Ella Chanel, a former adviser to Matthew Guy, is taking the Victorian Liberal Party to the Human Rights Commission, alleging multiple racial microaggressions in the party’s head office. Tim Anderson, the Sydney University political economy lecturer unfairly sacked for circulating comparisons of Israel and the Nazis, has lost his claim for damages arising from the “hurt and humiliation” suffered because of the university’s unjust move. And on Sunday, independent Senator Lidia Thorpe announced she will lodge a complaint with the Human Rights Commission against the Greens for alleged racist incidents while she was a senator for the party.
That’s just this week. These come a month or so after the announcements by Sydney MLA Alex Greenwich and Greens Senator Mehreen Faruqi that they would be going after One Nation’s Mark Latham and Pauline Hanson, respectively, for some tweets and a bit of follow-up, alleged to be libellous and vilifying.
On both right and left, ever more exploratory and possibly tendentious forms of legal appeal are becoming standard.
For the rest, it shows the continuing collapse of any notion of a separation between the public sphere and the state, and one which people suspicious of the state on both sides seem eager to enforce. The whole process is obviously counterproductive to the political movements and traditions these people are part of, but they’re doing it anyway. By being an increasingly common last resort, it is breeding cynicism, wearing away any notion of actual politics and making state action the dominant form of social exchange, but they do it anyway.
Chanel, of African descent, has been an adviser to federal and state Liberal outfits for more than a decade. Her complaint, judging by The Age’s report (which could have omissions), doesn’t seem to allege explicit racist abuse, but rather that a series of events — being left out of meetings, not being notified of things, being treated rudely — were racially directed in nature. In the Victorian Liberal Party? A hellmix of private school prefects’ rooms and happy-clappies? One could well believe it. One could also believe that it was factional or personal.
Inviting the Human Rights Commission in for this sort of thing is a really interesting type of liberalism where the state is asked to inspect and interpret the minutiae of daily encounters. It’s only one staffer, but the fact that even one fairly experienced staffer is doing it suggests that the political culture that sustains liberalism is breaking down at the highest level. If that culture was still functional, it should be unthinkable for that to occur to their political party.
In the case of Anderson, he had an absolute right and necessity to sue Sydney University to be reinstated. His sacking was one of the worst examples of university administrations curtailing what should be the almost unlimited right of humanities teachers to raise challenging issues and arguments that might make their students uncomfortable. And to a degree, the way in which the system is set up might make claiming “hurt and humiliation” the only route to full compensation.
But ehhh… neither is a good look, nor would it have been a good precedent if it was established. The complaint that the university used to sack Anderson — that he had shown a graphic that combined the Israeli flag and the Nazi swastika — was one of those teaching events increasingly being used by students to make complaints of being subjected to traumatising and shocking images. That’s part of an increasingly common Zionist movement tactic — especially on campuses — of using the language of trauma and harm to one’s subjectivity to attack anti-imperialist teaching and the BDS movement.
But hell, they’re right. If you’re from a Holocaust survivor family, or simply a somewhat sensitive person, such images would hurt. They might traumatise. But keeping the university as a place where an anti-imperialist discourse can be made openly, and unhedged, necessitates absolutely minimising the language of hurt and humiliation as a consideration in public life. We need to be able to say robust things and assume a robustness of our opponents when we say them, and to enforce the demand that people have to hear things they don’t want to.
Thorpe’s general announcement that she might be taking the Greens to the Human Rights Commission for racism while she was a member of the party appears contradictory. Once again, one can understand there might be all sorts of irritating hypocrisies within the Greens. But Thorpe mounted a stated resistance to reciting her oath of office in its current form to question the legitimacy of state sovereignty — which I thought was a great move, taken to the limits of what one could do while still taking office. She is now talking about inviting an arm of that state in to go over the affairs of a private organisation that Thorpe joined voluntarily and left voluntarily.
Does a critic of the state have no right to call on the powers of the state? Of course not. Blak sovereignty movementists still have a right to call the fire brigade. But extending the powers of the state by inviting it into the heart of a political party further legitimises the right of the state to set ideological standards. It further establishes that the law can determine what things are and are not authorised to be said, and frame certain non-criminal actions — like giving someone the silent treatment — as “judgeable” from the level of sovereignty.
This is not something that anyone involved with organisations who want the right to say radical things should encourage. It’s further licensing the state to reach into organisations, examine emails, texts, minutes of meetings, etc, and if you’ve already backed that principle, it’s difficult to do anything much when it happens to you except squawk in protest. Resistance to such measures becomes politically meaningful only when it comes from a position of consistency, not just individual outrage that it happened to you.
