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Issue 20

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  1. Let’s Build Towards More Staunch Actions to Demand That Vacant Public Housing Goes to People on the Waiting List or the Homeless & Not to Ultra-Rich Developers & Speculators
    Trade Unionists & Other Supporters of Public Housing Occupy Millers Point Houses Slated For Privatisation
  2.  Justice for David Dungay! Justice for Elijah! Justice for Tane! Outrage as the Killer of an Aboriginal Child Gets Away with Murder!
  3. Greedy Aussie Bosses Like to Blame Overseas Producers for Their Job Slashing. Don’t Buy Their Lies! Force Them to Retain Their Workforces & Accept Lower Profits!
  4. Male Chauvinism Creeps into Every Corner of Capitalist Australian Society
    In order to have cialis levitra generico correct treatment with the use of this exercise in order to delay ejaculation before orgasm. Not only Kamagra is now the medicine of purchase cheap viagra. This herbal pill is available in the denomination of discount on cialis 180, 120, 60 and 240 capsules at online stores. If your physician informs you that you do not have to worry anymore because of the advent viagra online store of a novel restaurant reservation system. How Misogyny Crushed the Career of a Talented Woman
  5. Send Packer’s Barangaroo Project Packing & Stop the Sell-off of Public Housing in Millers Point! Billionaire James Packer’s High Flying Executives Jailed by China for Corruption
  6. “Australians First” Economic Nationalism Fuels Racist Hostility to Refugees and People of Colour
  7. Stand with Socialistic North Korea against U.S./Australian Capitalism’s War Threats
  8. Israeli Terror Machine Supercharged by Trump’s Jerusalem Statement
    Oppose the U.S. and Australian Regimes that Support the Subjugation of Palestinian People
  9. NSW Government resorts to Gestapo-like Tactics, Smashing Windows to Evict a Public Housing Tenant Stop the Privatisation of Public Housing throughout Australia

BILLIONAIRE JAMES PACKER’S HIGH FLYING EXECUTIVES JAILED BY CHINA FOR CORRUPTION

Send Packer’s Barangaroo Project Packing & Stop the Sell-off of Public Housing in Millers Point!

BILLIONAIRE JAMES PACKER’S HIGH FLYING EXECUTIVES JAILED BY CHINA FOR CORRUPTION

10 July 2017 – This really isn’t happening, is it? Is James Packer, one of Australia’s richest people, really having his interests severely curtailed by state authorities? The same James Packer who is used to having troublesome laws magically disappear for his benefit? The same James Packer before whom Australian mainstream politicians and state officials, alike, prostrate themselves like so many minions? Did sixteen high flying executives of his Crown Group really get sentenced to up to ten months jail for corruption related charged? Seriously? Why, yes, it did happen! Except not in Australia. The executives were jailed in the Peoples Republic of China (PRC). Red China, that is! In Australia, Packer and the other most powerful of the tycoons who run this country are effectively above the law. But in the PRC it is a different story. Under the PRC’s system it is public ownership (albeit in a deformed and fragile manner) that dominates and not the interests of rich private sector bigwigs. And now, in what must have been quite a rude shock for them, the greedy James Packer and all of his executives have found that out for themselves.

Two weeks ago on June 26, all the Crown Group staff that were arrested last October in China pleaded guilty to charges of illegally luring high rollers to Packer’s casinos abroad – especially ones in Australia. This is illegal in China. The PRC, understandably, wants to stop casinos being used to subvert its strict control on money movements by the rich. It also does not want casino accounts to be used by corrupt wealthy individuals to hide or move tainted money.

Among the bosses who have been jailed in China are three high flying Australian executives including one of Crown’s most senior executives – head of VIP operations, Jason O’Connor. However, three of the Crown staff arrested last year were not executives. Unlike the other sixteen they were given bail shortly after arrest. Although they also pleaded guilty during the trial they did not receive any jail sentences or fines. That seems fair that non-executives are spared punishment. However, the sixteen jailed really were high fliers paid huge salaries. Court documents reveal that Crown paid O’Connor an annual bonus alone of three quarters of a million Australian dollars! (https://calvinayre. com/2017/07/10/casino/court-chinese-vips-lost-600mcrown-resorts-casinos/). One of the family members of the executives even turned up to the court hearing in a Rolls Royce! (see: http://www.abc.net.au/news/2017-0626/crown-casino-staff-jailed-in-china-over-gamblingcrimes/8652430). Many of the other relatives of the accused and duly convicted executives left the court in a convoy of black Audis.

Packer and his Crown Group knew that what they were doing in China was illegal. Chinese authorities had specifically warned them and given them a whole year to comply. However, they are so used to getting their way in Australia that they thought the same would apply in China. As one Murdoch journalist put it, from his capitalist point of view, when addressing the lessons for the Western corporate elite to be drawn from the Crown bosses’ trial:

The wider lessons include the danger of believing one understands China and can compute the risks of operating there, when one doesn’t. James Packer has had much less to say on China since so many of his employees were jailed. Four years ago he told the Asia Society how “it often amazes me that so many senior corporate leaders, public servants and MPs have not made the trip to China and still view it as a communist state. “Lesson No. 1: China is a communist state.”
The Australian, 27 June 2017

Billionaire James Packer and his Crown Group executives are largely above the law in this country. However, in China, three high-flying Australian Crown bosses who were engaged in devious activities that undermined China’s ability to crack down on corrupt rich people were jailed at a Shanghai detention centre (Left). That was a far cry from the lavish lifestyle of Crown-owned luxury hotels and private jets (Right) that these greedy executives – and the high rollers they court – normally cruise in.
BARANGAROO FOR EVERYONE – NOT JUST THE RICH

One effect of China’s jailing of Packer executives is that it has dented his project in Sydney’s harbourside Barangaroo area. In this project, Crown Group will run an exclusive, members only, high rollers casino and a six-star hotel that only the very rich will be able to afford to stay in. Although we do not support calls for banning gambling in Australia, it is an atrocity that public land in an iconic spot should be reserved for a resort that only the rich could afford to utilise and all that so that a greedy billionaire can get even richer. Furthermore, the way that Packer got approval for this project was a shocker. Laws and regulations simply melted away as ruling class politicians and state institutions fell over themselves to allow his Crown Group to grab public land at Barangaroo for their luxury resort complex.

Worst of all, the needs of Packer’s luxury resort project is a significant part of what is driving the NSW government’s obsessive push to kick out public housing tenants from the very nearby Millers Point and the Rocks. This is something that the public housing tenants in the area have long understood. In an article published in the 2017 edition of the Australian Journal of Social Issues, University of Technology Sydney academic Professor Alan Morris, highlights a “remarkable statement in October 2012 by the then NSW Finance Minister when he announced that the government was considering selling off public housing in Millers Point as the homes were perceived to be not compatible with the Barangaroo development.” The headline points of that high profile government press release were reported at the time in the 26 October 2012 issue of The Sydney Morning Herald (http://www.smh.com.au/nsw/residents-stick-totheir-point-of-community-20121025-288bh.html). This statement, made in the period leading up to the government’s announcement that it was selling off nearly 300 public housing units in the area and claiming that, “much of the Land and Housing Corporation’s portfolio at Millers Point is poorly suited for social housing,” revealingly asserted that: “Inevitably, when considering the future of Millers Point, the government needs to consider it in the context of all of the surrounding areas, including the Barangaroo redevelopment area.” In other words,  having working class people in the area is an “eyesore” for the wealthy clientele who will frequent the resort that Packer expects to make billions from. Meanwhile, the NSW government is determined to clear out working class tenants in order to also help its rich developer mates make a fortune from turning Millers Point into luxury accommodation for resort executives and patrons.

Just consider what all this means from a historical point of view. Before 1788 a warm, welcoming and friendly society existed in the area now called Barangaroo. It was the society of the Gadigal nation of the Eora Aboriginal people. However, the invading forces committed terrible massacres against the Gadigal. After heroic resistance, 90% of the Gadigal nation was then wiped out by smallpox deliberately introduced by officers in the first fleet. Later this area became the Darling Harbour dockyards. The bosses brutally exploited workers. But workers formed unions and fought for their rights. They were still exploited but won improved conditions through union struggle. And 110 years ago, unions fought for and won public housing in this area and working class people subsequently built a close-knit community. However, now after the docks have been moved, the ruling class is clearing out the public housing. And they are making a key part of Barangaroo a preserve only for those rich enough to get entry into a luxury resort. In other words, in 230 years that area has gone from the warm, inclusive society of the Gadigal to its diametric opposite: an exclusive area for the rich, serving the interests of a greedy billionaire and where the masses are not able to live anywhere in its vicinity.

However, China’s crackdown on Crown could derail Packer’s Barangaroo plans. If Crown is not able to get away with luring high rollers from China it makes the planned high rollers casino much less profitable. For, although the proportion of high rollers in China is much smaller than in Australia, the country is so huge, with a population sixty times that of Australia, that numerically there is still a big market from there. And especially given that gambling is banned in mainland China, Packer had been hoping for a sizeable part of his Barangaroo income to come from there.

June 24, Barangaroo, Sydney: Public housing tenants, a group of proudly unionised dock workers and other leftist supporters of public housing rally to welcome China’s prosecution of Crown executives, to stand against the handover of public land at Barangaroo to James Packer and to oppose the Packer casino project-driven sell-off of public housing at Millers Point.

 

THE POSITIVE IMPLICATIONS OF CHINA’S CRACKDOWN

The jail sentences that the PRC authorities handed out to the Crown bosses could have been tougher. However, given that the executives were not charged with bribery or erosion of state-owned assets (in China the latter is considered an especially big crime), they were always going to get lighter sentences than the Rio Tinto executives – including Australian Stern Hu – who were also convicted on corruption charges in China seven years ago. Furthermore, the jail terms, while moderate, still act as a deterrent to Crown luring Chinese high rollers to gamble at overseas casinos. This has been shown by Packer abandoning his stake in the Macau Casino. Indeed, Packer has become so desperate to prove to Chinese authorities that he is no longer trying to lure high rollers from China that his Crown Group has, since the arrests of its executives, closed almost all their offices in the whole of Asia! He doesn’t want to be seen to be using offices in other parts of Asia to lure customers from China. As a result, seven Crown offices from Macau to Thailand to Singapore and Indonesia have suddenly vanished. Moreover, in negotiations with Chinese authorities in the leadup to the trial of their high flying executives, Crown would have had to give assurances that it would pull back from seeking Chinese customers.

