Woolly Days attended the Politics in the Pub
session tonight at the Brunswick Hotel, New Farm.
Organised by the
Community Action Network and New Farm Neighbourhood Centre, the session
was attended by the candidates of the Brisbane electorate with the one
notable exception. Yet again, a Liberal candidate absented himself from
a community forum. This time, it was the turn of Ted O’Brien who failed
to make the event and "offered his apologies".
The seat of Brisbane
has been held by Arch Bevis since 1990 and he won in 2004 with a margin
of 3.9 per cent. Bevis is a Labor front bencher and Shadow Minister for
both Homeland Security and Justice and Customs and he was one of six
speakers who did attend, the others representing Family First,
Socialist Alliance, the Greens, Australian Democrats and the CEC. The
session was chaired by Jason Wilson of Youdecide2007.
Family First (FF) candidate Mark White
was first to speak. White started off by saying a passionate society
began with a passionate community. White said democracy is precious and
pointed out how lucky we were compared the problems in Pakistan and
Burma. He said FF protected some of the less-privileged members of our
society such as those on disability pensions, those affected by
Workchoices and new arrivals. He said immigrants “need our compassion”
and FF does not see them as “economic commodities”. He also said the
party supports an increase in foreign aid. He found it “offensive” when
people portrayed FF as extremist. He said the party had acted strongly
on policies such as tax deductions for first-time home buyers, child
care choices, reductions in the fuel levy and is in favour of imposing
a carbon tax which does not disadvantage low income earners. He said
the Senate contest was crucial this time round and endorsed Jeff
Buchanan as a “sensible and committed” candidate to join Steve Fielding
in the Upper House. He pointed out that FF voted with the government on
110 bills out of 197 which was a 55:45 split that showed the party's
dedication to balance.
Arch Bevis
was the second speaker. Bevis is seeking his seventh straight term as
the member for Brisbane. He began by talking about climate change which
he said was the “major national issue” dominating his thinking. He said
Australia had “dropped the ball” on climate change in the last decade.
He said under the Keating Government Australia was a major world player
in global warming discussions and the lead up to Kyoto. By the time
Kyoto was signed in 1997, John Howard was in power and he argued for a
rise in Australian emissions which Bevis said was “an odd thing to do”.
The Prime Minister then failed to ratify the Protocol. Ten years later
and Australia does not have a seat with full voting rights for Kyoto 2.
Bevis pledged that Labor would immediately ratify the Protocol and
pledged a 20 percent reduction in energy targets by 2020.
In
health, Bevis reiterated Kevin Rudd’s provision of $2.5 billion in
funding and lauded Rudd’s promise that “the buck stopped with him”. He
went on to discuss Workchoices which he denounced as “unfair and
unAustralian”. He said that workers in the US have better rights than
here, which he said “would have been laughed at 10 years ago”. Bevis
said he was a union official and appears in those anti-union Liberal
ads. But he said he was proud of the work he did as a union official.
He warned that the government intervention in IR law was not yet
complete. He quoted Senator Minchin whom he called “one of the Liberal
hardheads” as saying
the government would abolish the award safety net after the election if
it won. “If after 25 November John Howard is still Prime Minister,” he
said, “don’t think you’ll see the end of reforms”.
The third speaker was Ewan Saunders
from Socialist Alliance. He began by saying this election was historic
for “lots of people he knew” that only knew a Howard Government in
power. He said Rudd’s Labor were not a real opposition and “not much of
an alternative” to the government. He said the Socialist Alliance was
founded in 2001 as a “desperate need” for a party to stand for workers’
rights. He said they would “tear up” all of workchoices, as opposed to
Rudd’s “Workchoices Lite”. He said they would also deal with climate
change “the issue of the century” by reducing 60 per cent of emissions
by 2020 and 90 per cent by 2030. “Tomorrow is too late to act” he said.
He also said the Socialist Alliance was opposed to such measures as
nuclear power, the NT intervention, the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan,
and the anti-terror laws. He said Socialist Alliance was an activist
party that takes grassroots action for working people in Australia and
around the world.
Elizabeth Guthrie
from the Greens spoke next. Guthrie runs her own Interior Design
business where she provides her clients with economically achievable
and ethically sound design choices. Guthrie began with an allegory of a
fire in the forest where all the large animals argued on the best way
to put it out. Meanwhile while the arguments raged, a hummingbird was
taking tiny drops of water from the lake to the forest to put on the
fire. Guthrie said she was like the hummingbird “doing all I can” by
standing as a candidate for election. She said she was unlikely to win
in “a safe Labor seat” but was determined to “speak for the people in
my electorate”. Guthrie said the Greens had “well rounded policies” but
preferred to speak about the underlying values. “People want to be
represented by an accountable, responsible government,” she said. “I’m
prepared to stand up and fight for what I believe”. She finished by
saying this election was “your chance to take a drop of water to the
fire”.
Don Sinnamon
from the Democrats spoke next. Sinnamon said that although “John Howard
does not know what an apology is”, he did and proceeded to say he was
sorry for the sufferings of indigenous people. He said people “were
sick of the election” and the media had turned it into a litany of
false choices such as Howard v Rudd and Howard v Costello. He said the
election was a chance to “make our voices heard”. He decried much of
the government agenda including its castigation of the hundreds of
thousands of marchers against the Iraq war as “a mob”, the unfair
treatment of the unemployed, asylum seekers and those in same-sex
relationships. He said the silence of the ALP on these issues was
“disgraceful”. He said Australia needed a Bill of Rights, citizen
initiated referenda and direct democracy. He finished by saying the
country “needed democracy, not a dictatorship of special interests”.
The final speaker was Nick Contario of the Citizens Electoral Council (CEC).
He said that there was a looming global meltdown of financial systems
due to the sub prime mortgage crisis in the US. He said Australia’s
large public debt left it vulnerable and there are 1.8 million people
who are ‘mortgage stressed’. He said the country was “living beyond our
means because we have destroyed our means”. He said the CEC would
reinstitute a government owned national bank and would restore
“essential economic infrastructure” that would turn Australia into a
“truly sovereign nation state not just a quarry”.