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Rally Calls to Rip the Electricity and Fuel Sectors From the Tycoons and Bring Them Into Public Hands

Rally Calls to Rip the Electricity and Fuel Sectors From the Tycoons and
Bring Them Into Public Hands

12 April 2023: Last Saturday, over thirty people rallied in the Western Sydney suburb of Auburn to demand that the electricity, coal, oil and gas industries be ripped out of the hands of the greedy tycoons and be placed into public ownership. The action was in response to the unaffordable cost of living and plummeting real wages. In introducing the action, rally emcee Samuel Kim, who is also a leading member of Trotskyist Platform, explained:

Sisters and brothers, we are gathered here today because everything is way too expensive. Electricity, petrol, gas, rent, food … you name it. Bread and cereal prices are up nearly 13% over just this last year. The price of milk and other dairy products has risen nearly 15%. Meanwhile, workers wages are barely rising. As a result, large numbers of people are being driven into poverty. Many people are having to skip meals and forego buying essential medicine. Hundreds of thousands of people are set to endure winter shivering in discomfort.

A major cause of the rising prices is the skyrocketing cost of petrol, electricity and gas. This is not only increasing our fuel and power bills but has driven up the cost of refrigerating, processing and transporting food and other groceries.

So why are the prices of fuel and electricity so high? It is because the greedy rich corporations and company owners have decided to put up their prices for higher profits. And guess who’s paying up so that these tycoons can get even richer … You and I, the working-class, are paying.

As the call-out for the April 8 action stressed:

What we need is for all of the petrol, electricity, gas and coal sectors to be taken out of the hands of the ultra-rich profiteers that own them and be brought into public ownership….

The ruling class’ only “method” to try and contain steep prices is to crash the economy by jacking up interest rates. But we won’t be able to endure unaffordable prices if we lose our jobs or have our hours cut in the resulting recession! Let’s push down the cost of living and do it in a way that protects workers’ livelihoods and stops the slashing of our living standards! Let’s drive down the prices of everything by bringing the petrol, electricity, gas and coal sectors into public hands! We can’t allow the current filthy rich owners of these sectors – like Mike Cannon-Brookes and Kerry Stokes – to keep on milking fat profits at our expense!

The action was jointly built by Trotskyist Platform and the Australian Chinese Workers Association (ACWA). Speakers at the rally included Brenda Wang, a senior member of the ACWA, Sarah Fitzenmeyer, the Chairwoman of Trotskyist Platform and Wayne Sonter from the Revolutionary Housing League. After the introduction from the rally emcee, a message of solidarity to the protest was read out from Pete a retired coal mine worker in the Hunter Valley. The message stressed how the mining capitalists are not only exploiting their workers and charging the public exorbitant prices but are also leaching from the public budget through receiving a huge fuel rebate:

Firstly, I send to you all Comradely greetings from the Hunter Valley in NSW. I am a retired coal miner from Muswellbrook and I worked for BHP at their Mount Arthur open cut mine that is just on the outskirts of town for 20 years.

I come from a long line of miners that started out in the turn of the century at Broken Hill in the far west of NSW.

You are gathering today to voice your opposition against the private ownership of our natural recourses and have them returned to the people of Australia and I wish you every success.

Mount Arthur coal mine where I was a slave to the capitalist system produces both coking coal used in steel making and thermal coal mostly used in power generation….

BHP owns Mount Arthur mine 100% and has recently announced a record pre tax profit for the SIX months up to December 2022 of 1.4 BILLION US Dollars for that one single mine alone. That breaks down to approximately 10 million Australian dollars per day !!!

All of the mining equipment that is used in the mine is diesel powered so the amount of diesel fuel required to run the mine is a staggering amount, millions of litres annually in fact. One of the best  kept secrets that the coal miners keep closely guarded is the fact that the Federal Government gives them back a rebate of 47.7 cents per litre. That is for every litre of fuel used in the mine they claim back 47.7 cents and with millions of litres of fuel used annually they get a very fat cheque in the mail to help them pay their fuel bill. This Comrades has to STOP!

Information that I have from the Australia Institute in Canberra tells me that the mining industry in Australia for the years 2022/23 will receive 7.7 BILLION dollars in fuel rebate and for the years 2023/24 it jumps to 9.2 Billion dollars.