So the deterrence effect of China’s imprisonment of Crown high fliers may still be sufficient enough to reduce Packer’s expected revenue from Chinese clients and this may make his Barangaroo project unviable. Indeed, in the wake of the PRC’s initial arrests of Crown bosses, Crown’s income from its high rollers program at its existing Australian casinos has plunged by some 40% to 50% (see: http://www.smh.com. au/business/retail/crown-resorts-profit-slumps-on-fall-invip-revenue-jobs-set-to-go-20170222-guj42b.html). We will have to wait and see over the coming months whether the subsequent jailings will kill his Sydney luxury resort project. If it does then it would open up the possibility that this Barangaroo area in a picturesque part of Sydney could, as it should, become available for public use – like public recreation space or public housing. Furthermore, it would remove one of the drivers pushing the government’s privatisation of public housing in Millers Point – thus making it more likely that the government would make concessions if faced with powerful enough resistance actions by Millers Point activists and their supporters. Although the government has already driven out most of the members of the public housing community from their homes, it is still possible to save and reoccupy many of the homes for public housing before they are all sold off to wealthy developers and speculators.

Even if the Barangaroo luxury resort is not killed off, the jailing of the executives is still a rare blow against a billionaire Australian capitalist. It is notable that one of the news headlines in Australia announcing the sentences refer to “James Packer all at sea as Crown staff jailed and fined in Chinese court.” Moreover, the PRC’s crackdown on Packer’s henchmen can give confidence to working class people that the tycoons who lord it over everyone in Australia are not invincible and we should, especially, stress that point. Furthermore, because the executives pleaded guilty they have basically proven that Packer and his Crown corporation are, indeed, thoroughly corrupt. No matter how the media spins the guilty pleas, this can only discredit Packer and his corporation in the eyes of the masses. All this should give renewed vigour to those opposed to the handover of public land at Barangaroo to a greedy billionaire, to those fighting the sell off of public housing in Millers Point and to all working class people engaged in other struggles against exploitation and against the tyranny of the tycoons of Australia.
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WHY THE CRACKDOWN ON PACKER’S CORPORATION COULD TAKE PLACE IN CHINA

Two days before the Shanghai court trial of the Crown executives, public housing tenants, a group of proudly unionised dock workers and other leftist supporters of public housing rallied in Sydney against James Packer and the Crown bosses. We welcomed China’s prosecution of the Crown executives, opposed the handover of public land at Barangaroo to James Packer and opposed the Packer casino project-driven sell off of public housing at Millers Point. Demonstrators chanted: “Defend public housing – Give Packer the boot.” Also knowing that the Peoples Republic of China has so spectacularly increased its provision of public housing by providing over 40 million additional places in the last seven years, while Australian governments have slashed the amount of public housing places here by over 13 thousand, we chanted: “Public housing for you and me – Just like in the PRC!”

Speaking at this rally at the entrance to Barangaroo from Wynyard Station, a key Millers Point public housing activist, Peter Muller, denounced Packer’s Barangaroo project and received enthusiastic applause when he declared that the struggle to save public housing in the area is far from over. Wayne Sonter, the then secretary of the Sydney district committee of the Communist Party of Australia, stressed in his speech how, “the politicians and bureaucrats and the shadowy corporate players behind them” hold the people in contempt:

This rally poses a simple question – The People or Packer?
Is development on this key city site to be for the public good or for the profit takers?
…So here, at Barangaroo, the choice confronts us clearly – are we to let government of the sort that supports ratbags like Packer and his goons, caught in criminal activity and facing trial in China, to continue? Or is it time for us to draw a line and say, `No more! We the people, we the workers assert our sovereignty and our power.’

Sara Fitzenmeyer, chairwoman of Trotskyist Platform, the group that called the demonstration, highlighted the “eerie resonances” between what James Packer and the NSW government have been doing to public housing tenants in nearby Millers Point and “the avoidable tragedy that caused the death of up to hundred people in the Grenfell Tower fire in the UK’s capital city of London”:

Firstly, the authorities here have shown the same contempt for public housing tenants as they do in capitalist England – nobody listened to tenants’ concerns and the capitalist governments don’t work with the interests of the working class ever in mind.
… Just as Packer and the government want to get rid of Millers Points tenants because having working class people in the area in modest housing is considered to be an eyesore for the wealthy clientele expected at Packer’s luxury resort, the housing authorities in London used cheap panelling over the Grenfell Tower in an attempt to stop the tower being an eyesore to nearby rich residents. It was this very cheap panelling that was the reason why that fire spread with such deadly speed. All part of an overall gentrification program in the Kensington area of central London which has been described as `regeneration work’ that `amounted to ethnic and class cleansing.’ And class cleansing – social cleansing – is what the ruling class is doing in the Millers Point, Rocks and Dawes Point area.
Except actually it is they who need to be cleansed. This greedy capitalist ruling class not only exploits working class people like crazy but they are dishonest and corrupt as hell. Here in capitalist Australia, these bourgeoisie are celebrated. They get away with whatever they please. They sit right up at the very peak of the capitalist pyramid. But it is a different story in socialistic China.

Rally speakers from Trotskyist Platform, pointed out that it was possible to bring the Crown Group to justice in China because in the PRC tycoons have far less influence than they do in capitalist Australia. This is because in socialistic China, despite the ruling bureaucracy implementing a degree of harmful privatisation in the 1980s and 1990s, the commanding heights of the economy remain under the socialistic umbrella public ownership. So all the biggest banks, biggest energy companies, biggest mines, biggest telcos, all the major ports, car, rail and aircraft manufacturers and around 90% of the biggest 100 companies in mainland China are state-owned. That means that the billionaires there, while they have some influence, have much less than they do, here, in capitalist Australia. They cannot threaten to withdraw their production and assets from a project to get their way because the main productive assets are still publicly owned in the PRC. The dominance of an economy based on socialistic, public ownership of the key sectors is possible there because – albeit in a deformed way – the working class still retains state power in China flowing from the 1949 anti-capitalist revolution. That the PRC is some sort of workers state means that those billionaire exploiters that do exist in China often face crackdowns. As the rally mc explained:

Fittingly, twelve days ago when it was first announced that Packer’s executives would go to trial, it also emerged that one of China’s most prominent billionaires, Wu Xiaohui, head of Anbang insurance, has also been detained over corruption. Indeed even though China has a much lower overall rate of imprisonment than Australia, in China one out of every six people who have appeared on rich lists have either been investigated, jailed or indeed executed. That is why the nickname they have in China for the rich lists is `pig killing lists.’ I love that: `pig killing list.’ This curbing of the capitalists is a great thing for the Chinese masses and as we are seeing with the Crown Group arrests a good thing for working class people here too.

 

When capitalists and their henchmen, people like Wu Xiaohui or the Crown bosses, are curtailed in China then that has crucial significance for the direction of that country. This is because the working class rule that exists in China is, unfortunately, fragile. The capitalists that have been allowed to emerge in the PRC are able to buy some degree of influence. Through this influence and through the pressure of a layer of right wing economists, lawyers, academics, journalists, so-called dissidents and pro-capitalist elements within the wavering bureaucracy itself, the PRC’s socialistic system is under threat. However, whenever there’s a crackdown on capitalists there this gives encouragement to those genuinely pro-socialist elements seeking to resist capitalist restorationist forces. Seizing on such anti-capitalist crackdowns, determined workers and genuine servants of the masses must fight to smash all political influence of the capitalists and restrict the private sector in China to the level that is actually needed for its transition to socialism.

That the socialistic system that has kept the billionaires from power in China is under real threat makes it all the more important that supporters of working class interests around the world stand by the PRC against the forces pushing for capitalist counterrevolution. That means we must defend the Chinese workers state against Western imperialist military threats, for example, by U.S. and Australian warships sailing provocatively through the South China Sea. We also need to expose and deconstruct all the various propaganda campaigns against socialistic China that are constantly foisted upon the masses in the West.

That it was the workers state in China, as deformed as it is, that was able to strike a blow against a billionaire so powerful and well connected as James Packer, highlights the necessity to fight for a workers state here in Australia. As Trotskyist Platform activist, Samuel Kim, emphasised when addressing the June 24 rally:

In Australia, the rich are getting richer and the poor and the workers are creeping towards more and more poverty. Billionaires like James Packer together with the Gina Rineharts, Andrew Forrests, the Pratt family and the Lowys and the other capitalist billionaires have incredible power and influence… and, likewise, the entire bureaucracy, this establishment with its police, commissions, courts are acting in the interests of the likes of these billionaires against the interests of the poor and working people. However, despite this, it is the working class that creates the wealth of the billlionaires, the masses of poor and workers outnumber these elite and corrupt few.
“… Workers need permanent secure jobs, we need to cut billionaire profits, we need to stop billionaires slashing jobs. We say let’s make the greedy billionaires and the ruling class increase hiring at the cost of their profits. If they complain that this will ruin the economy then we working class people need to take the economy out of their hands. We need to put the means of production into our collective hands and run a socialist economy. Sisters and brothers – we have had enough of the tyranny of the tycoons. Let us fight towards a state where we, the working class people, run society. A future workers state will ensure that abominations like the Crown Barangaroo resort and the sell off of public housing will be things of the past.

 

Stop Rich Bosses Slashing Jobs to Leach Even Greater Profits

NAB: $6.6 Billion Profit, 6000 Jobs Axed

Stop Rich Bosses Slashing Jobs
to Leach Even Greater Profits

If the Capitalists Can’t Run the Economy
in a Way That Ensures Jobs For All Then
Working Class People Should Take Control of It All

 

15 April 2018: Last November, the NAB (National Australia Bank) CEO, Andrew Thorburn, was gloating with smug delight. He announced that the bank had increased its annual cash profit to $6.6 billion. Yet, for NAB workers this was very bad news. In the very same announcement of the huge profit, the company boss declared that they would be cutting the jobs of 6,000 workers over three years. Having leached fabulous profits from the hard work of their employees, the wealthy big shareholders and executives who control NAB want to grab profits at an even higher rate by dumping more than one out of six of the very same workers who made them their fortunes. For many of the workers being axed the pain is not only the big financial hit that they and their families will suffer as a result of being retrenched. It is also the demoralisation that comes from not being able to utilise their skills and labour, the loss of self-esteem as well as the social isolation for many that results from not interacting with co-workers at a workplace. However, the suffering of the retrenched workers means nothing to the big shareholders benefitting from their misery. To the big end of town, workers are just a “cost” on an account ledger needing to be minimised. So who are those bigwigs set to benefit from the misery of the axed workers? The big shareholders are mainly ultra-rich local Australians. Their exact identities are hidden as they direct their holdings through wealth management and other investment firms. However, one can be sure that several of the 200 richest Australians – whose combined wealth is a filthy $233 billion  (http://www.afr.com/leadership/afr-lists/ rich-list/financial-review-rich-list-2017-20170525-gwcvr6) – have major stakes. Many of the corporation’s executives are themselves significant shareholders. CEO Andrew Thorburn alone owns over $8 million worth of NAB shares. Meanwhile, he rakes in a fat remuneration package that last year alone was worth over $4 million. No doubt the directors will be rewarding him with an even greater package for his “cost cutting” – i.e. his ruthless axing of 6,000 workers’ jobs! Meanwhile, even as NAB owners were “forced to” axe 6,000 workers, they could still afford to pay former NSW premier Mike Baird almost $900,000 in just his first five months employed as an executive at the firm. What a racket! Baird took up this lucrative position just six weeks after exiting the NSW parliament. In employing Baird, NAB’s directors no doubt want to strengthen links with the mainstream political parties to ensure that these parties continue to aggressively serve the bosses’ interests.

