
I also get a little bit annoyed when we have people in those sorts of countries pointing the finger at Australia and say we should be shutting down all our resources sector so that, you know, they can continue to survive. Michael McCormack, Deputy Prime Minister of Australia
Australia rejects Pacific calls to commit to genuine action on climate change, tries to gag the leaders of island states on the subject and throws a wad of cash at them to bribe them into compliance. Scott Morrison’s climate policy for last week’s Pacific Islands Forum? Yes, but he stole it from Labor.
In August 2009, the Rudd government headed off a push by smaller Pacific island states to commit to strong emissions reduction targets, then tried to prevent word of its efforts from leaking out. Then-climate minister Penny Wong also announced $50 million for climate projects in the Pacific. Scott Morrison’s bribe had an extra zero on it but otherwise the tactic was exactly the same. To hear Wong criticising Morrison for “arrogance” was rich indeed.
In fact, Wong admitted Labor would have done pretty much the same thing as the government. It’s a perfectly believable claim because Labor has sold out Pacific states itself for the interests of our resource industries. Actually, Australia’s history of subordinating the existence of small island states to its economic interests has a longer history: in 1997, John Howard fought island states’ efforts to commit to binding emissions reduction targets.
But never before has a senior Australia politician — the Deputy Prime Minister — so baldly stated Australia’s position: the economic interests of Australian companies are more important than the interests of Pacific nations. We know that the interests of Australian capital come ahead of those of our neighbours. That’s the story of John Howard and Alexander Downer’s bugging of the Timor Leste cabinet in 2004 — to help resource company Woodside.
Michael McCormack’s honesty in saying it, however, has a certain refreshing quality. Indeed, not merely are our economic interests to be put ahead of the economic interests of smaller regional countries, but that they are to be put ahead even of the existence of those states.
McCormack suggests they will continue to exist, albeit in a kind of displaced zombie form: “They will continue to survive with large aid assistance from Australia. They will continue to survive because many of their workers come here and pick our fruit.” That’s the economic future of Pacific island states — as permanent mendicants and as horticultural labourers. Of course, that’s for the lucky ones — smaller island states like Kiribati will either vanish beneath the waves or become uninhabitable as lack of potable water kills their children, despite Australian-funded “adaptation” projects.
McCormack’s invocation of fruitpicking is resonant. Australia’s horticulture relies heavily on exploiting low-paid temporary migrants such as working holidaymakers, people here on bridging visas and seasonal worker permit holders from Pacific countries. The Fair Work Ombudsman’s Harvest Trail campaign revealed over half of employers in the industry were found in breach of workplace laws, with more than 40% failing to pay workers properly.
Pacific Islander workers are particular targets for exploitation and particularly serious abuse. As leader of the Nationals, McCormack knows what he’s talking about when he sees the glittering future of a foreign work force for the Nationals’ horticulture sector supporters.
Of course, Australia’s mass-scale abduction, deception and exploitation of tens of thousands of Pacific Islander people for cheap agricultural labour throughout the 19th and into the 20th centuries is infamous. So-called “blackbirding” is a core part of Australia’s historical engagement with the Pacific.
From the early 19th century, Australia’s interaction with Pacific peoples has been via exploitation of labour, resource exploitation on Nauru and in PNG, commodity exploitation by CSR or the maintenance of dominance of Australian firms in small national markets. And a key part of Australia’s economic imperialism in the Pacific was a long campaign to keep larger powers out — whether Germans, the French or the Japanese. Our current “Stepping Up” campaign against China is simply the continuation of the long-running mechanism of Australia’s Pacific imperialism: dominate the region, subordinate its interests to our own, prevent other, greater powers from establishing influence.
Australians, of course, don’t see themselves as imperialists. We’re a country that doesn’t even recognise the people who inhabited this land before European invasion or their dispossession and occupation, let alone have a formal treaty establishing a coherent framework for our presence here.
Two centuries of exploitation of Pacific peoples registers even less with us. At least McCormack has the gumption to say that we’d rather see those people obliterated than undermine our economic interests in any way. Candour and imperialism so rarely go together.