This is YOUR money Comrades going to the dirty Capitalists !!

Rise up Comrades and voice you opinion on this unfair handout to the fat cats of the coal industry!

Rally emcee Samuel Kim addresses the protest. In the foreground, supporters of the Australian Chinese Workers Association hold the banner of this group.

Among the placards that Trotskyist Platform carried at the event included: “Confiscate the Power, Coal, Oil and Gas Industries from the Greedy Tycoons And Put Them Into Public Hands!”, “Fight for: The Seizure of the Power and Fuel Industries From the Capitalists And Their Transfer Into Public Hands, a Massive Increase in Public Housing and the Conversion of All Casual Jobs into Secure, Permanent Ones!”, “Australia: Power, Fuel, Ports and Finance Sectors in the Hands of Super-Rich Big Shareholders – 6.8% Inflation, Plummeting Real Wages. China: All these Key Sectors Under Public Ownership – Just 1% Inflation and the Fastest Growing Workers’ Real Wages in the World” and “We Don’t Want to Cop Higher Prices for the Sake of the Global Ambitions of the Capitalists that are Ripping Us Off – Lift Western Sanctions on Russia!”  

Participants in the spirited rally loudly chanted: “Fuel and Power into Public Hands!” and “Hey, Hey, Ho, Ho, Confiscation’s the Way to Go!” Many passers-by in multi-racial, working-class Auburn stopped to listen to speeches and read the protest banner and signs. They also viewed a beautiful cultural performance put on by Chinese dancers from the ACWA during a brief interlude between the speeches.

The April 8 action received favourable coverage in several Australian Chinese language news outlets, international Chinese language outlets and also in several news platforms in mainland China. Some of the latter outlets especially highlighted the point made by ACWA spokeswoman Brenda Wang that the reason that China has much lower inflation than Australia is because she has public ownership of her key sectors. By thus showing people in China that even pro-working class activists in Australia understand the benefits of China’s system based on social ownership of the backbone industries and are demanding the nationalisation of key industries within their own country itself, the rally had the indirect effect of boosting the morale of staunch Chinese communists who want to defend and strengthen China’s socialistic state sector as against rightist elements who want to give greater openings to private – that is capitalist – “entrepreneurs” (read exploiters).

Emphasising the need to build a powerful working-class movement to win the transfer of the fuel and electricity sectors from the hands of the capitalists into public ownership, rally emcee Samuel Kim concluded the April 8 rally with a call to action:

Comrades and friends, fellow working class people in the good struggle – the costs of living for food, rents, fuel and electricity are eroding savings. Many even go hungry or take out loans. Wages are stagnant, and are in affect going backwards as the cost of living soars. Huge parts of the economy are controlled by the greedy rich who only care about themselves. They aggressively pursue profits – profits stolen from the wages of workers.

Today’s protest is one of many that will happen in the future. It is just the start, as things are not getting better. That is why we need to prepare for a future movement.

We reprint below the speeches given by the ACWA and Trotskyist Platform representatives at the April 8 action.

Speech by Brenda Wang, leading member of the
Australian Chinese Workers Association:

The Australian Chinese Workers Association strongly supports this rally to drive down living costs and to bring the fuel and power sectors into public ownership. I want to acknowledge that we are gathering here on the stolen land of the Dharug First Nations people.

Like our fellow working-class Australians of all ethnicities, Chinese workers in Australia have been enduring increasingly unaffordable living costs. Electricity prices, petrol costs, rent, food prices and the prices of other groceries are unbearable. Many working-class people of Chinese descent in this country are being driven into poverty just like our sisters and brothers of other ethnicities. We understand that the high cost of fuel and electricity is a major part of what is driving costs up across the board. That is why we in the Australian Chinese Workers Association support the struggle to take the electricity, oil, gas and coal sectors from the rich tycoons and put them into public ownership.

The Australian Chinese Workers Association is a mass organisation that organises Australian-Chinese workers to defend their workplace conditions and assert their rights to access social services; while linking the Chinese working-class community with the overall Australian trade union movement and involving them in broader social justice campaigns within Australia.