Greedy NAB (National Australia Bank) CEO, Andrew Thorburn. Last November, after informing that NAB had received a massive annual profit of $6.6 billion, Thorburn announced that the corporation would slash 6,000 jobs.

NAB’s jobs massacre shows the fraudulent character of “trickle down economics” – the claim that in order to have more jobs and higher wages one has to first ensure that the very wealthy and the corporations that they own first make larger incomes. It is the right-wing Liberal party that most openly espouses this deceitful “theory.” The Turnbull government uses it to “justify” its drive for still greater tax cuts for the richest corporations. Yet, as the NAB bosses’ action showed, higher corporate profits can actually mean less jobs not more!

The social democratic ALP has won some respect from their working class base for at least opposing the new tax cuts for the rich pushed by the Liberal-National government and Pauline Hanson’s racist One Nation party. Yet, while opposing the latest planned handouts to the ultra-rich, the ALP’s platform is only about maintaining the current, blatantly unfair, status quo. Thus, the ALP does not in the least challenge the “right” of the likes of the NAB bosses to axe large numbers of jobs whenever these capitalist exploiters calculate that this can bring them still more obscene profits. The ALP also accepts nearly all the existing laws restricting union industrial action and organising – laws that hamper workers’ efforts to take the kind of action needed to stop company bosses taking an ever greater share of the fruit of workers’ labour. The status quo that the ALP upholds allows billionaire bosses to throw workers out of their jobs like used packaging while, officially (and these figures grossly underestimate the problem), approaching two million people are either unemployed or working less hours than they want to and nearly three and a half million workers endure insecure employment as casuals.

Who NOT to Blame for Unemployment

NAB’s jobs massacre highlights the reality of who is to blame for unemployment, underemployment and the shortage of permanent, secure full-time jobs in Australia; and that is the big end of town business owners. In Australia’s capitalist system, the factories, banks, mines, agricultural land and media and communications infrastructure are owned by a small class of wealthy individuals. They make decisions about what, how much and how to produce solely on the basis of what ensures them the greatest profits. If that profit imperative means scaling back production or provision of services in order to slash “labour costs” or if they can get away with slashing jobs and then forcing remaining workers to toil faster for the same pay, they will not hesitate to throw onto the dole queues the workers from whose labour they had derived their wealth. However, because this class of bigwigs is very small relative to the masses whom they exploit, they are fearful of the working class masses uniting against them. That is why they and their mouthpieces seek to blame others for the unemployment, casualisation of the workforce, lack of affordable rental accommodation and stagnant wages that they and their system cause. Most notably, the media that the capitalists’ own, the mainstream political parties that serve their interests and sometimes the capitalists very openly themselves – like in the case of racist multi-millionaire Dick Smith – seek to push the blame for unemployment onto migrants. “Migrants are taking Aussie jobs” is their open or implied message. Typically, reinforcing White Australia racism, they single out – either openly or through implication – migrants from East Asia, the Indian subcontinent, the South Pacific and Africa. The claim that migrants are the cause of the shortage of secure, permanent jobs is a complete lie. Six thousand NAB workers are not being thrown out of work because of immigration or because their jobs are being replaced by migrants! By taking part in work life and then paying taxes and spending just like those born here, migrants create as many jobs as they occupy. It is worth noting that in the period when Australia had by far its highest rate of unemployment, during the 1930s Great Depression, there was very little immigration and none at all from Asia, the Middle East and Africa.

It is not just the conservative Liberal-Nationals, the racist One Nation Party and still more extreme far-right forces that are seeking to blame migrants for unemployment. The ALP – and on occasions the Greens too – play into these myths, in particular by blaming joblessness on temporary migrant skilled workers (these workers used to come under the 457 visa program but that scheme has been abolished and replaced by two smaller visa categories). Last May, the Labour Party released a video promising that a future ALP government would “Employ Australians First” with visuals where nearly all the Australians shown were white Anglos. The ad with its unmistakeable racist message – that white people had to be supposedly protected from having their jobs taken away by non-white people – was rightly condemned by many. Like all claims that migrants are “taking Aussie jobs,” the ALP’s campaign against visa workers is based on racist myths. One of these deceptions is to greatly exaggerate the number of guest workers in the country. The reality is that the number of temporary skilled migrant workers in Australia is tiny (http://www.abc.net.au/news/2016-1115/what-is-a-457-visa/8026280) – they make up just a mere 0.7% of the workforce. Put another way there are twenty times more people who are either without a job or working less hours than they want to than the number of temporary skilled migrant workers in Australia. Yet the ALP, the Liberals and sometimes the Greens join Pauline Hanson’s fascistic One Nation in blaming these workers for joblessness in Australia. The corporate high fliers who really do cause unemployment are left unscathed, unbothered and laughing all the way to the bank!

Left: NSW Opposition Leader, Labor’s Luke Foley whips up racist hostility to migrants with claims that refugees from the Middle East are swamping Western Sydney suburbs and leading to a “white flight” of Anglo-Saxons from these suburbs as well as a shortage of job opportunities and infrastructure. Refusing to stand on a program of class struggle to win jobs and decent public services for all workers, the ALP social democrats are left to offer bogus nationalist and racist “solutions” to unemployment and inadequate infrastructure. Yet, Asian, Middle Eastern, Latin American and African workers are among the ALP’s bases of support. The best the Labor Party can “offer” these working class people are almost worthless, symbolic gestures. Right: Luke Foley makes Chinese language greetings to the Hong Kong and Cantonese-based Chinese community. The posters making these greetings were seen in the multi-racial Western Sydney suburb of Auburn just days after Foley made his racist rantings that migrants entering such suburbs were responsible for a “white flight” from these areas. (Photo credit for photo on Right: Trotskyist Platform)

When the advocates for the big end of town aren’t trying to shift the responsibility for unemployment onto migrants and guest workers, they condemn the unemployed themselves. This blaming of the victim is done through spreading various myths. Governments, morning TV talk shows and radio shock jocks disgustingly insinuate that the reason that unemployed workers are out of a job is that they “have suffered a loss of work ethic” and need “tough love” to be “re-schooled in habits which make them employable like getting up on time in the morning.” So following this “logic” of the political poodles for the billionaires, the hundreds of NAB workers who will end up long-term unemployed as a result of the savage job cuts “lack a work ethic” and need to be “trained in adapting to work life.” How insulting!

As part of blaming the unemployed for their own hardships, the ruling class is constantly making life harder and harder for job seekers. That is as if inadequate welfare payments, a shortage of low-rent public housing, being bullied by privately owned, profit-seeking job agencies and being forced into semi-slave labour, work-for-the-dole schemes is not bad enough! Governments have introduced in two areas on a “trial basis” – in Ceduna, South Australia, and in the east Kimberley in Western Australia – a “cashless welfare” card. Under this scheme, welfare recipients are not allowed control of 80% of their own money which must be, instead, spent through a cashless debit card which can only be used at certain retail outlets. This draconian scheme will simply make life more miserable for those already suffering the hardships brought by paltry welfare income. They will need to now spend far more time doing basic shopping since jobseekers will have to travel often large distances to get to a cashless debit card-approved retail outlet. As is often the case with measures aimed against the masses, the racist ruling class is first implementing this “cashless welfare” scheme in areas with high concentrations of Aboriginal people. Similarly, the government has rolled out a particularly cruel form of work-for-the-dole targeting Aboriginal people called CDP. CDP requires welfare recipients in remote Aboriginal communities to work up to 760 hours more a year for the same basic payment as people in non-Aboriginal majority urban areas. All these paternalistic programs especially targeting Aboriginal people are inevitably the thin edge of a wedge that is intended to be shoved into the heart of all the poor and working class. In February, the conservative federal government with the support of Pauline Hanson’s One Nation – and in a deal with the Nick Xenophon Team (now rebadged as the Centre Alliance) – passed legislation extending the cashless welfare trials at Ceduna and east Kimberley for a further year. The new law also allows for the extension of the scheme to the Goldfields region in WA. The capitalist rulers say that “cashless welfare” is aimed at stopping welfare recipients spending their payments on alcohol, drugs and gambling. The truth is that it is just another means by which the rich ruling class can blame low income people for their own plight and make their lives harder in the process.

In a further blow to jobseekers, last month the federal government with the support of the racist One Nation, the Nick Xenophon Team, Derryn Hinch and other independents passed its draconian Welfare Reform Bill through the Senate. The new measures will impose ever more cruel restrictions and punishments on welfare recipients. Those who have been laid off will now have to wait longer before receiving payments. Jobseekers will also now be still more harshly hit with cuts to their payments for allegedly not meeting “job search” requirements for non-existent jobs! In short, many of the most economically vulnerable people in the country are going to have yet more hardships imposed on them while those newly unemployed reeling from the pain of being retrenched – such as the many axed NAB workers who will not quickly find new jobs – will be made to suffer greater financial stress. Meanwhile, the business owners whose greed has thrown the unemployed workers onto the dole queues will, of course, receive no penalty!

Even if one were to believe that the government is sincere in wanting to push the unemployed into work, the claimed rationale behind their harsh measures against welfare recipients is completely baseless. There simply are not enough available jobs. Indeed, on average, for every job vacancy there are 18 job seekers! One cause for this is that federal and state governments themselves have been slashing public service jobs as they underfund schools, hospitals and universities, slash TAFE and cut back on other services that working class people need the most. The main reason that there are not enough available jobs is that the rich company owners who run this country don’t hesitate to throw out workers when that is what it takes to boost profits. Moreover, in times when unemployment does fall, bosses become more and more reluctant to hire any more workers as remaining jobseekers will require greater training – training which greedy business owners simply don’t want to pay for – and because competition between bosses to hire the remaining workers means that they must put up wages. Thus, under the capitalist system there will always be a large number of unemployed people – both those “officially” counted as unemployed and the many more people who are either barely employed because they are getting far less work hours than they want or have given up a fruitless search for work and are, hence, not even counted in the statistics. This means that even if Australia’s rich people’s regime was truly interested in making people more intensely look for work, their cruel measures supposedly aimed at doing this would make no significant overall difference to unemployment levels. When all jobseekers look more avariciously for work then this simply increases competition between jobseekers for the same number of few, available job placements. The same overall number of people will remain without work as before!

