Crisis of conscience

The terror laws imbroglio has reached crisis point for the Government. It has rapidly developed into a passionate and overdue debate about core Liberal values, and across the factions some talented, articulate and ambitious backbenchers have put their foot down and said no. More than that, at least one junior minister has whispered “Good on you” to backbenchers leading the charge against the package.

There’s an element of atonement in the determination of a couple of backbenchers. They know that Kim Beazley rightly rejected Howard’s truly appalling first border protection bill, and that this could have lost him the election. They want Howard to know he can’t have carte blanche to trash traditional liberal values based on that precedent, where some Liberals kept their mouths shut to win an election.

Howard called a special Cabinet meeting for 4pm yesterday to work out how to close down this embarrassing public split. I have no information about what took place in Cabinet. It could have endorsed Daryl Williams’ latest compromise offer to put to the backbench or, more likely, decided that John Howard would take the whole thing over, listen to backbench concerns, work out a final position, and move on.

As the Herald reported today, last night’s joint party room meeting did not resolve the impasse between Daryl and the backbench. An edgy government neither announced that the special meeting would take place or gave the usual post-meeting media briefing. MPs were sworn to secrecy. When we asked the Prime Minister’s office last night for a post-meeting comment, we were told the PM would put out a statement today. He didn’t.

Another problem for the government is that it has not announced changes to the package already agreed between Daryl and the backbench. If the silence continues, community protests will focus on aspects of the legislation Daryl has agreed to tone down. But it’s pretty hard for the government to announce agreed changes when there’s still disagreement. What a mess!

The meeting began at 6.30pm last night and lasted for half an hour. My sources say Daryl gave his usual muttering performance and gave no compelling reasons why his will should prevail. Howard watched from the sidelines.

Williams has been backing down all week – he’s already offered a significant tightening of the definition of “a terrorist act” which appears to have satisfied the backbench. There are still two sticking points.

Daryl wants to keep the reversal of the onus of proof for his new terrorism offences. Not one person at the meeting supported him. The speakers against included Petro Georgiou (Lib, Victoria), Bruce Baird (Lib, NSW), Julie Bishop (Lib, Western Australia) and – to the shock of all present – Bronwyn Bishop! Is this part of her payback to Howard for dumping her from the ministry?

She also led the charge on the other sticking point – the power to ban political organisations. Daryl has been sliding on this one all week. First he offered to relieve himself of the sole power to ban, and that instead four ministers would decide and banned organisations could get a review on the merits by the Courts. Last night, he suggested that bans be imposed by the Parliament. The party room split.

This issue is opposed by some as a point of high principle. Former Queensland barrister and Howard favourite George Brandis – who Howard chose as defence counsel at the children overboard inquiry – is implacably opposed to proscription. In the party room, Williams found a supporter in Christopher Pearce, the bloke who triggered Howard’s change of fortune last year when he won the Victorian seat of Aston in a crucial byelection. Discussion centred on alternatives to proscription.

The backbench did not endorse Daryl’s latest offer. Howard said he would “take it all on board and come back to the party room”, a source said. Crucially, he praised the backbench, not lectured it on the need for unity. He said he would ensure the party room process continued to have “the credibility and integrity it is showing in this case”. I suspect leadership tensions are a factor in Howard’s appeasement, as most of the strongest opponents of Daryl’s assault on civil liberties are Costello supporters.

So where are we? Neither the Government’s or Labor’s position is finalised as we head into a month of campaigning by opponents of the package. The Senate resumes sittings on June 17 – on June 11 the parliamentary committee examining Daryl’s bill to give ASIO police-state powers will hand down its report. My guess is that, as with the terror committee, this one will unanimously propose amendments. This is a conservative committee for Labor – two former defence ministers Kim Beazley and Robert Ray are on board.

If Daryl has learnt anything – and if he hasn’t I’m sure Howard will give him a few pointers – he’ll get a draft of the recommendations from Liberal committee members and try to get agreement from his backbench and Labor before the report is released.

