Final votes counted in New South Wales election campaign

Vote-counting was finalised at Easter for the NSW state election held March 24, showing the Socialist Equality Party received a combined total of 1,201 votes across three lower house electorates and 456 in the Legislative Council.

During a month-long campaign the SEP was the only party to advance a socialist program against militarism and war, social inequality and the growing attack on democratic rights.

While the overall vote for the SEP was small, the strength of the party’s campaign lay in its fight for the political education of the working class and its demarcation from all forms of opportunist politics. The SEP opposed attempts by the Greens, Socialist Alliance and a variety of Independents to obstruct discussion on the Iraq war and its far-reaching implications, and to channel mass disaffection back into the two-party system on the basis of claims that Labor constituted a “lesser evil” to the Liberal-National coalition parties.

As a whole, the elections presented the workings of a finely calibrated machine—including state parliament, the NSW Electoral Commission, the major parties and their numerous “left” apologists, along with media editors, reporters and pundits—aimed at the exclusion from public life of the interests and concerns of the working class.

As well as being subject to a near complete media blackout, the SEP had to contend with a vast web of anti-democratic electoral laws designed to block an independent challenge to the two-party duopoly. These included an arbitrary requirement that parties must have 750 members before they can register with the state electoral commission. As a result, the SEP’s candidates did not appear on ballot papers under the party name. There is no question that this affected the voting outcome, particularly in the Legislative Council ballot. Here voters across NSW were denied the opportunity of voting for the SEP unless they knew the candidates’ names or the Group letter allocated to the party in the order-of-ballot draw.

Additionally, state electoral laws meant the party’s slate of 15 upper house candidates was barred from appearing “above the line”. This was because the SEP refused to allocate preferences to any other electoral group. NSW Electoral Commission official Terry Jessop spelt out the undemocratic implications of this regulatory catch-22 as follows: “If you run below the line, you will get very few votes”. In other words, the entire voting system is designed to force parties to engage in opportunist horse-trading over the distribution of preferences. If they do not, the price paid for political independence is relegation to the most obscure regions of a Legislative Council ballot paper, the size of a small tablecloth or bath towel.

Party scrutineers who observed the ballot count at two local booths on election night confirmed that due to the complexities associated with “below-the-line” votes, the vast majority were invalid.

In each of the three lower house electorates contested by the SEP, disgust toward the major parties was overwhelming. This sentiment, however, has yet to find an independent political expression. Instead, within the framework of Australia’s compulsory voting system, broad sections of the population sought to oppose the pro-market agenda of the Iemma Labor government by voting for independents and Green candidates, or else grudgingly for Labor, simply to keep the Liberal-National coalition parties out.

The SEP received its largest vote—875—in Heffron. Our candidate, James Cogan, stood in the same area as the party’s candidate in the 2004 federal elections, and, although the party name was not on the ballot paper, he was known to many voters. He was also opposed by just three other candidates, from Labor, the Liberal Party and Greens.

Many of the votes for Cogan came from Erskineville and Alexandria, home to a large number of university students and young professionals and an area widely canvassed and letterboxed by party supporters during the campaign. Significantly, he received the largest number of votes in Eastlakes, a working class suburb where the SEP has carried out political work for many years.

The SEP received fewer votes—215—in Marrickville where its candidate, Patrick O’Connor opposed eight other candidates, including a well-publicised bid by the Greens for a lower house seat. Here a definite chain of command was in evidence: Socialist Alliance functioned as cheerleaders for the Greens, and the Greens supported Labor. Both organisations promoted illusions that Labor could be pressured at the ballot box, and that it represented a “lesser evil” to the Liberals. In line with this, the Greens concluded a preference deal with Labor’s state executive, while Socialist Alliance allocated first preferences to the Greens and second preferences to Labor.

The SEP was the only party that rejected any preference deals and fought for an uncompromising position in relation to the great political questions of the day. While Socialist Alliance and the Greens suppressed discussion on the Iraq war, adapting themselves to the parliamentary framework of “local issues”, the SEP insisted that the eruption of US militarism was the pre-eminent issue confronting the working class. The workers and young people who voted for O’Connor took a highly conscious stand. SEP scrutineers—present for the count on election night—reported that in nearly all cases the ballot papers were marked simply 1 for O’Connor, with voters refusing to allocate preferences to any other party.