I want to share some of our experience as immigrants from the Peoples Republic of China and as people who still have many friend and relatives in China who we are in regular contact with. In China, not only is the fuel and power sector under public ownership but so are most of the steel, mining, ports, shipping, banks and other major sectors. That is why China has very low inflation now unlike the countries where these sectors are owned by rich shareholders. It is also why workers real wages continue to grow rapidly in China and the economy continues to develop. So if anyone tells you that public ownership does not work, please explain that they are mistaken. Public ownership works – we know this from our own experience and from that of our family and friends.

So I hope that Australian working-class people of all ethnicities can unite to struggle to bring the fuel and power industries into public ownership. And I hope that we can also unite to fight for higher wages, more low-rent public housing and other measures urgently needed by the masses. We in the Australian Chinese Workers Association pledge to do all we can to support these noble causes.

Speech by Sarah Fitzenmeyer, Chairwoman of Trotskyist Platform:

I acknowledge that we are gathering here on the stolen land of the Dharug First Nations people. And right across these stolen Aboriginal Peoples lands, the super-rich owners of Australia’s oil, gas, coal and renewable energy companies are making huge, obscene profits. They are making these sky-high profits both by exploiting their own workers and by over-charging us all for fuel and electricity.

But sisters and brothers it is not just the owners of the oil, gas and coal producers who are ripping us off. Right throughout the chain of the fuel and power industries, the billionaire owners of these companies involved are jacking up prices. This includes the oil refiners, the fuel distributors, the fuel retailers, the electricity generators and the electricity retailers.

If you cross the railway line and go not too far to South Granville, you will see that there are two petrol stations owned by United Petroleum. United is one of Australia’s biggest petrol retailers. United outlets are notorious for paying their workers below award wages. The company is owned by two Australians, Avi Silver and Eddie Hirsch. Each of them have acquired a fortune of over $1.6 billion from under-paying United workers and overcharging customers. So when you fill up petrol or buy food at a United outlet and wonder why you are paying such high prices, just know that a good chunk of what you are forking out is used to sustain the lavish lifestyle of two Australian billionaires.

Now, I want to speak about Australia’s biggest electricity supplier, AGL. By far the biggest shareholder in AGL is Australia’s third richest person, Mike Cannon-Brookes. Last financial year, this Mike Cannon Brookes company slashed more than 500 jobs, while pushing the remaining workers to toil harder at their jobs to cover the work of those who were retrenched. Through such exploitation of workers, Cannon Brookes has acquired a $28 billion fortune. Five years ago, he bought Australia’s first home that reached a price of $100 million! Last year, Mike Cannon Brookes share of AGL’s $860 million profit was almost enough to buy himself yet another $100 million home! So those of you who are AGL customers, when you fume at how high your next electricity or gas bill is, just know that a big slice of what you pay may well help a high-living Australian billionaire buy yet another $100 million mansion!

And as you continue to pay unaffordable prices for food and other groceries, just know that part of your payment is going to cover the high costs of transport, refrigeration and processing resulting from the rip-off fuel and electricity prices set by the companies owned by Australian billionaires like Mike Cannon Brookes, Avi Silver, Eddie Hirsch, Ivan Glasenberg and Kerry Stokes.

Sisters and brothers, we have put a stop to this! We cannot continue to tolerate unaffordable living costs just to sustain the lavish lifestyle of greedy tycoons. That is why we need to reverse the electricity privatisation that has taken place over the last two decades. That means we need to fight for the confiscation of the power industry from its current, super-rich owners so that it can be transferred back into public hands. The same nationalisation also needs to happen to the oil, gas, coal and renewable energy sectors. This is what is needed to seriously drive down these exorbitant living costs!

However, the ruling class and their media are doing everything possible to stop you coming to this realisation. That is why they want to blame Russia’s intervention in Ukraine for the high cost of living. But the fact is that prices were going up even faster before the war escalated last year. It is not the war or Russia’s actions that is causing high energy prices – it is because of the sanctions imposed by Western regimes against Russia and we must not be supporting these sanctions. The Australian, American, British and other Western regimes are waging a proxy war against Russia because they want to ensure that the tycoons that they serve maintain their exclusive right to exploit most of the world. It is true that Russia is also ruled by a greedy capitalist class just like here. But because Russia is economically weaker, it is not Russian capitalists that dominate most of the world but rather the American, British, Australian, Japanese and other Western capitalists. For example, resource-rich Papua New Guinea’s entire oil production is owned by Australian corporations! So it will be good for the world’s masses and good for the working-class people of Australia if the greedy ruling class that exploits us and rips us off suffers a blow by having their proxy war against Russia defeated. So we should oppose these sanctions on Russia – sanctions that are helping to drive up our living costs. We shouldn’t have to endure higher prices for the sake of the global ambitions of the capitalists that are ripping us off!