However, the Australian ruling class’s real reason for bashing welfare recipients is something more sinister than a poorly thought out policy. Apart from shielding their corporate mates from deserved blame for job slashing, their main motive for implementing ever more cruel measures against unemployed workers is to make life so miserable for those looking for work that it will drive many to accept positions with especially poor wages and conditions. It will also pressure already employed workers, fearful of being thrown into the harsh life of the unemployed, to accept lower wages and worse working conditions from their bosses. Meanwhile, the prospect of a terrible life if one becomes unemployed acts to deter some workers from standing up to their exploiting bosses or to join in unions to fight for their rights at work. All this is why it is in the very interests of the union movement and the whole working class to oppose the every crueler attacks on unemployed workers. No to cashless welfare! No to waiting periods for newly unemployed workers! No to the punishment of jobseekers! For a big increase in unemployment payments!

Who is Really to Blame for Unemployment and Underemployment

Given how much that attacks on unemployed workers helps the capitalists to increase their rate of exploitation of existing and new workers, some big time capitalists have used their wealth and influence to directly push the campaign against welfare recipients – rather than just leaving it all to their representatives in parliament as they often do. Thus, the cashless welfare debit card is actually the brainchild of mining magnate Andrew Forrest, Australia’s sixth richest person. Forrest made introducing cashless welfare a key recommendation of his August 2014 “Creating Parity” report on indigenous employment which he was commissioned to produce by the former Abbott government. Last year, Forrest’s “philanthropic” Minderoo Foundation funded advertisements promoting the cashless welfare card. Having leached a personal fortune of nearly $7 billion from mining on stolen Aboriginal land, Forrest is a high-living tycoon who owns a $53 million private jet. He’s probably thinking how many extra private jets he could buy if expanded cashless welfare helps to drive down wages throughout society and, thus, helps to further boost the profits of his Fortescue Metals Group (FMG).

Media groups owned – and, therefore, having their political outlook shaped – by billionaire moguls have also been at the forefront of pushing measures against unemployed workers. True to form, the newspapers owned by Rupert Murdoch’s News Corporation – like The Daily Telegraph and The Australian – have run frequent diatribes against unemployed workers. Meanwhile, Channel 7’s Sunrise morning show has engaged in vilifying the unemployed by running stories such as “Australia’s worst dole bludging areas named and shamed.” On September 8 last year, the Inner West Sydney branch of the Australian Unemployed Workers Union held a lively rally against Channel 7’s hate speech against the unemployed – a protest that we in Trotskyist Platform also participated in. Channel 7 is owned by tycoon Kerry Stokes who has a nearly $3 billion fortune and is famous for owning extravagant mansions and cruising the world in his luxury yacht.

July 2014: Some of the capitalist billionaires who really run this country and the mainstream politicians who serve them. Gambling tycoon James Packer (Left) and media mogul Kerry Stokes (Right) have a discussion while sitting down to dinner with then Communications Minister, and future but now deposed Prime Minister, Malcolm Turnbull.

It is telling that the capitalists who have been at the forefront of vilifying the unemployed have been among the harshest in throwing workers out of their jobs whenever their profit “imperative” demands it. Thus, four years ago, one of Kerry Stokes’ Seven Group subsidiaries, heavy machinery supplier WesTrac, retrenched 630 of their workers despite Seven Group having made a $486 million profit the previous financial year. And then Stokes’ Channel 7 has the hide to vilify unemployed workers as “dole bludgers.” A year after Stokes’ job massacre at WesTrac, none other than Mr Cashless Welfare himself, Andrew Forrest was spearheading the slashing of hundreds of jobs at his Fortescue Metals Group. Forrest cried poor as his excuse for the jobs slashing … despite his company extracting a $435 million profit that financial year! Indeed, while Forrest was so “poor” that he “had to” throw hundreds of workers out of their jobs, he was not poor enough to stop him buying, just months after his jobs massacre, a $21 million mansion in the Perth seaside suburb of Cottesloe – just metres away from another mansion that he owns!

The axing of workers’ jobs that Andrew Forrest, Kerry Stokes and the NAB bosses are prosecuting is being done by many other business owners throughout the country – whether they are big corporate heavies or small business owners exploiting just a few workers. Telstra bigwigs last year threw 2,800 workers out of their jobs despite making a massive $3.9 billion profit last year and an even more obscene $5.8 billion profit the year before. In February, they flagged even more job cuts because the poor devils had only made a half-year profit of $1.7 billion! Meanwhile, last August, Cadbury announced that it would be slashing 50 jobs, or more than one in ten of its workforce at its Hobart factory, after having axed 80 workers two years previously. This, despite Cadbury’s owners, Mondelez International having made a whopping $US 3 billion profit last year.

In recent years, company bosses have sometimes given automation as their reason for cutting jobs. However, automation, AI and advances in technology need not, in themselves, lead to job slashing. Improvements in efficiency could be used to increase the amount of training time for workers, to reduce employees’ working hours with no decrease in pay or to broaden customer services. Instead, when capitalist companies use automation to slash jobs this is often associated with a decline in the quality and flexibility of service to consumers and customers. Thus, a month after beginning to implement its jobs massacre, NAB announced that it would close seven bank branches in the rural Riverina area.

The recent obsession of the media and economic “experts” to blame automation and robots for unemployment and underemployment is yet another means to get wealthy business owners off the hook. It makes out that job slashing and casualisation of the workforce are part of some kind of unstoppable historical trend driven by technological progress. However, decisions to axe workers’ jobs are not made by robots! They are made by greedy business owners who will do anything to maximise profits. Their profit obsession and the profit imperative of the capitalist system leads them to use any labour time savings from automation not to increase workers’ training time and working conditions or to expand the quality of services for customers but to slash workforces. In a humane, workers-run society automation and technological advances would not lead to any less jobs at all but to a trend towards higher skilled and better remunerated positions requiring greater degrees of training. So let us not be fooled by corporate bosses who express “regret” that they were “forced” to axe workers’ jobs because of automation. When these ultra-rich business owners throw out of their jobs large numbers of the very workers whose toil made them their own fortunes it is for the very same motive that capitalists have always had for slashing jobs: the motive to organise production and employment levels in a way that maximises their own private profits. It is all about the corporate bosses being able to leach ever greater wealth so that they can afford those additional holiday homes, that extra Ferrari and a quicker upgrade to their private jets.

Build Union and Working Class People’s Action to
Stop Companies Slashing Jobs and
Force “Money-Making” Businesses to
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We don’t have to accept business owners slashing jobs at will. Through mass action, especially union strike action, we can force bosses to retain jobs. Such action can threaten company owners with far greater losses in revenue than the extra profit they would gain through axing workers jobs. Right now solid strikes of workers at any one of the corporations where job slashing is taking place – such as at NAB, Telstra and Optus – backed up by solidarity industrial action at other workplaces could force the bosses there to cancel their job axing programs.

When the union movement starts stopping business owners from retrenching workers whenever these capitalists’ profit imperative demands it, this will also greatly boost the struggle for higher wages. Currently, even as profits are ballooning, workers’ wages are not keeping up with price increases. Whenever our unions demand a pay rise, the bosses respond that they will be “forced” to cut jobs if wages increase. They use this to deter our struggle for decent wages. However, they will only cut jobs when wages rise if we let them! If through action we can force the bosses to retain jobs then higher wages simply mean less profits for the capitalist business owners and a greater share of the fruit of our labour going back to us workers.

Melbourne, July 2016: Workers at a Coles food distribution centre in the suburb of Truganina go on strike to demand that the casual workers amongst them be made permanent.

As well as industrial action to stop job slashing at private corporations, we need similar struggle to stop layoffs at public sector workplaces including at schools, hospitals, Australia Post and public transport. We must also mobilise action to oppose any privatisations – such as the NSW Liberal Party government’s sell-off of STA public buses in Inner West Sydney to a private company, Transit Systems. Such privatisations inevitably mean job cuts and attacks on working conditions as governments outsource job slashing to private firms and, thus, avoid the political cost of being the ones responsible for throwing workers out of their jobs. Transit Systems, which is owned by the wealthy Australian Francis, Leishman and Smith families, are slated to take over the Sydney Area 6 buses from July onwards.

Unfortunately, all workers are not employed by big enterprises like STA buses, Telstra or the big banks where it is relatively easier to build industrial action against job cuts or jobs-threatening privatisations. Many workers also toil in smaller workplaces and businesses where it is harder to organise workers into unions. To help protect these workers as well from job slashing, we need to fight for laws that ban all profitable businesses from cutting the size of their workforce. We will only be able to win such laws by fighting for them since all governments in capitalist Australia – whether Liberal, ALP or ALP/Greens coalitions – have proven that, ultimately, they only serve the big end of town. Governments administered by all these parties accept the “right” of business owners to only retain as many workers as makes them the greatest profit. Therefore, to win a ban on profitable businesses slashing their workforce will take a huge campaign of strikes and mass protest actions. Importantly, such struggle would inevitably bring together unionised workers toiling for larger companies with unemployed workers and workers in smaller workplaces, enabling the latter to be drawn into the class struggle and giving impetus to the fight to organise workers in smaller businesses into our unions too.

The demand that all profitable businesses be stopped from cutting jobs is not the be all and end all of the fight for jobs. Actually, regardless of whether they are currently making a profit or copping a loss we do not give any capitalist – who hires workers for the sake of trying to exploit their labour for profit – the “right” to retrench workers. However, the call to stop profitable companies slashing jobs is crucial at this time because it shows to the working class that their jobs are being axed not out of “necessity” but because of the greedy pursuit of ever greater profits by wealthy business owners. Organising around this demand, thus, has the potential to kickstart a badly needed, class struggle fight for secure jobs for all workers. Furthermore, it helps to undercut the divisive myth that the way to save local jobs is to reduce immigration or to put “Australian workers first.”