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Today, Labor Senate leader John Faulkner’s speech on Labor’s approach to the terror legislation – its current bottom line. Caucus agreed to a long list of amendments on Monday, but has refused requests from the media and the minor parties for the list. This failure suggests that Labor open to horsetrading with the government.

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Labor’s bottom line?

Senator John Faulkner, speech to the Senate, May 16

The events of September 11 sent a tremor through the world. Many innocent lives were lost at the hands of terrorists. There is no doubt that as a result we had to urgently recalibrate our domestic security laws and capability. Of course, the government did not schedule parliamentary sittings until three months after the elections. When it did, it scheduled only nine weeks of sittings, six for the Senate, in the first six months of the year.

It did not produce its legislative response to September 11 until 12 March this year. When it did introduce its package of five security bills, it tried to force the opposition to pass the legislation within 24 hours of the bills’ introduction by bringing them on for debate on 13 March. No time was allowed for scrutiny, no time for discussion or consultation and no time for considered thought.

Fortunately, the opposition was able to insist on the bills being referred to the Senate Legal and Constitutional Legislation Committee for examination. In an acknowledgment of the urgency of the legislation, we agreed to a reporting date which facilitated consideration of the bills as soon as the Senate resumed on 14 May. We also offered to agree to a commencement of 12 March for the bills if we were satisfied with their final form. In the short time available to it the committee did an outstanding job in scrutinising the bills, and I will have more to say about the committee’s report shortly.

Now, eight months after the event which prompted this far-reaching package of national security laws – certainly the most far-reaching since the Second World War-the bills which the Howard government, by its own admission, says provide for extraordinary intelligence gathering and coercive powers have still not been brought on for debate.

The parliament bears a heavy responsibility in dealing with this legislation. We must be vigilant in ensuring that, as far as possible, Australia is safeguarded from international terrorism. We also have a responsibility, given that terrorism knows no borders, to help protect others from terrorist attack. At the same time, we must be equally vigilant in defending the democratic values we hold dear.

As we in the parliament consider the bills, it is worth recalling how governments have handled such matters in the past. In two world wars Australian governments responded to perceived threats with draconian national security laws. Large numbers of Australian citizens of German or Italian descent were arrested and held in internment camps. Many lives were disrupted, indeed ruined, often on the basis of little more than malicious gossip.

The postwar Menzies government also secured the passage of the Communist Party Dissolution Act in 1950. The Act dissolved the Communist Party and provided for persons to be declared communist and subject to sanctions. Fortunately for the future of our democracy, the act was struck down as unconstitutional by the High Court and rejected by the Australian people at a subsequent referendum. Fifty years later, the Howard government’s anti-terrorism bills risk repeating past mistakes, and pose very significant challenges to civil liberties and democratic freedoms.

The Senate committee, to its credit, has shown itself to be both alert and responsive to these risks. The committee provided a forum for 421 individuals, community groups and eminent lawyers to air their concerns about the government’s proposals. Almost all stated that, unless significantly amended, the bills would erode rights and freedoms that are a fundamental part of our democratic way of life.

As well as those submissions, I – like most of my fellow members of parliament – have received thousands of emails communicating similar concerns; not one that I received supported the bills. The government must not ignore the unanimous report of the Senate committee, a committee which is chaired by a government senator and on which the government has a majority.

Labor shares the committee’s strong concerns that the definition of terrorism is too broad and may criminalise activities which are not terrorist acts, that the offence provisions involve an unacceptable reversal of the onus of proof and that the proposed proscription regime gives the Attorney-General extraordinary and unwarranted power to unilaterally and arbitrarily ban organisations to make their activities illegal.

Overwhelming evidence to the committee from the community and experts has shown that the draft bills contain sloppy definitions and are riddled with unintended consequences. If law, these bills could lead to draconian consequences for innocent people. They are not good law. In a very out of touch commentary last week the Attorney-General, Mr Williams, said: “We believe the community is prepared to make sacrifices of individual civil liberties in order that the community generally is protected from those threats.”