A Trotskyist Platform placard at the April 8 action condemned the Western economic sanctions on Russia that are contributing to the sky-high energy prices. The need to oppose these sanctions was also motivated in the speech given by Trotskyist Platform Chairwoman, Sarah Fitzenmeyer.

Yet, even these sanctions have not, by themselves, caused the steep price rises. Energy prices have surged because the greedy owners of the Australian fuel industry have chosen to massively increase prices here to match the increased world price. Just because world prices have increased doesn’t mean that we have to cop these increases here. After all it is here where many of these resources actually come from – produced by our labour. And the governments and pro-capitalist political parties have chosen to allow these tycoons to get away with this. The right-wing Liberal Party openly opposes any measures to curb power and fuel prices. The Labor Party, because it has a working-class base wants to look like it is trying to bring down living costs. But because it is so very committed to avoid angering the big end of town, the ALP takes only very weak measures. The price limit for gas that the Albanese government has implemented is nearly three times what the gas price was two and a half years ago! No wonder it has been announced that our electricity prices will go up in July by even more than they went up last year.

So we cannot rely on any of the current parliamentary parties to do what is needed to bring down unaffordable prices. That is why we need to build a campaign of mass actions, including protests, occupations and workers industrial action to demand the transfer of the fuel and power industries into public hands.  That is why we in Trotskyist Platform decided to initiate today’s action to begin the building of this much needed movement.  Sisters and brothers, if we look at the mass strikes in Britain against falling real wages and the militant protests in France against the government raising the age of eligibility for the pension, this gives us a small taste of what is needed here.

At the same time, we must understand that the rip off prices that we’re all paying for fuel, electricity and groceries is just a symptom of a much bigger disease. And that disease, is this decaying capitalist system that is only surviving by driving down real wages and forcing workers into ever more precarious forms of employment. So as well as demanding the transfer of the energy and power sectors into public ownership we need to fight for big wage rises, for the conversion of all gig and casual jobs into permanent secure positions and for a massive increase in low-rent public housing. To wage such struggles we need to build unity amongst all of the working class.

That means we must positively mobilise to oppose state violence against Aboriginal peoples, win the rights of citizenship for all guest workers, refugees and international students and defeat all far-right racist attacks on people of Asian, African and Middle Eastern backgrounds, stand with and support all women’s rights activists and the LGBTQIA+ community.

Now, working-class people do need a party, But not one like the ALP that accommodates the capitalists and runs their capitalists’ state for them. What we need is a workers party built to organise our intransigent and steadfast resistance against the exploiting class.

Sisters and brothers, nationalising the energy and power sectors will be an important step to driving down unaffordable prices. But it will be only be just a step because currently the state machinery itself is under the control of the big end of town. We will need to assert people’s inspection and supervision of any publicly owned fuel and power industries. These sectors and indeed the whole economy can only truly be made to work for us when we the working class take control of the state itself.

Now the apologists for the ruling class tell us that such talk of workers rule and public ownership is outdated and impractical. There is however a huge hole in their argument. For in the world’s most populous country, the Peoples Republic of China not only are the fuel and energy industries dominated by public ownership so are all the other key sectors including the banks, shipping, steel, ports, car manufacturing, airlines and telecommunications. To see how this works, lets look at state-owned China National Petroluem Company. This giant has a monopoly on China’s oil and gas production. Yet because it is directed as a public necessity to keep down prices, the profits of this Chinese state-owned giant is only just over 4% of its total sales. By contrast, Kerry Stokes oil and gas company here in Australia, Beach Energy has profits that are nearly 30% of its sales. That is why we are suffering an inflation rate of nearly 7%, while in China, through their public ownership of key sectors, they have kept inflation to just 1%. And while workers real wages here are markedly lower than they were 11 years ago, in China, workers real wages have more than doubled in the same period. Yet China’s socialistic system centred on public ownership is precisely what makes the capitalist rulers of the U.S. and Australia so hostile to her.

