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Labourstart News
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Work Choices - the challenges ahead |
15 November 2005  |
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On November 15 2005, over half a million working Australians attended
mass meetings across the country to protest the Howard Government's
proposed changes to industrial relations laws. In NSW, around 45,000
people attended Sydney rallies in Martin Place and outside Central
station with a further 95,000 people in more than two hundred packed
venues and locations around the State. Greg Combet, the Secretary of
the ACTU delivered the following speech to all those that attended.
Combet summarised the issues faced by all Australians due to the
Government's big business agenda:
Greg Combet:
Today, by rallying in such huge numbers, we declare that working people
will not be denied a central place in Australia's future. Working
families built this country. They fought and died for it. They do not
deserve to have their rights at work taken away.
The Government's laws are motivated by ideology - the articles of
Liberal Party faith - the prejudices of the Prime Minister. We face
these laws simply because the Government has won control of the Senate
and has the power to do what it wants. And in the next couple of weeks
the Government will abuse that power and ram these laws through. When
it does so it will not signal any set-back for our campaign. Rather, it
will signal the start of a determined, relentless effort to overturn
these laws and put in their place decent rights for the working people
of this country. That is our goal.
You have already heard the main ways in which the laws attack worker's
rights. Let me give you some more specific examples. Building workers
have been especially targeted. They risk gaol for standing up for their
rights. I am concerned for them and their families. The most important
thing unions do on building sites is protect the safety of workers. And
yet the Government wants to smash the building unions. It will put
lives at risk. I want the Prime Minister to know something right now.
We will hold the Government to account for the human cost of these
laws. Just as we supported the maritime workers when they were
targeted, we will support building workers and their families.
All of us face risks under the new laws - even for doing bread and
butter union work. It will be illegal to ask for workers to be
protected against unfair dismissal when negotiating an agreement - and
there's a $33,000 fine just for asking. And there will be a $33,000
fine for asking for union involvement in a disputes settlement
procedure. A $33,000 fine for asking for the right for people to attend
union education courses. A $33,000 fine for asking to protect jobs
against contracting out. A $33,000 fine for asking for a commitment to
collectively bargain. And a $33,000 fine for asking for anything else
the Government might like to ban.
These are scandalous abuses of democratic rights. But we will not be
intimidated Unions must continue to stand up for people. As a union
leader let me make this clear. I will not pay a $33,000 fine for asking
for people to be treated fairly. Because the Government has gone too
far. On such a fundamental issue we must look the Government in the eye
and stare them down. I will be asking other union leaders to do the
same. We must be disciplined and responsible. There is no place for
foolhardy or reckless behaviour. But we must also be firm in our
resolve to stand up for people.
It is true that it will take time for some people to be affected by the
laws. But the rights of every person will be diminished. And for many
the change will come quickly - particularly the most vulnerable. When
these laws have done their job there will be only five minimum
standards to protect people. The award safety net will be gone.
To get anything above the five minimum standards the Government wants
you to negotiate an individual contract. We all know what that means -
take what's on offer or get lost. No negotiation. No choice.
John Howard should have the guts to come out and say what he's really
up to - to argue his case. Instead the Government spends tens of
millions on slippery, deceitful ads. The claim that people's rights
will be protected by law is the most expensive lie ever perpetrated in
Australian politics. It would be a mistake for anyone to be conned by
their ads, to think 'I'll be alright - it won't happen to me'.
Even the best employers can be driven by competition to force down
labour costs using individual contracts. Why, during a 14 year economic
boom with record business profits, do Australian people have to be put
under this pressure? We will never compete with China and India by
driving down labour costs. We will simply end up with an army of
working poor and widespread inequality - a society like the United
States. That's not the sort of society unions want to see here.
A decent democracy should be improving opportunities for people,
reaching out to those who need a hand, and ensuring that basic rights
are protected - making Australia more fair not less.
Unions believe in fairness and justice, in prosperity for all not just
the few, in people having a say at work. We believe these are
democratic rights - rights that are worth fighting for. And fight we
will. We will fight until we win. We will campaign for as long and as
hard as it takes to overturn these laws. Anyone who thinks our campaign
will fade away had better think again. These past months have only been
the warm-up to the main event.
The real campaign starts now. After the Government rams these laws
through Parliament we will work right up to the next election to hold
them to account for what they have done.
There are two key things we must achieve in this campaign.
Firstly, to build our strength in the workplace so that we can protect
job security and pay and employment conditions. Only by sticking
together can we achieve this. That is something within our power.
Because the laws cannot take away our commitment to each other. If
you're not in a union - join - and ask others to join - because the
best protection will be achieved by standing together.
The second thing we must do is win the support of the wider community.
We must invite Australians to join a movement for change - not just a
movement to achieve rights at work, but a movement for fairness and
justice, a movement for democratic rights. We must build a broad
coalition of people committed to a better future.
Be part of it. Contribute in practical ways. Get involved by
registering on our website or by filling out the postcard. Help us
raise funds so that we can take the experience of working people into
every home with our advertising. Ask others to do the same. Take the
issues into your local community. Lobby politicians. Get active in
marginal seats. Put at risk the job security of politicians who don't
support worker's rights. Help build a wall of opposition to laws that
place business interests above family and community.
Because Australia needs to change. We need to reward effort not
exploitation. To encourage cooperation not division. To build a sense
of community not isolation. Compassion not intolerance. To inspire hope
not fear. I believe that the values for which we stand beat as strongly
in the hearts of Australians today as they have done for generations.
United by these values, we will not be defeated. We will see off bad
laws and bad Governments. We will deliver justice for working people.
Let this great event, broadcast across the nation, the largest meeting
of working people ever held in Australia, mark the beginning of a
movement for change. I am confident that if we have the courage to
stand up for our values, to provide the leadership, to fight for our
cause, to reach out to others and invite them to join us, we will win.
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