As our struggle intensifies we need to emphasise still more stringent demands on the capitalist enemy. Not only should all profitable businesses be banned from cutting their workforce, we should also demand that any loss-making firm able to afford to pay any director or executive above a certain salary – say, more than ten times the annual wage of the lowest paid employee – also be prevented from cutting jobs. Moreover, a presently loss-making firm should be forbidden from cutting their workforce if they have made an overall profit over the previous, say, five years. In other words, the capitalist business owners should be forced to sell off, say, a luxury yacht or two and a couple of their holiday homes – i.e. some of the things they have bought from the profits they had previously leached from their employees’ labour – to enable them to cover the losses their business is currently making in order to continue operating with its current workforce levels. For those companies making a profit, we should demand that they not only be prohibited from axing jobs but be forced to increase hiring by at least a certain minimum level in proportion to their profits. For example, we could demand that firms must increase their wages bill by at least 10% of their profits. That means that NAB bosses, after making a $6.6 billion profit, would instead of being allowed to cut 6,000 jobs be forced to increase their total annual outlay for wages by $660 million. If we, probably somewhat optimistically, assume that the annual cost to them of each worker – including super and insurance – is $100,000, then that means that they would be forced to increase their workforce numbers by 6,600 full-time equivalent positions (if they do not provide existing workers with a pay rise). The capitalists will scream that they should not be forced to hire workers for positions that don’t exist. However, positions only “don’t exist” because the capitalists are being allowed to organise their operations in the way that maximises their private profit. If they were forced to increase hiring they would be impelled to – in order to make use of the bigger workforce – improve services for customers, for example by opening more bank branches in remote areas if they are a bank like NAB; or, if they are a manufacturing business, to increase production and then reduce prices to sell the additional output. They could also use any excess labour-time of each of their employees for community service projects – the type of work that is currently being performed for virtually free by jobseekers forced into work for the dole schemes! If any of this were not feasible, company owners would end up being compelled to increase training and professional development time for each worker or to reduce work hours per worker with no loss in pay. In summary, the fight for jobs is a fight to force capitalist bosses to maintain a workforce larger than that which is most profitable for them – it is a fight for more jobs at the expense of the profits of the business owners.

So it really is possible to win permanent jobs for all jobseekers through class struggle. Unfortunately, in the face of chronic unemployment, the growing casualisation of the workforce and fears about automation, many people are resigned to there always being a high level of unemployment and underemployment. Reflecting this, many advocates for the rights of jobseekers and the disadvantaged have advanced the call for a minimum living allowance for all. This demand has been taken up by the Greens who have associated it with analysis that claims that in several years automation will lead to a large number of people being unemployed and that there is a seemingly irreversible, steady trend towards underemployment. We certainly must demand a massive increase in unemployment payments, the disability support pension, the old age pension and other welfare payments. However, the problem with emphasising the call for a minimum living allowance – especially when used in the way the Greens are as an answer to unemployment and underemployment – is that it is defeatist. It accepts that the capitalists will be able to get away with maintaining high levels of unemployment and with forcing increasing numbers of workers to accept working far less hours than they want to. What is more, it plays into the false narrative that technological development and automation will in themselves lead to increased unemployment and under-employment. This again gets the capitalist bosses off the hook … and let’s never forget it is they and not robots that make the decision to axe workers’ jobs. Thus, while we should demand a massive increase in welfare payments, to emphasise the call for a minimum living allowance can end up as a diversion from the necessary class struggle fight to force business owners to increase their number of full-time, permanent employees. In terms of the overall interests of the working class, a minimum living allowance is a poor substitute to secure, fulltime jobs for all jobseekers. For one, the allowance will never end up matching that of paid workers. Moreover, as social beings who are driven to want to contribute to society, being given the guaranteed right to participate in social labour is important for our mental and social happiness. Most importantly, being brought together at the point of production is what gives workers the ability to unite and collectively organise to challenge the whole present system of exploitation and insecure jobs.

If the Capitalist System Cannot Provide Secure Jobs for All
Then Let it Perish!

Once a class struggle fight against job slashing gains momentum, we need to bring to the fore the demand for an across the board reduction in work hours – to share the available work around – with no loss in workers’ pay. For example, we can demand there be a 30 hour normal work week with workers still receiving a weekly wage as they are in a 38 hour week. The exact amount of reduction in the work week will depend on how many jobseekers or underemployed people need to be brought in to secure, full-time jobs. The capitalists will, of course, shout in response that such a sliding scale of hours is “impractical.” They will yell that the higher per unit labour cost this will bring and the resulting loss of profits will drive many of them out of business. Indeed, some struggling business owners will as a result end up going bust but the increased hiring that will be forced upon profitable firms will more than soak up any jobs lost. Furthermore, when business owners scream that being forced to hire more workers and pay higher hourly wages will lead to a collapse in investment and economic ruin – as they inevitably will scream – we must respond that: if you capitalists cannot run the economy in a way that guarantees secure, full-time jobs for all then we working class people need to take the economy out of your hands. By placing the key means of production into our own collective hands, we, unlike you capitalists, will ensure that millions of workers are not left to lead an unhappy, stressed life without secure work.

Calls to force bosses to increase hiring and for a sliding scale of hours are transitional demands – that is, a type of demand that communists have long used to unite and mobilise the working class to fight for their needs while simultaneously helping to show to the toiling masses the necessity for the struggle to go all the way to the revolutionary seizure of state power by the working class and its allies. Indeed, the demand for a sliding scale of hours was part of the Transitional Program raised by the Trotskyist Fourth International in the period of capitalist crisis preceding the outbreak of World War II. As the Transitional Program famously stated: “If capitalism is incapable of satisfying the demands inevitably arising from the calamities generated by itself, then let it perish.”

Sydney, 3 May 2018: Supporters of Trotskyist Platform and unemployed people’s rights activists rally against job slashing by corporate bosses. The demonstration was organised to help build a class-struggle movement to force capitalist business owners to increase hiring at the expense of their profits. The action was held outside the building of the NAB on the same day as the bank announced its half yearly profit results. That announcement confirmed that NAB bosses had already forced over 1,000 workers out of their jobs as part of their plan to slash 6,000 jobs in three years.

Unemployment and underemployment not only causes misery to those affected by it but is also a terrible squandering of human resources that makes all of society materially and culturally poorer than it could be. Under capitalism this wastage of human potential occurs because decisions of what and how to produce are not based on satisfying society’s overall needs but according to the profit drives of the competing capitalist bigwigs. Socialist, collective ownership of the economy will guarantee jobs for all not only because the working class in power will ensure that the system meets the basic need for jobs for all but because the system’s successful operation demands that all available human resources are brought to bear for society’s benefit. That is why even in periods during its life when the capitalist world was undergoing deep crisis – such as during the 1930s Great Depression or the 1982-83 recession when Australia had double digit official unemployment rates – the socialistic former Soviet Union was able to maintain full employment. This was despite a mid-1920s bureaucratic
degeneration that weakened socialistic rule and opened the way to the eventual 1991-92 collapse of the Soviet workers state under the weight of massive capitalist pressure. Similarly, despite being squeezed by the most crippling economic sanctions imaginable and despite being burdened by its own bureaucratic distortions, the DPRK’s (North Korea) socialist, planned economy is today still able to ensure jobs for all its workers. More significantly, in the world’s most populous country, China, socialistic rule has ensured that unemployment has been kept at comparatively low levels – even when the capitalist world was being mired in the 1997-98 Asian financial crisis or the late 2000s-early 2010s Great Recession. The same can also be said for the other socialistic states: Vietnam, Cuba and Laos. If China, Vietnam, Cuba and Laos do still have some level of unemployment it is only because, while socialistic state-owned enterprises dominate the strategic economic sectors in these countries, a capitalistic private sector and market allocation of some resources exist side by side with the socialist-led economy. In other words, the triumph of socialism is far from fully accomplished in these countries and there remains an intense political battle over the future direction of these lands.

Whether it is the battle to maintain socialistic rule in the existing workers states or the fight to overturn capitalism in the capitalist ones, the conflict between socialism and capitalism – which boils down to the clash between the working class masses and the capitalist exploiters – is in good part the struggle between a future where every person has the guaranteed right to contribute their labour and talents for society’s benefit and one where large numbers of people will be consigned to the poverty and demoralisation brought by unemployment and underemployment. It is, thus, also a conflict between a future where an economy based on common, i.e. socialist, ownership and guaranteed jobs unites the different races of the world in a beautiful harmony and savoured diversity versus one where the scapegoating of minorities for joblessness and insecure work leads to ever greater racism; and opens the gate to the triumphant march of more hard right-wing Donald Trumps, Marine Le Pens, George Christensens, Pauline Hansons and Peter Duttons; and eventually to the ascendancy of mass murdering, Hitler-style fascism. And as the recent brutal Western imperialist missile attack on Syria foreshadows, the struggle between socialism and capitalism is the struggle between a future where shared ownership and an internationally planned economy lays the basis for a world of everlasting peace and equality between nations or one where the more powerful capitalist countries will make up for the economic crises at home by still more cruelly subjugating the ex-colonial nations and – eventually – by going into a cataclysmic war between imperialist powers themselves.

Advancing Towards Working Class Rule

For the working class to advance its struggle towards socialism – and indeed to even effectively fight against attacks on its jobs and wages – its most determined layers need to understand that the existing capitalist state machine is its enemy. That means we must understand that the various organs of the state – the courts, police, military, commissions and top bureaucrats – have been built up to enforce the rule of the big end of town over the toiling masses. This remains the case whichever party is administering the government. For the organs of the state are themselves connected by thousands of veins to the capitalist exploiters. It follows that we can never wield this capitalist state or its various organs to further the struggle against the exploiting class. Illusions in the possibility of utilising the existing state or its individual organs – especially when administered by an ALP government – is one of main things retarding the class struggle. For such illusions make the masses believe that there is a road to salvation other than through the difficult path of militant social struggle.

We need to keep all the above in mind in our fight against job slashing. We must ensure that we are careful to wage the struggle in a manner that teaches the masses to always distrust the capitalist state rather than a manner that reinforces illusions in it. This is especially the case because when we call for a ban on profitable companies slashing jobs or for an enforced reduction in the work week with no loss in pay, we are actually making this demand upon the capitalist state. This is permissible as it is a demand for an economic concession from the enemy – much like we demand pay rises, reductions in work hours and bans on asbestos use when we launch industrial action against individual capitalists. However, we should never make positive demands on the capitalist state – that is, demands that portray the state as having the ability to use its discretionary power in a way favourable to the working class or ones that increase the reach and power of this bosses state. This should be an absolute rule! For example, just as any genuine socialist would never call for the Australian imperialist state to intervene abroad to supposedly “liberate” any oppressed people overseas, we should never call for this state to be given special emergency powers to “fight unemployment.” For not only would making that demand breed illusions in the potential of the capitalist state to act in the masses’ political interests, it would be downright dangerous. The special powers would inevitably end up being used to break strikes and drive down wages – which is the capitalists’ favourite “remedy” for unemployment. Similarly, we would never call for a state inquiry into the problem of unemployment or for a commission to act against it, since these too would – in keeping with the class allegiance of capitalist state institutions – recommend and enact wage freezes and “more flexible” working conditions. In contrast, when we demand a ban on profitable companies slashing jobs or for a sliding scale of hours we are not calling for the state to use its discretion to act in a way favourable to workers’ interests but are rather making a very specific demand for an economic concession from the enemy. Like when we have in the past called for a restriction in the working week to forty hours or demanded a ban on asbestos use or called for increases in minimum wages, all such demands, in one way or another, amount to a demand for the bosses to be forced to accept a lower profit and for a greater share of the fruit of our toil to go back to us.

