Socialist Alliance (Australia)
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
| This article may require cleanup to meet Wikipedia's quality standards. Please improve this article if you can. (March 2007) |
| Socialist Alliance | |
|---|---|
| Leader | Collective Leadership - National Co-convenors: Dick Nichols (Sydney), Margarita Windisch (Melbourne), Bea Bleile (Armidale) |
| Founded | 2001 |
| Office | Sydney |
| Political Ideology | Democratic Socialism, Ecosocialism, Environmentalism |
| Website | http://www.socialist-alliance.org/ |
The Socialist Alliance was founded in 2001 as an alliance of socialist organisations and individuals in Australia, initiated by the Democratic Socialist Perspective and the International Socialist Organisation along with 6 other founding socialist organisations, to create greater left unity in the aftermath of the protest of the World Economic Forum in Melbourne on September 11-13, 2000.
Contents |
[edit] History
After its formation, the Socialist Alliance grew to a point where most of its members were not members of any of the affiliate organisations. In response to this, the Democratic Socialist Perspective and many non-aligned members argued successfully at successive national conferences for measures to take the Socialist Alliance in the direction of becoming a united socialist party. Other affiliates preferred to adhere to the alliance's original direction: a broad left-wing electoral front.
In late 2003, the Democratic Socialist Party resolved to became a "a Marxist tendency in the Socialist Alliance", renaming itself the "Democratic Socialist Perspective" as a step towards turning the Socialist Alliance into a "Multi-Tendency Socialist Party".
At the 2005 National Conference particularly sharp political differences were expressed. These centred on: the extent to which the Socialist Alliance should criticise the Australian Labor Party; whether the organisation should have a formal relationship with newspaper associated with the Democratic Socialist Perspective, Green Left Weekly, as a step towards Socialist Alliance itself having its own newspaper; and whether non-aligned members should have an automatic majority on the organisation's national executive. Following this conference three of the leading members of a "Non-Aligned Caucus" and most of the active affiliate organisations gradually withdrew. The "Non Aligned Caucus" was an ad hoc grouping of SA members who weren't aligned to any affiliated organisation which formed in the lead up to the 2003 conference of the Alliance.
Despite these and other setbacks, the Socialist Alliance remains the largest socialist organisation in Australia[citation needed], with branches around the country and a large majority of its members belonging to no particular affiliate. It annually maintains[1] electoral registration in New South Wales [2] and in Victoria.
For several years the Socialist Alliance published a quarterly journal, Seeing Red, the last issue of which came out in March 2006. The newspaper Green Left Weekly regularly runs a Socialist Alliance column called Our Common Cause, and the Brisbane local newspaper The Westender has also run a column written by the Socialist Alliance.
[edit] Election results
| Wikinews has related news: Wikinews interviews the Socialist Alliance about the upcoming Queensland State election |
The Socialist Alliance first campaigned in the 2001 federal election, however candidates were listed as independents on the ballot as its application for electoral registration was suspended when the election was called early. Despite this, it received over 25,000 votes for its 2001 Senate campaign in Victoria and many voters across the country took the opportunity to vote for a socialist candidate for the first time.[citation needed]
The Socialist Alliance has also run candidates at several state and council elections and the 2004 federal election. In the 2003 Moreland City Council elections, two candidates exceeded 4%.[citation needed] In an election in the Melbourne suburb of Boroondara, a Socialist Alliance candidate won over 12% of the vote (in the absence of an Australian Labor Party-endorsed candidate).[citation needed]
Voting in other elections was not so strong. At the 2004 federal election the alliance received 0.11% of the primary vote (13,305 votes) overall, while it has polled around 2% in individual seats.[citation needed] In the 2007 NSW election, the Socialist Alliance received 0.4% of the primary (15,142 votes), almost triple what it received in 2003, but in the 2007 Federal election the party's vote declined to the background level of "independent" candidates.
The 2008 Victorian local government election results were more positive, however. The Socialist Alliance polled as high as 19% in one ward of the Melbourne municipality of Maribyrnong, and polled over 10% in all wards bar one that it contested across the state.[citation needed]
[edit] Political Activity
Due to its unusual structure (as a broad alliance, rather than a politically homogeneous socialist organisation) the Socialist Alliance places more emphasis on campaigning activity than on expounding one particular "form" of socialism as do many other socialist groups, although affiliates and non-aligned members continue to put forward and argue for their own politics.
Some of the main political campaigns in which the Socialist Alliance is involved include:
[edit] Anti-War & Civil Liberties
The Socialist Alliance, its affiliates and members played a role in the campaign to stop the attacks on Afghanistan in 2001 and Iraq in 2003, and remains active in the campaigns against these, and other, wars. Socialist Alliance members are also active in promoting the Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions campaign against Israel over its treatment of the Palestinian people.
Socialist Alliance is also active in its opposition to the "war on terror", to the racism against the Muslim community it claims this causes, and to government policy on civil liberties. Socialist Alliance members helped to organise the protests in Sydney against APEC in 2007, and the visit of Pope Benedict XVI in 2008, in the face of increased police powers that were heavily criticised for violating civil liberties.[3] [4]
The Socialist Alliance conducts this work alongside other groups and individual activists in local community peace groups and in broader coalitions like the Stop the War Coalition- Sydney and the Gaza Defence Committee.
[edit] Workers' Rights
The Socialist Alliance orients towards struggles in the union movement. In line with its criticism that the ALP is holding back and bureaucratising the union movement, the Socialist Alliance encourages workers and unions to break with Labor and to set up a "new workers' party".
In 2005 and 2006, the Socialist Alliance organised successful trade union "fight-back" conferences, in response to the Federal Government's "WorkChoices" legislation, attracting hundreds of union militants and members of other socialist groups. The Socialist Alliance was involved in the campaign against WorkChoices, including as part of the Your Rights At Work movement, and against the Australian Building and Construction Commission (ABCC).
