deep trouble.” The capitalist media’s ability to sell such ridiculous lies is made easier by the silencing of the pro-PRC section of the Australian-Chinese community through repression and intimidation.

COLD WAR REPRESSION KEEPS
GETTING MORE INTENSE

The section of the ethnic Chinese population that the Australian ruling class is most determined to silence are Chinese international students. Since the college environment means that these students would interact with many local students – most at the age when they are still forming their political views – Chinese international students could significantly shape local students’ perceptions of the PRC. What horrifies Australia’s rulers is that despite experiencing life in wealthier Australia the overwhelming majority of these students remain sympathetic to Red China and proud of her achievements. So, when in August 2019, in response to anti-PRC riots in Hong Kong, Chinese international students in Sydney organised a 5,000 strong pro-PRC march, ASIO unleashed threatening interrogations of rally organisers. It was not until those student organisers returned to China that they felt safe to even publicise the Australian secret police intimidation. Since then, the Australian regime, via an order of its Federal Court of Australia, has censored Australians from accessing the main website where the activists detailed their frightening experiences (https://news.have8.tv/2636880.html) using the excuse that the site has made a “copyright infringement” (yeah, right!)

In the four years since, the neo-McCarthyist repression has greatly intensified. Earlier this year the Albanese government banned public sector employees from accessing the popular Chinese-based, short-video platform, TikTok, on government devices. At the start of this month, a parliamentary committee recommended imposing the same ban on another Chinese social media platform, WeChat. Moreover, the committee demanded that the platforms be subjected to “transparency requirements”. Imposing such requirements could then be a trigger for completely banning the platforms if the requirements are “not met”. However, as a high-profile report by anti-communist researchers that was submitted to the committee’s inquiry made clear, the main objection of the ruling class and its hacks is not that TikTok could be used for state surveillance [which is a loony conspiracy theory] but that the company would bias algorithms to promote pro-China narratives and “socialist core values.” Even if the latter were true, we say: so what! After all, Facebook, Twitter and Youtube bias their algorithms to promote the agenda of the Western capitalist ruling classes. Facebook is programmed to minimise the views of articles and accounts with a pro-PRC stance, like those of ourselves in Trotskyist Platform. This bias has increased in recent years. Meanwhile, these major Western social media platforms have each banned tens of thousands of accounts expressing pro-PRC political ideas. We say people ought to be free to access platforms that have an opposing slant to these Western capitalist-owned platforms. People must be free to decide for themselves! It is striking how those who say that they are intent on defending Australia’s “democracy” from “authoritarian influence” insist on carrying out censorship of opposing voices using the very same arguments that all “authoritarian” regimes used to justify their censorship: that certain views and biases are not acceptable. In truth it is not overtly political messaging on the likes of TikTok that worries the Australian ruling class. Rather they fear that Australian youth seeing clips of daily life of Chinese people from viral videos of their interaction with their golden retriever pets, to funny clips of them pranking their friends, to their holiday snapshots could undermine the efforts of anti-communist propaganda to portray life in Red China as a grey, monotonous and joyless existence.

Above: On New Year’s Eve 2023, actresses perform a dance of the Va ethnic group at a scenic spot in Kunming, capital of southwest China’s Yunnan Province. Below: Students learn taekwondo during an after-class activity in a school in Baotou in north China’s Inner Mongolia Autonomous Region. The Australian ruling class wants to restrict Australian people’s access to China-based social media apps like TikTok and WeChat because they fear that if the Australian masses hear depictions of Chinese people’s daily lives, this will undercut the Australian ruling class’ propaganda campaign to denigrate socialistic China.
Photo credit (Above photo): Liang Zhiqiang/ Xinhua
Photo credit (below photo): Peng Yuan/Xinhua

The same committee that targeted TikTok and WeChat also attacked the Australian Federal Police (AFP) for not prosecuting anyone for alleged “foreign interference” through social media. Although the politicians also mentioned people who made comments defending other states deemed hostile by Australia’s rulers – like Iran and Russia – their main targets were people who made strong social media comments attacking opponents of Red China. Some committee members, like James Paterson and David Shoebridge, were so rabid that they made the AFP Commander being grilled sound half decent. The latter explained that “a self-directed individual who’s a loyalist, let’s say, who is undertaking under their own directive … won’t fit in foreign interference because there’s no actual foreign principal or proxy connection.” He also said that supporters of the targeted states making social media comments often do not meet the “threshold” for prosecution and if their postings are threatening then that is more akin to a hate crime rather than “foreign interference”. However, the Greens David Shoebridge, who despite his strong opposition to AUKUS seems to be bidding to be Australia’s leading McCarthyist witch-hunter, rejected all this. He ranted to ABC News that the AFP’s response was not “up to scratch” claiming that his office receives a “troubling” number of reports of coordinated interference. Shoebridge demanded that “we need the AFP to do its job, take these threats seriously and take some action to let bad actors know that they will be caught and brought to justice.” If the likes of Shoebridge and Paterson have their way, dozens of supporters of socialistic China – amongst Chinese international students, the Australian-Chinese community and the broader Australian Left – would be jailed for passionately expressing their views.

The neo-McCarthyist witch-hunt is only able to become more vicious because there has been inadequate push back against it. Most of Australia’s Left groups, who ought to be spearheading such resistance, have only moderately opposed some aspects of the new McCarthyism, while failing to oppose other aspects at all. The three most active Left groups – Socialist Alternative (SAlt), Socialist Alliance (SA) and Solidarity – have thus far said nothing opposing the prosecution of Di Sanh Duong or the demands to prosecute pro-PRC social media users who sharply criticise opponents of Red China. They all failed to oppose the campaign that drove out the Confucius Institutes from NSW schools.

In part, the tepid response of these groups to the neo-McCarthyist campaign flows from their perspective of seeking a strategic alliance with the Greens – a party that has been fervently pushing most aspects of the witch-hunt. It also stems from the fact that although these groups declare “No War with China”, they simultaneously support the political campaign to overthrow the PRC state – from supporting the lying propaganda that China is “brutally persecuting” her Uyghur minority to hailing the most anti-communist of last year’s anti-COVID-response protests in Shanghai and Beijing. It is thus no surprise that none of these groups condemned ASIO’s threatening interrogation of the Chinese international students that organised the August 2019 Sydney march defending PRC sovereignty over Hong Kong. After all, SAlt, SA and Solidarity were on the opposite side to these students persecuted by ASIO – they were on the side of the anti-communist Hong Kong rioters. Moreover, by supporting the political and propaganda war against Red China, these left social-democrats are strengthening the anti-communism that underpins the neo-McCarthyist witch-hunt.

In contrast, we in Trotskyist Platform have opposed all parts of the regime’s anti-communist, anti-PRC scare campaign and all its attempts to intimidate those with sympathies for the PRC. Yet we understand that we need to put still more energy into this work. We are calling for united-front action of all pro-PRC and neutral-towards-the-PRC leftists to demand: Scrap the “Foreign Interference” laws! Drop all charges against Di Sanh Duong! Down with the restrictions and planned restrictions on people’s access to Chinese social media platforms TikTok and Wechat! Stop the attacks on Chinese community organisations that exercise their right to have a sympathetic or neutral stance towards the PRC! Down with the calls to arrest people who make strong social media comments defending the PRC against anti-communists! We insist that “free speech” must include the right to express a sympathetic stance towards Red China.

EVEN NON-CHINESE AUSTRALIANS WITH PRAGMATIC
DEALINGS WITH CHINA ARE BEING TARGETED

The targets of the Cold War witch-hunt have long ago widened beyond the Australian-Chinese community. In the autumn of 2020, NSW state MP, Shaoquett Moselmane, was subjected to an intense media attack after he made the manifestly true statement that China had responded effectively to the COVID pandemic. A few weeks later, the AFP and ASIO unleashed a massive raid on Moselmane’s home to supposedly investigate “foreign interference”. It was only months later, after Moselmane’s reputation had been trashed that the AFP confirmed that Moselmane was not suspected of doing anything illegal, nor had there ever been any plan to charge him. Then his own party, the ALP, followed through on this witch-hunt by refusing to re-nominate Moselmane for his Senate position.

Now the neo-McCarthyist witch-hunt has reached such proportions that even people without the slightest sympathy for China but who have had pragmatic relations with PRC entities are being persecuted. In these cases, the repression is not aimed at silencing particular pro-PRC voices. Rather it seeks to both fuel the general “China threat” hysteria and to scare Australians away from having normal, legal, working relations with PRC institutions. In the latest case, Sydney businessman, Alexander Csergo, was imprisoned after being subjected to a high-profile arrest four months ago, accompanied by AFP ranting in the media about “espionage.” However, the next day it turned out that Csergo was not even charged with espionage but with “reckless foreign interference.” Details of the case are sketchy but it seems that Csergo merely allegedly provided, for a fee, alleged Chinese officials with open source information (that is information from the media and public websites) about “Australia’s national security”. If this is the sum content of the allegations, Csergo is no different to the numerous people in China hired by Western think tanks, government agencies and media organisations to collect open source information about China’s political and security matters.

In one of the most outrageous persecutions of this entire neo-McCarthyist campaign, Australian citizen and former U.S. fighter pilot, Daniel Duggan, is facing extradition to the U.S. simply for training Chinese pilots at a South African training school more than ten years ago when he was still a U.S. citizen. As a result, Duggan has been imprisoned in harsh conditions in NSW prisons over the last ten months. Washington claims that the pilots trained by the “Top Gun” former U.S. marine pilot were military pilots. However, the husband and father of six emphatically insists that he only trained Chinese civilian pilots. He has been backed up by the South African training school where he had worked, which reported that none of its training involved classified methods nor any frontline activities. Moreover, even if military pilots were trained it is absolutely certain that this training would have been at a low level – much below the level of training and sophistication then already reached by China’s People’s Liberation Army Airforce. Thus the U.S. accusation does not even claim that Duggan trained the pilots on actual fighter aircraft. Rather they claimed that a T-2 Buckeye trainer, first produced in 1959, was used. This trainer cannot even reach the speeds of modern passenger airlines … let alone supersonic speeds! At the time Duggan was allegedly training pilots on them, the aircraft was so obsolete that it had been out of production for four decades (!) and had been fully retired from use by the U.S. military in favour of faster trainer aircraft.

Furthermore, it was not and is not illegal under Australian law for Australians to train Chinese military pilots. This means that Duggan should not be extradited since an extradition requires the alleged offence to be illegal in both the requesting country and the requested country. This fact and the reality that the charges related to training that Duggan conducted more than ten years ago – training that the U.S. regime was at the time aware of – shows that the prosecution of the 54 year-old pilot has little to do with upholding the law. Unlike Di Sanh Duong, Duggan does not have any known political sympathy for the PRC. He is just a top notch pilot, who like many others highly-skilled in their field enjoy making a living by imparting their knowledge to others. However, in the context of their crazed Cold War drive against socialistic China, Duggan is a convenient object for the U.S. and Australian rulers to create a show trial around in order to hype up the supposed [actually non-existent] “Chinese military threat.”

Sydney, 25 July 2023: The family of Daniel Duggan and other supporters protest outside his latest court appearance. Duggan is a political prisoner in Australia who is facing extradition to the USA. Both the U.S. and Australian regimes want to turn Duggan into an object of hatred in order to justify their Cold War campaign to crush the Peoples Republic of China.
Photo credit: Gaye Gerard/NCA NewsWire

WHAT THE STRUGGLE TO FREE DAN DUGGAN AND
STOP HIS EXTRADITION CAN LEARN FROM
THE MOVEMENT THAT FREED ANOTHER
AUSTRALIAN POLITICAL PRISONER

The facts of Duggan’s case are very much in favour of him staving off extradition to the U.S. and a possibly very long sentence. However, the political streams are flowing strongly in the opposite direction. This was apparent when ASIO boss Mike Burgess delivered his annual “threat assessment” in February. In a clear shot at Duggan and comparison with his case, the secret police chief ranted that former Australian defence personnel “willing to sell their military training and expertise to foreign governments” “… that do not share our values or respect the rule of law” “… are lackeys, more ‘top tools’ than ‘top guns’”. This vicious attack on Daniel Duggan by the ASIO boss showed that the Australian regime is just as committed to persecuting Duggan as their U.S. counterparts. It is not simply a matter of a reluctant Canberra being unwilling to stand up to demands from Washington, as some believe. Moreover, this insult thrown at Duggan and some former Australian defence personnel for conducting activities that are not illegal, show that it is the secret police boss who does not “respect the rule of law”. His statements show that ASIO, far from being a body motivated to uphold the law independent of political bias, is a highly ideological institution that is deeply committed to enforcing the interests of Australia’s capitalist ruling class – a class whose interests mandate joining the combined West’s Cold War against socialistic China and manufacturing the “China threat” hysteria used to justify it. Unfortunately, the courts that will hear Duggan’s extradition case have this very same bias.

Since Duggan is not a political sympathiser of the PRC unlike the equally unfairly persecuted Di Sanh Duong – and his imprisonment is so blatantly unjust, Duggan has received neutral, or even mildly sympathetic, coverage from some of the mainstream media. Even arch neo-McCarthyist witch-hunter, David Shoebridge, has spoken out in support of Duggan (as have many on the Left). However, the degree of mainstream support that exists for Duggan may not help him much. For as long as the message coming from those demanding freedom for Duggan is that his persecution is an affront to an otherwise “democratic Australian system” “based on the rule of law”, the Australian ruling class will feel that agitation in support of Duggan is not doing much harm to their political reputation. They will judge that at least those calling for his freedom are reinforcing the notion that the system here is in most cases “fair’ and “democratic”. But if the push for Duggan’s freedom is not doing the ruling class any political damage, they will be content to simply ignore it!

This is the exact same problem faced by those fighting to free Julian Assange. There is massive support for Assange in Australia and in other countries. However, the campaign to free him has largely been restricted to the single issue of freeing Assange. The implication behind that message is that the political systems in the U.S., Britain and Australia are otherwise fair but for this one terrible atrocity. Aware that this message is not doing them much political harm, Washington, London and Canberra have been comfortable to largely ignore the pleas.

To see the kind of movement that would be needed to have a chance of freeing Duggan we should look back at the campaign to free another Australian political prisoner, Chan Han Choi. Now Chan Han Choi’s case could not be more different to that of Dan Duggan’s. Whereas Duggan is a non-political figure who very unluckily happened to be a convenient target for building up the anti-China scare campaign, Choi is a highly politically driven person. Choi, a South Korean-born Australian, is a sympathiser of socialistic North Korea who was proud of the latter’s efforts to maintain independence from the imperial powers. What drove him most was opposition to the Western-instigated economic sanctions on North Korea and the suffering that it caused – suffering which he had seen with his own eyes and which deeply moved him. To alleviate this suffering, Choi risked his own freedom to attempt to arrange trade deals between North Korea and other countries in violation of the sanctions. Choi was caught in December 2017 and imprisoned in harsh conditions in Sydney jails. He was for long periods blocked from access to lawyers, language interpreters and visitors and denied medical treatment during a crucial eight and a half-month period during which his diabetes condition reached emergency levels. The authorities refused to give him bail for nearly three years based largely on the McCarthyist notion that Choi’s avowed political sympathy for North Korea made his alleged offending more serious.

The Australian regime grossly exaggerated Choi’s charges. They initially, quite ridiculously, claimed that he had sought to facilitate the export of North Korean weapons of mass destruction – charges which they later dropped. This exaggeration of the charges pointed to one notable similarity between Choi’s plight and Duggan’s – both were being demonised as a means to create fear of socialistic states and, thus, to “justify” the Cold War. Indeed, when Choi was first arrested, then prime minister Malcolm Turnbull launched a tirade against North Korea, which is a neighbour and ally of the PRC. The hype and North Korea scare campaign whipped up around Choi’s arrest was a significant part of what enabled the Turnbull government to create the anti-communist and national security-obsessed political climate that allowed it to push through parliament the Foreign Interference laws six months after Choi’s arrest.

The Australian ruling class thought they could continue to milk Choi’s case to justify a further escalation in their anti-PRC/ anti-North Korea Cold War drive. However, instead, quite unexpectedly for them, a lively solidarity campaign was launched in defence of Choi. Trotskyist Platform and the smaller grouplets and individuals who also joined the campaign demanded not only Choi’s freedom but an end to the cruel economic starvation sanctions on the people of North Korea. We said that if Choi is indeed guilty of trying to arrange deals in violations of the sanctions then he is a great humanitarian. Importantly, we did not say that Choi’s imprisonment was a blot on Australia’s otherwise “great democracy.” Instead, we had an almost opposite message: that Choi’s unjust imprisonment showed that the “democracy” in capitalist Australia is only a “democracy” for the capitalist class. We connected the harsh imprisonment of Choi and the McCarthyist denial of bail by the courts to the unjust persecution of war crimes whistleblower David McBride, to the anti-working class prosecutions of construction workers’ union activists by the police and courts and to racist state terror against Aboriginal people. We pointed out that the Australian ruling class had no right to attack the PRC or North Korea over “human rights” issues.

Eventually the campaign reached a level of support that convinced the capitalist class that any remaining boosting of their Cold War campaign by the hype surrounding Choi’s prosecution was more than cancelled out by the political damage and exposure of their “democracy” that they were suffering as a result of the campaign to free Choi. After nearly three years in jail, Choi was finally granted bail and eight months later his legal persecution ended and he was free. The regime which had been expecting to give him a ten to fifteen year jail sentence, ended up only being able to hit him with a three and a half-year sentence that had already mostly been served before trial. To be sure, even after Choi became free there was no guarantee that the regime and its allies would not seek a way to gain revenge on Choi for the lighter sentence that he endured. Nevertheless, the fact that the campaign to free Choi was able to divert what was heading to be a horrifically bad injustice into being just a plain bad injustice shows that the movement had pushed the ruling class back. Indeed, this was the first and so far only significant pushback against the neo-McCarthyist campaign. The important lesson of this struggle for supporters of Duggan is that we will only have a chance of pushing back his persecutors if we are able to damage them politically . That means broadcasting the message that Duggan’s terribly unjust persecution shows what the Australian regime is all about and proves that its pretensions of being “democratic” and “committed to the rule of law” are bogus. That the “democracy” here is only a democracy for the ultra-rich capitalists and that the regime has no basis to attack the PRC over “lack of respect for human rights and the rule of law.” If a powerful, Free Duggan movement with this message can be built, the Australian regime will truly be faced with the need to limit political damage to their authority by making a concession to Duggan and his supporters.

Above, 13 April 2019: A sizable crowd of demonstrators march through the streets of Sydney demanding freedom for socialist, then political prisoner in Australia, Chan Han Choi. Below: In the nine street actions held for Choi that eventually resulted in him being freed from incarceration by the Australian regime, his supporters connected his persecution to the broader repression that the capitalist state was unleashing against union activists, whistleblowers, pro-PRC members of the Chinese community, Aboriginal people and leftists.
Photo credit (all photos): Trotskyist Platform

DOWN WITH THE NEO-MCCARTHYIST WITCH-HUNT!

Although in Australia, governments are elected on the basis of one person one vote, it is the capitalist class who are able to disproportionately shape public opinion and with it election results. For it is the super-rich capitalists that have the ownership of the media and the financial resources to fund political think tanks, make big donations to political parties and pay for political advertising. As the ASIO boss’ tirade against Duggan shows, the state institutions themselves have been built up, trained and ideologically prepared to enforce the exclusive interests of the capitalist class.

Thus, the democracy that nominally exists in Western capitalist countries is largely a democracy only for the capitalists. When this biased democracy is not enough to enforce the capitalists’ agenda, they use blatant repression instead. Today’s neo-McCarthyist witch-hunt and the persecutions of Di Sanh Duong, Dan Duggan, David McBride and Alexander Csergo all prove this. In the long run, if the capitalist class faces a serious threat to their domination of society from the exploited masses, they will turn to the most hideously brutal methods to maintain their rule. That is what happened when the Italian and German “democratic” capitalists turned to Mussolini and Hitler’s fascism for salvation.