Nevertheless, as well as calling for militant class struggle to stop job slashing by individual firms and to compel the bosses state into the concession of enacting laws to force capitalists to increase hiring, we also need to organise other independent actions and workers’ organs to advance the struggle for jobs for all. In this way we help the masses to trust only their own united efforts. This becomes especially practical over the question of enforcing any concessions we may win from the capitalists and their state. Today, concessions we have won from the capitalists are often simply ignored by them. And even as their state sometimes enforces these concessions in order to avoid enraging us – which would threaten their interests in a more serious way – they often also allow individual bosses to get away with violating the rights that we have won. Take, for example, the minimum wage. Currently there are hundreds of thousands of workers in Australia – mainly casual, young and sometimes migrant – receiving far less than the minimum wage. A Facebook campaign started by a female University of Wollongong student in August 2016 created a storm after it exposed the extent to which young casual workers in the hospitality and retail sectors are being underpaid – some getting as little as $10 per hour. Therefore, alongside demanding bans on profitable companies slashing jobs etc we need to demand the right – and when possible simply assume the right – of our unions and workplace committees of workers to inspect all the bosses’ account books. Even as they talk up their prospects when they want to get new investments, bosses always cry poor to workers in order to “justify” keeping wages low and cutting jobs. We need to see their true position: how much of the fruits of our labour they are actually stealing, how much of their actual profits they are hiding by giving themselves spectacular corporate bonuses and fringe benefits or by siphoning off company resources to their own personal business accounts. Should any companies be found to violate any legal concessions we have won – for example, on minimum hiring requirements – then we should use the cover of enforcing these laws to put these businesses under the control of workplace committees. Eventually these workers committees can link up and elect higher committees to coordinate the operations of the different firms that have been put under workers’ control. In this way workers get a taste of administering power in their own interests and of the need for our class to take over economic and political power entirely.

For A Workers Leadership That Truly Believes That
The Workers United Will Never Be Defeated

In the struggle for jobs for all, the social power of our trade union movement is crucial. Unfortunately, while our union leaders have expressed anger at job cuts in the likes of the NAB and Telstra they have not actually mobilised any opposition to this job slashing thus far. This is because it is the program of the ALP that currently dominates our union movement. This social democratic program, while seeking greater benefits for workers within the current social order, accepts the “right” of capitalists to determine how they should organise production and, thus, how many workers they should retain. Consequently, many of our unions only take a strong stand against job slashing when they believe that axed jobs are being sent overseas or replaced by guest workers from abroad. However, this does little good to the fight to win jobs for all because although there are phone helpdesk and IT jobs that are being sent abroad, the number of jobs that are offshored are comparatively few and even less are replaced by guest workers. For example, none of the 6,000 jobs being slashed at NAB are due to offshoring or replacement by guest workers.

Indeed, the obsession of many of our union leaders with the supposed “export of jobs” and with the entry of guest workers is worse than useless. For it diverts workers from the necessary fight to force the greedy capitalist bosses to increase hiring at the expense of these bosses’ fat profits. Instead, it channels workers into squabbling over jobs with their overseas working class sisters and brothers. This inevitably creates racist sentiments which harm workers’ unity and further undermine the possibility of the needed class struggle fight against job slashing.

Now, of course, the capitalist exploiters are always seeking the cheapest sources of labour and always trying to undercut working conditions. They do this by not only hiring some guest workers but also when they hire many young workers or apprentices. However, in those cases where bosses are actually offshoring jobs or in the fewer cases where jobs are given to skilled overseas workers that could go to locals, our slogan should not be the divisive one to give the jobs to local workers instead of overseas ones but the simple demand to stop any job losses here and for increased hiring of workers. And the way to oppose attempts to use the entry of temporary skilled workers to undercut working conditions is to demand that all these workers (formerly known as 457 visa workers) be paid at the same rates with the same conditions as local workers and be given the full rights of citizens so that the threat of deportation cannot be used to intimidate them. Most crucially, our unions must energetically and sympathetically organise these working class sisters and brothers into our unions.

More left talking union officials will disguise their nationalist opposition to the entry of 457 and other visa workers by expressing concern at how badly these workers become exploited. And, indeed, many of these workers can be severely exploited. However, true solidarity with these workers means fighting to win them equal pay and conditions, union protection and the rights of citizens … not trying to kick them out and prevent them getting a livelihood! The argument that we are saving guest workers from exploitation by excluding them has a parallel to racist Australian governments’ claims that they are saving asylum seekers from drowning by locking them up if they make it here! Unfortunately, in this overall wealthy country surrounded by lower income people, the strength of a selfish, rich country-type nationalism is so strong that even many of the Far-Left groups in some way buy into it. This was seen most starkly in July 2012 when there was the largest demonstration in Australia to keep out foreign workers: the “Local Workers First” rally in Perth. The Socialist Alliance group, Socialist Alternative and the Communist Party of Australia (CPA) all backed this divisive, national-chauvinist march.

Being leftists, those socialist groups that buy into anti-overseas worker campaigns advocate a “clean” “local workers first” policy which rejects conscious dog whistling to racism. These groups are torn between healthy internationalist impulses to solidarise with overseas workers and a pull to capitulate to the nationalist sentiments bred by pro-ALP union bureaucrats. For example, in the editorial in the 1 November, 2017 edition of their newspaper, The Guardian, the CPA correctly called for “an end to all forms of racial discrimination” and for visa workers to be given the same wages and conditions as local workers, for temporary visa workers to be given permanent residency and for them to be organised into the unions. However, the editorial also stated that: “Temporary visa workers are used to break solidarity, pit worker against worker in a race to the bottom. It creates fear and divisions, fosters racism and xenophobia, as workers who lose their jobs or cannot find work in one country see the foreign workers being brought in as ‘taking their jobs’.” This is rather rich given that the statement refused to oppose the pro-ALP, union leaderships’ nationalist campaign to keep out these workers. It is not the entry of visa workers that is fostering racism and xenophobia but the demands to keep them out. To argue otherwise is like claiming that the entry of migrants in general, rather than anti-immigrant agitation, is to be blamed for fostering division and racism. However, even as the CPA editorial rightly stated that, “Temporary visa workers are not the enemy of the working class in Australia. They are part of the international working class and must be welcomed”, the CPA itself fosters anxieties about guest workers “taking local jobs.” Thus, an article in the 30 August 2017 edition of their Guardian (http://cpa.org.au/guardian/2017/1792/06-457-rises. html) has the fear-mongering title, “457 rises Phoenix-like.” The article expresses shock horror over Thomas Foods in Tamworth bringing in twenty 457 Visa workers. It favourably quotes the Australasian Meat Industry Employees’ Union (AMIEU) leadership divisively asking: where was the genuine, independent local labour market testing that showed New England somehow needed even more foreign workers while unemployment is so high? Feeding into the national myth that joblessness is caused by 457 visa workers, the article concludes by positively quoting the AMIEU leadership’s statement that: “All Australians should be deeply concerned about the future of Australian jobs under Malcolm Turnbull. The 457 Visa program is far from dead, but Turnbull has no problem killing off the future of young Australians ….” The fact is there is no such thing as a clean “local workers first” policy! Any policy that calls for putting the interests of (mainly white) Australian workers over (overwhelmingly coloured) lower paid workers from “Third World” countries will inevitably appeal to and reinforce White Australia xenophobic attitudes as well as “First World” arrogance. And all such demands divert workers away from the struggle that is actually needed – the one against the job-slashing capitalist exploiters – while pitting local workers against their natural allies: the working class people of the world.

This is true, too, also for protectionist demands that call for tariffs, local content policies or other measures to favour local capitalists over overseas producers. Where such measures lead is very apparent today: to Donald Trumpism! In other words, protectionism is associated with racist hostility to ethnic and religious minorities. Meanwhile, as the masses are distracted by seeing the non-existent enemy abroad, the local capitalists will savage workers’ rights at home: in Trump’s America’s case by gouging the funds needed for social services by giving a massive tax cut to the rich. Meanwhile, as Trump’s incitement of a trade war is showing, protectionist measures bring no net savings to jobs as overseas countries retaliate with their own measures. In the end all that happens is that working class people are divided and the possibility of class struggle against job slashing is, thus, undermined. Meanwhile, protectionism also weakens class struggle by promoting the notion that more profits for the bosses are what is needed to get more jobs for workers – basically a variant of the claims of trickle-down economics. Yet as the recent mass sackings announced by NAB shows, more profits for the capitalists can actually mean less jobs!

The fight for jobs for all workers, which means a struggle to force bosses to retain more workers than they wish to, is indeed a struggle to force the capitalists to produce in a way that is less profitable for them. Put simply: the interests of workers are counterposed to that of the capitalists. We need our union movement to be dominated by this understanding – not hamstrung by the ALP social democratic myth of common “national interests” between local workers and Aussie bosses. A union leadership infused with a class struggle understanding will mobilise the militant industrial action needed to win secure jobs and improved wages for all workers. Given that the capitalists have created laws to prevent nearly all the kinds of strike action that can actually win gains for us, our unions need to be prepared to flout these unjust laws. This was starkly seen when the Fair Work Commission outlawed the then impending January 29 strike by Sydney rail workers. The pro-ALP leaders of the RBTU union caved in to this ruling and obeyed it. They did not have the program to defy the laws and then deter them being used by upping the ante through deepening the planned strike action, calling out for solidarity strikes and actively building community support. However, there were many rank and file, rail worker unionists and elected delegates who were outraged at this decision to obey the no-strike ruling. These most determined militants from throughout the toiling masses must cohere themselves into a workers party based on an unalloyed class struggle and internationalist program. This is the instrument by which these most active, militant layers can win broader sections of the masses to join a class struggle fight for jobs, improved wages, public housing and all the services that working class people need the most.

Such a revolutionary workers party would oppose all “local workers first” and protectionist demands that divide us. Instead it would positively work to foster the working class unity and internationalist spirit crucial to class struggle by fighting to win the workers movement to champion the rights of guest workers, refugees, Aboriginal people, the unemployed, women and LGBTI people. The interests of the working class of all ethnicities and that of all the downtrodden are, indeed, the same and we face the same capitalist enemy. It is notable that the same billionaire Kerry Stokes who threw hundreds of workers out of their jobs at his Seven Group’s Westrac subsidiary and whose Channel 7 vilifies jobseekers is the same capitalist tycoon whose Channel 7 Sunrise breakfast program last month outrageously called for a renewed push to steal Aboriginal children from their families.