The Socialist Alliance is highly critical of the ALP's industrial policy for not returning enough rights to workers and for retaining the ABCC, referring to the new system (Fair Work Australia) as "WorkChoices-lite".
Notable Socialist Alliance trade union leaders have included Chris Cain, Western Australian State Secretary of the Maritime Union of Australia;[5] Tim Gooden, secretary of the Geelong Trades and Labour Council; and Craig Johnston, former Victorian State Secretary of the Australian Manufacturing Workers Union, who was jailed for 9 months in 2004 after an industrial dispute at Johnson Tiles in 2001.[6]
[edit] The Environment
The Socialist Alliance also campaigns around environmental issues, most notably climate change, helping to organise the 2006 Walk Against Warming rallies in some cities, and producing detailed policies on combating climate change which have been created through an open wiki process with broad membership input. In the lead-up to the 2007 Federal Election the environmental website VoteClimate rated Socialist Alliance environmental policy #1 (ahead of the Greens). [7]
Socialist Alliance members also helped to organise the [8] Climate Action Summit in Canberra on January 31 - February 1 2009, and is involved in building the new national Climate Action Network that grew out of that summit.
The Socialist Alliance argues that no solution to the crisis caused by global warming is possible without overthrowing capitalism, and criticises "market mechanisms" such as carbon trading as being unworkable, profit-driven and reinforcing the capitalist relations that caused the pollution to begin with.
[edit] Indigenous Rights
The Socialist Alliance has played a role in recent campaigns for justice for indigenous Australia, particularly around the inquiries into the deaths-in-custody of TJ Hickey in Redfern and Mulrunji Doomadgee on Palm Island. In the case of Mulrunji, leading indigenous activist, academic and Socialist Alliance member Sam Watson played a key role in organising the protests that led to the re-opening of the inquiry.[9]
The Socialist Alliance has also played a central role in the response to the Federal Government's "Intervention" in the Northern Territory, helping to organise the February 12, 2008 protests outside Parliament House in Canberra.[10]
[edit] Anti-racism and Immigrants Rights
The Socialist Alliance has been able to build growing support among some ethnic community sectors in urban Australia such as among Somali youth and from within the Latin American community.[citation needed] In the latter case, the Socialist Alliance has been an active supporter of the revolutionary process in Venezuela and is affiliated to the Australia Venezuela Solidarity Network.
Socialist Alliance members have also been involved in the struggle for refugee rights, opposing mandatory detention of illegal immigrants, and calling for Australia to pursue a more humane policy on refugees.[11]
[edit] Public Services
The Socialist Alliance is an advocate of quality public services, calling for increased funding for public education, healthcare, housing and transport. In NSW, Socialist Alliance is heavily involved in the campaigns against privatisation planned by the State government (for example electricity and prisons), alongside the Greens, unions, ALP members and community groups.
The Socialist Alliance is also active in a number of other campaigns, including LGBTI rights, women's liberation and in various social justice campaigns, as well as around local issues and international solidarity. The Socialist Alliance maintains branches outside of the major cities, including in Wollongong, Newcastle, Armidale, Geelong, Lismore and on the Gold Coast.[citation needed]
[edit] Active affiliate organisations
- Democratic Socialist Perspective (formerly the Democratic Socialist Party)
- Resistance (affiliated in 2003)
- Sudanese-Australian Human Rights Association (affiliated in 2008) [12]
[edit] Inactive affiliate organisations, and organisations which have not formally disaffiliated
- Worker-Communist Party of Iraq in Australia
- Workers League
- Workers Liberty
- Chilean Popular and Indigenous Network (affiliated in 2004)
[edit] Former affiliates
- Socialist Alternative (withdrew in the initial stages)
- Socialist Democracy (disbanded in December 2005)
- Workers Power (left in April 2006) [13]
- International Socialist Organisation (left in January 2007)
- Freedom Socialist Party (left in March 2007)
[edit] References
- ^ "Political party registration in NSW", NSW Electoral Commission website, Accessed 25 June 2009.
- ^ "State registered political parties", NSW Electoral Commission website, Accessed 25 June 2009.
- ^ "Protesters concerned by APEC police powers, ABC News, August 17, 2007. Accessed: April 20, 2009.
- ^ "World Youth Day 'anti-annoyance' law be damned: appalled barristers quick to fight state", The Australian, July 18, 2008. Accessed: April 20, 2009.
- ^ "Socialist Alliance discusses unity proposal", Green Left Weekly, November 20, 2002. Accessed April 20, 2009. Accessed: June 25, 2009.
- ^ "Craig Johnston, welcome back to the struggle!", Socialist Alliance press release, May 25, 2005. Accessed Jun 25, 2009.
- ^ "Policy Analysis - At A Glance (PDF)", Vote Climate. Accessed: April 20, 2009.
- ^ "Canberra Climate Summit launches and unites new environment movement", Socialist Alliance. Accessed: April 20, 2009.
- ^ "Activists call for Wotton's freedom", Brisbane Times, November 1, 2008. Accessed: April 20, 2009.
- ^ "Sam Watson: 'Converge on Canberra Feb 12 for Aboriginal rights!'", Socialist Alliance, January 25, 2008. Accessed: April 20, 2009.
- ^ "Socialist Alliance Refugee, Asylum Seeker and Immigration Rights Charter". Accessed: April 20, 2009.
- ^ "Sixth national conference strengthens Socialist Alliance", Green Left Weekly, December 16, 2008. Accessed April 20, 2009.
- ^ "Workers Power resignation from Socialist Alliance", GreenLeft_discussion Yahoo!group, April 16, 2006. Accessed April 20, 2009.

