Australian Labor Party

Australian Labor Party
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Friday 25 July 2014

Faulkner's reforms will fail as NSW Labor refuses to change

Faulkner's reforms will fail as NSW Labor refuses to change



Faulkner’s reforms will fail as NSW Labor refuses to change





Labor senator John Faulkner does not anticipate that his moves
to reform the party’s preselection processes will succeed at this
weekend’s NSW State Conference. Faulkner is hoping to have the rules
changed…
















It seems things are not yet bad enough in the Labor Party to
make significant reform, such as John Faulkner’s proposed changes to
preselection, likely.
AAP/Daniel Munoz







Labor senator John Faulkner does not anticipate
that his moves to reform the party’s preselection processes will
succeed at this weekend’s NSW State Conference. Faulkner is hoping to
have the rules changed so that candidates for upper house elections in
NSW and federally will be chosen directly by party members, rather than
by the ALP’s Administrative Committee, where trade union delegates are all powerful.




The relationship between trade unions and party rank-and-file members
has been strained from the Labor Party’s birth in the 1890s. In the
early years of the 20th century almost every state ALP conference saw
protests by either unionists or local members that one or the other was
being sidelined.




Today, trade union delegates dominate state conference, which is the
policy-making body of the party, so they are unlikely to give up their
power voluntarily.




A long history of conflict



The first NSW Labor Party – the Labor Electoral League – was created
by the trade union movement in the 1890s precisely to defend its
interests in the parliamentary arena. The unions still regard the party
as theirs.




However, it is unwise to rely too heavily on history to justify
present-day policies, since both the Labor Party and the trade union
movement have been utterly transformed since the late 19th century. The
NSW party has been virtually recreated many times since then:




  • by William Holman in order to make it electable to majority government in 1910;
  • by the Australian Workers' Union (AWU) creating a rigid faction
    system in order to get rid of supporters of conscription (including
    Holman) in 1916-17;
  • by Jack Lang to create his own personal political machine in the 1920s and 1930s;
  • by William McKell in the early 1940s to restore sanity and to foster the values of postwar reconstruction of Australian society;
  • by Neville Wran to further the principles of Gough Whitlam’s social agenda, and;
  • most recently by Eddie Obeid and Joe Tripodi to outdo Lang in using the party for personal profit.


Eddie Obeid and others recast the NSW ALP in a bid for personal profit.
AAP/Paul Miller

Click to enlarge


Not surprisingly, many party members are hoping for a modern-day McKell to restore sanity.



The union movement also bears little resemblance to the Trades and
Labor Council of the 1890s. It is now called Unions NSW and very few of
its leaders have ever worked at the coalface or spent half a lifetime
recruiting members among shearers or stonemasons, as was the typical
career path for union leaders until the 1960s.




Now, most union leaders hold their positions because they have
university degrees and management experience, irrespective of the craft
or trade of their members.




What chance is there for genuine reform?



Calls for the Labor Party to reform are nothing new. Every election
defeat at federal or state level brings an official inquiry and report
explaining that further effort should be made to stop the decline in
party membership and to introduce structural changes to the party to
make this possible.




Occasionally there is a more formal inquiry, as with Bob Hawke and Neville Wran’s report after the party’s loss at the 2001 federal election. However, its modest recommendations disappeared without trace.



In his first stint as prime minister, Kevin Rudd tried to reduce the
role of large unions by denying a role for left and right factions to choose his ministry. The present leader, Bill Shorten, talks up the need for modest party reform but, as a former union leader himself, it is unlikely that his words will lead to firm action.




In previous eras, federal intervention could force reform of corrupt
state branches. The party’s federal executive has intervened in the NSW
ALP at least half-a-dozen times and leaned rather heavily another three
or four times. The most important occasions were to get rid of Lang in
1939, to disband a pro-communist state executive in 1941, and to sort
out the problems of the DLP split in the 1950s.




However, it is difficult to see federal intervention forcing the NSW
party to introduce internal democracy. Trade unions are also dominant at
the federal level. A very strong party leader, with unchallengeable
electoral support, could force the federal conference or executive to
intervene in this way, but such a leader is not currently in view.





Federal Labor leader Bill Shorten has talked up the need for modest party reform.
AAP/Dan Himbrechts

Click to enlarge


In one sense, the current political climate is not favourable for
such reforms. At the next NSW state election the ALP should improve its
position markedly, although it is unlikely to win. At the federal level
the reaction against prime minister Tony Abbott is so strong that there
is a genuine possibility that Labor could win the next election, even
led by a lacklustre Shorten. Party minders will be saying that now is
not the time to rock the boat.




The alternative that will become more likely the longer nothing is
done is the complete reformation of the party. Robert Menzies
accomplished this in the 1940s when he helped to create the present
Liberal Party from the ashes of the previous United Australia Party
(UAP), which had imploded over leadership and policy issues.




Gough Whitlam completely transformed the federal Labor Party in the
late 1960s, although the party structures and name maintained
considerable continuity. But such leaders do not come along every day.




A final caveat



Giving power over preselection to local members does not guarantee genuine party democracy.
Especially in a party where membership is declining and apathetic,
local branches can very easily be stacked, as has been demonstrated time
and time again. And stacked branches go with faction-driven
preselections.




In the 1922 state conference, for example, AWU branch stacking was so
all-pervasive that a motion was debated that all preselections be
abolished and any candidate should be allowed to present at election.
That is even less likely to be supported in 2014 than in 1923.




Perhaps the better alternative is to allow candidates to contest
primary elections open to a vote of non-party members, as in the US, and
as happened recently in the selection of Verity Firth
for the state seat of Balmain. But primaries can become very expensive
and the need for electoral funding becomes even more pressing – along
with its temptations. And in a tight contest, it is open for members of
opposed political parties to penetrate the process in order to block a
candidate whom they fear.




All in all, the lesson seems to be that things are not yet bad enough in the Labor Party to make significant reform likely.





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