Left: September 2017 Sydney rally against the vilification of jobseekers by Channel 7’s morning Sunrise program. Right: 16 March 2018 Aboriginal-led protest against the very same Channel 7 show. The action targeted Sunrise because a segment in an earlier broadcast outrageously called for an intensified push to steal Aboriginal children from their families. The Trotskyist Platform placard featured in the photo stressed that such racist lies spread by Sunrise serve the greedy designs of its billionaire owner, Kerry Stokes and the capitalist class that he is part of. The struggle for workers jobs and workers rights and the fight against the intense oppression of Aboriginal people are struggles against the same enemy and against the same racist and exploitative capitalist system.

Uniting all sections of the oppressed, a revolutionary workers party would include all sections of the working class especially its lowest paid, most downtrodden sections including “coloured” ethnic workers, Aboriginal workers, women workers, young workers, casual workers and unemployed and underemployed workers. Rejecting the myth of “common interests” between local bosses and local workers, this party would within our unions popularise demands to force the capitalists to retain more workers at the expense of their profits. Through promoting such demands and in the course of waging struggles to win public housing, crush fascists, oppose racist oppression, advance the emancipation of women and oppose imperialist tyranny, a revolutionary workers party will show the masses the need to sweep away the cruel capitalist order and usher in a workers-run society. Such a society will finally guarantee that every single person has the secure job, free quality heath care and education, free housing and lasting peace that we have all longed for.

Let’s Build More Staunch Actions to Prevent the Privatisation of Public Housing

Trade Unionists and Other Supporters of Public Housing Occupy Millers Point
Houses Slated For Privatisation

Let’s Build Towards More Staunch Actions to Demand That Vacant Public Housing Goes to People on the Waiting List or the Homeless & Not to Ultra-Rich Developers & Speculators

Millers Point, Sydney: Houses in High St occupied by trade unionists, current and former public housing tenants and other supporters of public housing. The powerful August 6, 2017 occupation demanded that these vacant public housing dwellings be made available to those on the public housing waiting list or the homeless.

8 March 2018: On August 6 last year, scores of trade unionists, current and former public housing tenants and other supporters of public housing carried out a powerful occupation of vacant public housing dwellings at 78 to 80 High St, Millers Point. These houses in Sydney city are slated for sell-off to wealthy speculators, landlords and capitalist developers. The NSW Liberal/National government had driven off the public housing tenants who lived in the houses. Notably, 78 High St was the home from where housing authorities had, weeks before, forcibly relocated a highly respected female Aboriginal activist and elder. Indeed, a large proportion of the public housing tenants that the right-wing NSW government and high-handed bureaucrats squeezed out of their homes in the Millers Point, Rocks and Dawes Point area are elderly, single women.

Fittingly, the houses that were occupied have a development notice from a state government authority announcing a plan to build a four car, car-park under them. The project would cost hundreds of thousands of dollars. Yet, the state government had previously said that it did not have money to maintain the homes and gave this as a primary reason for needing to sell them! But now that public housing tenants have been kicked out they are prepared to spend large sums of money to make the homes more valuable for their rich developer mates and other wealthy property investors expected to buy them.

The occupation demanded that the occupied houses and all unoccupied public housing dwellings in the area be given to the homeless or those on public housing waiting lists. Activists adorned the occupied homes with banners emphasising the struggle against the sell-off of public housing as well as the always colourful array of union flags. The action caught the housing authorities and their security guards by surprise. The NSW government went into a panic that the action would resonate.

The August 6 mobilisation was backed by the Sydney Branch of the MUA as well as by the CFMEU. The occupation was a rear-guard action to stop the sell-off of public housing in the Millers Point, Rocks and Dawes Point area. Sadly, all but a handful of public housing tenants who once lived in the area have now been squeezed out as part of the state government’s plan to sell off nearly all the public housing in the area. However, this struggle was more than about the crucial fight to save the working class community in Millers Point. It was also about the broader struggle to stop the sell-off of public housing right across the country. This struggle is urgent. In just 12 years, the former ALP and current Liberal state governments have slashed NSW’s public housing stock by 12%. The proportion of people with access to public housing in the whole country is nearly 30% less than what it was 23 years ago.

Later in the evening of the August 6 occupation, after numbers had dwindled somewhat, a heavy contingent of riot cops raided the occupation site. They arrested four activists participating in the struggle who had linked arms to protect the public property from theft by the ultra-rich. The last of those arrested was evicted Millers Point public housing tenant, Peter Muller, who has been at the forefront of resisting the state government’s atrocious sell-off of public housing in the area over the last three and a half years. The others arrested were a staunch anti-fascist activist who has been involved in the struggle to defend public housing in the area from the very start, a young university student and a Trotskyist Platform supporter.

The four arrested have been charged with “Hinder/Resist police officer in execution of duty” and are currently going through court proceedings. Police used heavy-handed force during the arrests. In two of the cases, the arrested were subjected to undue pain by the police. In one case, police caused permanent damage to the person’s wrist. In another case, police, after they took one of the arrested around the corner and out of sight of most other protesters, bent his wrist back to cause sharp pain and then maintained a painful hold for a few minutes. This was even though he was in no way resisting arrest at the time. This was witnessed by another of the arrested who was already in the paddy wagon at the time (but with the back door open). In addition to the four arrested and facing criminal charges, in the hours leading up to the action, three other supporters of public housing were given trespass fines for allegedly being in the occupied houses.

However, far from this repression deterring people, the occupation has inspired many supporters of public housing to be more determined than ever. In the days following the August 6 occupation, many who participated in or heard of the struggle were eager to know when the next action would be! What is driving the movement is the extreme lack of affordable rental housing caused by the privatisation of public housing by successive governments. This is pushing large numbers of people into poverty — and many even into homelessness. The campaign for public housing concerns all working class people and all the poor since the dire shortage of public housing is allowing landlords to jack up rents to exorbitant levels in the private rental market. Therefore, it is inevitable that those standing for the interests of working class people will launch other staunch actions in support of public housing. That could be in the inner-city or in the many other areas where public housing is being sold off.

Furthermore, the morale of the public housing campaign was given a boost when solidarity donations covered the entire fines of the three activists who were hit with civil fines (but not charged) in the period leading up to the occupation. Most of this was collected in a September 1 fundraiser organised to help cover the fines and review the lessons of the occupation struggle. The successful fundraiser was chaired by secretary of the Millers Point, Rocks and Dawes Point tenants committee, Barney Gardner, and included speeches by the then sole remaining High St public housing tenant, Wendy, by Peter Muller, by Campbelltown based public housing activist, Peter Butler and by two young activists heavily involved in the occupation struggle including Trotskyist Platform comrade, Samuel Kim. Speaking of the August 6 occupation, Peter Muller made a crucial point at the fundraiser: “we may not have been able to achieve our aims but we sure did scare the be-jesus out of the government.” He pointed to announcements from the government about increasing social housing in the days following the occupation as a possible concession to the struggle and to the threat of more similar, militant actions. Moreover, it seems that in the days following the occupation, the housing bureaucrats had been slightly less pig-headed about forcing the then remaining Millers Point tenants into suburbs and properties that they did not want to move into. Indeed, the 24 hour-a-day security guards that they have posted, ever since the occupation, specifically outside the houses occupied on August 6 shows their fear of further militant struggle.

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Supporters of public housing take a strong stand during the 6 August 2017 protest action in Millers Point

Valuable Lessons for Future Struggles

The on the streets struggle to defend and extend public housing in the contemporary period began with an important November 2009 protest outside the office of the then Housing minister in the former ALP federal government, Tanya Plibersek. At the time, federal and state governments were orchestrating the sell off of public housing and building much less than they sold off. Now things have gotten even worse.

This sell-off of public housing is not only bad for all working class people, it is often particularly hurting the most discriminated against and disadvantaged sections of the masses including women, Aboriginal people, the elderly, those from people of coloured backgrounds, youth and people with disabilities. The slashing of public housing is especially hurting low-income single mothers. They and their families are already reeling from measures taken by the Howard conservative government and then the Gillard social-democratic government that combined to cruelly throw all sole parents with children over eight off the parenting payment. As if having to deal with socially conservative people that look condescendingly upon them or being insultingly portrayed by talkback shock jocks and “investigative” reporters as undeserving, “welfare mums” is not enough for low income single mothers to have to face! Now the dire shortage of public housing means that many already squeezed, single mothers have to suffer anywhere from ten to twenty years on the waiting list to get public housing … by which time their children are already adults and the money saved on rent from having public housing will no longer allow them to pay for the school excursions, computer fees, music lessons and sports expenses that they excruciatingly couldn’t afford to provide for their children or for all the clothing, medication, travel and entertainment that they weren’t able to purchase while still being, in what should have been, the prime of their and their family’s life. Meanwhile, one of the combined effects of the gutting of the sole parenting payment and the slashing of public housing is to increase domestic violence against women. For these measures mean that low-income women relying financially on a male partner who is abusive are confronted with the unbearable choice of either going out on their own and living an impoverished life without a guaranteed roof over their heads (and over those of their children if they are mothers) or staying with their partner and trying to endure the attacks.

Yet as government sell-offs of public housing deepen and cause more and more misery, our struggle is notably also getting stronger. The Millers Point public housing tenants by their determined struggle have added so much vigour to the overall fight to defend public housing in NSW. The blockade which attempted to stop Peter Muller’s eviction in May 2017 and then the August 6 occupation have taken the movement up to a new, higher level of militancy.

Millers Point, Sydney: Some activists wait outside ready to defend the August 6 occupation of vacant public housing on High St by dozens of supporters of public housing.

This is what we need because the situation is getting more desperate. We need audacious struggles like the August 6 occupation because this is the only sort of method that works. Lobbying ruling class politicians does not work. For they all, in the end, serve the capitalist, big end of town. The Liberals are the most in your face and arrogant about it. But the ALP and ALP/Greens state and federal governments have also sold off public housing left, right and centre. They did this in Minto, in Bonnyrigg, in Claymore and in Glebe.

To strengthen our struggles for the future, activists for public housing need to learn some crucial lessons from the August 6 occupation and from the blockade three months earlier. The most important of them concerns the police and other state enforcement organs. Illusions in these institutions did affect our struggles. During the May blockade against Peter Muller’s eviction, we had less forces overnight than we could have had when the sheriffs and police raided because many people expected that these bodies would follow their own stated procedures and wait for a new warrant to be issued before charging in. At the August 6 occupation, police promised that they would not raid until at least midday the next day. Expectations that they would keep their promise meant that some people who may have been able to stay longer left to come back the next day and others who heard about the struggle thought it would be OK if they waited for the following day to join the action. That weakened our forces. So the most crucial lesson that must be drawn from these struggles is to understand that the cops, sheriffs, courts and other state organs are not impartial bodies but part of a state created, quite specifically, to impose the interests of the filthy rich, capitalist exploiting class on the rest of us. With this understanding, next time we must work harder to ensure that as many people as possible in the movement are not fooled by any promises from the state enforcement bodies and, certainly, do not trust them to follow their own so-called rules.