It is quite ridiculous to suggest that McCormack has been honest or has displayed gumption. Frankly, he is so blind to Australia’s, and, by extension, his, sense of entitlement that he wouldn’t have seen anything wrong in what he was saying. Blind stupidity is more like it. I agree absolutely with everything else you say, but let us not roll the turd in glitter. This mob is just witless.
I don’t know about ‘witless’? More wilfully malignant?
I think they know exactly what they’re doing and who for (not the majority of those that elected them) – they just can’t see far enough down the road to the consequences of their actions?
I would add to that Klewso, that they don’t want to see what is coming down the road, they would rather live in denial than be honest with not only themselves but also with the pacific islanders, but most importantly the people they are supposed to represent…
In McCormack’s case I agree that his problem is pig ignorance & stupidity.
I’m currently more concerned about the meeja trained Littleproud (nominative determinism?) who is also mean & vicious, apart from being dumb a post.
Your damning of the ALP would have more or even some credibility if you’d even slightly touched on the fact that unlike the ALP and their attempt at an ETS, this Government, the Morrison Government, before them the Turnbull Government and before them the Abbott shambles have/had no climate policy at all…and pretty much bugger all energy policy to boot.
Yes, we are seeing just how good Prime Minister Julia Gillard’s carbon levy really was.
A point we need to make more often. Also that we need more such “breaches of promise”.
Well observed RabidHamster…
At least under ALP sustainability & then the ETS had a chance…
It’s deeply disappointing that the populace of the various states & some state/territory governments are trying to make the changes to reduce the emissions targets, but the Federal government is continuing down this very dangerous path…
This meeting with all the pacific island country’s was going to be a debacle with Morrison’s bully boy tactic, most people could see that coming..
It seems that the chooks are coming home to roost, for Australia..
Most of us are concerned but our Federal government is refusing to represent us in fair & just manner..
If were don’t do something quickly we’re going to end up like China if were not careful as the pariah’s of the pacific, which from what I understand will affect our reputation overseas/or from many discussions with people that live os, we have gone from having one of the best to one of the worst reputations…
C’mon fellas. You’ll do your backs in if you stoop to setting the decency bar so low that the indecent ALP passes it just because they’re not quite as evil as the Liberals. ‘Pretty Polly’ Penny Wong has confirmed Bernard’s criticism very professionally.
Well observed RabidHamster…
At least under ALP sustainability & then the ETS had a chance…
It’s deeply disappointing that the populace of the various states & some state/territory governments are trying to make the changes to reduce the emissions targets, but the Federal government is continuing down this very dangerous path…
This meeting with all the pacific island country’s was going to be a debacle with Morrison’s bully boy tactic, most people could see that coming..
It seems that the chooks are coming home to roost, for Australia..
Most of us are concerned but our Federal government is refusing to represent us in fair & just manner..
If were don’t do something quickly we’re going to end up like China if were not careful as the pariah’s of the pacific, which from what I understand will affect our reputation overseas/or from many discussions with people that live os, we have gone from having one of the best to one of the worst reputations…
I dunno. China’s treatment of the Island nations makes them seem like angelic philanthropists compared to this bunch of thugs – and that opinion seems to accord with comments I’ve heard from some of the Pacific leaders.
Artless as well as heartless.
It is a rare moment when a party leader states, unabridged, what he really thinks. To McCormack our economy has priority over lives.
It appears to conflict with National Party anti-abortion policy on the right to life. Or does that right only apply to those not yet born?
Poor buggers can only hold one thought at a time.
Gonna save you and hire you
To pick a bale of cherries,
Gonna cheat you, use you
To pick a bale a day
Tu-va-lu, pick a bale of cherries
Tu-va-lu will be washed away.
(with apologies to Lead Belly et al, and especially to the people of the Pacific Island states)
CitizenK is so right. The big appeal to McCormack is the similarity to the 19th century, where Pacific Island people were brought here for low or no wages for the benefit of the agricultural classes. We called it then “blackbirding”.
ScoMo needs to send his minister for gulags over to these islands, so that he can rush to a microphone and explain the humour of their dilemma. He can doubtless also explain the sadistic way we treat refugees here – just in case they have any thoughts of coming to Australia.