Nevertheless, despite the grossly slanted nature of the “democracy” that currently exists in Australia, this form of capitalist rule is preferable to more repressive forms of capitalist rule. It gives the working class and all the oppressed more space to organise struggles for their rights. Therefore, the workers movement must oppose any repressive measures that curtail its democratic rights. That is why we must mobilise in determined opposition to the Cold War repression that is plaguing Australia. We should understand too that the national security obsession that the neo-McCarthyist repression is creating is being used to repress dissidents making a stand over non-Cold War issues too – from David McBride to activists in support of public housing to environmental activists and to trade unionists taking industrial action. Moreover, if we do not push back against the Cold War witch-hunt it will eventually reach such a level that even people who advocate policies that are being implemented in China with a focus on public housing or publicly owned banks will be accused of “foreign interference.” And the working class masses do need to be able to fight for the policies that the PRC has used to combat poverty. For it is precisely those policies – like a massive increase in public housing, restrictions on housing speculation and public ownership of the banks, electricity, power and energy sectors – that we desperately need implemented here right now. So let us mobilise in action to demand: Down with the “Foreign Interference” laws! Drop the charges against Di Sanh Duong! Free Dan Duggan! Resist the push to arrest pro-PRC social media users! Stop the persecution of Chinese social organisations that choose to have a friendly or neutral attitude towards the PRC! Stop the marginalisation of the Chinese community!

Massively Increase Public Housing! Expand Rental Supply Now – Confiscate Vacant Houses of the Ultra-Rich!

Photo Above: Six years ago, scores of current and former public housing tenants, trade unionists from the Maritime Union of Australia, Trotskyist Platform supporters, staunch anti-fascist activists and other supporters of public housing carried out a powerful occupation of vacant public housing dwellings at 78 to 80 High St, in inner city Sydney’s Millers Point to oppose the slated sell-off of these properties to wealthy speculators and capitalist developers. The powerful 6 August 2017 occupation demanded that these vacant public housing dwellings be made available to those on the public housing waiting list or the homeless. We urgently need such actions now on a huge scale to not only oppose all privatisation of public housing but to fight for the confiscation of the vacant homes of the ultra-rich so that they can be used for low-rent public housing.

Drive Down Rents by
Massively Increasing Public Housing!

Expand Rental Supply Now –
Confiscate Vacant Houses of the Ultra-Rich!

16 June 2023: Skyrocketing rents in Australia are driving working class people into poverty. Over the last year, rents for new leases surged by an incredible 20% in capital cities. Alongside the prices of food, electricity and fuel rising much more quickly than modest wage increases, surging rents are forcing millions of people to skip meals, stop buying fresh food, forego visits to dentists and specialists and avoid using heaters during the frigid winter, just to try and get by.

Unaffordable rents are the result of the capitalist “free market”. Developers shy away from building affordable homes because they know that they can make more profit by building expensive homes for the affluent or for wealthy investors looking to buy up houses for speculation. As a result, there is such a shortage of affordable rentals that not only are landlords able to jack up rents but low income tenants are not able to move into cheaper homes to escape soaring rents in their existing tenancies. A recent rental affordability snapshot found that just eight out of every 1000 available properties were affordable for a single person on the minimum wage lucky enough to have a full-time job! At the time of the 2021 census, over 122,000 people were homeless in Australia. Since then, the number of homeless people has skyrocketed – many of whom have jobs. Meanwhile, more and more low income women who are financially dependent on abusive partners are being hit with the terrible “choice” of either dumping their abusers and becoming homeless or trying to endure the abuse just to keep a roof over their – and often their children’s – heads.

The inevitable failure of profit-driven developers to provide affordable accommodation is compounded by the policies of federal and state governments. Not only have they favoured landlords and investors over low income tenants, they have instituted tax policies that have skewed the housing market towards speculators. Most damagingly, these governments have gutted public housing. As a result, the percentage of people in public housing in Australia has nearly halved over the last 25 years! By 2021, the proportion of public housing had plunged to just one in every 36 dwellings.

Some of the public housing sold off by governments has been turned into “community housing”. Still, over the last 25 years, Australia’s governments have slashed the total amount of “social housing” – which includes both public and “community” housing – by a quarter. Moreover, “community housing” is not public housing. “Community housing” landlords are private entities notorious for their high-handed bullying of tenants. Furthermore, because “community housing” operators are driven to either make a profit or, if they are a charity, “break even”, they bias their tenancy allocation towards those who can afford higher rents. Thus, the proportion of well-off people housed in “community housing” is nearly three times higher than in “public housing.” On average, “community housing” operators allocate one in eight tenancies to those who are in the highest 60% of income earners – many low income households thus  missing out when public housing is converted into “community housing”. Moreover, the proportion of community housing” that is tenanted by Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people is 20% lower than in public housing. We say: No to privatisation by stealth – Stop the sell-off of public housing to private “community housing” operators!

Bulli (NSW South Coast), 11 October 2014: Supporters of public housing from the Illawara and Sydney protest the sell-off of yet another public housing dwelling as real estate agents conducting the auction look on. The bottom slogan (which is slightly obscured in this photo) of the Trotskyist Platform banner reads: “MASSIVELY INCREASE PUBLIC HOUSING – JUST LIKE WHAT CHINA IS DOING”.
Photo credit: Adam McLean

What is needed is to massively increase the amount of low-rent public housing. This does not only mean greatly boosting the public housing budget. Currently, at every level, capitalist contractors engaged to build and maintain public housing leach off as profit a big part of housing budgets. State-owned firms must be set up to take over these tasks so that more public housing can be built for the same spending. However, all this alone will no longer be able to relieve the hardships of those hit by soaring private rents. Not only is the public housing waiting list too huge, many others eligible have not put their names on the list only because they know about the ten plus years they may need to wait to finally get a tenancy. Moreover, the criteria to even get on the list is so stringent that many who desperately need public housing can’t even get wait listed. Thus, a full-time, minimum wage worker is not even close to being eligible for public housing. To immediately boost the supply of public housing, some of the more than one million unoccupied homes (!) in Australia must be requisitioned. Many of them are owned by the super-rich who use them as holiday homes or as speculative investments. We say that any dwelling owned by a household with more than five million dollars worth of property assets that is either unoccupied or underutilised for one month – or for a total of more than two months within a year – should be confiscated and turned into public housing. Since such dwellings are often large mansions, they can be turned into dwellings for multiple households. And to the extent that the ultra-rich will let out their properties to avoid such confiscation that will, at least, reduce the demand – and hence rents – for other dwellings.

For Working Class Protest Action to Win Low-Rent Housing for the Masses

To institute the housing measures that are urgently needed, it is not only the right wing Liberals that stand in the way. All the parties currently in parliament are complicit in undermining public housing. In just the five years up to 2021, the state Labor government in Victoria slashed the proportion of public housing dwellings there by nearly 14%. For their part, the Greens, in a coalition with Labor in Tasmania in the early 2010s, were part of a state government that drastically cut the proportion of public housing dwellings, alongside slashing public housing maintenance.

Parramatta, Western Sydney, May 2012: Rally opposes the undermining of public housing by the then Labor-Greens federal government and the right-wing, Coalition state government. The demonstration instead demanded a massive increase in public housing. From our first action on the question held on 5 November 2009 outside the office of the then federal housing minister in the Rudd government (Tanya Plibersek) onwards, Trotskyist Platform has, over the last 13 years, initiated several protests (mainly in Western Sydney) opposing the erosion of public housing by successive Labor, Labor-Greens and Liberal federal and state governments. Today, with decades of erosion of public housing having done much to cause the present rental affordability crisis, the urgency of fighting for public housing is now understood by broader sections of the Left and workers movement.
Photo credit: Trotskyist Platform

Today, with a widely acknowledged rental affordability crisis, the ALP and the Greens are now keen to portray themselves as supporters of “social housing”. Labor promises 30,000 new “social and affordable” housing dwellings over five years. However, the new “social housing” will not be public housing but “community housing”. The “affordable housing” component involves subsidising landlords to offer rents 20% lower than the market rate. Yet with market rents so obscenely high, such “affordable” homes will remain out of reach for most low-paid workers and part-time workers, let alone unemployed workers and students. Moreover, as the Greens have rightly pointed out, the 30,000 “social and affordable” dwellings that Labor pledges, will not even meet half the increased need for low-rent accommodation during the next five years. The ALP’s plan is a recipe for driving even more low income renters into poverty – albeit at a slightly slower pace! The Greens plan offers more, promising $2.5 billion a year on low-rent housing. However, this is still wholly inadequate to address the huge shortfall in low-rent accommodation. This is especially so given that the Greens, as a party which accepts the dominance of the capitalist economy, has no plan for bringing the actual construction and maintenance of public housing under public ownership, thus allowing a big chunk of the housing budget to continue to be gouged away by the bosses of capitalist contracting firms. Moreover, the Greens plan is not exclusively for public housing but also for “community” and “affordable” housing. Thus, in good part, the Green’s proposals, like the ALP government’s entire plan, will see public money handed over to private landlords – money that should be used to build up public housing. The Greens do call for a freeze on rents – a measure that we support. However, such rent controls will only work if they are accompanied by measures to restrict landlords from removing properties from the rental market and skimping on repairs – measures that the Greens do not advocate. Most notably, the Greens do not even promise the housing measure that is most urgently needed: the confiscation of the vacant homes of the ultra-rich and their transfer into the public housing stock.

Ultimately, all the current parliamentary parties have no program that can truly solve the rental and homelessness crisis because they all uphold the big end of town’s “right to dispose of their property as they see fit”. To win the housing measures needed, workers, unemployed workers, low income youth, activists opposing domestic violence against women and leftists must all unite in militant protest action. There need to be mass protest occupations to stop any privatisation of public housing and to requisition the vacant homes of the super-rich into the public housing supply. In recent years there have been some actions that can inspire us on this course. On 6 August 2017, scores of current and former public housing tenants, trade unionists from the Maritime Union of Australia, Trotskyist Platform supporters and staunch anti-fascist activists carried out a powerful occupation of vacant public housing dwellings at 78 to 80 High St, in inner city Sydney’s Millers Point to oppose the slated sell-off of these properties to wealthy speculators and capitalist developers. Although after about five hours, van loads of riot police brutally broke up the action and arrested four of the activists involved, including two main organisers of the occupation – a respected long-time Millers Point tenant who had then recently been cruelly evicted from public housing there and one of our own Trotskyist Platform comrades – the action scared the then NSW Coalition government enough to temporarily restrain their broader state-wide public housing selloff. This can be seen by looking at the numbers of public housing dwellings in NSW over the last decade (see Table 18A.3, Report on Government Services 2022, Australian Government Productivity Commission). They show that during each year, the number of public housing dwellings either decreased or barely changed. The one exception is for the financial year that includes the eleven month period that followed the August 2017 Millers Point occupation – when total public housing numbers in NSW increased by over 1,100 homes. Then just last week, about two dozen people occupied the common areas of a public housing block in 82 Wentworth Park Rd, Glebe to oppose the NSW state government’s plan to demolish the block and turn the site into a larger “mixed” housing block with the public housing turned into privately-run “community housing”. The protest action, which was deemed legal by the authorities because none of the vacant units were occupied, lasted five days. It was organised by Action for Public Housing and the Anti-Poverty Centre and was supported by various socialist groups as well as by left-wing anarchists and other staunch antifascists who did much of the hard work of staffing the protest site during the nights. The action had an impact. The housing minister in the new NSW state Labor government has now promised that the site will remain entirely devoted to public housing (but without any evidence of an actual change to the formal development plan activists are rightly sceptical of this promise). 

9 June 2023, Glebe, Inner-city Sydney: Supporters of public housing protest the NSW state government’s plan to demolish the public housing complex at 82 Wentworth Park Rd, Glebe and replace it with “mixed housing” in which the existing public housing would be privatised into “community housing”. The day before, several activists began a legal, five-day occupation of the common areas of the site to help press the protesters demands.
Photo Credit: Action For Public Housing Facebook page

Yet, given the severity of the long-brewing rental affordability crisis, we need mass action on a scale and intensity much greater than anything we have seen. In particular, the power of the organised working class movement must be brought to bear. Class-struggle action to win the measures needed to provide low-rent accommodation must be combined with demands for a big increase in workers’ wages, for the conversion of casual jobs into secure ones with all the rights of permanency and for the confiscation of the power and fuel sectors and their transfer into public hands in order to drive down unaffordable living costs. To unleash the kind of struggle needed, it is not enough to energetically advocate for it. We must knock down the political obstacles that stand in the way of such struggle. Chief among these is the reality that the current leadership of the workers movement are supporters of the ALP. Especially with an ALP federal government and wall to wall Labor state governments across the mainland, they are reluctant to organise truly concerted struggle against any government policy. Instead, they tell their working class base that the ALP in office is the best that they can hope for and nothing should be done that could damage the ALP’s re-election prospects. These officials sell their ranks the lie that the ALP’s program of seeking “win-win” collaboration with the big end of town is workers’ only effective path to improving their lives. Currently, many workers grudgingly accept these claims. That is why, the struggle to mobilise determined action against soaring rents must be accompanied by a political campaign to explain that, when in government, the ALP, in the end, operates a state machine hard wired to the capitalists that is programmed to serve the big business and big property owners. In opposition to the program of the Labourites, we must win the most politically advanced workers to the understanding that the interests of working class people can only advance at the expense of the economic interests of the capitalist big-end-of-town.

Hopes in the Greens are also an obstacle to the struggle that is needed. Since the Greens do at least loudly advocate for public housing, such illusions in the Greens do exist – especially amongst progressive-minded youth. Should the Greens want to support a particular protest action in defence of public housing, they are of course free to do so. However, activists must point out not only the Greens’ own tarnished record on public housing when they have been in coalition government with the ALP in Tasmania and federally in the early 2010s but the fact that this is inevitable for any party that seeks to manage the capitalist order. Most importantly, the demands and direction of struggles must not be curtailed to win the acceptance of the Greens. We must not shy away from militant protest occupations that impinge on official capitalist “property rights” or recoil from raising the urgently needed demand to confiscate the vacant homes of the ultra-rich because we know that both these courses will scare off the Greens, who after all include wealthy capitalists amongst their ranks and their donors as well as plenty of upper middle-class, multiple property owners. Just as importantly, we must not avoid openly framing our housing struggle as one that is being waged in the class interests of working class people against the class interests of the super-rich, big property-owning class for fear of “putting off the Greens”. If we were to in this way dilute and shroud the class-struggle content of our movement it would make the movement less attractive to militant workers – the very people whose participation is key to winning victories. For the movement against unaffordable rents to acquire the pro-working class orientation, militant character and anti-capitalist demands that can make it a serious factor, the movement must be freed from all subordination to the agenda of the “progressive” wing of the big end of town, represented by the Greens. All promotion of the Greens by groups within the movement – for example, by advocacy of a vote for the Greens at elections – must be challenged.

There is another, very sinister, political challenge that faces any movement to drive down unaffordable rents. That is the fact that the capitalist class, including most blatantly the capitalist media and Peter Dutton’s Liberal Party, are increasingly seeking to blame migration for the rental affordability crisis. Their claims are a complete pack of lies. The lack of affordable accommodation is solely the result of the capitalist free market in housing and decades of government policy favouring landlords and speculative investors over tenants and low income home buyers. The ruling class wants the masses to blame anyone but themselves! We cannot let them get away with this! To the extent that the masses buy the capitalist rulers’ propaganda, it will not only divert away the movement against unaffordable rents but by inciting racist hostility to migrants and people of colour, it will divide and weaken the workers movement and its capacity to resist capitalist attacks on its living standards. That is why the workers movement and all supporters of public housing must not only oppose any scapegoating of migrants for the housing crisis but must positively mobilise to defend targeted communities against any racist, and other bigoted, attacks. We must demand freedom for and the bringing here of all refugees from PNG and Nauru. We must build mass action to defend Aboriginal people, Asians, other people of colour and the LGBTIQ community against violent far-right forces. And to stop people, vulnerable because of their insecure visa status, being especially ripped off by greedy landlords, which helps push up rents for everyone, we must fight to win the full rights of citizenship for all visa workers, international students and refugees.

The Example of Socialistic China’s Housing Policy:
“Houses Are for Living, Not for Speculation”

Those opposing an emphasis on public housing and strict controls on the housing market argue that such an agenda does not work in practice. They say it is outdated and goes against the world trend of privatisation, “user-pays” and neo-liberal deregulation. There is a huge problem with that argument, however. In Australia’s largest trading partner, the People’s Republic of China (PRC), the direction over the last decade and a half has been explicitly towards public housing and strict regulation of the housing sector. In the decade from 2008, the PRC provided 70 million additional public housing dwellings for her low and lower-middle income people. Proportionate to population size, China delivered in ten years, one and a half times the amount of public housing as what the Greens promise to provide in low-cost accommodation over twenty years. As a result, today, the percentage of China’s urban population in public housing is nearly ten times higher than Australia’s. Moreover, the PRC’s public housing drive continues. Last year, the PRC provided an additional two and a half million public rental dwellings for her people. In percentage terms, this is equivalent to 45,000 dwellings here. That means proportionate to population size, Red China in just one year provided one and a half times as much public housing as what the Albanese government promises to deliver in privately-owned “social and affordable” housing over five years. And unlike here, China does not have a homelessness crisis. Despite China (which is still trying to pull herself up from her impoverished pre-1949, capitalist days) having a per capita income some three to five times lower than Australia’s, Chinese international students entering Australia, the U.S. and Western Europe are shocked at the level of homelessness in these richer countries compared with their socialistic homeland.

Beijing, China: Tenants of a public housing complex in the Chinese capital hang out.
Photo credit: Zhu Yumeng

The PRC’s public housing drive is part of Beijing’s official housing policy that is aptly titled; “Houses are for living, not for speculation.” The PRC takes the opposite stance towards housing speculation compared to successive Australian governments. For example, most Chinese cities ban households from buying more than two homes. Needless to say, Australia’s big end of town hate the PRC’s policies. That is why their media seek to denigrate it at every possible instance. Last year, they seized on the troubles of a Chinese capitalist developer hit by the anti-speculation campaign to claim that the PRC’s “Houses are for living, not for speculation”-policy was soon going to cause the Chinese economy to collapse. Needless to say, that never happened! Today, while the capitalist Australian, American, British and German economies are either in recession or on the verge of one, the PRC’s economy surged by 4.5% last quarter. More importantly, socialistic China’s workers continue to enjoy, by far, the world’s fastest growth rate in real wages. All this is why the Western capitalist powers see China as an “existential threat.” They fear that the successes of China’ socialist alternative will encourage their own masses to also demand a system that puts the masses’ needs above big end of town profits. Frankly, that is the kind of “threat” that working class people in the capitalist West need! Let’s help “infect” Australia’s working class population with sympathy for Red China’s “Houses are for living, not for speculation” policy and her system that underpins it. The fact that China’s transition to socialism is incomplete, bureaucratically distorted and endangered by hostile elements – including by the capitalist powers internationally and by its own capitalists who long to have the right to “freely” exploit as in “normal” (that is capitalist) countries and who have a layer of academics, lawyers, journalists and politicians in the right wing of the ruling Communist Party of China doing their bidding – actually makes socialistic rule in China more in need of defence, not less. Let’s oppose the U.S. and Australian regime’s military build up against the PRC! Let’s refute their lying propaganda attacks against China! And let’s oppose the anticommunist groups within China that they support in their quest to destroy socialistic rule there!