For they fear that China’s successes in uplifting her people out of extreme poverty will make the masses in their own countries also demand a system based on public ownership. But demanding public ownership is exactly what we need the masses here to fight for! So we should support, applaud and want the great example of socialistic China to continue in its success. That is why it is in the clear interests of the working-class of Australia and the world to oppose all the attacks on socialistic rule in China – whether that be the war-mongering AUKUS submarine project or the lying propaganda that China is persecuting Uyghurs and people in Hong Kong.

Sisters and brothers, we do not need to accept a system based on ownership of industry by filthy rich tycoons who exploit workers labour and charge us unaffordable prices. Let’s stop the ever growing slide into poverty for low-paid workers in Australia! Let’s fight for the confiscation of the coal, oil, gas and power companies and their prompt transfer into public ownership! Let’s build a spirited movement to fight for this. Let’s build on today’s action! 

Demonstrators chant slogans at the April 8 rally in Auburn.

CONFISCATE THE OIL, GAS, COAL & POWER CORPORATIONS AND TRANSFER THEM INTO PUBLIC OWNERSHIP!

Photo Above: Exorbitant petrol prices on 8 January 2023 in South Australia’s Kingscote. Surging fuel prices have driven up the costs of distributing food and other goods, helping to drive up all-round living costs.
Photo: Cheap Fuel Adelaide Facebook page

SICK OF PAYING HIGH FUEL, POWER & FOOD PRICES
FOR THE SAKE OF BILLIONAIRES’ FAT PROFITS?

CONFISCATE THE OIL, GAS, COAL &
POWER CORPORATIONS AND TRANSFER
THEM INTO PUBLIC OWNERSHIP!

30 December 2022: Everything is costing us more. Last year, one in six adults in Australia were unable to afford enough food to eat. Since then the inflation rate has surged to 7%. We are now paying 10% more for fruits and vegetables than we were just a year ago. Workers’ wages are nowhere near keeping up. Younger workers are especially doing it tough. Interest rate rises have hit those with mortgages left to pay off. And soaring rents mean that renters are suffering by far the most.

A major reason for rising prices is the surging cost of oil, gas and coal. This not only increases our transport and heating costs but has caused electricity prices to rise by one-fifth this year. This has in turn boosted the cost of both refrigeration and factory operation, which has pushed up the prices of both fresh and processed food. Meanwhile, the higher fuel costs for shipping, rail, truck, air and forklifts have driven up the distribution costs of food and other goods. The government and media blame all this on Russia. However, even before Russia’s intervention in Ukraine, inflation in all the capitalist countries was too high. This was because Western regimes had unleashed a flood of cheap credit and budget deficits to keep their flawed economies afloat following first, the late noughties recession and then, the pandemic. In Britain, inflation was more than 6% even before the war in Ukraine intensified. The war’s February 24 escalation did lead to a fuel price surge. However, this was not because of Russia but because of the economic sanctions that the regimes running the U.S., most of Europe and Australia imposed on Russia. Once again, our living standards are being sacrificed for the sake of the billionaire oligarchs that dominate Australia. In this case, they want to help the U.S.-led Western imperialist syndicate that they are part of to maintain its plundering domination of the world by ensuring that Russia – which is itself a capitalist country but independent of the Western bloc – cannot become powerful enough to challenge their stranglehold over markets and resources in Eastern Europe and western Asia. They want to shove Russia down to a humiliated condition.

Yet, even these sanctions have not, by themselves, caused the steep price rises. After all, Australia is a big energy exporter. Energy prices have only surged because the greedy bosses of Australian fuel resource giants have chosen to jack up prices to benefit from the higher world prices resulting from Western sanctions. The Albanese government has responded by putting a cap on wholesale gas and coal prices. However, these measures are so weak that the price limit for gas is nearly three times what the gas price was two and a half years ago! As a result, power prices are forecast to rise even more next year than they did this year! Furthermore, although the fuel sector bigwigs and their Liberal Party mates are completely cynical when they oppose even the half-baked price cap on the grounds that it will reduce fuel supply, it is nevertheless true that as long as profit-obsessed shareholders own this sector, they will manipulate markets to try and get their way.