In Newcastle Noel Holt received 110 votes. In many ways, the election campaign in that electorate revealed, in a highly concentrated manner, the crisis of political perspective confronting workers and young people everywhere. Holt rejected the parochial and essentially nationalist campaigns of Labor, Greens and a host of local Independents who demagogically promised to deliver “a better deal” for the large working class regional city, some 200 km north of Sydney.

The collapse in support for Labor was apparent. Members of the Carrington branch, one of the oldest branches in the state, resigned en-masse in February after the ALP’s state executive undemocratically swept aside preselection requirements to impose star-recruit Jodie McKay, a media personality, as the party’s candidate. But the anger and hostility of workers was largely channelled behind the campaigns of deposed Labor MP Bryce Gaudry, who contested as an Independent, Newcastle’s Lord Mayor John Tate, and the Greens.

Overall, the NSW election results show a deepening crisis of the two-party system. The Liberals mustered just 26.8 percent of the primary vote, with the subsequent ousting of the party’s leader Peter Debnam doing nothing to abate the party’s decline. The Iemma government retained office with 38.9 percent, despite a statewide 3 percent swing against it, reaching double digits in some working class electorates. With the elections out of the way for another four years, and the state teetering on the brink of recession, the Iemma government will proceed to launch a new round of far-reaching attacks on the living standards of working people.

The primary focus of the SEP’s campaign was not to secure votes, but to prepare workers and young people for the struggles ahead by explaining that the real source of the drive to war, mounting inequality and the assault on democratic rights lay in the capitalist profit system itself, and making clear that the most urgent task was the building of a new mass working class movement, based on a socialist and internationalist perspective.

See Also:
NSW election: Labor government returned despite popular disaffection
[26 March 2007]

http://wsws.org/articles/2007/mar2007/vote-m26.shtml
Australia: Why you should vote for the SEP in the New South Wales election
[23 March 2007]

http://wsws.org/articles/2007/mar2007/nick-m23.shtml
Australian SEP election campaign wins appreciative response
[22 March 2007]

http://wsws.org/articles/2007/mar2007/camp-m22.shtml
Australia: the socialist alternative in the New South Wales state election
Support the SEP campaign
[10 February 2007]

http://wsws.org/articles/2007/feb2007/sep-f10.shtml

 

http://wsws.org/articles/2007/apr2007/sep-a25.shtml

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Drug Policy and local issues

Does the SEP have a website of their own? I'd like to see their policy documents. In particular I'd like to see their policy on drugs.

The Greens are the only party that I saw that explicitly advocated a sane drug policy (decriminalisation and a focus on education and health). I'm glad they did this. Drug prohibition is a big factor in the class war. The rich have more money to pay for drugs, while the poor who are addicted have to compromise money for food and other basic needs to pay for illegal drugs that are expensive because they are illegal. Also, once again, a rich person can afford a better lawyer when they get caught with drugs, therefore avoiding harsher sentencing. The list goes on.

I think the SEP's downplaying of local issues in favour of war issues is to their own detriment. People care about local issues because that is what is directly affecting them. If you can't relate to people on the local level, they won't vote for you.