Sydney, 2 April 2022 – Demonstrators march to demand that the measures China is using to beat poverty be applied here – including a massive increase in public housing, a guaranteed minimum wage for food delivery riders and the nationalisation of the banks. The action was built by Trotskyist Platform and the Australian Chinese Workers Association.
Photo credit: Demi Huang/New Impressions Media

The PRC’s public housing drive has been made possible not only by official policy. It is also made possible by the fact that the developers building the public housing, the steel, cement, glass and other factories providing the materials for the constructions and the banks whose loans provided part of the finance for the projects are all, overwhelmingly, under public ownership. So the PRC is able to build more public housing without having a good part of the budget leached away by capitalist profiteers. China’s system centred on public ownership was created in an inspirational revolution in 1949 that brought the toiling classes to power – albeit a power administered in an imperfect, indirect way via a middle-class bureaucracy. To ensure a system here where not only housing but also health care, aged care, education, industry, agriculture, science and culture operate for the people’s needs and not the profits of a super-rich few, the working class here will also need to take power. Let’s advance towards that goal by enhancing working class peoples’ unity, confidence in their own power and distrust of all the parties and institutions serving the capitalist class (and all its wings) in the course of hard-fought struggles to radically drive down rents, stop the plunge in the masses’ living standards and reverse the decline in workers’ real wages. Let’s build militant struggles to win a massive increase in public housing and the confiscation of the vacant homes of the ultra-rich for transfer into low-rent housing.

HIS MAJESTY’S LABOR GOVERNMENT MARCHES THE SAME PATH AS HER MAJESTY’S LIBERAL GOVERNMENT …
ONLY WITH LESS ODIOUS REGALIA

Above Left: Australia’s Labor prime minister Anthony Albanese meets with Australia’s unelected feudal, head of state for life, King Charles III a few days before the British monarch’s coronation on 6 May 2023. Above Right: Albanese arrives with his partner for King Charles III and Queen Camilla’s coronation ceremony. Albanese pledged allegiance to the new monarch.
Photo credit: AP

LIKE THE DEPOSED, MUCH HATED,
RIGHT WING MORRISON GOVERNMENT,
ALBANESE HEADS AN ADMINISTRATION

SERVING THE CAPITALIST EXPLOITERS!

HIS MAJESTY’S LABOR GOVERNMENT
MARCHES THE SAME PATH AS
HER MAJESTY’S LIBERAL GOVERNMENT
… ONLY WITH LESS ODIOUS REGALIA

27 January 2023: After nearly nine years of conservative administration, Australia’s working class masses, progressive youth, Aboriginal people and much of this country’s Asian, African, Islander and Middle Eastern-based migrant communities had been hoping that the defeat of the hated Morrison government in last May’s elections would finally bring at least a modest degree of relief from years of reactionary attacks on their rights and living standards. However, eight months later, it is clear that little of substance has changed. Moreover, the new Labor administration headed by supposed ALP “Left” Anthony Albanese has no agenda to substantially alter the course that the former right-wing government was on. As a result, the masses’ living standards continue to plunge. Workers’ wages only rise slowly, while food, gas and electricity prices are surging and petrol prices remain obscenely high. Millions of gig economy and casual workers continue to endure jobs with no security and harsh employment conditions that can be made still tougher at any time at the whim of the boss. Just look at how the 15,000 riders delivering food for Deliveroo were thrown out of work with no notice, zero entitlements and zero payout after the delivery platform wound up in Australia two months ago. Especially hard hit are the large number of low-income households that rent. Last year rents soared by more than 10%. Moreover, with so little affordable rental accommodation available, low-income households are not even able to move into cheaper dwellings to get by. As a result, not only are many unemployed workers being forced into living rough on the streets but more and more casual, part-time and other low-paid workers are being reduced to sleeping in their cars or their friends’ lounge rooms to get by. Many more are trying to make ends meet by skipping meals, foregoing essential dental visits or enduring cold winters without using the heater at all.

There are a couple of areas where the new government has moved to end especially extreme anti-working class measures imposed by the previous right-wing government. It has wound back the powers of the union-busting Australian Building and Construction Commission (ABCC). Yet, at the same time, the ALP government has committed itself to maintaining all the laws restricting workers’ strike action and union access to workplaces. The government did follow through on their promise to end the compulsory use of the cashless debit card that had been imposed on welfare recipients in some communities to control how they could spend their money. However, the Albanese government insists on continuing to subject unemployed workers to grinding poverty by refusing to make any real increases to the paltry Jobseeker payments [update – At the May 2023 budget the government did announce that JobSeeker, Youth Allowance and Austudy payments would increase from September onwards … but only by an insulting $2.60 a day!]. Albanese and his treasurer Jim Chalmers are simply not prepared to spend any of the public budget to lift these most vulnerable people out of poverty. Nor are they prepared to use public revenue to maintain funding levels for public hospitals – let alone boost them. Last October’s budget saw the federal government incredibly announce that it will cut the funding that it gives to the states to run public hospitals by $2.4 billion over four years. This is at a time when the public hospital system is so overwhelmed that patients are waiting years for surgeries deemed “elective”, ambulances are queuing in ramps outside hospital emergency departments for sometimes hours before they can get their patients admitted and nurses are being battered with ever more unsustainably high work loads due to short staffing. Yet if required to expand the wealth of the rich, ALP leaders are quite happy to drain down the public budget. Thus, Albanese and Chalmers dismissed opposition from Labor ranks and went ahead with their promised tax cuts for the wealthy.

The main difference between the current ALP government and its right-wing predecessors is merely in style and rhetoric. Morrison and Co. would oversee skyrocketing rents, falling real wages, and rising profits and then arrogantly tell us that this is all fair and we ought to work harder if we don’t like it … or buy a house if we are tenants who think that rents are too high! On the other hand, the ALP as a party with a mass working class base is careful to acknowledge “that many working people in Australia are hurting” and that “real wages need to rise.” Yet, the more sympathetic demeanour does not help workers to pay for their surging food and electricity costs and their ever-increasing rents that result from a government that continues to put the interests of the capitalist bosses ahead of the needs of the working class masses… just like their predecessors!

The divergence between the style and substance of the Albanese government is especially apparent on the issue of workers’ wages. When the Fair Work Commission (FWC) was about to make its annual setting of minimum wages last June, the Albanese government made a submission to the FWC calling for a minimum wage increase in line with the then inflation rate. This is what the FWC basically did, granting an increase in the minimum wage of 5.2% and a below inflation increase of 4.6% for other award workers. The Labor government boasted about its role in the decision and contrasted its stance to that taken by the previous Liberal-National government. The currently pro-ALP, ACTU leadership of our unions also stated that they were “really happy” with the outcome. However, the Albanese government and the ACTU tops knew all too well at the time that the inflation rate was expected to sharply rise and that by the Labor government only calling for a minimum wage increase that matched the then inflation rate, they were in effect calling for a pay cut. Seven months down the track this is all too clear. Prices have soared in this period. Annual official inflation is now 7.8% – the highest in over three decades. Most notably, food prices surged by 9.2% over the last year. As a result, the rate of price increase of non-discretionary items like food and fuel, which is what low-paid workers spend most of their money on, has surged even faster than the overall inflation rate – rising by 8.4%. Therefore, the June Fair Work Commission wage decision, so cheered on by Albanese, has in effect turned out to be a 3.2% pay cut for minimum wage workers and an even larger cut for other award workers. For many gig economy workers – like food delivery workers, Uber drivers and taxi drivers – the loss of income is even greater. Not only are they not even granted award wage increases, they have to pay out of their own pockets for the super-high fuel costs.

The reason that workers’ living standards are plummeting can be seen by comparing changes in wages with that of business profits. The latest figures from the Australian Bureau of Statistics (ABS) show that while wages only increased by 3.1% on average over the last year – that is a 4.7% cut in real wages – company profits increased by 8.5%. The profits of unincorporated businesses – overwhelmingly small businesses – increased even more sharply, surging by nearly 16%. In other words, workers are getting poorer because capitalist business owners – both big and small – are seizing as profits an ever greater share of the fruits of workers’ labour.

Australia’s capitalist bosses have been increasing the rate at which they exploit their workers not only over the last year but over the last nearly four decades. This is revealed in an index published by the ABS called the Unit Labour Cost, which shows the relative amount that bosses pay workers in wages, super and other benefits for every dollar of output value added by their workers. That Unit Labour Cost has plunged by over 21% over the last 36 years, representing the staggering increase in the rate at which capitalist business owners are exploiting their workers. This has been presided over by Liberal, Labor and Labor-Greens governments alike. Whether under the Coalition, Labor or indeed Labor-Greens defacto coalitions, the rich capitalist exploiters have gotten richer while the working class masses got poorer.

With no program to close the ever expanding income gap between the rich capitalists and working class people, the Albanese government inevitably seeks to divert the masses’ frustrations onto racial minorities by upholding the xenophobic and reactionary nationalist policies of the previous government. Thus, although the Labor government made a sop to its progressive supporters by finally ending the unpopular persecution of the Murugappan Biloela-based Tamil family, it continues to cruelly incarcerate over two hundred Asian, Middle Eastern and African refugees in off-shore detention in Nauru and PNG. To show how deeply it shares the racist refugee policy adhered to by the Coalition, immediately upon taking office, the Albanese government deported the asylum seekers who had arrived by boat on election-day from Sri Lanka. In fact, even as it slashed funding for public hospitals in its recent budget, the Albanese government increased annual spending on enforcing its offshore detention policy by a further $150 million. Meanwhile, the government has refused to offer permanent residency to those brought here for medical treatment from off-shore detention in Nauru and PNG (the “Medevac refugees”). As for their promise to grant permanency to the thousands of refugees living here on temporary visas, eight months into office this has not been implemented. This has left thousands of refugees in limbo. On top of the stress of having to reapply for these temporary visas every three or five years and not knowing if they will end up being deported at the end of a visa period, these temporary visas deny refugees the right to bring their spouses or children living abroad, the right to travel abroad, the right to have full access to social security payments, the right to university education and in the case of SHEV visa holders the right to live and work in urban areas.

22 September 2022: Some of the Trotskyist Platform signs carried at the anti-monarchy protest in Sydney after Labor prime minister, Anthony Albanese, declared the day a public holiday in honour of the late queen Elizabeth II.

Meanwhile, like its predecessors, the Labor government defends a system that continues to cruelly oppress Aboriginal people. This was signified in the ostentatious way that the government mourned over the death of Queen Elizabeth, the monarch under whom Aboriginal people were brutally subjugated and under whom generations of Aboriginal children were heinously stolen from their parents in order to be cut off from their culture and heritage. Albanese and Co. deeply offended Aboriginal people and all those opposed to colonialism by hailing uncritically the dead, war-criminal queen and by embracing the coronation of her unpopular son as king. They went event further. Seemingly trying to outdo right-wing conservatives and monarchists in adulation for the queen, the supposedly “republican” prime minister, Albanese, even decided to grant a special public holiday to mourn the passing of Australia’s unelected head of state for life. While upholding the social order that oppresses Aboriginal people, the ALP proposes to insert a token “recognition” of Aboriginal people into the constitution and to set up a powerless Aboriginal advisory body (“Voice”) to the parliament. This scheme is aimed at giving the regime the appearance that it is listening to Aboriginal people’s voices. Although the hard right-wing section of the Australian ruling class cannot stomach any recognition that Aboriginal people lived on this land for tens of thousands of years before colonial invasion, much of the ruling class see the proposed scheme as being useful because they hope that it will dampen the Aboriginal rights movement that has become more vigorous in recent years. They also think that the planned changes will persuade the broader population into having greater faith in the supposed “fairness” of the present Australian social order and, therefore, be more willing to support the ruling class’ more aggressive military and political interventions into the Asia-Pacific; as Australia’s capitalist rulers seek to, on the one hand, maintain their neo-colonial plunder and paternalistic control of the South Pacific and, on the other, play a frontline role in the Western imperialists’ Cold War drive against socialistic China. Those sections of the White Australia capitalist ruling class pushing the new scheme also want to ostentatiously display “constitutional recognition” and a nominal Aboriginal “Voice” for international consumption. They want to deflect widespread global revulsion at the Australian regime’s brutal oppression of Aboriginal people, which they know undercuts their ability to unleash (usually bogus) attacks on their enemies over “human rights.” However, most staunch Aboriginal activists have seen through the proposed measures. They have been enraged by the window-dressing nature of the “embrace” of an Aboriginal “Voice” and have skewered the tokenism of the proposed constitutional changes. At yesterday’s January 26 Invasion Day rally in Sydney, every single Aboriginal activist that addressed the issue of the “Voice” and “Constitutional Recognition” – including leading activists Gwenda Stanley, Lizzy Jarrett and Lynda-June Coe – condemned and opposed the sham plans. Nearly all the speakers at the Melbourne and Brisbane protests took the same stance. As Gumbainggir man and veteran Aboriginal militant, Uncle Gary Foley, powerfully told the Melbourne rally, the Voice would “only be cosmetic”. “Like lipstick on a pig. It will not address the deep underlying issues that still pervade Australian society and that primary issue is white Australian racism,” Foley pointed out.

Sydney, 26 January 2023: Aboriginal people and supporters of Aboriginal rights of all colours march together to protest against the racist oppression of Aboriginal people. The main banner of the thousands-strong demonstration and all the Aboriginal speakers who addressed the issue condemned the government’s “Voice” to parliament proposal as a powerless sham. Several key speakers including rally MC, Dunghutti, Gumbaynggirr, Bundjalung woman, Auntie Lizzie Jarrett also stressed that the new Labor government is just as much their enemy as the previous government.
Photo credit: Robert Wallace/ AFP

The stance taken by staunch Aboriginal activists is especially valid when the government that is pushing the proposed constitutional changes not only hails the blood-soaked, white supremacist monarchy but does nothing to stop regime personnel from killing Aboriginal people in custody and continuing to remove Aboriginal children from their families; while doing little to ensure decent housing and services for Aboriginal communities and absolutely nothing to genuinely return stolen land to Aboriginal people. Since the ALP took office, young Aboriginal people continue to die in state custody at a horrific rate and police and prison guards responsible for killing Aboriginal people continue to get away with these crimes. This has only encouraged violent white supremacists on the streets. The sickening beating to death by white racists of 15 year-old Aboriginal boy, Cassius Turvey, while he was walking home with his friends from a school in suburban Perth is a product of the White Australia capitalist “order” upheld by the Liberals, One Nation, the ALP and the Greens alike.

CLASS STRUGGLE IS THE ONLY ROAD
TO DEFEND WORKING CLASS PEOPLES’ LIVING STANDARDS

With the ALP’s working class base increasingly angry at their falling living standards, ALP leaders have been at pains to look like they are trying to lift wages. They pushed through new laws ostentatiously called the “Secure Jobs, Better Pay Bill.” As well as claiming that it will lift wages and improve job security for casual workers, Labor says that the bill will help reduce the gender pay gap. However, any benefits to workers from this bill will at best be modest and on balance it may do as much harm for workers as good. One positive aspect of the legislation is that it somewhat increases the scope for workers employed by different businesses in the same industry to collectively bargain for their rights. This partially winds back the measures introduced by the Keating Labor government in the early 1990s that restricted workers to bargaining with their bosses at a single enterprise. That system of enterprise bargaining, by curtailing the number of workers who could be united together to fight for a particular deal, reduced workers’ power and has been part of the reason why the capitalists have been able to increase their rate of exploitation of workers over the last few decades. To the extent that particular aspects of the new law undo the enforced limitation of workers bargaining to the enterprise level – that is, undo the damage done by a former Labor government – these aspects should be defended. However, we need to fight for the extension of the right to multi-employer bargaining that is far, far more wide-ranging than those very modest measures prescribed in the current law. For example, not only does the new law give small business bosses the power to refuse to be part of multi-employer deals with workers, it also gives this same power to capitalists who already have an enterprise agreement with their staff. Moreover, the legislation excludes multi-employer deals done with unions that have been involved in “repeated breaches of industrial law” – effectively preventing construction workers, mine workers, wharfies, seamen, offshore energy workers, ferry drivers and others represented by the more militant unions like the CFMMEU from engaging in multi-employer bargaining. Furthermore, in typical social democratic fashion, the ALP caved in to ruling class opposition to the pro-worker aspects of the bill from bosses’ organisations and the yuppy cross-benchers, thereby weakening them further. Thus, the extension of industry-wide bargaining prescribed in the original legislation kept on getting narrower and narrower. In the last few days before the bill was passed, the ALP government bowed to cross-bench senator David Pocock and excluded businesses with fewer than 20 employees from being compelled by the majority of their workers to engage in multi-employer bargaining, rather than the previous threshold of 15 employees. Additionally, the Albanese government agreed to changes that will make it much easier for bosses of businesses with up to 50 employees to escape multi-employer bargaining by workers.

Moreover, there are aspects of the so-called, “Secure Jobs, Better Pay Bill” that will actually help capitalist bosses to intensify their cuts to workers’ employment rights and real wages. For one, the new law includes new impediments on workers’ already very restricted right to take strike action. Workers must now go through a momentum-slowing, compulsory period of formal conciliation with the bosses before taking any industrial action. If they take action involving multi-employer bargaining they must give the bosses a full five days notice. And in a measure aimed at quashing long-running union industrial action, workers must now go through the complex process that they already need to engage in before taking industrial action – involving a time-consuming, momentum-sapping secret ballot of employees – every three months. Moreover, a measure in the bill to give the “Fair Work Commission” (FWC) the power to resolve disputes between bosses and workers through arbitration where there is no reasonable prospect of agreement being reached, will in the long run do far more harm to workers than any good. Yes, in places where workers’ unions are weaker and in the context of the workers movement having been on the back foot over so many years, it is perhaps possible that compulsory arbitration could allow some workers in the short term to receive a tiny few more crumbs from their bosses than they otherwise would. However, when the workers movement rises in a class struggle fightback – as it must – then increased arbitration powers for the FWC, which are after all the courts of a capitalist bosses-serving state, will be used to quell workers’ struggles and prevent workers from winning substantial victories through action. Furthermore, in a concession to lobbying by business groups, the ALP has introduced a measure in the legislation that will weaken the requirement that deals between workers and their bosses leave the workers nominally better-off than previous arrangements. Instead of this Better Off Overall Test (BOOT) being applied for specific changes, bosses can claim that they have met the BOOT because they have made improvements to workers’ conditions in some areas that supposedly offset cuts to workers’ rights in others. The new measure is set to open the way for business owners to drastically undercut workers’ conditions at those workplaces where workers have less bargaining power – for example, where workers’ union organisations are weaker. Indeed, secretary of the Retail and Fast Food Workers Union, Josh Cullinan, described the new law (when it was still at a bill stage before its better aspects were weakened further) as one containing “calamitous attacks on working people.” The union secretary further insisted that the (then proposed) law “does nothing to improve the job security of casual workers. In truth, it only attacks them.”

With the last eight months having proven, once again, that the ALP in government is not willing or able to stand up to the rich and powerful capitalist bigwigs that the conservative parties openly represent, it is clearer than ever that the only way for the working class masses and all the oppressed to defend their living standards and rights is through determined class struggle. Let’s build up our unions and make them infinitely more militant. We need hard-fought strikes and other struggles to win massive pay rises for workers. We must not only make up for rampant inflation but for the years of falling real wages. To clear the legal obstacles to such struggles we must simultaneously fight for the repeal of all anti-strike laws. For the unrestricted right of unions to engage in industry-wide and nationwide bargaining with the bosses! Reverse Labor, the Liberals and the capitalists’ gutting of the Better Off Overall Test in workplace agreements! We also need to ensure that all those currently working as casuals and gig workers have their positions converted into secure jobs with all the rights of permanency. As part of fighting for this and in order to ensure secure jobs for all unemployed workers, we must force companies to increase hiring of permanent workers at the expense of their fat profits. To stop landlords being able to jack up rents ever higher because they know that renters have nowhere else to go, we must take action to demand a massive increase in low-rent housing. To facilitate women’s full participation in economic life and complete economic independence, we must struggle for free 24-hour childcare. We must also fight for Medicare to fully cover all specialist fees, essential medicine, dental, “elective” surgeries and all aged care. The public budget will only be able to afford such free childcare, healthcare and aged care if we bring these sectors completely into public ownership so that a large part of the public budget for these social services does not end up, as it does today, in the pockets of the wealthy capitalists that own profit-driven childcare, aged care, pathology, X-ray, medical centre, pharmacy and other health service firms. We need funds to employ more public sector nurses, paramedics, doctors and aged care workers and not high profits for health sector profiteers. To help provide the urgently needed resources for public health, aged care, public housing and education and to drive down surging living costs we must fight for the confiscation of the oil, gas, coal and power companies and their transfer into public ownership.