The case of the Greens surely establishes that. Two weeks after Faruqi sicced the commission onto Hanson for a tweet — one that implicitly argued that immigrants to a country who have a hatred for the popular institutions of that country might want to return to the place from whence they came (an arguable and general statement, applicable to anyone) — the Greens may now be the target of a similar sort of action.
Round and round it all goes. The faster it goes, the more any form of critical and radical questioning politics will be wholly undermined by the hypocrisy of its elite representatives in pursuit of their individual redress. Eventually academics like Anderson will get a complaint based on student feels. Politicians will increasingly be pinged by a disgruntled ex-staffer, and the capacity to be political will be weakened with each further round.
Where does it end? You can look to America to see. It’s the Ron DeSantis movement, which entirely re-energised the right by using the language and politics of the cultural left to mount an attack against progressive politics overall.
By going to war against the curriculum and library catalogues based on notions of trauma and hurt to white students who thought they were being blamed for slavery, DeSantis gave the left nothing to reply with — and used its arguments for his legitimacy.
The left had already given away the notion of a robust public sphere, and the inconsequence of “being offended”, and so all it could burble out was that white offence and potential hurt weren’t the same as Black or other offence, hurt and trauma. That’s true enough, but it’s a messy and complex thing to argue, and the underlying principle has been established.
Whatever the frustrations and temptations, radical and critical political forces and movements always lose in the long, or even middle run, when they draw in the state on their “side”.
I think the larger point is Australia’s libel laws are a mess and way too intrusive into public speech. I don’t think the average punter understands that, far from protecting the little guy, they are mostly being used by wealthy folks who can afford large legal teams (Chau Chak Wing comes to mind). It really gets under my skin that Alex Greenwich claims he is standing up for LGBT people with his case. I’m gay, and a flaming lefty, but frankly I was glad that Mark Latham let loose on Twitter rather than couching his bigotry in careful media-friendly language. Anything that shows voters the true character of a public figure like Latham is useful data.
With the exception of Anderson, it’s the Me,me! syndrome. Now we have politicians diverting energy & attention onto themselves rather than into policies & their electorates. Nothing gives an enemy as much satisfaction as knowing they have rattled or hurt you. Simply ignore. Or simply stay out of politics which can be a notoriously tough game.
Go Grundle!
Can it be that the new editor is determined to change the whingefest this site has become?
Interesting. I had a sneaking suspicion that the fight against Murdoch had been quietly underwritten for commercial reasons by the Daily Mail, and so was not entirely surprised at the job done on celebs Karvelas and Grant the other week. To be fair, the piece didn’t mention figure-hugging garments, house prices or woke millionaires, so I can’t be sure, but it was uncanny.
RN on Mon morning, HamishMcTavish announced/hinted that he’s replaced Karvelis as she’s to do/be Special project – ie Q&A!
From Stansmarm to smirPK.
The appearance of critical thinking when Grundle’s pieces appear is what stands out to me. I wonder if certain Crikey colleagues read and reflect.
Unlikely, “…the squalling (of a few )opportunistic outrage merchants…” (™ ® C.Lewis) here are not familiar with cerebration, being so unaware of the real world as to be deficient in basic reasoning skills.
The surprise is that Grundle’s piece snuck in at all – it would be a good idea to copy it to Word.doc as it’s very likely be cleansed, as have other “problematic” pieces, not just his the Tongue, of fond memory.
Can you elaborate?
I rarely read the site anymore apart from Rundle.
How I miss those days when it was the glorious sh*tsheet that Mayne started. While I disagree with almost all his politics, at least he got out there and had a go – and encouraged people he disagreed with to have a go too.
Just look at the usual suspects, Cam, Chucky, et al and the other tranzx war correspondents.
I can’t really be bothered. I’m all for hearing viewpoints that challenge me, but this stuff is becoming as conformist and monochrome as Melbourne clothing.
Read one and you’ve read them all – same vocabulary, same tropes, same group-grope and same estrangement from reality.
When Robert Hughes wrote The Culture of Complaint in 1994 I thought he was a grumpy old twit, but nowadays he looks like something of a prophet.
He was talking about America, but it seems pretty obvious where we’ve inherited/contracted this disease from. Our public sphere will go the same depressing way as theirs – just on a slower burn.
“When I was young I saw how foolish were the elders but when I grew up I was amazed at how much they’d learned in the meantime!”
Makes good sense to me. If you go down the road of American style litigation at any offence, you just look like a soft-c*ck idiot. On the face of it, I feel a bit sorry for Anderson, but I’ll need to check what the court said before putting foot in mouth.