The only way to ensure cheap and reliable fuel – and thus to also keep food and power costs down – is to rip the coal and gas companies from their super-rich owners and transfer them into public ownership. We must also address the petrol sector. Although the majority of Australia’s petrol is imported, the obscene prices charged for domestically produced LPG and oil – which amount to one-third of total domestic consumption – add to fuel prices. So does the cut taken by domestic refiners and retailers. Even though they have been hit by higher fuel costs, they have lifted their sales prices so much that they are grabbing even larger profits all at our expense! In this way, Australia’s biggest fuel distributor, Ampol, which also owns one of this country’s two refineries, more than doubled its already huge profits. Seizing on our expectations of higher fuel prices, Ampol’s refinery, alone, drastically lifted the mark up on their petrol price, in excess of all expenses, from less than two cents per litre in the first half of 2021 to 15 cents per litre a year later. The power sector, which state Liberal and ALP governments have largely privatised, is doing the same. Thus, even with rising fuel costs and even as it cruelly cut more than 500 jobs, Australia’s biggest electricity supplier, AGL, announced that it is expecting its underlying profit to rise this financial year. That is why we must fight to also nationalise the electricity generation and retail sectors as well as the oil extraction, refining and retail sectors. If the entire fuel and power sectors were brought into public hands it would also make it easier to enforce a rapid transition from fossil fuels to renewables and, most crucially, a transition without any job losses or wage cuts and with fully paid retraining of workers currently employed in fossil fuel industries. Most importantly, state ownership of these sectors could make it easier for Aboriginal rights activists to exert political pressure to block those projects that trample on Aboriginal community wishes, while ensuring that acceptable projects do not damage Aboriginal sacred sites and adequately transfer project revenues to local black communities.

A BIG BOUNTY FOR BILLIONAIRES

There is some overseas ownership of Australia’s fuel and power sectors. A major gas producer here is American giant, Chevron, in which the world’s sixth richest person, Warren Buffett, has a $A7.2 billion stake. Also, players in the local oil and gas industry are American behemoths Exxon-Mobil and ConocoPhillips and British giants, BP and Shell. However, it is locally-owned Woodside that is Australia’s largest oil and gas producer. The biggest fuel retailer, Ampol, is also Australian owned. The fact is that it is mostly local capitalists that are making obscene profits from this country’s energy resources and fleecing consumers and exploiting workers in the process! It is many of these same ultra-rich bigwigs that are also plundering the natural wealth of PNG and East Timor. Australia’s power sector is also mostly owned by local exploiters. Thus, the biggest generators and electricity (and gas) retailers here are Australian-owned AGL and Origin Energy.

Apologists for capitalism tell us that such companies are owned by middle-class “mums and dads” and super funds. However, the truth is that these types of investors account for only a small minority of the overall ownership of the corporations. Take this country’s biggest coal miner, Australian-owned BHP. The middle-class “mums and dads” that each have shareholdings of a value that’s less than $231,000 own just 10% of the company while the top 0.2% of shareholders own more than 80%. In most of these companies, the ultra-rich main shareholders use bank nominees as intermediaries to hide their identities. Nevertheless, one is able to identify some of the tycoons that dominate these industries. Take, for instance, Australia’s biggest onshore oil producer, Beach Energy. Its largest stake is held by Seven Holdings, a conglomerate owning Channel 7 TV, Boral and other firms that is owned by powerful Australian oligarch, Kerry Stokes. Meanwhile, the biggest individual shareholder in Australia’s largest thermal coal miner, Swiss-based Glencore, is its Australian former CEO, Ivan Glasenberg. Despite Glencore recently admitting that when Glasenberg was CEO its agents had paid millions to bribe officials in several African countries, Glasenberg’s wealth has skyrocketed by 65% to $12.5 billion over the last year due to Glencore jacking up its coal sale price. Portraying himself as different to Glasenberg and as a climate warrior is AGL’s controlling shareholder, Mike Cannon-Brookes. But at bottom, Australia’s third richest person is just your usual greedy tycoon, one known for buying up extravagant properties. AGL workers angry that they are being made to work harder and more dangerously due to the company’s job slashing and AGL customers livid at their ever-rising utility bills should know that Cannon-Brookes’ share of AGL’s 2022 profit that their labour and payments are contributing to is almost enough for him to buy another $100 million mansion like the Sydney one that he bought in 2018! Similarly, Kerry Stokes’ slice of Beach Energy’s 2022 profit, which he received part of through dividends and will get the rest whenever he sells his shares of the company’s profit-boosted equity, is more than three-quarters of what he needs to get himself another $110 million private jet! Think about that the next time you wonder why you are paying such steep prices when you fill up petrol or are angry why transport and food prices are so high!