To wage such struggles against the powerful capitalist class that runs this country, working class people need tight unity across racial and ethnic lines. Such unity can only be built if the workers movement consciously combats the efforts of the exploiting class to divide the masses with reactionary nationalism and if it actively mobilises against racist oppression. The workers movement must unleash its power to oppose racist state killings of Aboriginal people in custody and to oppose the disproportionate imprisonment of black people in Australian jails. We have to resist the rampant white supremacist violence in this country – whether it comes from rabid rednecks on the streets, as in the beating to death of Cassius Turvey, or from the regime forces, as in the crushing to death of 26 year-old Aboriginal man, David Dungay, by racist prison guards. There also needs to be united mass action of our unions, Aboriginal people, Asians and other people of colour to sweep violent far-right racist outfits off the streets. If we can strike blows against such organised white supremacist forces, we can send a message to the more numerous garden variety rednecks out there – of the type that in Kalgoorlie deliberately ran over and killed 14 year-old Aboriginal boy Elijah Doughty, who murdered Indian-origin, Brisbane transport worker Manmeet Alisher by throwing a firebomb into the bus that he was driving and who have brutally bashed numerous Chinese and other East Asian people over the last few years – that they had better pull their head in. We can not allow racist terror to intimidate and, thus, marginalise from broader society and social struggle Aboriginal people and other people of colour. We also need to ensure that migrant workers are not bullied out of participation in class struggle resistance by the threat of deportation. That means that we must fight for the rights of citizenship for everyone who is here. We must demand that all refugees on temporary visas, all guest workers and all international students are given permanency and the rights of citizenship. Let us also demand that all the asylum seekers incarcerated in PNG and Nauru are brought here with the full rights of citizens.

Workers at the General Mills food processing factory in Sydney’s west do a shift on the picket line during their weeks-long June 2021 strike for improved wages and better job security. The workers’ resolve and courage won them some important gains. If unshackled from the dead-end Laborite program of seeking common ground with the capitalist bosses on the basis of a mythical “common national interest”, the workers movement will be able to wage powerful class struggle that can push back against the nearly four decades of increased capitalist exploitation of workers in Australia.
Photo credit: United Workers Union Twitter page

THE ALP DID NOT EVEN PROMISE TO STAND UP
TO THE WEALTHY BUSINESS-OWNING CLASS

That the ALP government is kowtowing to the big end of town is hardly a surprise. Even during the lead up to the elections they made clear that they were not going to challenge the capitalists. Fearful that the billionaire oligarchs would utilise both their ownership of the media and their power to decide which political forces that they direct their massive financial resources to in order to campaign against Labor, Albanese’s team went out of their way to assure the wealthy ruling class that the ALP would look after their interests as diligently as Morrison’s conservatives. To their working class base, on the other hand, Albanese and Co. promised that they would reverse the plunge in real wages, fix the crisis in aged care and address the lack of affordable housing. Yet they promised to do all this by merely managing the existing capitalist system more rationally than the Liberals and by doing away with the most extreme reactionary of the latter’s policies. Rather than measures to curb the power of the corporate bigwigs, the ALP tops advocated “win-win” policies that brought together workers and their unions on the one hand and worker-hiring business owners on the other. However, such talk of “win-win” between workers and the capitalists is a cruel hoax. Workers are getting poorer precisely because capitalist bosses are increasing the proportion of the fruits of workers’ labour that they seize as profits. The interests of workers and those of the business owners that extract profit from their toil are counterposed. To refuse to stand with workers’ interests against those of their capitalist bosses means to accept the status quo of ever-increasing capitalist exploitation of workers.

Yet, despite all the ALP leaders’ efforts to please the capitalist ruling class, the latter do not come easily to accepting a Labor government. The ALP is, after all, a party whose rank-and-file are workers and is a party organically tied to the union movement. The exploiting class worries that this base could push an ALP government into enacting measures to defend workers’ interests. Therefore, in “normal” times, the oligarchs prefer their own parties, like the Liberals and the Nationals, to administer government, especially at the federal level. However, when the working class start to get restive or when the ruling class wants to herd the masses into supporting measures that could be unpopular – like a major war – the ruling class turn to the ALP. They hope that with the ALP’s greater authority amongst the working class and with its ties to the union leadership, the Labor Party is better able to pacify the working class masses and more effective at lining up the masses behind major campaigns of the capitalist elite than the openly, pro-business owner conservatives. In this way, the ruling class will look to ALP social democracy to come to their rescue when they are in a difficult position, even while having misgivings that an ALP government could irritate them by throwing some sops to its working class base. This was the case in the lead up to the 2007 elections when the working class masses were angry after more than eleven years of right-wing Coalition government and when workers had in the previous two years participated in mass nationwide stopwork actions against the Howard government’s anti-worker Workchoices legislation. At the time, even the main national, NSW and Queensland newspapers of hard-right billionaire Rupert Murdoch called for a vote to Kevin Rudd’s ALP. Murdoch even personally praised Rudd. Then, in the lead-up to last May’s elections, after nearly nine years of corrupt Coalition rule has discredited Australia’s present social order in the eyes of the masses and with working class people grumbling over plunging living standards, decisive sections of the ruling class started to seriously consider whether it would be better to get the ALP into government. This is especially the case because the capitalist rulers are worried that the disgruntled working class masses could refuse to get behind their Cold War drive against socialistic China.

However, before they were willing to accept the possibility of a Labor government, in the months and years leading up to the federal elections, the various factions of the capitalist class subjected Albanese’s Labor to a number of tests to see whether this nominally workers’ party could be trusted to run the federal government. The big end of town utilised their control of the media and think tanks and their numerous personal connections with politicians to demand reassurances from the ALP on key issues.

For one, they wanted to be sure that the ALP would not loosen anti-strike laws and would not encourage class struggle by pushing any policies that would openly redistribute wealth from the rich to the masses. The capitalist bigwigs were quite satisfied with Labor’s response. Not only did the ALP pledge to uphold anti-strike laws, some of which they had themselves instituted on previous occasions that they were in office, the ALP also pointedly refused to make even the most modest promises to redistribute income away from the super-rich. Indeed, ALP head offices openly instructed branch members not to make any negative references to the “big end of town” that the Labor Party had sometimes used in the lead up to the previous elections in 2019. The big end of town also demanded that the Labor Party abandon any plans to enact even minimal measures that would curb the returns of the rich from buying up multiple properties for speculation or for renting out as landlords. Here too Albanese’s Labor duly obliged. Thus, long before the elections, the ALP ditched the agenda that it took to the previous two elections of limiting the scope of negative gearing tax exemptions and reducing the amount of discount on capital gains tax payments. The supposed ALP “Left” Albanese has ostentatiously positioned himself even further to the right than his ALP Right faction predecessor, Bill Shorten. Even when promising resources for lower-rent “social housing”, the proposals of Albanese’s ALP are so modest that they would not be enough to pull down rents across the market – music to the ears of multiple-property owning, rich landlords shaking down ever greater rents from their tenants. Moreover, even the ALP’s modest plan for more “social housing” that it took to the election will not increase badly needed public housing but rather promises funds for just a modest increase in “community housing”, notorious for its private operators who skimp on repairs and shun the most hard-up, would-be tenants. Thus, even in making a sop to the needs of low-income renters, the ALP was careful to show that there would be a lot in the plans for the capitalists – in the form of expanded opportunities to profiteer from running partly government-funded “community housing.”

A two bedroom apartment in this building in working class Granville in Western Sydney was rented out before the real estate agency even put the unit up for its first open inspection. This all-too frequent occurrence took place despite the modest apartment being rented out for $620 a week (with a four week bond of $2480) – more than three quarters of the before-tax, full-time minimum wage. Not only are rents skyrocketing but the number of available properties for rent is very small relative to the need for them, giving low-income people little chance of securing suitable accommodation.

THE BIG END OF TOWN’S KEY RED LINE: ANY GOVERNMENT MUST
FULLY PARTICIPATE IN THE COLD WAR TO STRANGLE SOCIALISTIC CHINA

Perhaps the most important assurance that the ruling class demanded of Labor in the lead-up to the elections is a guarantee that it continue to support the U.S.-led Cold War drive to “contain” and squeeze socialistic China. They want Labor to follow through on the conservatives’ agenda for an increase in the U.S. military presence in Australia, for an aggressive Australian military build-up in support of this anti-China war drive and for a continuation of political support for those forces seeking to undermine socialistic rule in China from within – whether they be pro-capitalist, pseudo-“pro-democracy” activists or the dwindling number of anti-communist and fanatically anti-women’s-equality, religious fundamentalist forces based on the, more European-looking, Uyghur minority in north-western China’s Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region. The capitalist class also want Labor to do a more skillful job in aggressively interfering in Australia’s South Pacific “neighbourhood” in order to sabotage socialistic China’s south-south cooperation with the region. To be sure, the capitalists also want Labor to somehow conduct this Cold War in a way that simultaneously maintains workable diplomatic relations between Canberra and Beijing so that the tens of billions of profit that they get from Australian exports to China is not disrupted too much.

This begs the question: why are Australia’s capitalist bigwigs risking harm to their immensely lucrative trade with China by antagonising the latter? The answer to this question is entirely related to the fact that China is a workers state as opposed to being a country under capitalist rule. China’s toiling classes grabbed state power in a giant anti-capitalist revolution in 1949. To this day, China has an economy centred on a property system that favours working class people: that is, socialist, public ownership of key economic sectors. Even though the current Beijing leadership does not seek to challenge Western imperialism’s domination over the world, the mere existence of China as a socialistic power is slowly undermining the grip of imperialism over the ex-colonial countries. China’s mutually beneficial cooperation with the Global South is allowing countries in the Pacific, Africa, Asia, the Middle East and Latin America to access capital, modern technology, training and a large market in China without having to subordinate their country to the imperial powers or their agencies like the IMF. This is what is driving Australia’s capitalist rulers mad as countries in the South Pacific like the Solomon Islands and Fiji slowly exert greater independence from their Australian imperialist overlords.

Furthermore, the capitalist powers are terrified that even though Beijing does nothing to explicitly promote socialist revolution, the mere example presented by the most populous country in the world continuing to adhere to a socialistic course, while successfully lifting her people out of poverty and providing rapidly rising real wages, wide access to low-rent public housing and ever improving infrastructure, public transport and cultural opportunities for her masses, will encourage working class people in the capitalist world to themselves start agitating for socialism. That is why the Western ruling classes see the rise of socialistic China as an “existential threat.”

Top: The latest Global Wages Report from the International Labor Organisation shows that workers in China have enjoyed by far the fastest growing wages of any country in the world, whether “advanced” or emerging. Above: Although average real wages in Australia rose by roughly 10% from 2008 to 2019 they have plummeted since. By June 2022, workers’ real wages in Australia were lower than they were in March 2012 (data reprinted in ABC News and obtained from The Australia Institute). In the last few months, they have plunged further and Australian real wages are now lower than they were 15 years ago! In contrast, real wages have continued to increase in China over these last three years. Below: Although China’s workers have enjoyed by far the fastest growing real wages of any country, China’s stock market, represented by the Shanghai Composite Index, is actually lower than it was 15 years ago (see red dotted line). By contrast, in the same period the Australian stock market index, the S&P/ASX 200, has soared by 30% (blue solid line). This is an indicator that while workers’ real wages have been falling here, Australia’s capitalists have been gaining ever greater return on their capital. In contrast, in China, while workers’ real wages have been steeply rising, the capitalists are not gaining any greater return on their capital (indeed China’s richest have lost wealth in the last period).
Source for stock market data: Investing.com

For the very same reason that capitalist exploiting classes fear and loathe the socialistic PRC, the working class must hail and defend its existence. For the very existence of working class rule in China, Vietnam, Laos, Cuba and North Korea – in however a fragile and incomplete form – gives confidence to the toiling classes in Australia and other capitalist countries that they do not have to accept capitalist rule and all that it brings – bullying bosses, plunging real wages, skyrocketing rents, growing racism and all-round economic insecurity and chaos. That is why the workers movement and Left must unconditionally stand with socialistic China and the other workers states against every form of attack that they face – whether that be military, economic or propagandistic.

Yet, diametrically against the interests of its working class membership, the ALP is right behind the capitalists’ drive to strangle socialistic China. Thus, while in Opposition, the ALP supported every one of the former Liberal government’s Cold War moves against the PRC – from the discriminatory banning of Chinese tech giant, Huawei, from participating in the building of Australia’s 5G wireless network, to the introduction of McCarthyist, so-called “foreign interference” laws aimed at intimidating Australians of Chinese descent that are sympathetic to Red China, to the enacting of the AUKUS anti-China deal for Australia to acquire nuclear submarines from the U.S. and Britain. Indeed, in the lead up to the elections, Albanese’s ALP even sought to position itself as more extreme in its opposition to the PRC than the right-wing Coalition. Thus, the ALP joined the hysterical, anti-China denunciations of the deal leasing part of the civilian port of Darwin to a Chinese company. Moreover, ALP leaders criticised the Morrison government for not bullying enough the Solomon Islands into renouncing their security cooperation with China. At the same time, the ALP tops canvassed to the capitalist class that they could do a better job than their rivals of dragging South Pacific countries back into the Australian ruling class’ tight hold. They argued that they would restore the Australian regime’s damaged credentials in the region through taking a more rational verbal position on issues – like climate change – knowing full well that Pacific island countries vulnerable to rising sea-levels are only too aware that Australia’s carbon emissions per person are among the highest in the world and nearly two and a half times larger than China’s. Australia’s capitalist rulers have been more than convinced. As far as they are concerned, the ALP passed with high distinction their test requiring that any prospective government commit to zealously pursuing the anti-communist Cold War against China. Moreover, Labor’s assurances that they could do all this while simultaneously restoring full trade relations with China through dialling down the ferocity of Canberra’s anti-China rhetoric also impressed the corporate elite.

THE STANCE THAT MARXISTS SHOULD HAVE TAKEN TOWARDS THE
ELECTIONS IN ORDER TO ADVANCE ANTI-CAPITALIST RESISTANCE

Before finalising their decision not to throw their massive economic might against the election of an ALP government, there was one final important requirement that Australia’s capitalists vetted the ALP over. They wanted to be sure that Labor would be all the way with Canberra’s Western allies in waging the West’s defacto war against Russia via their Ukrainian proxies. To be sure, initially the war was mainly a squalid battle for territory between the respective capitalist classes of Ukraine and Russia. In such an inter-capitalist war, the working people of both countries had no side except opposition to their own respective rulers. However, even from the very start of the war, an important additional aspect of the conflict was Russia’s just struggle to keep the nuclear-armed NATO warmongers from its Western border, on the one hand, and, on the other, Kiev’s kowtowing to the interests of Western imperialism. Before long, this second aspect of the conflict became the dominant one. The U.S. and its British, EU, Australian and Canadian allies poured into Ukraine such huge amounts of weapons, military advisers, intelligence assistance and propaganda backing, that in a matter of weeks this conflict ceased to be primarily a Ukraine-Russia war and effectively became a conflict between the Western imperialists and Russia with Ukraine acting as the proxy for the former. The U.S. imperialists want to subordinate Russia and reduce her to the humiliated status that she had in the first decade and a half after the early 1990s capitalist counterrevolution devastated her and the other lands of the former USSR. They want to ensure that Russia does not obstruct their predatory designs on the resource rich Caucuses and Central Asian regions. Moreover, the U.S.-led imperialists cannot tolerate Russia or anyone else being an independent, nuclear-armed power, especially if that power has failed to sign up to their Cold War drive against Red China. To be sure, the Australian ruling class’ reasons for opposing Russia are very different to their opposition to socialistic China. Most notably, unlike the PRC, Russia is a fellow capitalist country. Moreover, Russia has few interests in the South Pacific and Southeast Asian region. She is not obstructing Australian multinational corporations from plundering this region. Nor do the Australian capitalists have any significant interests or ambitions within either Russia or its neighbouring regions that would enable them to gain some direct economic benefit from any subordination of Russia. That is why, in previous years, Australian regime officials had privately complained to Washington that it is expending too much energy countering Russia when it should be devoting all its efforts to suppressing Red China. However, once the U.S. and its other allies entered the recent war in a decisive manner, the Australian ruling class fell in behind its allies. It wants the power and prestige of the U.S. and the overall West to come out strengthened rather than damaged from the war. This is a matter of self interest for Australia’s capitalist rulers. It is Australia’s alliance with U.S. – and to a lesser extent British – military and economic might that enables Australia’s capitalists to subjugate the peoples of the South Pacific. If the powerful allies of Australia’s exploiting class are weakened, then its own tyranny in this region becomes endangered.

Here too on the question of the war in Ukraine, the ALP proved its credentials to the capitalist class. It enthusiastically backed the Morrison government’s imposition of sanctions on Russia and its sending of hundreds of millions of dollars of military equipment to the authoritarian regime in Ukraine. With the ALP thus on board on all the issues of greatest strategic concern to the capitalist class and with the latter having serious concerns about the corrupt Morrison government’s ability to hold back mass struggle in the context of plunging real wages, much of the ruling class chose to either back Albanese’s ALP in the elections or to be indifferent as to whether the ALP or the Coalition won. This is shown by the fact that just like the openly pro-boss Liberals, far-right parties, “Teal independents” and Greens, the various branches of the Labor Party received tens of millions of dollars in donations from both ultra-wealthy individuals and from corporations in the months and years leading up to last year’s federal elections. Moreover, significant sections of the capitalist-owned media sided with the ALP in the elections. Take, for instance, Nine Entertainment Holdings which owns Channel Nine TV, the 2GB radio station and the vast suite of newspapers that formerly belonged to the, now defunct, Fairfax Group. Nine Entertainment is owned by right-wing billionaire, Bruce Gordon, and the chairman of the corporation is none other than former federal treasurer and Liberal Party stalwart, Peter Costello. The flagship newspapers of the corporation, the Sydney Morning Herald and The Age, both editorialised for a vote to Albanese’s Labor at the elections. Also calling for a vote to the ALP was the “progressive” liberal, Guardian Australia online newspaper, a publications that has relied on massive financial contributions from wealthy capitalists to operate – including a huge initial investment from filthy rich, Australian tech tycoon Graeme Wood (at the nudging of Liberal Party then future prime minister Malcolm Turnbull) and large contributions to the British owners of the publication from foundations controlled by some of the most powerful American capitalists in history, including Bill Gates, the Ford family that control the Ford car company, the Hilton family owning the Hilton hotel chain and the Rockefeller family known for their vast oil, banking and property empire and their one-time advocacy of despicable fascistic “theories” like Social Darwinism and Eugenics. To be sure, the hard-right Murdoch family’s main newspapers like The Australian and the Daily Telegraph supported the Liberals at the elections. Yet, Rupert and Lachlan Murdoch were unperturbed enough about the prospect of a Labor government to recoil away from enforcing a uniform, anti-ALP election line on their outlets, unlike the uniform positions that they often enforce for questions that are important to them – like support for particular Western military interventions abroad. Thus, the Murdoch newspaper in the Northern Territory, the NT News actually editorialised for a vote to Labor.