Perhaps it is time that the Attorney-General and the government tuned in on these issues. Australians will not sacrifice their freedoms lightly; that much is crystal clear from the Senate committee process and the enormous amount of correspondence that has been received by all parliamentarians.

Labor believes that if the legislation is drafted properly, sacrifices of civil liberties will not be necessary. With improved drafting and tighter definitions peoples’ rights will remain protected. Labor will be vigilant in the fight against terrorism and equally vigilant in protecting Australians’ democratic values and freedoms; we are absolutely committed to safeguarding both.

Some people question why this legislation is necessary at all. To them I say that September 11 was a quantum leap in the scale of international terrorism. A `business as usual’ response is not enough. An enhanced level of terrorism requires an enhanced response capacity, both legislative and operational. The legislative framework we have to counter terrorism is outmoded and inadequate. It does not specifically criminalise the full range of terrorist acts. For example, the training and financing of a terrorist organisation is not captured.

Australia also needs to play its part as a good international citizen to combat international terrorism. Two of the bills in the government’s package give domestic legislative effect to our obligations under United Nations conventions for the suppression and financing of terrorism and terrorist bombings. Australia also supported United Nations resolution 1373, which was passed on 28 September last year. That resolution requires United Nations member states to prevent and suppress the financing of terrorist acts, criminalise the wilful provision or collection of terrorist funds by their nationals and freeze the assets of those connected with terrorism.

It also requires member states to take necessary steps to prevent the commission of terrorist acts, to ensure that terrorists, their accomplices and supporters are brought to justice and to ensure that terrorist acts are established as serious offences in domestic laws and that the punishment duly reflects the seriousness of such acts. This package of legislation gives effect to our obligations as expressed in that resolution. That is its aim.

The Labor Party supports tough laws against terrorism and terrorists, but those laws must target the terrorists. We must remember not only whom we are fighting against but also what we are fighting for. When these bills come on for debate, Labor will be moving amendments so that we can fight terrorism without sacrificing key elements of our democracy. Labor will be moving a number of amendments to the bills to correct what we believe are serious flaws. Our amendments tighten the definitions, protect important principles of liberty and, importantly, save the bills from serious questions regarding their constitutionality.

Key amendments

Similar to the problems with other aspects of the legislation, there are potentially unintended consequences from the bills’ proposed definition of treason. In particular, we are concerned that humanitarian activities, such as Care Australia or the Red Cross, are not caught up by this poorly drafted definition. Often, such groups are helping people in a situation where the politics and sides are not clear. Their motive is to help people, and the definition of treason needs to be redrafted so that they can do their important humanitarian work without fear of being charged with treason.

The proposed definition of terrorism is sloppy and will potentially have significant unintended consequences. I understand why people have reacted so strongly to them. Labor will be making sure these laws target terrorists and no-one else.

The definition of a terrorist act is very important because it is at the core of the bills. Clearly, the definition is very wide, and we are concerned that civil protests may be criminalised as terrorist acts under the definition. For example, farmers, unionists or other protesters marching, blockading or mass emailing could fall within the definition as soon as their actions were unlawful in any way-be it trespass, nuisance, property damage and the like. The proposed definition does not distinguish terrorist violence from offences or forms of violence covered in other acts. Labor believes the definition must refer to the use of violence to influence the government or to intimidate or coerce the public or a section of the public.

The onus of proof has been reversed in many of the offences so that people facing life sentences will have to prove their innocence, as opposed to the prosecution having to prove their guilt. Labor does not supportreversing the onus of proof for the offences created by this legislation. The presumption of innocence is a cornerstone of our law. It is reasonable to expect the prosecution to prove the elements of an offence before a person is sentenced to life imprisonment.

It is also reasonable that the prosecution be required to show the requisite intent for each of the offences. Frankly, if someone does not have the knowledge or the intent, they are extremely unlikely to be terrorists and should be dealt with according to other criminal laws if and as appropriate.

