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Showing posts with label Howard's Industrial Gestapo Lives Under Rudd 11-3-08. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Howard's Industrial Gestapo Lives Under Rudd 11-3-08. Show all posts

Saturday, June 07, 2008

Not much of a true believer by Dean Mighell


It's ironic that Kevin Rudd comes from Queensland, the state where the Australian Labor Party was founded in the 1890s by striking unionists under the sacred Tree of Knowledge.In 2008, it's symbolic that the Tree of Knowledge is now dead. This irony must not be lost on Australian workers when they look at our industrial relations laws.

At the last federal election, outside any major party, the Australian trade union movement conducted the best-resourced and most sophisticated political campaign in our nation's history. The Your Rights at Work campaign was fundamentally responsible for creating awareness of the Howard government's unjust industrial laws and ultimately the removal of the Coalition government. Many Australian workers suffered under Work Choices, and they voted to get rid of it; all of it. They believed Rudd when he said he would "rip up Work Choices".

I saw this as political spin and viewed it with caution. It's easy to say what governments will get rid of, it's another thing to replace it with something of substance. Since the election, Rudd and Julia Gillard have really done nothing more than re-decorate the Work Choices bus. It has a fresh coat of paint and new tyres, but it's still essentially the same vehicle John Howard drove. Howard used Work Choices to force down workers' conditions and to restrain unions from looking after their members' interests. Sure, AWAs may have changed but individual contracts remain, albeit with a better safety net. Unfair bargaining laws are entirely intact and building-industry workers are still subjected to laws that fail the most basic of human rights and International Labour Organisation conventions, to which Australia is a signatory.

Remember the political witch-hunt that was the Cole royal commission into the building industry? Despite no criminal conduct from unions, we ended up with the Australian Building and Construction Commission. This political police force against construction workers was put in place for Howard's multi-millionaire property developer and builder mates, and Rudd and Gillard retain it. I don't believe Rudd understands unions or workers or the coercive powers of the ABCC's taskforce which include compelling witnesses to give evidence under threat of jail and leaving building workers with less rights than drug dealers or armed robbers charged with serious crimes.

Rudd a true believer? I think not. Yet six months after the election, unions and workers rightly ask if the YRAW campaign was truly effective, or is there still a long way to go? Workers perceive bad laws under a Howard government as bad laws under the Rudd Government. Rudd has retained 95 per cent of Work Choices which makes the laws Rudd's, not Howard's, so let's get serious here. Was the YRAW campaign about getting rid of the Howard government or ensuring that laws consistent with our international obligations are restored to protect workers? Having rallied many workers and community people in support of the YRAW campaign, the union movement itself has a responsibility to genuinely fight bad laws regardless of who governs.

There is no doubt that we and the YRAW campaign suffered with the defection of ACTU secretary Greg Combet. Rudd recruited our team captain and left us silent and compromised when he and Gillard backflipped on promises to Australian workers and their unions. The union movement was so committed to the removal of the Howard government that it was paralysed in terms of fighting Labor for a better deal on industrial relations, and Rudd knew it. More than a year ago, Rudd and Gillard put forward their industrial-relations policy at the ALP national conference. Many unionists agreed to play a "team game" and reluctantly supported their policy. Backroom discussions took place and promises to unions were made to avoid a fight on the conference floor.

It was poor policy from a worker's point of view, but better than Work Choices and there was always the hope of convincing Labor in government of a better deal. Right? In election mode, there were many "on the run" policy changes from the government-in-waiting. Employer associations were overjoyed with the Gillard/Rudd promise to retain laws that cripple unions' bargaining rights to get a better deal for their members. And the illegitimate child of the process that was the building industry royal commission, the Australian Building Industry Taskforce, has been fully preserved along with its coercive powers.

Let's not kid ourselves, Work Choices survives and there seems little planned legislation to change it. How will the Australian union movement respond? Gone are the days of Paul Keating or Bob Hawke when the ACTU had great influence, which resulted in important social change. Industry productivity went up, superannuation was introduced and industry reform was paramount. The ACTU is now treated like a second-rate lobby group and is either pointedly ignored or, worse, deliberately opposed for the sake of a populist agenda.

The Australian Industry Group and business lobbyists appear to have more influence on the Government than the ACTU. It can't be long before Gillard formally names AIG chief Heather Ridout as minister for industrial relations. In many respects unions must accept responsibility for their lack of influence over the ALP: we have the numbers but don't use them. It may also be argued that too many union leaders are compromised by their political aspirations, and sitting Labor MPs supported by unions find it hard to stand up to the popular Rudd. His popularity will pass, and Labor MPs must be held accountable for their voting in caucus.