With major sections of the capitalist class either backing, or being unconcerned by, an ALP election win, to call for a vote for the ALP at the elections would have been a call for upholding the overall interests of the capitalist class. To do so would have been harmful to the interests of the working class and oppressed just as would obviously have been any support for the reactionary, openly anti-union Coalition. As we put it in a Trotskyist Platform leaflet issued in the weeks leading up to the election:

“… the Labor Party (ALP) “alternative” is hell bent on proving to the big business owners, the people who really hold the power here, that an ALP administration will enforce capitalist interests as reliably as the Coalition does. Albanese’s ALP even proclaimed that a Labor government will not increase the paltry JobSeeker payments. So, at the upcoming elections, no vote should be given to either the Coalition or the ALP and Greens “alternatives” and obviously not to the racist One Nation or the other nationalist far-right outfits like the United Australia Party. Instead, we need hard-fought strikes and other mass actions by the workers movement and its allies to turn back the capitalists’ exploitation of workers, to resist their oppression of Aboriginal people, women and coloured ethnic communities and to oppose “their” regime’s military buildup. The more that the working class understands that their position will not be advanced through supporting any of the current parliamentary parties, the more determined they will be to build the mass struggles needed.”

Trotskyist Platform, For Militant Class Struggle Against Australia’s Capitalists!, 25 April 2022

Most of the other far-left groups rejected such a stance. They called either openly, or more often backhandedly through preferences, for a vote to the ALP. However, events since the Albanese government’s election have confirmed the correctness of our opposition to supporting either the Coalition or the ALP or indeed any of other current parliamentary parties. Since coming to office, the Labor government has upheld all its commitments to the big end of town, while delivering few of the meagre promises that it made to its working class base. Thus, the Albanese government has given tax cuts to the rich, maintained tax exemptions for wealthy property speculators, cut public hospital spending and maintained – and even strengthened – anti-strike laws. Its measures to lift wages are so limp and state Labor and Liberal governments so draconian in their determination to keep state public sector pay rises well below inflation, that not only are real wages falling even faster than they were during Morrison’s reign but even treasurer Jim Chalmers quietly concedes that real wages are expected to continue to fall until … at least, 2024!

Meanwhile, as promised to the capitalist bigwigs, the ALP has continued the Australian regime’s obsessive participation in the imperialist campaign to strangle socialistic rule in China. Indeed, it was literally just hours after Albanese and his cabinet had been sworn into government by “Her Majesty’s” representative (the Governor General) that Albanese and foreign minister Penny Wong flew off to a Quad meeting in Tokyo to advance the Cold War measures of the U.S.- Australia-Japan-India, anti-China alliance. That Albanese briefly met Chinese president Xi during the G20 summit is hardly a sign of an easing off of the Australian regime’s determination to participate in the anti-PRC Cold War. The government and the capitalist class that it serves wants to have a relationship with the PRC somewhat like the Japanese, German, New Zealand and French regimes, who are all fellow, zealous Cold War opponents of socialistic rule in China but maintain diplomatic relations with Beijing at the level just above that which causes trade to be seriously affected. Albanese and Penny Wong thus seek improvement in diplomatic exchanges with Beijing from Morrison’s time. This is especially because the inflation-plagued Australian economy is faltering. Yet, while seeking to reduce the temperature of diplomatic disputes with Beijing, Canberra is following through on its commitment to the capitalist class to continue to pile on the pressure on socialistic China. Since, the Albanese government took office, Australian warships and military aircraft have continued to provocatively traverse waters and skies claimed by Beijing in the South China Sea, thousands upon thousands of kilometres from Australia. Moreover, not only is the ALP government following through on the deposed conservative government’s plan to acquire long-range naval missiles and nuclear submarines, late last year it was revealed that the Albanese government was planning a still more threatening move against China – allowing the U.S. to deploy nuclear-capable B52 bombers at a base south of Darwin. Then, three weeks ago, it was revealed that the Albanese government would be buying the expensive, long-range HIMARS missile system from the United States. All this is part of an aggressive military build-up aimed at contributing to Cold War military pressure against the PRC. Meanwhile, in the South Pacific, the new government has followed through on its promise to intervene more aggressively in the region in order to shore up the interests of Australia’s capitalist class through sabotaging the efforts of regional countries to cooperate with the PRC. Indeed, Albanese and Penny Wong have intruded so coercively into the Solomon Islands that the Solomon Islands government responded to one such act of meddling last September with a defiant statement slamming Canberra’s move as “an assault on our parliamentary democracy” and “direct interference by a foreign government into our domestic affairs” (a brave act by the Solomon Islands government given that Western powers had stoked riots against them a year earlier and given the degree to which not only the upper levels of the country’s bureaucracy have been infiltrated by Australian officials and “advisers” but broader sections of the island nation’s civil institutions and media have been ensnared in the Australian ruling class’ influence operations).

Moreover, the new ALP government has taken over the baton from the previous government when it comes to participating in Western imperialism’s joint propaganda war against Red China. Three weeks ago, the government joined a very small number of other countries – including the U.S. and Britain – in imposing a requirement that travellers from China and only from China get a pre-departure COVID test. They forced through the new rule in spite of Australia’s chief medical officer and most other experts advising against the move! Clearly, the Australian government’s measure has little to do with protecting the Australian population from COVID and everything to do with trying to build negative perceptions of China by denigrating her COVID response, despite the fact that the PRC has so successfully protected her people from the pandemic that her COVID death rate per resident is currently 15 times lower than Australia’s. After having supported last November’s small anti-COVID-response protests in China – that were the Chinese version of the Far Right-instigated COVID “Freedom” protests in Australia and other Western countries – that opposed China’s mask mandates and PCR testing of COVID-affected regions, the Albanese government and its Western counterparts have now done a 180 degree flip and want to portray China’s recent relaxation of COVID controls as reckless. This is despite the PRC being in a much better position to protect her people from COVID deaths after reopening than Australia was when it opened up a year ago because the anti-viral medications that are now widely available in China – both from Western pharmaceutical firms and from Chinese ones – were not available at the time Australia opened up; and because China’s community-based COVID response (which involves doctors and nurses seeing patients in makeshift clinics within neighbourhoods and neighbourhood committees and local volunteers regularly checking up on the health condition of elderly and other COVID-vulnerable neighbours, while delivering medical kits and pandemic information) is very effective in ensuring that vulnerable COVID-infected people get prompt enough access to anti-viral medication and are speedily triaged to top-level hospitals.

Meanwhile, just like its right-wing predecessors, the Labor government has continued to claim that China is persecuting her Muslim Uyghur minority that live in the country’s northwest – a claim that not only have countries representing around 85% of the world’s population refused to sign on to during UN debates and motions (including every single Muslim majority country in the world other than for tiny U.S.-dependent Bosnia) but which the organisation of Islamic Cooperation, most Muslim-majority countries individually and much of Africa, the Middle East and Asia have denounced as a lie and instead emphatically praised China’s treatment of Muslim Uyghurs after sending fact-finding inspections to the country’s northwest.

The Albanese government has also more than delivered on its promise to the imperialist ruling class to continue the Morrison government’s support for the Washington-led proxy war against Russia. In July, Albanese exceeded the former prime minister’s level of support for the war by personally visiting Ukraine and meeting with its authoritarian president. Albanese announced during his trip that his government would provide Ukraine with an additional 34 armoured vehicles valued at $100 million. As Albanese has boasted many times, the Australian regime is now the largest non-NATO provider of military aid to Ukraine… or rather to the proxies of Western imperialism. This backing reached a new level last week when 70 Australian soldiers departed for Britain to participate in a British-led training program of Ukrainian troops.

THE LABOR PARTY HAS ALWAYS BETRAYED ITS WORKING CLASS BASE

Although none of the Labor Party’s working class supporters thought that the Albanese government was going to seriously redistribute income and power from the big end of town to the masses, even their most modest hopes of progressive change are gradually being dashed. Yet this is hardly a new experience for Labor supporters. The ALP has always betrayed its base. This is not merely a matter of a lack of resolute, selfless leaders or a matter of the leadership not living up to the “principles” of the Labor Party. Mostly, it is because the social democratic strategy that the Labor Party commits itself to is incapable of delivering major, lasting benefits for its mass base. Social democracy seeks to improve the lives of the masses without fundamentally challenging the tremendous economic and political power of the capitalist class … or by “postponing” constructing that challenge to the distant never reached “right moment”. This becomes a recipe for resigning oneself to the domination of society by the big end of town and capitulating to their demands on the most decisive issues. By thereby accepting the supremacy of the capitalists, while negotiating with the latter on terms of their dominance in society on the nominal behalf of the working class masses, social democratic politicians, union leaders and NGO heads gain a highly respectable position in society as well as privileged incomes compared to their support base. They also acquire personal links with the big end of town that facilitate future lucrative careers in the corporate world. All this entices them to bow down even more subserviently to the capitalist bigwigs whenever the latter get angry that social democratic leaders are demanding “too much” on behalf of their support base.

Any working class based political party in a capitalist country faces not only the direct pressure of the capitalists but also the pressure of the state institutions. Despite the state being a body that nominally “treats everyone equally”, in practice, in capitalist societies the government departments, the bureaucracies, the courts, police, army and secret police all act as upholders of the interests of the racist, capitalist exploiting class. Just look at what has been revealed during the course of the Royal Commission into the former Morrison government’s despised “Robodebt” scheme, in which the regime’s computers, supposedly checking for “over-claiming” by welfare recipients, automatically sent messages to nearly half a million of this country’s most economically vulnerable people unlawfully demanding payments of non-existing debts, in some cases of up to tens of thousands of dollars. What testimony during the investigation showed is that it was not just Morrison and his ministers who were driving the Robodebt scheme. So were many highly-paid, senior government bureaucrats who shared the anti-working class Liberal government’s determination to suck every cent that they could out of low-income welfare recipients. Indeed it was bureaucrats from the Department of Human Services rather than Coalition ministers that first proposed Robodebt. Later, after the harm caused by Robodebt became widely known, calls by lower down staff for the scheme to be seriously overhauled were met with hostility by upper bureaucrats.

Meanwhile, two months ago, there were revelations of just how intense racism and hostility to leftists is within Queensland Police ranks. In recordings taken at the Brisbane city police watch house, a large number of cops engaged in discussions expressing their extreme hatred of black Africans, Muslim people, Aboriginal people and leftist protesters and also their contempt and concocted “fear” of being overwhelmed by Africans, Chinese, Indian and Muslim people and migrants more generally. Chillingly, some officers even discussed the possibility of beating to death and burying black Africans and expressed their wish to violently attack anti-racist, climate change and refugee rights protesters.

Given the racist, anti-leftist and anti-working class character of bureaucratic organs in Australia and other capitalist countries, any party that comes into government promising progressive, pro-working class measures would face sabotage of their agenda from the state agencies nominally under their “control”. Understanding this, we communists understand that in order to implement thoroughgoing, progressive social change, the working class, united with all the oppressed, must first grab state power by replacing the existing capitalist state with its own organs built to defend the interests of the working class masses and all the downtrodden. On the road to such a workers revolution, the exploited and oppressed can win immediate gains and concessions from the ruling capitalists through class struggle and other mass actions provided that they maintain complete political independence from all institutions of the capitalist state. In contrast, the approach of social democrats – whether of its most right-wing practitioners like the ALP or it’s most avowedly pro-socialist, left-wing elements – is to seek to wield the existing capitalist state in the service of the masses. Yet given that this state has been built up and maintained to enforce the interests of the capitalist ruling class, social democrat-administered governments, aware of the resistance that they would face from their own state agencies, almost always recoil from implementing the more progressive aspects of their agendas, even in those cases where pressure from their working class base pushes them to promise a more radical program.

In very rare cases when a social democratic party in government still insists on following through on a more explicitly pro-working class agenda, their government ends up being overthrown by the state institutions that they nominally head. Most infamously in September 1973 in Chile, the elected Socialist Party-led government of then Chilean president Salvador Allende, which had nationalised some industries and sought to improve workers’ living standards, was overthrown in a coup by the Chilean military backed by the country’s police. That the Australian Secret Intelligence Service (ASIS) helped the American CIA to conduct a destabilisation campaign against Allende in order to foment the right-wing coup underscores the intensely pro-capitalist political character of Australia’s state organs. A few months before the coup, the then newly elected ALP government led by Gough Whitlam found out about the ASIS operation in Chile. Whitlam did order the ASIS operation to be disbanded. But this was only because he feared that it would be politically damaging if the plot was exposed. Indeed the ASIS chief at the time made clear to fellow spies that “personally he [Whitlam] would have wished to approve” the operation. Moreover, while ordering the end of ASIS’s role in the destabilisation plot, Whitlam facilitated the ongoing CIA operation against the elected Allende government by choosing not to expose it. This did not stop the CIA from carrying out a covert destabilisation campaign against Whitlam’s own administration! That culminated in the November 1975 overthrow of the Labor government in a right-wing coup executed by the British monarchy’s representative and long-time participant in CIA front organisations, then Governor General John Kerr. Although Whitlam was far more conservative and far less principled than the avowed Marxist, Allende, the American regime felt that he was still not a reliable enough backer of the critical Pine Gap U.S./Australia spy base in the Northern Territory. That the most progressive Labor government in Australian history was overthrown in such a coup shows the impossibility of realising even the rather modest aims of the Laborite project. That Whitlam had earlier stabbed his fellow social democrat Allende in the back by keeping him in the dark about the CIA destabilisation operation and by refusing to publicly expose the American interference plot only shows how the social democratic perspective of seeking to govern with the tolerance of the capitalist bigwigs and their state agencies inevitably means betraying the interests of the working class.

WHEN IT IS USEFUL TO GIVE CRITICAL ELECTORAL SUPPORT TO A
SOCIAL DEMOCRATIC PARTY AND WHEN TO DO SO WOULD BE A BETRAYAL

Despite the political bankruptcy of social democracy, there are certain times when mass working class based social democratic parties, like the ALP, could be pushed by their base to stand on a more explicitly pro-working class platform. This would be at a time of left-wing radicalisation of the working class and during a period of greater class struggle. Leaders of social democratic parties may then use the strengthened activity of their base to try and pressure the capitalists into granting some concessions to their base in order to dampen their mobilisation. At the same time, social democratic parties may put forward more overtly pro-working class demands and push to the fore more left-wing elements of their parties in order to maintain the authority of their base, so that they will be able to contain the radicalising working class and prevent them from heading in a revolutionary direction. In such circumstances, especially if the social democratic party has been out of government for a lengthy period, the working class masses could have serious expectations that should the party win office they would institute major pro-working class reforms. Although, in the event of a working class radicalisation, the worried capitalist class will be looking to social democracy to save their system from a resurgent working class, the demands that a social democratic party may be pushed to put forward could be too much for the capitalists to accept. In such scenarios, the capitalists as a whole may choose to actively campaign against the election of the social democratic party to government. If that were to happen, it may be worthwhile for communists to give electoral support to the mass social democratic party in order to deliver a political defeat to the capitalists and, thereby, embolden the anti-capitalist sentiments of the working class mases. Moreover, given that major pro-working class measures can only be implemented against the resistance of the capitalists through the powerful push of class struggle mobilisation, having a social democratic party in government when it actually stands on an anti-capitalist agenda can help intensify class struggle. However, any electoral support given by communists to a social democratic party like the Labor Party would be given with unyielding criticism of that party. We would point out that the social democratic party is incapable of realising its more worthy promises because it always ultimately seeks an accommodation with the capitalist exploiting class and because it is loyal to the capitalist state that enforces the interests of the exploiting class. Communists would warn the working class masses that the social democrats in government would inevitably betray them. We would insist that only class struggle action that is based on maintaining complete political independence from all the arms of the capitalist state can ensure major advances for the working class in the present; and that such gains can only be secured and reach decisive levels if the working class is able to lead all the oppressed in the seizure of state power. Thus, even in situations where it would be appropriate to give electoral support to a social democratic party, communists would be, in the words of Russian Revolution leader V.I. Lenin, seeking to support the social democratic party “in the same way as the rope supports a hanged man.”

When Lenin wrote the above words in April-May 1920 he was outlining why he believed that communists in Britain at the time should call for a vote for the British Labour Party while explaining to the masses that a Labor government would inevitably betray its working class supporters. Since then, nominally Marxist, left social democratic groups have seized on Lenin’s words to advocate giving electoral support to mass social democratic parties in every election, irrespective of the platform that those parties may claim to stand on. However, when Lenin advocated giving critical electoral support to the British Labour Party, the latter was claiming to stand on a program very different to Albanese’s Australian Labour Party today. With the most politically advanced layers of the British working class inspired by the socialist revolution in Russia two and a half years earlier and demanding a struggle for socialism in Britain, the leaders of the British Labour Party at the time knew that they would need to show some socialist credentials if they were to retain the loyalty of the British working class. In February 1918, notably just three months after Russia’s socialist revolution, the British Labour Party wrote into its constitution a commitment to socialist public ownership of the economy. They adopted Clause IV into their constitution, which stated that: “To secure for the workers by hand or by brain the full fruits of their industry and the most equitable distribution thereof that may be possible upon the basis of the common ownership of the means of production, distribution, and exchange, and the best obtainable system of popular administration and control of each industry or service.” In contrast, not only does the ALP today not even pretend to stand for nationalisation of the economy and socialism, it is known by the politically engaged masses for having supported privatisation. Indeed, it was the 1983-1996 Hawke/Keating ALP governments that unleashed the privatisation wave that has swept Australia over the last four decades. That Labor government sold off the Commonwealth Bank and Qantas. Then, in 2002, the Carr NSW Labor government and the Bracks Victorian Labor government joined with the then Howard federal Liberal-National government to privatise the bulk of Australia’s rail freight operations. Meanwhile, state Labor governments have sold off public housing and state-owned electricity generation and retail with almost as much vigour as their right-wing opponents.

Another major difference between the British Labour Party of 1920 and today’s ALP was in their respective attitudes to the capitalist war drive against the then biggest workers states of their times. To be sure, in 1920 the leaders of the British Labour Party were as hostile to Soviet Russia (the only workers state then) as the ALP leaders are today towards socialistic China. However, Britain’s Labour Party heads also knew that there was considerable sympathy for the Soviet workers state amongst the most politically active ranks of the British working class. This sympathy combined with war weariness (following World War I) and pacifist sentiments led to a number of protest actions against the British government’s military intervention in Russia that was supporting anti-communist forces that were waging a civil war to overthrow the young Soviet workers state and restore capitalist-landlord rule. There were even a series of daring mutinies by British forces in Russia who demanded to be sent home. Meanwhile, within Britain itself, troops staged mutinies against plans to send them to Russia. Then during the very weeks in April-May 1920 when Lenin was writing the book, “Left-Wing” Communism: an Infantile Disorder, where he made that call for British communists at the time to give critical electoral support to the Labour Party “in the same way as the rope supports a hanged man”, there were two very powerful actions by British workers in opposition to the government’s shipment of arms and munitions to the capitalist Polish regime that was waging a war against Soviet Russia. In one, seamen sabotaged barges carrying munitions to the Polish troops causing the barges to sink. Then dock and coal workers refused to load and supply the ship Jolly George that had been scheduled to send munitions to Poland. In these various actions and munities, rank- and-file Labour members participated. Aware of this, when the British government weeks later announced that it would be sending troops to Poland to help fight against Soviet Russia, the Labour Party leaders and pro-Labour trade union heads called for protest actions to oppose the intervention. They built Councils of Action across the country to oppose the expedition to Poland, organised a series of massive protests and even threatened a general strike should the intervention go ahead. As a result, the British government had to abandon its plans to openly support the Polish regime’s war on the Soviet workers state. How different was the stance of the British Labour Party in 1920 towards the war drive against the Soviet workers state from the policies of today’s ALP towards the war drive against socialistic China! Today, even before the elections, Albanese’s ALP vowed to prosecute the rapid anti-China expansion of the Australian military, expand the presence of U.S. forces in Australia aimed against Red China and continue the Australian navy’s participation in provocative Western military incursions into China-claimed waters off her coast.