We are not convinced that emails should have any lesser protection than telephone calls-that is, you need an interception warrant that offers appropriate privacy protections, as opposed to a search warrant.

I now come to what is, for many in the parliament and in the community, and for me personally, the most significant issue in these bills-that is, the proposal to give the Attorney-General the power to ban organisations at the stroke of a pen. Personally, I am strongly opposed to proscription in any form. The government is proposing that the Attorney-General, or any other minister he nominates, can ban an organisation simply by issuing a press release – no warning, no hearing, nothing. In our view, that is totally unacceptable.

Labor has never supported, and does not support now, giving such incredible arbitrary powers to any minister of government. Such powers are too open to abuse. Australians need to think very carefully not only about expanding the powers of a government that has so often abused the powers currently available to it but also about giving an open cheque to future governments. Australians have never accepted that the civil liberties of a group of people could be wiped out by the stroke of a pen by a single minister. That is why they opposed the anticommunist referendum in the early 1950s; that is why the public will not swallow these bills in their current form.

Labor’s case

Proscription generally works for a government if the organisation they want to ban is visible, has a known membership and, usually, is also a political or industrial organisation. Governments, historically, have proscribed for political advantage – the Nazis, communist regimes, the South African apartheid regime. Historically, proscription has been a tool of political repression, not law enforcement.

But the terrorists of the 21st century are not on the radar. They are very secretive, loose networks. They do not necessarily have any label. Terrorist groups split, evolve and mutate just like viruses. They may have names, they may change their names or they may not have names at all. Why risk the democratic rights of any non-terrorist visible organisation at the expense of the invisible murderers and give a government of the future the ability to exercise massive power against its political rivals?

Proscription is simply an administrative step to put in place a preliminary fact or status before criminal proceedings. It will be a honey pot for practitioners of administrative law. The hard-headed, effective approach is to properly define the offences and let the police, intelligence service and the courts do their jobs.

Let me just ask: if the Prime Minister or the Attorney-General suddenly announce that we have banned, say, Al-Qaeda, how much safer would Australians feel? I suspect not much at all. The point is, we need to target terrorist acts and terrorist organisations, not the names of organisations which can be changed from one minute to the next. You will never get an up-to-date list of terrorist organisations.

But, apparently, the government’s concern is that the evidence required to prosecute terrorists is too sensitive to be exposed in the courts. But the courts are ready, willing and able to deal with highly secretive and sensitive evidence. They do that every day in murder, fraud and espionage cases. Of all the arguments supporting proscription, the need for secrecy surrounding the Attorney-General’s decision is the flimsiest argument of all. Courts can hear evidence in camera or make non-publication orders. The courts do have the tools to handle these sensitive matters.

Labor has proposed a set of legislative mechanisms to target terrorists, their actions and their organisations-what terrorists do and what they intend to do. We support legislation that will cut off terrorist funds. We support the legislation that classifies terrorism as a heinous crime and puts terrorists in jail for 25 years.

Labor’s proposals will target the people in terrorist organisations, not the name of the organisation, and Labor will not at all target those who are not involved in terrorist activities. Our model will target terrorists; it will not target innocent bystanders.

Proscription is a clumsy and unsophisticated approach to dealing with sophisticated terrorist organisations. Every lawyer that we have spoken to, conservative lawyers included, think that the proscription of organisations is a very bad idea. Most of the commentators in the media – again, including some very conservative people – also think it is a bad idea.

Maybe the government believes it can wedge the opposition on this issue but, if so, that is not a good reason to make bad law. Robert Menzies tried to wedge Labor in the 1950s by banning the Communist Party and, even though the vast majority of Australians did not like communists or communism, they voted down a referendum because proscription was a bad idea and because they thought it was antidemocratic, And they were right.

The Australian people were right then; they are right now. We do not need proscription to target terrorism. We need tough measures, and Labor will support tough measures. But we will not support those measures in the form proposed by the government. The bills need to be substantially amended, and it is our view that that is the task that lies ahead of this Senate when the government determines they be brought on for debate.

