Remember “class war”? References to class war were incessant in the 2019 campaign, with Bill Shorten portrayed as a class warrior out to get “the top end of town” — a phrase he readily used himself.
“Class warfare is set to dominate this election,” News Corp stenographers wrote at the beginning of the 2019 campaign. John Howard memorably emerged to accuse Shorten of “class warfare”.
As always, whenever the phrase “class warfare” is being employed by the powerful, it’s a good indicator there is a class war going on — but it’s a defence of existing economic structures that favour the wealthy and the powerful and punish the low-paid and the young.
Labor under Anthony Albanese has ostentatiously dropped policies that could be portrayed as class warfare, and any rhetoric that could be interpreted along such lines. He has attended business forums during the campaign and made much of the Business Council of Australia’s support for his use of a safeguard mechanism to reduce carbon emissions.
But the class war continues. Having defeated Shorten’s sensible, moderate proposals to retilt the fiscal and economic playing field slightly less dramatically in the direction of powerful elites, those elites have moved on to the offensive. The goal? To inflict real wage cuts on the lowest-paid Australians.
The idea that the lowest-paid should suffer real wage cuts — after a decade in which their incomes have either stagnated or gone backwards compared with inflation — is the real deal when it comes to class war. It’s as near to class war as you’ll get without aristocrats being beheaded in Martin Place.
As Crikey wrote early yesterday, with others following in our wake, we now have a clear difference between the parties on a fundamental issue.
And what a bizarre issue. The idea that increasing the minimum wage from $20.33 to about $21.40 will entrench inflation and wreck the economy.
It’s understandable that Prime Minister Scott Morrison and the Coalition support real wage cuts. They exist to implement the agenda of business, which is almost universally hostile to wage rises. There’s an unusual honesty about Morrison’s attacks on Albanese over the issue.
It’s less clear why the media are backing this attack. But very likely it has a lot to do with the invisibility of many of the occupations of the lowest paid. These are people whose services keep the lives of the comfortable middle class going, but out of direct sight. They care for our kids, they clean our homes and offices, they look after our parents, they provide basic retail services.
They’re not people that the middle class, even progressives, interact with other than economically and transactionally. They’re not People Like Us. They’re strongly female, strongly migrant, often with poor English, often working more than one job. Out of sight and certainly out of mind.
Without them, the modern service economy on which Australians rely falls apart. But they’re low paid and very often exploited.
Some economists get it. Warren Hogan, who Crikey has had occasion to criticise for his views on monetary policy, wrote an excellent piece today explaining why a 5.1% pay rise for the low paid was important. His observation that worker scarcity was not going away was particularly relevant. But so too was his warning about the creation of a US-style class of working poor, “people who work but struggle to pay the rent and feed their families… Australia is now heading in that direction with big cuts to the living standards of low-income earners driven by surging costs of living.”
This is a serious moment not just politically or economically but, as Hogan rightly notes, about what kind of Australia we have. One that wants to ensure low-income earners don’t fall behind, and values the contribution they make, regardless of whether well-off journalists and politicians see them, or one in which they remain the victims of elites pursuing their own interests at the expense of everyone else.
If a $1.10 rise in the minimum wage is going to wreck ‘our’ economy, is the economy actually ‘strong’? Obviously not! As Warren Hogan pointed out, the lowest paid workers will spend most of any pay rise they receive.The pay rise circulates in the economy and may also raise the number of females participating in the workforce.
And the economy wrecking argument is actually a bit sillier, than what it appears at first glance. From what I can make out, those railing against a 5% rise, seem to think that a rise of around 3% is more appropriate. So, a 70 cents per hour rise is okay, but giving the lowest paid an extra 40 cents, to bring the rise to $1.10, is somehow economy wrecking.
As the most divisive PM in history continues to try to pull off another paid ,rorted miracle the main issues are Climate Change and Integrity.With both these issues, the Liberal /CP/Nats minority Morrison government refuses to make an honest statement on its stance and honest attempts to mitigate the effects?