None of the above changes the fact that Britain’s Labour Party in 1920 was just as much an enemy of the fight for workers revolution then as the Australian Labor Party is today. The British Labour Party was fresh from having criminally led workers into supporting their “own” capitalist exploiters in the horrific inter-imperialist slaughter that was World War I. Labour Party leaders even took up cabinet posts in a wartime coalition government led by the Liberal Party. It was for good reason that Lenin had labelled social democratic parties like the Labour Party a “stinking corpse”. The British Labour Party leadership’s pro-socialist posturing was largely about maintaining its hold over a radicalising working class. In 1919, British workers had unleashed a massive strike wave that continued into 1920. Labour parliamentary and union leaders while nominally supporting the strikes worked overtime to ensure that they did not reach the level that would threaten the stability of the capitalist order. This is despite the unions representing the miners, railways workers and dockers and other transport workers having earlier formed themselves into a Triple Alliance promising to stand as one to fight for their demands. However, when each section of workers was facing major disputes with their bosses in 1919 and 1920, the pro-Labour Party union leaders refused to call out their members to strike as one as the Triple Alliance promised. Labour leaders held the same attitude to the promises of Clause IV as they did to the Triple Alliance. Clause IV existed to express a sentiment that would maintain the allegiance of pro-socialist workers to Labour but provided no program of action as to how an economic system in Britain based on “common ownership of the means of production, distribution, and exchange” was going to be actually achieved. This was because the social democratic Labour leaders were unwilling to mobilise the revolutionary struggle needed to win such a system.

However, for most British workers it meant a lot that the leaders of the party that they saw as their party was promising to nationalise the mines and railways, greatly increase the provision of public housing and significantly redistribute income from the capitalists to the workers should they win the next election. To be sure, Lenin pointed out that the most politically advanced section of the British working class already distrusted Labour Party leaders and their commitment to deliver on their stated agenda. They had been convinced of this through communist propaganda and theory. However, the majority of workers could not be educated in this way. They needed to be shown through their own experience that social democracy is incapable of bringing a fundamental redistribution of power and wealth in society towards the working class – let alone open the road to socialism. Thus Lenin argued that it was necessary to get Labour elected to government and be put to the test. At the same time, communists must explain to the mass of British workers that communists are helping them to get the Labour Party elected in order to prove to them that the Labour Party will surely betray working class people. Communists would say to the British workers: we will prove to you that only our communist program can bring you lasting improvements in living standards, public ownership and socialism.

Yet such a tactic only made sense because British workers at the time could have genuine illusions that the Labour Party would nationalise key industries, seriously redistribute income towards the workers and make steps toward socialism. No politically engaged worker in Australia could have had illusions before last May’s elections that Albanese’s ALP was going to do any of these things. For not only did the ALP never promise any nationalisations, it was careful to not even speak about redistributing wealth from the capitalists to the masses in even the mildest way. Indeed, while the ALP did promise to stop the decline in real wages, it also promised to follow through on implementing the Coalition’s planned tax cuts for the rich – a promise that they dutifully kept!

Lenin’s advocacy of the tactic of critical support was also shaped by the attitude of the British capitalist class towards the Labour Party. Openly declaring his fear of a Labour victory, then prime minister from the capitalist Liberal Party, Lloyd George, compared the Labour Party to the Bolsheviks! He was of course completely wrong! However, such statements from capitalist leaders could only reinforce illusions amongst politically conscious British workers that the Labour Party would advance the country towards socialism. Moreover, the anti-Labour rants of Lloyd George and his then secretary of state for war, Winston Churchill, showed the then gulf between the agenda that the Labour Party had been pushed by their base to promise and the level of pro-working class reforms that the capitalist class were prepared to accept. In such a situation, an electoral victory for the Labour Party against the openly capitalist parties would be seen as a victory for the working class over the capitalists that would raise the fighting morale of anti-capitalist workers. This situation definitely did not occur in Australia around the May 2022 elections. A gauge of what the big end of town thought about the triumph of Albanese’s ALP in the last federal elections can be seen by comparing Australia’s stock market index immediately before and after the May 21 election. Not only was there no dramatic fall but the index actually rose slightly. This proved that much of the capitalist class were either mildly sympathetic or ambivalent towards the Labor victory over the conservatives. There was certainly no fear amongst wealthy investors that a Labor election would lead to a major reduction in the rate of capitalist profits.

The most important reason why Lenin and the other Bolshevik leaders, like Trotsky, thought that British communists should give critical electoral support to Britain’s Labour Party is because, at the time, that party had never previously led a national government. That meant that the majority of Labour’s working class base still had many illusions that should the party take over the government, this would lead to a substantial improvement in their living standards and major advances towards socialism. Many workers held the social democratic illusion that since workers make up the majority of the population, they could take over society through “democratic elections”. These hopes were reinforced by the then still expanding suffrage in Britain that was expanding the right to vote to workers who had been previously disenfranchised by laws restricting the right to vote to those who owned more than a specified amount of property. It was only in 1918 that all property requirements for male voters were scrapped granting the right to vote to the 40% of males hitherto denied suffrage because they lacked sufficient property; and that the right to vote was at long last extended to a large number of women (provided that they were over 30 and had some property – it took until 1928 for British women to be granted the same voting rights as men). British working class people expected that this expanded suffrage for working class people, the prospect of a future expansion of suffrage to low-income women lacking property and to younger women and the hoped-for scrapping of laws allowing business owners and other, mostly wealthy, individuals to vote twice, would open the way for workers to finally bring their numbers in society to bear in the political field. Lenin and the other leaders of the Communist International understood that it would take the experience of Labour in government to dash the hopes of the mass of politically engaged British workers that there could be an electoral road to socialism.

More than a century later, when workers in both Britain and Australia have been subjected to many Labour/Labor governments over the decades, such illusions amongst workers have been disappointed many times over. Indeed, over the last four decades, the Australian Labor Party has headed the federal government for a full half of this period. Therefore, right now, working class people in Australia do not have unrealistic expectations that a Labor government would fundamentally restructure society in their interests. That means that for communists to today consider applying the tactic of critical support towards the Labor Party, the ALP would need to stand on a far more emphatic pro-working class agenda than would have been required for communists to apply critical support in the period before the ALP first headed a majority government or in the period when it had been out of office for several decades (as was the case when the Whitlam Labor government was elected in 1972). The leaders of the anti-revolutionary ALP would only proclaim such an agenda if they were pushed to do so by a huge surge in militancy and left-wing radicalism of their working class base. Yet when the socialist consciousness of working class people reaches the next level – when the majority of the politically active section of the toiling masses is not only intent on resisting capitalist exploitation but desire the sweeping away of the entire capitalist order – then the time for electoral tactics becomes superseded; and communists will need to immediately organise a direct struggle for the working class seizure of state power. Therefore, while it still exists, the window, in terms of working class consciousness, in which the tactic of critical support to mass social democratic parties is applicable is narrower than it was a century ago.

What is called for before determining whether the tactic of critical support should be applied towards a particular social democratic party is a careful examination of what the party is claiming to stand for, what attitude the capitalist class is taking towards that party, what the sentiments of the working class are and what the general state of the class struggle is. What is definitely not needed is to mindlessly campaign for the victory of mass social democratic parties at every election based on what Lenin advocated towards the British Labour Party more than a century ago ‒ a position that was based on the particular circumstances at the time where that party had never previously led a government and, pushed by the striking growth in pro-socialist sentiments amongst their base following the October 1917 Russian Revolution, was proclaiming its intent to nationalise key industries and oppose its own rulers’ war moves against Soviet Russia. Those far-left groups that advocated a vote for the ALP at last year’s federal elections when the ALP was not even pretending to stand on an anti-capitalist program achieved the very opposite of Lenin’s tactic of supporting a mass social democratic party “in the way that a rope supports a hanged man.” Instead of helping to break the working class masses from allegiance to the ALP in the direction of support for communism, their call for support to the ALP pushed the masses, disgruntled at the Labor Party’s subservience to the capitalist bigwigs, back towards the Labor Party. No matter what else they said, by calling to support Albanese’s ALP, these pseudo-Leninist groups sent a message to those that they have influence over that no matter how much the ALP upholds the domination of the big end of town at home and the international agenda of that class abroad, workers have “no choice” but to support the ALP as “a lesser evil”. This can only breed despair and demoralisation amongst the working class. It harms the building of class struggle resistance to the capitalist exploiters.

WHAT ABOUT THE GREENS?

Given how small are the differences between Labor’s agenda and that of the Liberals, the Greens have gained a growing following amongst progressive-minded youth and the small-l liberal, middle class. They are attracted to the Greens by some progressive policies that the Greens advocate. This includes the Greens platform calling for dental to be covered by Medicare. Unlike the ALP, whose plan to grow “social” housing only involves a small increase in privately owned, “community housing” rather than any increase in public housing, the Greens stand for actually increasing public housing, albeit at a modest pace. However, to implement such reforms, let alone really substantial anti-poverty measures, requires standing up to inevitable resistance from the majority of the capitalist class. The Greens cannot do this because they reject a class struggle outlook. This is because the Greens actually embrace wealthy capitalists in their own party and a dominant role in their party is played by upper-middle class elements who gain part of their income from capitalist share investments. For example, one capitalist investor, Duncan Turpie, has personally donated over a million dollars to the Greens over the last few years. Therefore, lacking both the will and ability to challenge capitalist power, any Greens in government will inevitably bend to the demands of the powerful capitalists.

That is why in the early 2010s, when the Greens had two ministries in the then Tasmanian government, they were part of a joint government with Labor that cut nursing jobs and public housing maintenance. Federally, as part of a defacto coalition with Labor from 2010 to 2013, the Greens helped oversee the final privatisation of Telstra begun under John Howard. Today, they back the rest of the capitalist class’ drive to strangle socialistic rule in China. Indeed, while opposing the AUKUS nuclear submarine plans, the Greens are even more rabid than either Labor or the Coalition when it comes to spewing the lying “human rights” tirades against China that “rationalises” such military escalation. In this the Australian Greens are similar to their German counterparts who today form a key part of Germany’s coalition government alongside the Social Democratic Party and the avidly neoliberal, Free Democratic Party. The leader of Germany Greens, Annalena Baerbock, is that country’s foreign minister. While preferring to wrap their meddling imperialist agenda in more “human rights” packaging than their right-wing counterparts, Germany’s Greens are so extreme in supporting both Western imperialism’s proxy war against Russia and its Cold War drive against socialistic China that they would make neoconservatives blush! A future Greens role in the Australian government, either as a coalition with Labor or alone, would similarly see them act as imperialist warriors with a “progressive” face. Although the Greens call for lowering defence spending to 1.5% of GDP that would still be much higher than the likes of Canada and Japan and, on a per person level, nearly five times higher than China’s. The Greens international agenda is to support essentially the same imperialist interests of Australia’s capitalist class that Labor and the Coalition uphold, while pushing to supplement military might with greater use of “human rights” propaganda, increased support for pro-Western opposition movements in countries targeted by Western imperialism and deeper utilisation of Australian government aid as a means of political manipulation.

The Greens unwillingness and inability, as a party, to resolutely stand up to the rest of the capitalist establishment has sometimes even been evident when their own members have been targeted by other sections of the ruling class. Greens politicians are frequently pilloried by Far-Right parties, right-wing Coalition MPs, the Murdoch media, conservative think tanks and other organs of the hard right-wing of the capitalist class. Copping such, often vicious
and personal, attacks is indeed part of what gives the Greens credibility with progressive-minded people. A favourite target of the rabid right-wing is the federal Greens First Nations portfolio head – DjabWurrung Gunnai Gunditjmara Aboriginal woman and senator from Victoria, Lidia Thorpe. Before becoming a Greens senator, Thorpe had been well known as a staunch activist for Aboriginal rights. Thus, her entry into the Greens gave the party increased authority amongst many Aboriginal people and leftists. In May 2017, at the Uluru Aboriginal convention where supporters of constitutional recognition created their petition calling for the establishment of a First Nations “Voice” enshrined in the Australian Constitution, Lidia Thorpe was one of the staunch activists who walked out of the convention in protest at the direction it was heading in. She stated at the time, “We as sovereign First Nations people reject constitutional recognition. We do not recognise occupying power or their sovereignty, because it serves to disempower, and takes away our voice,” insisting that, “We need to protect and preserve our sovereignty.” When the new Albanese government announced its intention to push for the implementation of the advisory “Voice”, Thorpe made clear that she was not going to simply roll over and accept the scheme that was being championed by small-l liberals, social democrats, “progressive”-liberals and many mainstream conservatives. Lidia Thorpe insisted that a Treaty between the government and Aboriginal people, a Truth Commission to lay bare all the genocidal crimes that have been perpetrated against Aboriginal people, the stopping of Aboriginal deaths in custody and providing proper compensation for Aboriginal people who were stolen from their families when children, all took precedence over the “Voice”. As a result of this stance, the centrist and “progressive” sections of the ruling class establishment joined their right-wing counterparts in setting their political gunsights on Thorpe. It was, indeed, the supposedly centrist-“progressive” ABC News that led the renewed witch hunt against Lidia Thorpe. They sensationalised an “exposé’” about how Thorpe had once briefly dated a former Victorian leader of an “outlaw” bikie gang. Quickly, the rest of the racist establishment joined the beat up claiming that Thorpe had a potential conflict of interest because she sat on a parliamentary “law enforcement committee”, even though the person she dated had years before left the motorcycle group and had no criminal convictions and despite the committee having not even inquired into outlaw motorcycle groups during Thorpe’s time as a member. Indeed, the man Thorpe briefly dated, who is a strong supporter of Aboriginal rights, seems to be a saint relative to the greedy, often corrupt and frequently racist capitalist exploiters that most parliamentarians associate with. Yet, less than an hour after the ABC unleashed this revamped witch-hunt against Lidia Thorpe, Greens leader Adam Bandt cowardly forced his First Nations portfolio head to resign as the Greens deputy leader in the Senate. Bandt also publicly condemned Thorpe for showing a “significant lack of judgement”, while saying nothing against the obvious beat up against her. A party that cannot even defend one of its own leaders against a ruling class witch hunt, moreover one laden with large amounts of racism and misogyny, is incapable of standing up to the rest of the capitalist ruling class more generally. The Greens should be given no political support – including at election time!

After this article was written, on 6 February 2022, DjabWurrung Gunnai Gunditjmara woman and prominent voice for Aboriginal rights, Lidia Thorpe, quit the Greens. The federal senator, who had been the Greens First Nations spokesperson, will now sit as an independent. Announcing her resignation from the Greens, Lidia Thorpe stated that: “This country has a strong grassroots blak sovereign movement, full of staunch and committed warriors, and I want to represent that movement fully”, “It has become clear to me that I can’t do that within the Greens.” Earlier, targeted for her strong advocacy of Aboriginal rights and her refusal to simply roll over and accept the powerless “Voice” to parliament scheme that was being championed by small-l liberals, social democrats and “progressive”-liberals and many mainstream conservatives, Lidia Thorpe had been subjected to a despicable witch-hunt over having once dated a former member of a motorcycle gang (big deal!). Greens leader, Adam Bandt, failed to defend Thorpe from the witch-hunt and indeed cowardly forced his First Nations portfolio head to resign as the Greens deputy leader in the Senate. Although our Marxist-Leninist politics are different to Lidia Thorpe’s politics, we salute her determined advocacy of Aboriginal people’s liberation right now and say: Down with the racist, right-wing and small-l liberal witch-hunt of Lidia Thorpe! Bravo Lidia Thorpe for having the courage of her convictions to resign from the Greens in order to unshackle her struggle for Aboriginal people’s rights! Hopefully Lidia Thorpe’s resignation will encourage any progressive-minded workers or youth that have illusions in the Greens to also break from the party. And hopefully it will put pressure on those Far Left groups that tail after the Greens and give it electoral support to dump their unprincipled support to this party of the “progressive”-liberal wing of the inherently anti-Aboriginal, capitalist establishment. We say: No unity with any wing of Australia’s racist, capitalist ruling class – including the “progressive”-liberal wing represented by the Greens!
Photo credit: Matt Roberts/ABC News

Several socialist groups that stood to the left of the Greens also ran in the May 2022 federal elections. Unlike the Greens, these parties proudly proclaim themselves anti-capitalist organisations. Among these groups is Socialist Alliance. Whereas the Greens advocate maintaining the U.S.-Australia alliance – only calling for it to be “renegotiated” – Socialist Alliance rightly demand an end to the alliance. Moreover, while the Greens leadership refused to defend their own First Nations portfolio head, Lidia Thorpe, from the reactionary witch hunt unleashed against her five months after the elections, Socialist Alliance had the decency to condemn the attack upon her. However, Socialist Alliance tied their 2022 electoral campaign to the Greens. They called not only for directing preferences to the Greens but for a vote to the Greens in seats where their own party was not standing. This is despite Socialist Alliance and other pro-Greens socialists sometimes acknowledging the capitalist essence of the Greens. By advocating a vote for the Greens, Socialist Alliance and other pro-Greens socialists are undermining class struggle by, in effect, promoting the false notion that a wing of the capitalist class – represented by the Greens – can improve workers’ lives. This is as harmful to the building of militant unions as the false notion at the workplace level that workers can improve their lot by helping “nicer” managers to become their top bosses.

The tailing of the Greens by the likes of Socialist Alliance not only reflects their failure to insist on the independence of the working class movement from all wings of the capitalist class – including the “progressive”-liberal wing represented by the Greens – but also the fact that these reformist socialist groups share not only the Greens’ progressive positions but also share its reactionary loyalty to the key global strategic agendas of the Australian capitalist class. Thus, Socialist Alliance, like the Greens, are avid supporters of the U.S.-NATO-Australian regimes’ proxy war against Russia. An 18 September 2022 Socialist Alliance resolution even supported the supply of arms to Ukraine by these Western regimes. Still more harmfully, Socialist Alliance apes the Greens in lining up behind the principle strategic goal of the U.S. and Australian imperialist ruling classes: to destroy the Chinese workers state. Socialist Alliance excuses this position by ridiculously claiming that China is just another “capitalist” country and, what’s more, one dominated by “authoritarian nationalist politics.” With these rationales, Socialist Alliance, while rightly opposing the U.S.-Australia military build up against China, fervently support the Western imperialists’ anti-communist propaganda assaults on Red China over “human rights”. They also support all the forces attacking socialistic rule in China from within – from the pro-colonial, upper-middle class, anti-communist opposition forces in Hong Kong to the Taiwanese capitalist ruling class seeking to guarantee its rule of exploitation through securing independence from socialistic China to last November’s Chinese version of the Far Right-instigated, anti-COVID response “Freedom” protests. Unless Socialist Alliance both dumps their support for the imperialist-driven campaign to undermine the Chinese workers state and breaks free from the orbit of the “progressive”-capitalist Greens, they should not be given even critical electoral support – including at the upcoming NSW state election.