Momentum against Terror Australis

The terror laws saga is getting murky. It seems Attorney-General Daryl Williams is still unable to get the tick from his backbench on his fervent wish to give himself to power the ban political organisations.

A joint party room meeting planned for this afternoon to tick an expected agreement between Daryl and the backbench legal committee staring him down has been put off till 6.30 tonight. Daryl’s plan to rush his package through the Senate this week is off.

It now won’t be debated until the Senate sits again on June 17. That’s four weeks for his opponents to exploit the increasing momentum against his legislation. Protests and meetings around the country are already being planned by lawyers, students, unions and environmentalists. As foreshadowed, One Nation Senator Len Harris will oppose the package of bills too, today calling them “draconian and oppressive bills … normally associated with military juntas and police states”.

And Williams has just got kicked from a surprising quarter, the Australian Bankers Association. ABA spokeswoman Heather Wellard said the ABA had joined the lobbying queue outside Daryl’s office. “The bill establishes a strict liability offence where a person directly or indirectly receives funds or makes funds available to a proscribed (banned) organisation,” she said today. That meant bank tellers would be on the block “for simply carrying out duties of their position’ and tellers, not the prosecution, would have to prove they didn’t know an organisation was banned.

Williams’ sloppy, overreaching, autocratic, civil liberties-blind legislation is unravelling before his eyes, and his performance has been so bad you’d have to wonder how long he’s got long left as Attorney-General. He was reduced to this in today’s Question Time. “We must make sure that we are in the best possible position to identify, prevent and punish those responsible for terrorist acts and those planning terrorist acts…I recently returned from discussions with my counterparts in the United States, Canada and the UK and I can report to the House that our commitment to dealing with the threat of terrorism in a comprehensive and responsible way has earned us the appreciation and respect of these important allies, and, in particular, the respect of the United States.” As usual, not the scintilla of an answer to his critic’s case.

Labor, which had largely shut up and hoped to get a nice little deal with the government to get the thing out of the way, has been inundated with protests. Labor Senate leader John Faulkner, the man responsible for presenting Labor’s position, said that “I – like most of my fellow members of parliament – have received thousands of emails…not one that I received supported the bill.” He let Daryl know he couldn’t rely on Labor to get the power to ban through, setting out Labor’s position in the Senate this morning. I’ll put his speech up tomorrow when it becomes available online.

In summary, Labor wants:

1. An exemption from the crime of treason for humanitarian groups

2. An addition to the definition of `a terrorist act’ to include the requirement of “the use of violence to influence the government or to intimidate or coerce the public or a section of the public”.

3. Dumping of the reversals of the onus of proof, and of strict liability by requiring the prosecution to prove that the defendant intended to commit the act in question..

4. Raising the bar for permission to intercept emails to the same level required for telephone intercepts.

5. Scrapping the power to ban political organisations.

Faulkner’s speech was also the first outing of Labor’s rhetoric on the matter. “Our model will target terrorists; it will not target innocent bystanders.” Like it?

Labor has moved, no doubt about it, under pressure from the Left faction and a huge effort from community groups and lawyers. And Daryl Williams has moved too, under pressure from his own backbench. But there is further room to move if the protests take off. As far as I know, the issue has not yet reached the shock jocks desks. How will they play it?

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TODAY, more terror laws comment from Damien Lawson, Phill Parsons, Lindsay Peters, Hamish Tweedy, Sean Richardson and John Fielding.

Tomorrow is the first anniversary of my weekly column in the Echo News, a weekly community paper in Lismore. Editor Simon Thomsen is simultaneously super-charged and laid back, and is great to work for. Since buying the Echo with local partners some years ago, he’s transformed a loss maker into a profitable paper through total commitment to reporting from the ground up and a high degree of reader involvement, including pages of readers letters each issue. The online version of the paper is at www.echonews.com.