The bottom line is that unions should only support a political party if it's in the interests of their members to do so. The unique relationship between unions and Labor must be questioned in the interests of members if it compromises our ability to get a better deal for workers. Rudd won the election on the back of Australian workers, not employer associations. With our members' support and effective leadership, unions can again become the most powerful political lobby group in this country.

With more than two million members, resources and a commitment to working people, we are far from a spent force. Let's be brave and committed enough to say to the ALP: we will not mobilise for you or donate a cent if you ignore ILO conventions. Unions don't want unfettered rights to run amok; however, we do demand a fair go. It's hardly a radical initiative. It's time for the union movement to put its members' interests first and to stop waiting for someone to save us.

Dean Mighell is the Victorian state secretary of the Electrical Trades Union.

from the The Australian, June 05, 2008

Tuesday, March 11, 2008

CFMEU to campaign against ABCC by Graham Matthews


“We’re approaching the future with some confidence notwithstanding the obstacles that are put in our path by institutions like the ABCC [Australian Building and Construction Commission]”, Dave Noonan, national secretary of the construction division of the Construction, Forestry, Mining and Energy Union told Green Left Weekly. Noonan spoke to GLW after the CFMEU national conference, held in Sydney from February 18-22.

A central campaign for the CFMEU in 2008 will be around the demand that the federal Labor government abolish the ABCC, which acts as a secret police force for the building industry with the aim of hampering construction workers’ organising. “We’ll make continuous public calls on Labor to honour its national policy, sooner not later, and we’ll continue to expose the excesses and undemocratic laws under which this organisation operates”, Noonan said. “We’ve now seen over 70 people, all bar one construction workers, pulled in and interrogated. “It’s horrible that this should continue under any government, but particularly a government that has been elected on the basis of getting rid of [former prime minister John] Howard’s industrial relations laws and we make the case very strongly that they have a mandate to sweep away John Howard’s industrial relations legacy. We think that should be done without delay.”

Enterprise agreements for construction workers expire in 2008. The wage rises the union has called for put it at odds with the call by Prime Minister Kevin Rudd’s government for “wage restraint” to stop inflation.

“The construction industry is prosperous and employers are making large profits as we see the case in companies such as Leighton”, Noonan told GLW. “The notion that wage and salary earners are expected to bear the brunt of the fight against inflation we think is repugnant.” “The union will be bargaining for the best deal for its members”, Noonan stressed. “The powers-that-be have introduced a deregulated labour market in this country … There’s now no centralised direction or guideline about the size of wage increases so we will negotiate the best outcome we can.

“We’re very conscious of the fact that inflation doesn’t help working people but we don’t believe that the responsibility of fighting inflation should fall on the shoulders of working people.” Noonan described the response of corporate executives to Rudd’s call for restraint on executive salaries as “contemptuous”. As for the PM’s announcement of a freeze on parliamentary salaries, Noonan argued that “this comes on the back of increases [of] 7% for politicians over the last few years — they also have 21% [superannuation] on a very good base rate, so they can probably afford wage freezes better than most wage earners in the community”.

The CFMEU is in dispute with John Holland Constructions, which is building the desalination plant in Port Botany in Sydney. The company is attempting to use the federal Comcare health-and-safety legislation, under which the site is covered, to prevent union health and safety officers accessing the site. The company has taken the union to court over the issue.

“John Holland Constructions have taken an extremely aggressive attitude to all unions over the period of the Howard government and they appear not to have realised that that approach was strongly rejected by the Australian people”, Noonan said. “They have used their move to the Comcare [federal workplace saftey] system to try to deny workers their legitimate rights to access to safety committees and the like and they have used that piece of law to attempt to deny workers assistance from their union on matters of safety.” Federal workplace relations minister Julia Gillard has undertaken a review of Comcare, to which the CFMEU will submit proposals, Noonan said.

“Workers have the right to receive assistance from their unions on site under state legislation. That’s the regime that ought to prevail. We need laws that apply consistently across the country that allow workers to elect their representatives and have a say in stopping work where it’s unsafe.” A CFMEU member in the Pilbara was killed in January, Noonan told GLW.

“If these companies have got nothing to hide they should welcome scrutiny from the relevant union and they should cooperate with people being able to have a say in their own safety because that’s what makes workplaces safe, not managers decreeing what’s safe.” “Artificial restrictions shouldn’t be put in the way of unions operating properly”, Noonan said. “In terms of the building industry we now have received three reports from the ILO [International Labour Organization] which criticise the [Building and Construction Industry Improvement Act, which gave the ABCC some of its draconian powers] as being in breach of international law and we think that there are a range of things that Labor needs to act on.”

From: Comment & Analysis, Green Left Weekly issue #743 12 March 2008.
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From: Comment & AnalysisGLW issue #743 - 12 March 2008:

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