WHAT THE MAY 2022 ELECTION RESULTS SIGNIFIED

The Greens gained significantly during last May’s federal elections. With an increasing share of the vote, they boosted their numbers in the Lower House from one seat to four seats and their Senate numbers went up by to twelve seats from the nine held previously. Although the Coalition were badly defeated, the ALP’s first preference vote actually fell slightly. The loss in Coalition vote in affluent areas was in good part siphoned off to so-called Teal “independents” that advocated greater action against climate change, gender equality and more small-l liberal social policies. Their success represented a rebuff by the liberal sections of the upper class and upper middle-class to the Liberal-National’s increasingly extreme, rightward course on social policies, resistance to action on climate change and male chauvinist internal culture. These “independents” grabbed six formerly safe Liberal seats in urban and suburban areas in addition to those that they held prior to the elections. However, these Teal independents are as committed to anti-working class, neoliberal economic policies as the conservatives. Their campaigns relied on lavish funding from corporate bigwigs and other wealthy individuals. Some of this went directly to TEAL candidates and the rest was funnelled through campaign groups like Climate 200, which alone provided nearly $6 million dollars to TEAL candidates. Among those making donations well in excess of $1 million to the TEALs and Climate 200 were Australia’s fourth and fifth richest capitalist exploiters – Atlassian cofounders Mike Cannon-Brookes and Scott Farquhar – and the CEO of trading outfit VivCourt, Rob Keldoulis. Also providing big bucks for the TEALs is Climate 200 convenor, Simon Holmes à Court, a capitalist investor and one of the heirs to the wealth of his father, Australia’s first billionaire, ruthless corporate raider Robert Holmes à Court. On the opposite political flank of the Coalition, the Liberals and Nationals lost votes to the Far-Right parties. The parties to the right of the Coalition increased their vote by nearly 60% relative to the previous elections. That means that last May’s elections saw one in eight people vote in the Lower House for a range of extreme right-wing parties including the racist Pauline Hanson’s One Nation and Liberal Democratic parties and billionaire Clive Palmer’s ultra-nationalist, United Australia Party. This reflected the dangerously growing right-wing extremism of a chunk of Australia’s disgruntled middle class and self-employed layers – a result of their economic insecurities in the context of the decaying capitalist order and the present failure of the workers movement to provide a powerful anti- capitalist alternative that could channel the legitimate component of middle-class grievances. The splintering away, in either direction, from the main parties of the capitalist class, the Liberals and the Nationals, ultimately reflects the crisis of confidence that the capitalist class feels internally as it agonises over the economic and social crises of its own system, on the one hand, and on the other, panics over the implications posed by the successes of socialistic rule in the world’s most populous country.

Given that there was no mass workers party running on an anti-capitalist platform in last May’s elections, the most crucial aspect of the election results to examine was the proportion of people who did not cast valid votes. It turns out that the number of people who risked a fine by neither showing up to vote nor filling out a postal ballot increased by 25% from the previous elections – reflecting fading hopes in the supposedly “democratic” political system. Over one in ten voters did this. More interesting still is to analyse the number of people who turned up to the ballot boxes to get their names ticked off to avoid a fine and then did not cast a valid vote. Some of these people even wrote messages criticising the political parties instead of numbering the boxes. More than eight hundred thousand people in this way “voted” Informal at last May’s federal elections. Although a very small proportion of these people may have simply filled out the forms in error, for the most part, their Informal “vote” represented distrust of all the political parties running in the elections.

Such anti-establishment suspicion could come from a number of different standpoints. In the worst case it could reflect people’s adherence to any number of crazy, inherently right-wing, conspiracy theories or to the fact that each extreme right-wing party was not on the ballot in every seat where there were people who wanted to vote for them. However, the greatest share of the Informal vote came from working class voters – often from people of colour backgrounds – who would never dream of voting for the Liberals or Far-Right parties but are understandably disillusioned with the ALP for not standing up for their interests. This is proven by the big disparity in the Informal “vote” between the wealthy electorates and the strongly, pro-ALP working class electorates. Thus in the rich Sydney electorate of Wentworth, which includes plush suburbs like Bellevue Hill, Point Piper, Rose Bay and Vaucluse, just 2.5% of people “voted” Informal. Wealthy residents trust the political system and their casting of valid votes reflects their understanding that they have a voice in how the system operates. In contrast, the opposite sentiment is significant in working class areas. Thus, in the Sydney electorate of Blaxland, which largely consists of heavily Asian, Middle Eastern, African and Islander working class suburbs like Auburn, Bankstown, Chester Hill and Villawood, the Informal “vote” was well over four times higher than it was in wealthy Wentworth. Nearly one in nine voters showed up to the ballots in Blaxland only to cast an Informal “vote”. Indeed, in particular voting booths in Sydney’s multiracial southwest, the Informal vote was even higher. In the Blaxland polling booth in Auburn West, nearly one in five voters cast an Informal “vote”. In the Villawood North polling booth in the seat of Fowler and the Fairfield Heights booth in the McMahon electorate, the Informal “vote” was also more than 18%. By contrast, a ten times lower proportion of voters cast an Informal “vote” at the polling booths in the wealthy Double Bay and Bellevue Hill South areas. Some mainstream political commentators, eager to cover up the distrust in the “democratic” system amongst the working class masses, patronisingly claim that the much higher Informal “vote” in migrant, working class areas is due to poor education and lack of English ability causing people not to know how to vote properly. However, while such problems caused by socio-economic disadvantage is a minor factor, it is not the main one. This is proven by the reality that the Informal “vote” in the Senate, where people have greater choice in the parties that they can vote for, is more than a third lower than it is in the Lower House vote. The fact that the Informal “vote” mostly represents a conscious choice to reject all the parties running in the elections is further proven by the fact that the Informal vote fluctuates widely from election to election. After all, if unintentional errors in filling out ballot papers were the cause of the Informal vote it should not swing so wildly from election to election.

Indeed, the narrow defeat of high-profile Labor candidate Kristina Keneally to a local independent in the multiracial, working class, southwestern Sydney electorate of Fowler can be, in good part, put down to the fact that well over one in ten voters – no doubt mostly potential Labor voters – turned up to the ballots to get their names ticked off and then cast an informal “vote”. Indeed, when a Trotskyist Platform supporter in this electorate explained to Labor election day canvassers why he would be “voting” Informal, the reaction of the Labor activists was along the lines off: Oh no, not you as well, please don’t waste your vote like so many other people! This indicated that many others in the electorate were “voting” Informal as a conscious rejection of all the parliamentary parties and in particular as a rebuff of the party that they see as the party which should represent them but which they rightly understand has betrayed them – the ALP.

WORKERS DO NEED A PARTY – BUT ONE BUILT TO ORGANISE
INTRANSIGENT RESISTANCE TO THE CAPITALIST CLASS

That proportion of working class people who would never support the conservative or Far-Right parties but are disillusioned with Labor can be a key force for organising class struggle action to fight for the rights of working class people and all the oppressed. However, that is only if their disappointment with Labor and the whole system does not lead to them becoming skeptical of the possibility of achieving change and cause them to become depoliticised. Especially when plunging living standards and economic insecurity constantly impel people into political activity, political demoralisation can sometimes be people’s first step to turning towards the Far Right whose stock in trade is, after all, to turn despair at the possibility of resisting the big end of town into scapegoating of the most downtrodden layers of society.

That is why it is crucial that there be built a working class party that will provide a genuine alternative to the many disillusioned former Labor supporters. However, such a party must be completely different to the ALP. We do not need another party vying for administrative leadership of the capitalist system in order to try to tweak the system to serve the masses’ interests, which is the mission impossible that the ALP seeks to fulfil (at least in the most generous evaluation of the party’s ethos). What we need instead is a workers party that is committed to organising intransigent mass resistance to the capitalist exploiting class and their system. Right now, the potential to mobilise such class struggle resistance is especially evident in Europe where the masses living standards are plunging particularly rapidly. Angered by surging inflation and crumbling public services, hundreds of thousands of French transport workers, teachers, oil refinery workers and others went on strike last Friday against French president Macron’s moves to raise the age at which people can get the aged pension. Meanwhile, workers in Britain have unleased the biggest wave of industrial action there in decades. In the last two months, rail workers, bus drivers, teachers, nurses, paramedics, postal workers and others have waged a series of strikes against falling real wages. To mobilise such struggle here and, most importantly, to ensure that the struggles are both raised to the level of intensity and guided to the direction that can ensure victory (which is a challenge also acutely faced by the rebelling workers movements of France and Britain given their social democratic misleadership), it is necessary to not only positively motivate the need for such actions but to knock down the serious political obstacles impeding militant class struggle resistance.

One such obstacle is the widely held illusion that a Labor government is, in some way, a workers government. A more left-wing version of this myth is the idea that even though an ALP government is far from ideal, the ALP in office can be made to serve the interests of the masses through political pressure and campaigning. Unfortunately, such illusions are being reinforced by many Far Left groups – due to their social democratic skew away from authentic Marxism. This includes the Communist Party of Australia (CPA). Thus, an open letter sent last June by the CPA’s National President to prime minister Albanese praises his government’s stance on a number of issues while politely urging him to take a more progressive stance on others. The letter begins by expressing warm solidarity with the new government:

“Dear Prime Minister Albanese, The Communist Party of Australia wishes to congratulate you on the election of a Labor government and the more diverse Cabinet of MPs and Senators. We recognise you will face many challenges from the nine years of the corrupt, dysfunctional Coalition government with its anti-worker, union-bashing record.”

The Guardian, Issue #2012, 27 June 2022,
https://cpa.org.au/guardian/issue-2012/open-letter-to-the-prime-minister-of-australia/

The CPA letter then covers up the Albanese government’s failure to seriously push for real wage rises and its backing of a minimum wage increase that it knew would not be sufficient to match the widely predicted increase in inflation in the following months by cheering that “We warmly welcome your government’s swift action to support a cost-of living increase in the minimum wage. The outcome is a start to arresting the decline in real wages experienced by low and middle-income workers over recent decades.” Well it wasn’t even a start! Real wages have plummeted at an even greater rate in the seven months since! The CPA letter even praised the Albanese government’s stance on the Palestinian issue by stating that: “We congratulate your government on its stand at the United Nations in not supporting the US-led opposition to an inquiry into human rights abuses by Israel in the occupied territories of Palestine.” Yet, even then it was clear that the new government had no intention of reversing the Australian regime’s long-standing support for Israel’s brutal oppression of the Palestinian people. Indeed, over the last few months, the ALP government has been amongst just a small number of other governments around the world to oppose UN motions aimed against the Israeli regime’s tyranny over the Palestinian people and other Arab peoples in its neighbourhood.

The most harmful aspect of the CPA leadership’s warm open letter to the head of Australia’s capitalist regime is the false notions that it promotes amongst the party’s supporters that the Albanese government deserves some level of support and can be pressured to take a basically progressive course. Such ideas are completely wrong. The Labor Party is, to be sure, a party with a working class base. However, its leadership and program support the capitalist order. Moreover, the Albanese government heads a state machine that has been built up to enforce the interests of the exploiting class. As the last eight months of plunging real wages, skyrocketing rents and continued military build-up against socialistic China proves, the Albanese government is an enemy of the working class and oppressed. Although the CPA and other reformist Far Left groups say that “grassroots campaigning and direct action” is necessary to “push Labor to the left and force progressive policy on key issues”, their semi-favourable portrayal of the ALP government and their sugar-coating of its actions acts to deter the building of truly intransigent class struggle. For it reinforces the false notion that militant anti-capitalist struggle – whether aimed against reactionary policies of the Labor government or against particular capitalist bosses – should currently be avoided, lest it undermine a Labor government that should be given some level of support. Today, the wide acceptance of this idea by politically active workers and progressive youth is the main reason why, despite working class people’s plummeting living standards here, the Australian workers movement and Left has yet to unleash, even, the level of class and other progressive social struggle seen in the likes of France and Britain.

Britain, 18 January 2023: Nurses picket outside London’s University College Hospital as part of a mass nurses’ strike. Over the last two months, Britain has had its biggest strike wave in decades as workers desperately demand decent pay rises to keep up with soaring living costs. However, the full potential of such powerful strike action is held back from being brought to bear by the social democratic (pro-Labour Party), present leadership of Britain’s workers movement. The same problem faces the Australian working class. Moreover, even though Australian workers are seeing similar cuts to their real wages as their British counterparts, since a Labor government is in office here (unlike in Britain), the pro-Labor social democratic bent of Australia’s current union leadership and beliefs amongst workers themselves that a Labor government should be supported as a “lesser evil” has meant that workers here are yet to unleash the level of resistance seen in Britain – let alone the massive, hard-fought struggle needed to truly smash the attacks on workers’ living standards.
Photo credit: Reuters/Toby Melville

Another widely held misconception holding back class struggle right now is the idea that the new Albanese government has won a “mandate” through its election and should not be opposed in the first half of its term, at least when it is carrying out policies that it took to the elections. However, under capitalism, such “mandates” are not truly “democratically” chosen by the people. For in capitalist societies, any elections and the political discourse leading up to them do not express the interests of the majority of people – the working class masses. For starters, this is because it is capitalists who thoroughly dominate ownership of the media and, thus, ensure that it is only the policies that serve their class that are being promoted by the news media. Moreover, through their incredible wealth, it is the capitalists who are, in great disproportion to their numbers, able to dominate funding of political parties, buying of political advertising, hiring of lobbyists and establishing of those supposedly “independent” think tanks and “movements” (like the right-wing Advance Australia) that have such a great impact on public opinion. Disclosures about political donations in Australia are not yet available for the 2021-22 financial year when the federal elections were held and, thus, when the biggest donations would have been made. But records do show that in the previous financial year, a whopping $177 million dollars flowed into Australia’s political parties – most of it through undisclosed donations and receipts. From the records of the small portion of donations that are disclosed, we do know that in the last two financial years for which records are available, 2019-2020 and 2020-2021, Australia’s fifth richest person with a total wealth of $24.3 billion, Anthony Pratt and family (owners of packaging and paper giant Visy Industries) donated nearly $2.9 million to the Coalition. Meanwhile, in the same period, Australia’s seventh richest person, Clive Palmer, donated nearly $6 million to his United Australia Party, which helped it win a Senate seat in Victoria at the recent federal election. And if you are wondering why the Coalition and Labor keep on allowing the bank bosses to ruthlessly plunder from their customers despite these corporate bigwigs admitting to rip-off practices like charging customers account management fees for no service, here is some part of your answer: from 2019 to 2021 the four big banks donated a combined $580,000 to each of Labor and the Coalition. With such huge money flowing into the “democratic process” from the corporate elite, what chance do the working class masses struggling to pay bills have to significantly shape the “mandates” of the dominant parliamentary parties? The fact is that these “mandates” primarily represent the will of the super-rich capitalist exploiting class. We should not be bowing down before any such “mandates”!

Since this article was written, the Australian Electoral Commission has finally released the list of major political donations for the financial year from 1 July 2021 to 30 June 2022. Above are some of the ultra-rich capitalists whose large political donations thoroughly shaped last May’s federal elections and the political discourse that surrounded it. From Left to Right: Anthony Pratt, Australia’s fifth richest person and owner of the Visy packaging giant; filthy rich tycoon, Dick Honan, who along with his children own agribusiness behemoth, Manildra Group; mining billionaire, Clive Palmer; Australia’s fourth richest capitalist, Scott Farquhar; high-rolling investor, Duncan Turpie; Pierre Langenhoven who alongside his wife, Luciana, are big-time pastoralists in the NT and the son-in-law and daughter respectively of one of South Africa’s richest men. In the 2021-2022 financial year, Anthony Pratt made political donations of almost $4 million evenly distributed to the ALP and the Coalition. This is unlike in the previous two years, where Pratt donated a total of over $2.8 million to the Coalition as against just 0.35% of that amount to the ALP. The big turnaround reflects the fact that the capitalists were increasingly worried that the corrupt and unpopular Morrison government would not be able to hold back workers’ anger over falling real wages. Hence, the capitalist exploiters thought that Labor, with its organic ties to the union leadership, would be more effective at restraining workers’ resistance than the conservatives. As a result, many capitalists chose to support, or at minimum be indifferent to, an ALP victory in the 2022 elections. Dick Honan’s Manildra Group also gave big amounts to both sides: donating $154,200 to the Coalition and a slightly lesser $105,718 to Labor. Clive Palmer made by far the biggest political donations. He incredibly gave almost $117 million to his United Australia Party (UAP) and another $250,000 to fellow Far Right outfit, the Liberal Democratic Party. As a result, despite the UAP’s increasingly extremist right-wing politics, mixed with a good deal of crackpot conspiracy, the UAP was able to win a Senate seat and increase its vote in the lower house by 20%. Meanwhile Scott Farquhar donated $1.5 million to the Climate 200 campaign group that was in good part responsible for getting the TEAL “independents” elected and which also backed the Centre Alliance that won a lower house seat in the only seat that it contested. By donating more than three quarters of a million dollars to his campaign, Climate 200 were also largely responsible for getting elected ACT “independent” senator David Pocock (who later became known for weakening the only significant pro-worker aspect of the government’s “Secure Jobs, Better Pay” law). Farquhar also donated $8,000 to the Greens. However, the biggest single donor to the Greens in the 2021-2022 financial year was capitalist investor, Duncan Turpie, who gave the party a whopping $545,555. Also sizable donors to the Greens are the pastoral companies owned by the Langenhoven family. These filthy rich, rural capitalists donated a combined $29,000 to the Greens last financial year.

In all the imperialist countries, at all times, among the biggest obstacles to working class resistance is the notion that the capitalist class on the one hand and working class people and other downtrodden sectors on the other have substantial common interests. This false notion is continuously drummed into the working class masses by the currently social democratic, ACTU leadership of our unions. The capitalist ruling class also actively promotes this lie. In large part they do this through whipping up nationalism and the false notion that accompanies it: that all people of the nation regardless of their class position have a common “national interest”. In actual fact, it is the very opposite that is true: that the rights of the working class and all the downtrodden can only be advanced at the expense of the immediate economic interests of the capitalists … and vice versa! This was true even a century ago when Britain’s Labour Party promised substantial reforms benefiting working class people without challenging the capitalist order. However, it is even more so today. For capitalism has reached a still more senile and diseased state than it was in a century earlier. Even by a century ago, the capitalist system had outlived the period when it could still provide some progressive benefits to humanity. The appalling slaughter of World War I where the rival capitalist powers sent the masses of their own countries and their colonies to kill each other for the sake of their competing claims over spheres of exploitation showed this all too clearly. By 1921, Britain and the rest of the capitalist world was in the midst of a sharp post-war recession. Yet, in a longer-term sense, capitalism today is afflicted by a still more severe malaise. The economic collapse in the capitalist world during the late noughties Great Recession was the clearest indicator of this. Most major capitalist economies had never fully recovered from this plunge when they were buffeted by new crises associated with first, COVID and now, out of control inflation. The latest available figures (for 2021) show that since the eve of the late noughties Great Recession, average incomes (adjusted for inflation) have plummeted by 8% in Britain, 9% in Italy, 15% in Brazil and 37% in Greece. The real incomes of the working class section of the population in these countries have fallen still more steeply. If Australia did not suffer to the same degree from the Great Recession and its aftermath, it is solely because China’s booming socialistic state-owned enterprises bought up an ever greater amount of exports from Australia. Indeed, much of the capitalist world has only been saved from still greater disintegration by the rapid growth of the market provided by a socialistic country, in China, combined with the inflation-lowering impact of imports from Red China. To be sure, the wonderful capacity of us humans to innovate occasionally injects some vitality into the shrivelled up veins of late-stage capitalism. However, the system is unable to deliver the benefits of such innovation to the masses. Instead, the capitalist bosses’ only “effective” means to prop up their system is to ever more steeply increase the rate at which they exploit their workers. In by far the biggest capitalist economy, the U.S., real wages are today what they were 50 years ago. In Australia, real wages are lower than they were 12 years earlier. With their system mired in economic and social stagnation and decay, the capitalist bigwigs are even more loathe to grant concessions to the masses than they were a century ago. It will take very intense class struggle to win any substantial gains for the exploited and oppressed masses.

If it is to be able to build large-scale resistance against the ruling class, the workers party that we need will have to oppose nationalism and consciously dispel the myths about the possibility of “win-win” collaboration between the capitalist exploiters and the exploited workers. It will have to convince the masses that every setback for the capitalist rulers strengthens the struggle to advance the rights of working class people and all the downtrodden. That means that such a party would resolutely oppose the extreme exploitation of PNG, East Timor, Fiji, the Solomon Islands and other South Pacific nations by Australian-owned corporations; while opposing the neo-colonial meddling in the region that the Australian regime engages in to facilitate such plunder. Understanding that any setbacks for the U.S./NATO/Australian proxy war against Russia in Ukraine can only make the Western ruling classes more vulnerable to resistance from their masses, a class struggle workers party would stand for the defence of Russia in this conflict – despite the reactionary, capitalist nature of Russia’s ruling class. It would demand an end to all weapons supplies to Ukraine and the immediate dropping of all economic sanctions against Russia.