Some of the big media boys could learn a lot from Simon’s success – his focus is not on design (the “look”) but on content, content, content. He wants his staff on the streets getting the news, not processing press releases and phoning PR flaks from the office.

Lismore is a diverse and dynamic town. This week 100 opponents of the terror laws gathered outside the office of the federal National Party member Ian Causley. Aidan Ricketts, a law lecturer at Southern Cross University in Lismore, helped organise the event. “Our action involved a 5 point quiz to determine whether a person is a terrorist, followed by numerous confessions of such acts by the people present. We then staged a procession reminiscent of the Cultural Revolution in China, where we marched the dissidents to the police station with boards detailing their crimes around their necks, for example “Terrorist: I donated to Greenpeace” or “Terrorist: A lawyer who gave legal advice to protesters”.

As the terror package moves into the intense backroom phase prior to landing in the Senate, Damien Lawson from the Victorian Federation of Community Legal Centres is in Canberra knocking on doors to put his case. The federation has led the email campaign through appeals like the one I published in Sniffing terrorism. Here’s his bulletin from the frontline.

Damien Lawson

Like me I am sure you are crossing your fingers on the ALP standing solid on their decision to not support the banning of political organisations – the first time the Left has had a win since the MX missile crisis!

Of course the devil is always in the detail. I am concerned they are still not willing to address other problematic aspects of the bills that have not had proper discussion, in particular the financing of terrorism provisions. This can be illustrated by looking at the Senate Committee Recommendations, as they will form the basis of negotiations.

My comments:

Security Legislation Amendment (Terrorism) Bill 2002 [No. 2]

Recommendation 1

The Committee recommends that proposed section 80.1 in the Bill be amended so that the terms `conduct that assists by any means whatever’ and `engaged in armed hostilities’ are defined, in order to ensure that the humanitarian activities of aid agencies are not caught within the ambit of the offence of treason.

This fails to address two problems:

i) Australian citizens involved in one side of a civil conflict will potentially be committing treason if the Australian Defence forces are sent in as peacekeeping and/or to support one side, and

ii) Family and friends of someone in that situation and who know they are there will be committing treason if they fail to inform the Australian police.

Recommendation 2

The Committee recommends that the definition of ‘terrorist act’ in proposed section 100.1 in the Bill be amended to include a third element, namely that the action or threat of action is designed to influence government by undue intimidation or undue coercion, or to unduly intimidate the public or a section of the public.

This is a significant improvement, but does not address the fundamental problem that by trying to define terrorist offences you are criminalising motive rather than action. Some political and union activity could still be labelled terrorist. The existing criminal law should be used.

Recommendation 3

The Committee recommends that:

(i) the Bill be amended to remove proposed sections 101.2(2), 101.4(2) and 101.5(2), which impose absolute liability in respect of certain elements of those offences; and

(ii) the offences in proposed sections 101.2(1), 101.4(1) and 101.5(1) be amended to provide that they are committed if the person knew or was reckless as to the required element in 101.2(1)(b), 101.4(1)(b) and 101.5(1)(b).

This is a significant improvement. Before the action alone without any intent was enough to convict. So, for example, possession of a `thing’ connected to a terrorist act, regardless of what you knew about the thing or intended to do with it could get you life imprisonment.

However recklessness still lowers the bar for the prosecution and allows people without a specific intent to receive life imprisonment. For example the prosecution could argue that a flight instructor who who trained someone to fly should have known he was a terrorist.

Recommendation 4

The Committee recommends:

(i) that proposed Division 102 in the Bill in relation to the proscription of organisations with a terrorist connection not be agreed to; and (ii) that the Attorney-General review the proscription provisions with a view to developing a statutory procedure which:

* does not vest a broad and effectively unreviewable discretion in a member of the Executive;

* restricts the proposed ground under which an organisation may be proscribed if it has endangered or is likely to endanger the `security or integrity’ of the Commonwealth or any country, by defining `integrity’ as meaning `territorial integrity’;

* provides detailed procedures for revocation, including giving a proscribed organisation the right to apply for review of that decision;

* provides for adequate judicial review of the grounds for declarations of proscription;

* more appropriately identifies and defines the proposed offences in relation to proscribed organisations, particularly in relation to the offence of `assisting’ such an organisation; and

* does not create offences with elements of strict liability, given the very high proposed penalties.