Secondly, the recent actions also expose many of the mainstream politicians who say they are our allies. They often make nice speeches trying to get our votes. But when we launch the kind of action that can actually scare the enemy, most of them are nowhere to be seen. That is why we must rely only on our own power, united with all the downtrodden. As Trotskyist Platform activist, Samuel Kim, explained while giving his speech at the September 1 fundraiser:

“The enemy have their immense wealth, their cops, sheriffs, courts, politicians and media. But we have the power that comes from the fact that their gigantic profits actually come from our labour; we have our potentially huge numbers, our potential unity, our unions and our determination that was seen in the August 6 occupation.”

Everyone who took part in the August 6 occupation and in preparing it should be proud of themselves. As intermediate steps to the next staunch action, we need to broaden support for the struggle to defend public housing through a series of standard rallies that bring new forces into the movement. We can win such broader support! There are hundreds of thousands of people on public housing waiting lists. There are millions more workers on the minimum wage or other low incomes who need public housing but can’t even get on the waiting list because the criteria is so strict. Also the struggle against the sell-off of public housing is part of the overall struggle of working class people and the poor against the greedy capitalists who want to get even richer at our expense.

9 December 2017, Sydney: Current and evicted public housing tenants, trade unionists, unemployed rights activists and other supporters of public housing marched through the Millers Point and Rocks Area demanding “Stop the Sell-Off of Public Housing.” Standing by the August 6 protest occupation of public housing dwellings at 78-80 High St, the march sought to build support for future staunch actions in defence of public housing.

Let us trust only in our own power and build our unity across racial and national lines! Let us reject any expectations in the institutions of the capitalist big end of town that are only there to enforce their interests! Let us prepare for new militant actions by broadening the campaign for a massive increase in public housing!

Issue 18

TP 18 COver

PDF version 9MB or reduced file size 3MB

  1. As Neo-Nazi Thugs are Emboldened by the Racist Violence of Police & the Brutal Jailers of the Nauru, Christmas & Manus Island Hell Holes… Crush All the Violent Far Right Racists through United Mass Action by the Workers Movement, Aboriginal People, Coloured People and the Left
  2. Casual & Low Paid Workers in Non-Union Worksites Face Extreme Exploitation. Unions Waging Militant Struggle Can Inspire the Unionisation of Currently Unorganised Workers
  3. Supporters Greet Arrival of DPRK Soccer Team for Asia Cup Finals
  4. Down with Capitalist Australia’s Military Build Up! U.S., Australian Militaries: Stay Out of the South China Sea! Defend Socialistic China against Military Intimidation by Capitalist Powers
  5. An African Person Who Studied in Russia Tells His Story: Capitalism Breeds Racism. A First Hand Account of How Russia’s Return to Capitalism Led to An Explosion of Racism
  6. Imperialist Hypocrisy, Nationalism & Repression after Paris Terror Attacks
  7. Oppose All U.S. & Australian Military & Political Intervention in Syria & Iraq!
  8. Redfern Aboriginal Tent Embassy Stood Strong & Made Gains 
  9. Smash the Cuts to Services Working Class People Need the Most! Stop the Sell-Off of Public Housing
    Massively Increase Public Housing Just Like Socialistic China is Doing
  10. “Human Rights Attacks on Socialistic North Korea & the Trade Union Royal Commission Here: Both are Campaigns of Lies to “Justify” Attacks on Anyone Standing in the Way of Capitalist Exploitation.
    Down with the Right-Wing Campaign of Lies about North Korea!
  11. The Transition from Socialist Revolution to Communism. On the Tasks of the Workers State in the Transition to Equality and Stateless Society
  12. Defenders of the Socialistic DPRK Support the DPRK Soccer Team at the Asia Cup
  13. What Strategy Is Needed to Counter the Violent Racist Threat? Working Class-Based Mass Direct Action vs Liberal/Social-Democratic Pacifism
  14. Ten Years On after the Filthy, Violent White Supremacist Riot Trade Unionists, Ethnic People & All Anti-Racists Must Unite to Open Up Cronulla Beach to People of Colour!

Issue 17

Issue 17 December 2014
ISSN 2201-358X

TP Cover

  1. Smash Abbott’s Budget. Rely on Class Struggle Not Campaigning for ALP/Greens Governments. Unleash Industrial Action Now to Reverse Three Decades of Attacks on Working Class People.
  2. U.S./Australia: Hands off Iraq and Syria! Defend Syria against Western Imperialism & its “Rebel” Proxies! Workers Caught in the Crosshairs of Capitalism: Don’t Let the Jingoistic Beat of War Divert You from Justified Anger at the Exploiters & Their Budget. Abbott/Shorten’s War and “Anti-Terror Laws” are Bad for Working Class People.
  3. Greetings for the October 1 Anniversary of China’s Great 1949 Revolution. Down with Yuppy, Anti-Communist Hong Kong Protests.
  4. Suffering of a Public Housing Tenant. Fight for Proper Maintenance of Public Housing. Stop the Neglect and Stop the Sell-Offs.
  5. For Working Class Action against the U.S. & Australian Rulers Backing Israel’s Genocidal Terror. Support the Palestinian Struggle for Self- Determination! Defend Syrian Self-Determination against NATO’s Proxy Armies!
  6. Provocation by Violent Racists Crushed in Brisbane:Unions United with Leftists & Other Anti-Racists Got the Job Done!
  7. Here are the different stages: Stage A This is the period of recovery for the mother that begins as soon as the baby is born. viagra canada free No one can tell viagra price usa that you made these transactions. Carefully watching the man and in any case on the off chance that they wait around for quite a while, then show to a spegeneric cheap viagra djpaulkom.tvt and disclose your predicaments. Most discomfort prescription for viagra is felt after periods of not taking medications, for instance when one first wakes up or intentionally tries to stop taking them.

  8. Mobilise United Action of Aboriginal People, Trade Unions and “Ethnic” Communities to Demand: Justice For TJ, Jail for the Racist Murdering Cops!
  9. Stop Capitalist Job Slashing through Class Struggle. Force Bosses to Increase Hiring at the Expense of their Profits!
  10. Force the Ruling Class to Hold Back Their Cops from Killing Aboriginal People – Unleash Union/Black Action! Palm Island Aboriginal Hero Lex Wotton Joins Brisbane G20 Protests.
  11. Freedom for the Refugees! No to Offshore or Onshore Detention! Build a Pro-Working Class Refugee Rights Movement.
  12. Racist Cop Attack on Teen Gathers Protesters Outside Police Station.
  13. The Main Enemy Are the Capitalist Rulers at Home. Lift Western Sanctions on Russia! Down with NATO/Australian Meddling in Ukraine! Abbott & Shorten Use Ukraine Plane Tragedy to Promote Support for Aussie Imperialism. Defend the Just Struggle of the People of the Donbass! For the Revolutionary Unity of the Ukrainian and Russian Working Class!
  14. Anti-Fascists Give Violent Racists a Drubbing in Marrickville. Build Trade Union-Centred Mass Actions to Crush the Fascists!
  15. Sydney Rally Opposes Entire U.S. and Australian Imperialist Intervention in Syria and Iraq.

Issue 17 PDF Format 2.8 MB

Issue 16

TP 16 on a file in PDF format: TP16

Smash Rudd’s Racist Scheme! Immediate Asylum in Australia for All Refugee Arrivals!

Sydney, 20 July 2013: Protestors in Sydney join others all around the country in the first defiant response to Kevin Rudd’s announcement of his cruel and racist “PNG Solution.”

Sydney, 20 July 2013: Protestors in Sydney join others all around the country in the first defiant response to Kevin Rudd’s announcement of his cruel and racist “PNG Solution.”
Sydney, 20 July 2013: Protestors in Sydney join others all around the country in the first defiant response to Kevin Rudd’s announcement of his cruel and racist “PNG Solution.”

Racist Scapegoating of Refugees and 457 Visa Workers Is Aimed at Attacking Workers’ Rights. Trade Unions: Win Freedom for Refugees! Defend 457 Visa Workers’ Rights!

Official figures show that as of 10 June 2013, there are over 1,850 child refugees being detained in Australia.
Official figures show that as of 10 June 2013, there are over 1,850 child refugees being detained in Australia.

Unleash Militant Class Struggle to Restore the Single Parent Payment and Massively Increase Both the Parenting Payment and Newstart Allowance! Smash the ALP Government’s Attack on Low-Income Single Mothers!

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Capture

An Eye Witness Account of Capitalist South Korea

Above: South Korean Ssangyong workers armed with metal pipes during their 2009 industrial struggle with the car company. In South Korea workers have a strong history of resisting their exploiters and subsequently being brutalised by the capitalist state.
Above: South Korean Ssangyong workers armed with metal pipes during their 2009 industrial struggle with the car company. In South Korea workers have a strong history of resisting their exploiters and subsequently being brutalised by the capitalist state.

Defend Syria from Imperialist-Imposed Regime Change!june 15 rally_fmt

An Eyewitness Account of North Korea and Its People: Bravely Building a Friendly, Socialistic Society While in the Cross Hairs of Imperialism

A scene from the 2012 Arirang performance hails the socialist alliance between North Korea and the Peoples Republic of China.
A scene from the 2012 Arirang performance hails the socialist alliance between North Korea and the Peoples Republic of China.

Issue 15

Massively Increase Public Housing! Socialistic China is Doing That So Let’s Fight for the Same Here!

One of China’s many new public housing complexes. Last year China started construction of<br /><br /><br /><br />
over ten million new public housing dwellings.

Oppose Police Terror against Aboriginal People, “Ethnic” Youth And All The Poor! Don’t Allow Business as Usual – Build Mass Actions Backed by Trade Union Power!

Horrific Racist Savagery: After shooting Aboriginal youth Troy Taylor in Sydney’s Kings Cross, police drag and bash the teenager as he bleeds to within an inch of death. -Sunday Telegraph

No to Neo-Colonialism: Defend Syria against the Pro-Imperialist “Rebels”. Oppose All NATO/Australia Diplomatic, Military & Political Intervention in Syria! 

Sydney, August 5:  Syrian origin youth pose for a photo in front of the Trotskyist Platform banner at the thousands strong, Hands Off Syria rally.
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Crush the QLD Government’s Attacks on Public Sector Workers! Let’s Not Get Diverted into Campaigning for an ALP/Greens Government! The Only Thing That Can Save Jobs is All Out Strike Action!

An unlucky participant at the September 12 rally in Brisbane - one of thousands being laid off from the public sector in an austerity drive resembling those occurring across Europe.

 

The Struggle for the Left to Take an Anti-Imperialist Position on the Syria Conflict

PDF of TP Issue 15:TP15