Whereas the ALP and its allies in the ACTU leadership limit their demands to what it thinks the capitalists will reluctantly tolerate, the new workers party that must be built will fight for what the working class and all oppressed actually need. Given that the crisis-ridden capitalist system cannot satisfy the masses’ aspirations, the ultimate task of such a party is to lead the working class masses to depose the capitalist exploiters from power and take state power into their own hands. This is not an easy task. The capitalists have enormous wealth, control of the economy and the physical power of all the current state institutions. Therefore, to be able to organise the eventual defeat of such an immense force, the members of the revolutionary workers party that we need must be made to adhere to much more rigorous obligations than that of the Labor Party. In the ALP, many join due to a combination of, on the one hand, wanting to advance the interests of working people and, on the other, wanting to build lucrative and socially respectable careers in politics. For the ranks of the party it is more the former that motivates them. However, for the personally ambitious and pushily, careerist-minded people who shove themselves into Labor leadership positions, it is the latter that is often more important. Furthermore, the longer the careers of such leading ALP members progress and, correspondingly, the more evident it is to them that the party’s strategy is incapable of delivering the gains for the masses that may have once primarily motivated them, the more cynical that they become and the more shamelessly that they subordinate their principles for the sake of personal advancement. In contrast, for a party seeking to accomplish so difficult a task as the defeat of the powerful capitalist rulers, the political activity of all members will need to be solely motivated by the goals of liberating the exploited and oppressed and advancing the well-being of humanity. Thus, in working hard to contribute to the building of such a party, we in Trotskyist Platform insist that our members must not seek any personal financial advantage whatsoever out of their involvement in the party’s activities, other than the benefits that they would share with the rest of the masses due to participation in victorious struggles – for example through party members at a workplace being part of industrial action that wins higher wages for all workers at the site. Similarly, members of a revolutionary workers party must not seek even non-material forms of particular personal benefit from their political activities, whether that be fame, ego, sex appeal, social networks or even excitement, although a number of these things, to some degree, may arise as a by-product of their involvement in the struggle. Most crucially, members of a revolutionary party will need to make enormous personal sacrifices for the sake of the struggle and show great personal and political courage.

Despite the enormous power of the capitalists, the working class and other oppressed have one huge advantage over these filthy rich exploiters – there is a lot more of us than them! Moreover, it is the manual and mental labour of the workers that creates capitalist profits. In other words, the working class is potentially a lot more powerful than the capitalists. Indeed, for between a century and a century and a half, the working class in much of the world has had the objective power to overturn capitalist rule. What has been lacking is the consciousness of the need to accomplish this task amongst the mass of workers and a workers’ leadership that is prepared to fight tenaciously for socialist revolution. Even as its own system decays, the capitalists have become increasingly expert at messing up the political consciousness of the working class masses and at poisoning it with nationalism, racism and illusions in the “fairness” of parliamentary “democracy”. Moreover, they are very adept at intervening into the contest within the Left and workers movements between reformists that uphold the capitalist order and revolutionaries opposed to the capitalist system in order to boost the former. The ruling class do so in various ways. First they give enormous financial and other backing to the social democratic reformists. It is not only the bank bosses doing this. The bosses of retail conglomerate, Wesfarmers, and banking and asset management giant, Macquarie Group, each gave around $220,000 to the ALP during the two financial years from 2019 to 2021 – the same amount that they each gave to the Coalition. Meanwhile, in this same period, the bosses of Bluescope Steel which gave Labor $108,000, accounting giant PricewaterhouseCoopers which gave $254,316, oil and gas giant Santos that gave Labor $88,000 and mining giant Fortescue – owned by Australia’s second richest person Andrew Forrest – that gave nearly $70,000, all gave more to the ALP in this period than they did to the openly capitalist Liberal/Nationals. The corporate bigwigs also skew the political battle between Laborite social democrats and revolutionaries, within the Left and workers’ movements, in other ways. The media that they own and the think tanks that they fund promote the most capitalism-loyal elements within the workers movement, while denigrating and witch-hunting revolutionary elements and more militant union leaders. Meanwhile, their courts, DPPs and police target for persecution the more revolutionary elements of the Left and the more radical officials and delegates within the trade union movement. Within workplaces, capitalist bosses victimise militant union delegates and unionists. The bosses seek to break the spirit of such left-wing workers by giving them the worst, most undesirable workplace tasks. More sinisterly, they prosecute disciplinary actions against these workers by concocting claims that these workers have “violated” workplace rules in order to intimidate these workers with the threat of being sacked. In contrast, capitalist bosses look after those union delegates that are seen as compliant, or open to being co-opted, by giving them special treatment at the workplace. Yet, despite how slanted is the competition for the hearts and minds of the working class masses between the Laborites and other social democrats, on the one hand, and the revolutionaries, on the other, the latter have one massive advantage that tilts the contest back the other way: it is we whose program actually represents the historic interests of the working class and all the oppressed. And as capitalist Australia enters a period where falling economic growth and rising job insecurity melds with the high cost of living, plummeting real wages and dangerously rising imperialist militarism that we have already been copping, it will be easier for revolutionaries to motivate a program that is opposed to the entire capitalist order.

Indeed, even the capitalist rulers themselves know that their system is in crisis. In a January 18 interview, none other than the head of the French capitalist regime, Emmanuel Macron, openly expressed his fears for the stability of capitalist rule and for the precarious state of Western capitalist “democracies”:

“First, there’s a crisis within the global open financial capitalist system. This system is experiencing a deep crisis, because, by acquiring capital, it has caused inequalities to skyrocket…. Therefore, our democratic system is in crisis, because it no longer spontaneously generates progress for all – once again, it creates inequalities between social classes.”

As surely as the sun shines, capitalism will create the conditions that will impel the masses into large-scale struggles. The strike wave that we are seeing today in Britain, France and other parts of Europe is testament to this. The only question is: will the Left be up to the task of intervening in and guiding these struggle towards an eventual assault on the crisis-ridden, inequality-skyrocketing, capitalist order? If we fail in this task, the crisis of capitalism will be exploited by the fascist wing of the capitalist class as it was in the 1930s. The terrifying rise of the Far Right in Europe, the 60% growth in the combined Far Right vote at last May’s Australian elections and the expansion of violent fascist, extra-parliamentary forces in Australia, illustrates this all too clearly.

All this is why now is the time to work extra hard and make still greater sacrifices to advance the struggle against the capitalist system. The final assault on the capitalist order can only be prepared and the masses schooled for this task by training the working class masses in all sorts of partial struggles right now to defend their living standards, oppose racist attacks and make immediate improvements in their rights and conditions. So let us unleash the power of our workers’ unions and build militant class struggle and other progressive struggle actions to win higher wages, the rights of permanency for all gig and casual workers, a massive increase in public housing and the confiscation of the oil, gas, coal and power sectors and their transfer into public ownership. Let us fight for the full rights of citizenship for all visa workers, refugees and international students and build mass actions uniting our unions, Aboriginal people, other people of colour and leftists to drive violent racist outfits off the streets. We must also mobilise these forces to oppose the racist state murder of Aboriginal people in custody, stop the continuing removal of Aboriginal children from their families, win full and genuine land rights for Aboriginal people and ensure decent housing and services in Aboriginal communities funded for by confiscating the wealth of the mining and pastoral bosses. Let us also demand: Down with the racist, right-wing and small-l liberal witch-hunt of Lidia Thorpe! Crucially, to advance the struggle against capitalist rule in this country, we must defend the anti-capitalist conquests that have already been made abroad. Most importantly, that means that we must defend the working class rule – as imperfect and insecure as it may currently be – in China that was born out of her earth-shattering, 1949 anti-capitalist revolution. To unleash all these struggles and ensure that they have the greatest chance of victory, we need to work relentlessly to knock down the political obstacles that impede and limit these struggles. Let us destroy the myth that workers and their capitalist exploiters have a common “national interest.” Let us convince the masses that Albanese’s ALP in power is a capitalist government ‒ just like its right-wing predecessors. And let us point out that “democracy” under capitalism is only truly a democracy for the rich and that the “mandate” that the ALP government has to maintain anti-strike laws, institute tax cuts for the rich, keep unemployment benefits at their present paltry level, avoid increasing actual public housing, shun measures to crack down on housing speculation, continue the military build up and propaganda war against socialistic China and support the Western imperialists’ proxy war against Russia in Ukraine, is not a “mandate” that the masses should, in the slightest, respect. To most effectively bring such understanding to the working class masses, let us build a new workers party that is linked to the new class struggle leadership of our unions that we need. A party composed of those people who understand that workers and their capitalist exploiters have no common “national interest” and are willing to make great sacrifices for the cause of socialist revolution.

Oppose the U.S. and Australian Rulers’ Violent Imperialist
“Rules-Based Global Order” Propping Up Israel’s Terror!

Photo above: Palestinian people survey the rubble of a house in Beit Lahia, in the northern Gaza Strip. The house was destroyed on 12 May 2023 by yet another deadly Israeli airstrike on the people of Gaza.
Photo credit: Fatima Shbair/AP

SUPPORT THE PALESTINIAN PEOPLE’S RESISTANCE!

OPPOSE THE U.S. AND AUSTRALIAN RULERS’
VIOLENT IMPERIALIST “RULES-BASED GLOBAL
ORDER” PROPPING UP ISRAEL’S TERROR!

SUPPORT SOCIALISTIC CHINA AGAINST THE
AUKUS REGIMES’ POLITICAL AND MILITARY PRESSURE!
DOWN WITH WESTERN IMPERIALISM’S PROXY WAR AGAINST RUSSIA!

7 May 2023: Today, Israel demolished a Palestinian school at the Jabbet al-Dhib village in the West Bank. With ministers in its new extreme, right wing government openly vilifying Palestinian people, Israel’s authorities are emboldened to intensify what they have long been doing: destroying Palestinian people’s homes, schools, fruit gardens and water sources. The Israeli state aims to violently create “facts on the ground” so that Palestinians never regain their national rights over the West Bank and its key city of Jerusalem. It has moved half a million Jewish settlers into the West Bank.

Already, in this year alone, Israeli forces have killed 111 Palestinian people, including at least 20 children. They have done this through the terror bombing of Gaza, murderous raids on Palestinian activists in the West Bank and attacks on Palestinian protesters. All this racist state violence has in turn encouraged increasingly powerful, fascist gangs amongst Israeli settlers and others within the country, thereby adding to the terror that Palestinian people must face.

This oppression is outrageous to most of the world. In a UN session last December, a resolution standing against Israel’s actions in the West Bank was supported by a majority of the world’s most populous countries, including socialistic China, Pakistan, Russia, Nigeria and Mexico. The only countries that opposed the resolution were most of the Western powers and their most hopelessly dependent neocolonies. Also refusing to stand by the Palestinian people were several Western-allied regimes that either abstained or did not vote on the resolution including Ukraine, Japan, India, South Korea, the Philippines and Fiji. It is only because of the support of the Western imperialist powers that dominate the world that Israel is able to get away with its murderous occupation. In particular, the U.S. superpower and its AUKUS allies, Australia and Britain, are ardent supporters of Israel’s terror. Canberra’s opposition to the December UN resolution shows that the new Labor government is as committed to upholding Israel’s tyranny as was its conservative predecessors.

That Australia’s rulers strongly back Israel is little surprise. Capitalist rule was established here through the dispossession of Aboriginal people in a manner that had all the brutality of Israel’s later 1948 Nakba ethnic cleansing of Palestinians … and then some! The Australian ruling class continues to subjugate Aboriginal people. Anti-colonial activists must, therefore, both support Aboriginal people’s struggle for liberation and back the Palestinian resistance. Let us: Oppose the state murder of Aboriginal people in custody! Welcome any flow of arms to Palestinian people carrying out armed resistance against Israeli forces and fascist settler gangs! Let us demand: Israel and far right settlers, get out of the West Bank and Gaza! For the right of return of Palestinian refugees to all parts of Palestine!

13 May 2023, Nablus, Palestine’s occupied West Bank: The Balata refugee camp following a deadly assault by the Israeli army. The Israeli forces opened fire on the residents of the camp after they objected to the troops raiding the camp and surrounding a house. The Israeli military killed two Palestinians by shooting them in the head – 32 year-old Saed Jihad Masheh and 19 year-old Adnan Wasim – and injured three others, including an elderly woman.
Photo credit: Ayman Noubani/Palestine News & Info Agency

BRING DOWN ETHNIC/RELIGIOUS ULTRA-CHAUVINIST, ZIONIST RULE
THROUGHOUT ALL OF PALESTINE!

The Israeli occupation is hell for Palestinian people. But life in Israel is not that great for the Jewish masses either. Zionist rulers promised that Israel would create a sanctuary for Jews to escape discrimination and racist oppression in Europe – an idea that only gained wide appeal following the Holocaust. However, the idea of building a nation in a land by expelling its existing inhabitants will necessarily breed resistance by the dispossessed people of that land. And so while Palestinians are overwhelmingly the victims of violence in their homeland, the Zionist project incites attacks on Jewish inhabitants too. Moreover, a state where Jewish youth must endure a compulsory military service of up to three years and where residents are frequently running into bomb shelters is hardly a “peaceful sanctuary”. Far from protecting Jewish people, the Zionist project, based as it is on ethnic cleansing, has made Israel’s Jews the objects of hatred on the part of their neighbours.

That Israel is now administered by a chaotic, extremist government – and, moreover, one that is grabbing dictatorial powers for itself while being hated by much of its own population – is a symptom of just how crisis-ridden the Zionist “order” is. The Zionist regime is squeezed between the resistance it faces from the Palestinian people and the fact that its “order” does not serve the Jewish working class either but only truly serves a small class of capitalist Jews. The economic system that this capitalist class runs is based on the theft of Palestinian agricultural land and crops. These capitalists make huge profits, too, by super-exploiting Palestinian labourers who enjoy few rights. Although relatively privileged compared to their Palestinian counterparts, Jewish workers are also exploited by Israel’s bosses just like in any other capitalist state. Israel’s capitalist rulers infect their masses with virulent ethnic supremacist notions to keep the Jewish working class subservient to their capitalist interests. However, when the neighbouring Arab toiling classes rise up against their imperialist-dependent rulers and fight to take over power, this will inevitably inspire a portion of the Israeli Jewish working class to break from Zionism. There is plenty of social tinder for such an explosion. Arab toilers are seething under Western neolonialism and ground down by poverty and unemployment. Women workers face women’s oppression on top of all that. Meanwhile, Israel has one of the highest poverty rates in the OECD. In real terms, Israel’s minimum wage has dived by around 5% over the last five years. A section of the Jewish working class must be won to the understanding that the only way that they can put an end to their own exploitation and create a truly peaceful home is by linking up with neighbouring Arab workers and with the Palestinian people’s resistance in a joint struggle to smash the racist Israeli capitalist regime and create a secular, socialist Palestine where Palestinians and Jews can live together in equality.

2 May 2023, Ramallah, Palestine’s occupied West Bank: Large numbers of Palestinians marched in several West Bank cities to protest the death of Palestinian activist, Khader Adnan, who died after an 86-day hunger strike in protest at his detention without charge. The Israeli regime imprisons over a thousand other Palestinians without charge in such military detention.
Photo credit: Palestine News & Info Agency

RESIST THE U.S. AND AUSTRALIAN REGIMES THAT UPHOLD
THE SUBJUGATION OF PALESTINIAN PEOPLE!

Why do U.S. rulers and their allies support Israel’s conquest of Palestine? The imperialist rulers of the U.S. and those of Germany, Japan, Australia, Britain and France make profits not only from exploiting their own workers but from even more ruthlessly exploiting the workers of the ex-colonial countries of Asia, Africa, the Middle East, the Pacific and Latin America and through plundering natural resources and seizing markets there. To enforce this tyranny, the strongest imperial power, the U.S., enlists deputy sheriffs to police particular regions. Israel is its deputy sheriff in the oil-rich and strategically-located Middle East. As Israel’s attacks on anti-Western forces in Lebanon, its threats against Iran and its air strikes against Syria prove, Israel acts to undermine forces that refuse to fully accept the U.S.-led West’s violent despotism over the world – what Western powers cynically refer to as the “rules-based global order”. Israel also serves in the West’s Cold War against socialistic China by intimidating regional countries that dare to become close to the Peoples Republic of China.

Yet, precisely because it is in the interest of America’s capitalists and their allies ruling Australia and Britain to back Israel, it is in the interests of the exploited masses of these countries to take the very opposite stance. For any weakening of Australia’s capitalist rulers through blows against their local or global interests can only be a good thing for the downtrodden masses of Australia. It would strengthen the struggles of workers facing plunging real wages, insecure jobs and skyrocketing rents and of Aboriginal people being hit with racist state oppression and ever more intense vilification in the capitalist media. That is why it is not only a matter of moral imperative but also in the clear interests of the working class of the U.S. and Australia to oppose Israel’s tyranny. The Australian workers movement must take industrial action to demand: End all U.S. and Australian military and economic support for Israel!

Right now there is a major battle in Ukraine whose outcome will affect the strength of the imperialist powers that prop up Israel’s occupation. Although the conflict started as mostly an inter-capitalist battle for territory, the Western powers intervened so aggressively that it quickly became a proxy war of the U.S.-led imperialist powers against Russia. Although Russia is also ruled by capitalist rulers, Russia’s ruling class lacks the capital to lord it over the “Third World.” It is not Russia that destroyed Iraq, Afghanistan and Libya and it is not Russia that props up Israel’s occupation. That is why it is in the interests of all those suffering directly and indirectly from the tyranny of Western imperialism – including the Palestinian people – and the workers of the world to stand for the defeat of the U.S., British and Australian regimes’ proxy war against Russia. However, the Socialist Alternative and Socialist Alliance groups which proclaim their solidarity with Palestine are on the side of the U.S.-backed imperialist powers in their Ukraine proxy war. They even support Western arms supplies to Ukraine. In doing so, they are taking the side which, if victorious, will reinforce Western imperialist tyranny over the world and with it the strengthening of their brutal Israeli deputy sheriff.

There is a far more serious threat to Western global domination (the so-called rules-based order) than Russia. And that is the rise of a giant socialistic power in China. China’s cooperation with developing countries is slowly enabling the latter to achieve greater independence from the imperial powers. Today’s decision by the Arab League to rebuff Western pressure and readmit Syria into the League and China’s successful efforts to bring Iran and Saudi Arabia towards rapprochement in defiance of the USA’s divisive schemes are early signs of this. If China’s strength were to continue to grow and she was able to further offer developing countries access to technology, capital and markets in her mutually beneficial way, Palestine’s neighbours would be less dependent on the imperialists and more willing to resist Washington’s demands that they acquiesce to Israel’s occupation. Most importantly, should China’s rapid development continue until her per capita income approaches that of the richest countries, her poverty alleviation successes will encourage workers all over the world to also demand socialism. The Western capitalist rulers would face being overthrown at home. The Zionist occupation will topple with them. That is why every true supporter of Palestine must stand for the defence of socialistic rule in China from not only imperialist military threats but also from Western-backed anti-communist forces within China. We must also oppose the lying anti-China propaganda attacks that are launched by Western imperialist politicians, NGOs and pro-Western media – the very same people that vilify the Palestinian struggle.

Let’s weaken the Western imperialist props that uphold Israel’s tyranny! Let’s combine opposition to Washington and Canberra’s military, political and economic aid to Israel with resistance to the brutal oppression of Aboriginal people and class struggle action against the exploitation of workers and all the poor in this country!