The Committee correctly highlights the problems, but does not rule out proscription all together. Whether done by the Attorney General or a judge proscription should not be allowed. There are reports that the ALP will not accept any form of proscription, which is a significant success. We are awaiting the detail on negotiation with the government before we can say the ALP has adopted the appropriate position, but they seem to be heading in the right direction.

By the way, there is no requirement from the UN Security Council for a general proscription power to be enacted. The Attorney General’s Department have conceded this in their written answers to the Senate Committee.

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Telecommunications Interception Legislation Amendment Bill 2002

Recommendation 5

The Committee recommends that the Attorney-General review the current law on access to stored communications of delayed messages services with a view to amending the Telecommunications Interception Legislation Amendment Bill 2002 so that the accessing of such data requires a telecommunication interception warrant.

This is suggesting that ASIO should at the very least have to get the same type of warrants they obtain for phone tapping if they want to read email and SMS messages. Once again need to see detailed amendments. The Democrats have been very vocal on this.

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Suppression of the Financing of Terrorism Bill 2002

Recommendation 6

The Committee recommends that proposed section 103.1 in the Suppression of the Financing of Terrorism Bill 2002 be amended so that the financing of terrorism offence includes an element of intent.

Comment: Excepting that offences of terrorism will be created (see comments above), removing recklessness in the provision of funds is a good recommendation.

Recommendation 7

The Committee recommends that:

(a) provision be made, either by way of an amendment to the Suppression of the Financing of Terrorism Bill 2002 or under regulations, that before any decision is taken to freeze assets in respect of a proscribed person or entity, the Australian Federal Police set an appropriate course of action in consultation with the relevant financial institution or institutions before any asset is frozen; and

(b) Once action has been taken to freeze an asset, the owner of assets must be advised in writing as soon as possible and their rights and obligations explained.

This is to address some of the problems of “innocent people” having their assets frozen, such as the Collingwood music business owner of Shining Path Records , who had his assets frozen by the bank for a month after being confused with the Peruvian guerilla group! (See Brian Toohey’s report of the farce at the end of this entry.) However this does not address the problem of people and groups placed on the UN list with no natural justice or due process and their assets being frozen around the world.

UN Resolution 1373 does require member states to attack the financing of terrorism, but does not specify exactly how this must be done. There is a difference of opinion about how this should be done. Some states have fulfilled their obligations by pointing towards the conspiracy and preparatory act offences in their existing criminal law. Others have gone down the route of listing like Australia.

The trouble with listing is who decides who goes on the list and how do you get put on it and off it. There have already been problems with the UN listing where member states put forward names to a committee, other states have 48 hours to object and then you are on. There’s no natural justice and no process to get off. Already Swedish citizens named in this way have had big problems. Only intense lobbying of the Swedish government got them moving and then of course they had to convince the Security Council to take them off.

The effects of all this on particular individuals and business is profound, particularly small business, which unlike IBM can’t just say `Don’t be ridiculous, I am not connected with terrorism”. Given that there is no natural justice and the information on which decisions are made is from informants and the like, it could be easy for competitors to defame you, and by the time you are able to get off a list the damage has been done.

Given the information is able to be shared between country’s various agencies, a mistake can affect you capacity to do business all around the world. With finances frozen and difficulty in getting visas etc, in many ways this can be worse then a criminal charge, where at least you have the capacity for a court to review the evidence.

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Phill Parsons

Am I being paranoid? I received an email from Forest Ethics – unusually it took 11 days from its date to receipt. Usually it is one day. I am awaiting an explanation. Yesterday I received my daily New York Times email dated 1/01/70 for the May 13 edition!