Above: The $100 million Fairwater property in Sydney’s Point Piper was bought by Australia’s third richest billionaire, Mike Cannon-Brookes in 2018. It was Australia’s first ever 9 digit home! Cannon-Brookes is, by far, the biggest owner – and effective controlling shareholder – of power giant AGL. His share of AGL’s huge 2022 profit, achieved through exploiting its workforce and overcharging its electricity and gas customers, was enough to buy himself another $100 million property! Below: One of Australia’s many homeless people. As a result of surging electricity, food and other prices and skyrocketing rents, last year saw a steep rise in the number of people in Australia accessing homeless services.
Photo above: Mark Merton/Sydneyimages.com
Photo below: Dan Peled/AAP

BUILD A MASS WORKING CLASS-CENTRED CAMPAIGN

Especially given that the fuel and power industries are dominated by powerful tycoons, the ruling class will fervently resist any demands to bring these sectors into public ownership. Look at what happened in 2010 when the then Rudd Labor government attempted to introduce a much more modest measure – a tax on mining super profits. The mining magnates – led by Gina Rinehart and Andrew Forrest – responded by using their huge wealth to unleash a massive media advertising campaign against the tax, their mates in the Murdoch media denounced the tax and “sophisticated” critiques of the tax were churned out by the “independent” think tanks that these capitalists fund (like the right-wing Institute of Public Affairs that has received huge funding from Gina Rinehart and BHP). As a result, Rudd’s approval ratings plunged and his spooked Labor colleagues (showing typical Laborite cowardice) dumped him as prime minister. The Gillard government that followed immediately diluted the tax plan. Indeed, they watered it down so much that it barely collected any tax at all! When Rudd regained the prime ministership in 2013 he had learned his lesson… from a capitulating social-democratic point of view, that is. He did not try to bring back the originally proposed tax and, instead, put forward an agenda even more servile to the capitalist bigwigs than that of the ousted Gillard. That is why we need a new program to lead our workers movement: one that does not limit our demands to what is tolerable to the capitalists, as the ALP does, but instead fights to mobilise struggle against the capitalists to win what the masses actually need. That means building a campaign of mass actions – including union industrial action, rallies and blockades – to win the nationalisation of the fuel, resource and power industries.

Sadly, the global trend is currently towards privatisation. Pro-capitalist economists, academics and journalists have been able to sell us the lie that “public ownership doesn’t work.” However, their argument has a huge hole in it: the world’s most populous country, the Peoples Republic of China (PRC) runs on a system dominated by public ownership and has been delivering its workers the world’s fastest growing real wages. In the PRC, not only are its fuel and power sectors under the collective ownership of her people, so are most of her other key sectors. That is why while the capitalist world is today buffeted by runaway inflation, inflation is just 1.6% in China. Moreover, even if a PRC state-owned enterprise makes excess profits, the income goes back into the public budget to be used for anti-poverty, public housing and renewable energy projects. Although China’s transition to socialism is incomplete and somewhat deformed, the fact that her system is based on socialist public ownership is why capitalist regimes want to denigrate the PRC. For they know that such a system favours workers at the expense of their capitalist class and they fear that if their own masses see the PRC’s successes, they will want socialism too. It took a revolution by China’s toiling classes in 1949 to establish her public ownership-based system. Although militant struggle could force the regime here to nationalise the fuel and power sectors, to secure a system of common ownership of all key sectors will take our own socialist revolution. Demanding the confiscation of the fuel and power sectors advances the struggle for socialism by showing the need for collective ownership. In campaigning for this measure, we will be fighting for what we need right now to stop the rapid erosion of our living standards. So, let’s fight for the confiscation of the coal, oil, gas and power companies and their prompt transfer into public ownership! And let’s also oppose the sanctions on Russia – we don’t want to wear higher prices for the sake of the global ambitions of the capitalists that are ripping us off!