Port of Darwin sale by the Territory government was rewarded by the then relevant minister Mr Morrison with a $20 million bonus as part of a system of selling off public assets
The fossil fuel industry and the likes of the fat coal miner and the greedy grandmother place profits ahead of all else including the future of the planet
Change of government, ICAC, Prison in that order
The idea of the tumbrels making their way into Martin Place has a certain appeal to it….
I’d never endorse the notion of murdering them all in their beds, but I don’t think it should be dismissed out of hand.
Spot on BK. Absolutely dumb and unconsionable of the elites. I think a public hanging might be a good thing for these people. No concept of a fair or shared wealth society. Who in their right mind woul see the American system as a model??
How have we now reached this point of reality. AMERICA AMERICA Land of the ????
America has seen greater Wage Growth over the last 12 months than Australia has.
The guillotine in Martin Place? Sensational. Bring it on!
I already have a list…..
I’m getting out my knitting
Sometimes you just have to speak up. So I did.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XtnY9mY2das
Good stuff.
Well said. Thankyou.
Just watched it. I’d like an Australia where this has to be played on Sky After Dark, and all of their shock jocks and propagandists made to listen to it.
Great stuff, Graham…we all need to be reminded of that ‘other’ Australia from time to time!!
Thanks. Very powerful words. I’ve shared. I know what type of Australia I want to live in and where my grandsons will grow up in and it isn’t what we currently have. I just hope the election outcome sees a better, more respectful, honest and fairer Australia
I was thinking about a facet of that ‘other’ Australia today, the one where public housing was for life, because a roof over your family’s head was a fundamental human right, not some mongrel’s asset.
My grandparents raised their family in a NSW Housing Commission home. Their tenancy ended when their lives did. They were keen gardeners, so they laid out permanent beds: vegetables, prize winning roses, stone fruit and citrus that wouldn’t bear for years, but it didn’t matter because they had time. I can still taste the plums and peaches and remember dragging mandarines off the tree with a rake on the lower branches, it was so tall.
My mother first entered that Housing Commission home as a baby in arms. She left it on her father’s arm, dressed in her wedding gown. Us grandkids grew up in that home, too, gathered together at Christmas, a noisy horde of squabbling cousins, the children of four daughters, close enough in age to fight like cats and dogs. Or siblings.
We grew up with pets in that house. Cats. Dogs. Chooks. Goldfish ponds. I think I inherited my passion for planted aquariums from my Poppy. Aviaries of various kinds came and went, depending on my young uncle’s passion at the time. Sometimes it was pigeons, sometimes it was budgies.
When something broke or stopped working in that house, Housing came and fixed it. Once every ten years, they came and painted your home, inside and out. You didn’t get a say over the colour, but they didn’t give you anything you couldn’t live with either. You knew all the neighbours and they knew you. Of course they did. You were looking at generations of familial association. The children intermarried. The Housing Commission suburbs of old were communities. Close knit. Tolerant. Hard working. Decent. Proud.
And what are renters offered now? What’s the great progressive offering? Guaranteed five year leases and the right to have a cat or small dog. Well, fcuk you very much and excuse me for not falling on my face in sheer gratitude, but I want what my grandparents had. I want it for myself. I want it for my grandchildren. And I want it for the over a third and growing percentage of the Australian population that will never, ever be able to buy a home.
Several fewer smashed skinny soy toast & avocado lattes per week ought to do it.
Well said Kathy.
There are many memories of those values, and others, who are with you Kathy. What has changed is the political class. Enticed, privileged, captured by greed, protected by lawyers and rewarded by corporate commerce and the culture of a foreign power. A greedy remorseless culture, now abandoning their wrung-out nation, and that greedy culture is in need of re-location. To a more naive nation that offers, promises, to renew their harvesting, and begin all over again.
Exactly. Nowadays the concept of actually having a home is a luxury reserved for the rich. And the rich rely on higher walls and more vicious police forces to keep those without a home at bay. It would be cheaper to buy everyone who needs one a home for life, but that’s not the way they see it. They’d rather spend ten million dollars on a walled mansion than a million dollars building a home for someone who can’t afford one.