Drugs and government surveillance

I went to my local chemist yesterday to buy a box of Lemsip. I was feeling pretty crook, struggled to the counter and said, "A box of Lemsip, please, non-drousy daytime". Well, you'd have thought I asked for Satan in a box. "LEMSIP?! the assistant shouted (and everyone turned to look). 'DO YOU HAVE YOUR DRIVER'S LICENCE HERE?' 'I wasn't planning on driving out a truckload, I just want one box of Lemsip.' "I have to see your driver's licence." I felt so bloody sick but I struggled back to the car to get my licence, only to be made to join the END of the fecking queue. I thought I would die as I waited for the six people in front of me. So I jumped the queue and called out to the chemist "Hey! I've been waiting here for ages. I am sick and I want a box of Lemsip." "Get her a box of Lemsip!" he called to an assistant. Instead of Lemsip she took out a bloody government-style FORM and started asking me QUESTIONS. I was so angry by this time. Do you take any other medications? No. Have you taken Lemsip before? Yes. Do you plan to use this product to manufacture illegal substances? Definitely. Do you have any recipes for methamphetamine? (She ticked no). "I'll take a hundred boxes, please," I said. I got one. I said, "Just what are you going to do with that form?" as she wrote my driver's licence number and address on it. "Oh, nothing much, we just type the information into the computer at the end of the day." "And what happens to it after that?" "The government receives the information eventually." "Well, I don't like this kind of surveillance. I think I'll buy my Lemsip out on the street next time." I was getting quite wound up about it all, as I do when I feel something is unjust. The chemist came out with a bottle wrapped in brown paper. "Take home some of my tonic, free of charge," he said, "But only if you go home NOW." So I got a free bottle of Blanc de Blotto out of it but I am still angry at this attack on my freedom. I feel like I need some Sudafed now. Does anyone have some for sale?

Drugs?

Come on Cam wise up. Sure the drugs issue is bad for anyone else but capitalists. But the real problem if you ask me is war. What has war led to? Draconian laws. What drugs can you take or afford in prison?

When I was there a packet of whiteox which cost $12 dollars 10 years ago would buy you two bongs of grass for a dance with the radio on friday night.

I guess you don't know that because you've never been there and I don't blame you for that.

However that said, the only rights you have is from the 'powers that be' no other rights exist, all the days of your life. So whether you know it or not I think you need to rethink your idea about what is important in life.

Liberty is the most basic tenant and without it you're a prisoner and a slave. What moron dicatator is going to give you drugs?

The fact that the two party system is rigged ought to tell you that even if you voted for the SEP there is no way you're going to change the rigged system. On that basis the arguments raised by the SEP are of primary importants. The main stream media giants and lib/Lab have a monopoly on the voting system. In short it's not a democracy by a long shot.

What are local issues if you're jailed for 20 years for thought crimes?

Only because of the illegal and degrading war of aggression and crimes against humanity did the 'powers that be' impose those draconian laws.

Think about it? Labor can impose on you for another four years any law that it wishes.

In short we are stuffed.

 

Keeping Australia Safe

We can defend Australia from terrorism by deporting anyone we are scared of. I am scared of anyone with a name that's from a language I don't know. Out you go, Mr Hatzistergos.

 I mean, that's not a real Australian name. A real Australian name is something like Hanson, which is Norwegian, but at least it's a white wog, not a balt wog or a muslim wog.

 This is just such a classic example of the enthusiastic racism of Australian politics.

 What's the definition of a wog in Australia?

 Someone on the boat after the one I arrived on.

 Why are people falling for such transparent rubbish?

http://melbourne.indymedia.org/news/2007/04/143893_comment.php#143917

Hatzistergos

You can spell Hatzistergos. That's clever. That bastard liar wrote to Noreen Hay that HealthQuest (the N.S.W. government medical office) has never issued certifcates of insanity. Noreen Hay duly dismissed the complaint of her constituent as nonsense. You're a liar, Hatzistergos. Deport him! Does anyone know his address so I can send some Hillsong people around to mow his lawn?

Vote Nobody Next Federal Election

Vote Nobody Next Federal Election

Federal elections are coming up and it's the same old joke as usual - a "choice" that isn't one! Instead of not voting, how about voting for Nobody?

You should vote for Nobody, because:

- Nobody keeps election promises.
- Nobody has all the answers.
- Nobody will represent you.
- Nobody will improve your community.
- Nobody has your best interests at heart.
- Nobody will make a real difference!
- A vote for Nobody is a vote for Everybody!

OK, seriously now...

http://sydney.indymedia.org.au/node/50799

 

Cool Cat

That's a funny post cat.

Sad to think when things come to this state of affairs.

May I ask this question ? Why are the most prominent pollies etc 'Italian' ?

Now I don't dislike them personally (my neighbour is from Italy) BUT I mean ? Is it the mafia that are running this state of NSW - literally ?

Or is it just another case of 'jobs for the boys' ?????????

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