In the first was advice about logging in Malaysia and included the names of organizations. The NYT had the word Terrorism in a headline. If they are watching, who are they? Both emails arise in the US. However if it is an Australian organisation is it legal and will the watch be so obvious, with delays or silly dates giving away the activities of the spooks?

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Lindsay Peters

In a perverse sort of way I kind of wish the mad legislation of terror got passed, for then Australians might get to see the REAL John Howard. Remember, nobody buys a gun so they can leave it locked away and not use it. Howard has asked Australia to give him the scariest gun he could imagine, and the business end is pointed at us.

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Hamish Tweedy

I imagine that more often than not I would find myself on Daniel Maurice’s side in an argument (see Pre-budget terror), however I disagree with him on this occasion.

The Government decided that in light of September 11 current Australian laws are deficient, and has proposed legislation designed to address these deficiencies. Those who oppose these laws argue that the legislation impinges far too much on civil liberties and strikes at the heart of some of the basic tenants of our democracy and judicial system. In this debate the burden of proof must lie with the Government to demonstrate the necessity of the proposed legislation.

In response to Daniel’s points:

1. “Do you seriously believe that ANY Australian government – Howard’s or one following sometime in the foreseeable future – would get away with using these proposed laws to prevent “garden-variety” protest, eg Greenpeace, Free Tibet? In the real Australia I live in such a government would not survive long under the weight of media, judicial and electoral responses. Sure, it’s possible to envisage a gradual slide into a police state, but there are a many, many other scenarios for the future of Australia that are both more likely and more worrying.”

Daniel admits it is possible to envisage a slide into a police state, but justifies the legislation by the fact that there are many other scenarios for the future of Australia that are both more likely and more worrying. The problem is that these laws almost certainly will not prevent an 11 September type scenario but definitely will provide the basis for a police state.

2. “Do you acknowledge that, using your logic and argument, there are already many laws, including the constitution which if taken as literally as you wish to take the proposed anti-terrorism laws, provide extremely wide and draconian powers to government authorities who seek to abuse them?”

I don’t know the current laws to which you refer but I can’t accept that argument as justification for adding to them.

3. “Do you understand how self-defeating it is for the `bleeding heart’ cause to constantly use extremist and exaggerated language to argue your point of view? Just in the last couple of days we’ve had another example of this, with critics of the Government’s detention policy describing Australia’s detention of children as “worse than Nazi Germany”. Really? I can’t recall the last time I saw any evidence of gas ovens at Woomera. Nonsense like this turns off people in droves.”

I couldn’t agree more. The issue is: What in a practical sense can Australia do to prevent an 11 September scenario? My opinion is that in the short term you increase security at facilities that can be used for mass destruction and over the medium term you try to address the circumstances that allow people like Osama bin Laden to thrive. I don’t believe you do it by reducing our civil liberties.

***

Sean Richardson in Sydney

I was surprised you didn’t answer Daniel Maurice’s questions in Pre-budget terror then and there. In relation to the Governor General’s power under the Constitution, I’d have reminded him of a certain democratically elected government which was dismissed against all custom and discretion. And would ANY Australian government EVER use legal powers to stop legitimate protest? Has he ever heard the words “Bjelke-Petersen”? Mr Maurice must have a short memory.

***

John Fielding in Zagreb, Croatia

I agree about the outrageous anti-terrorism bills but am more concerned about how the ALP will deal with it. I have just sent an email to Senator John Faulkner and will be interested to see if any response is forthcoming. Incidentally, do you have any readout on how Laws and Jones are reacting to the proposals?

Dear Senator Faulkner,

I have just caught up with your recent column in SMH with Mr Melham (Labor’s justice spokesman). I think you expressed a sound point of view and wish you luck with it.

As I spend most of my time working out of Australia I can only keep up with events through the Net, and I run some risk therefore of seeing things through the eyes of people such as Margo Kingston. However it seems to me that the proposed anti-terrorist legislation represents a watershed in the life of the Howard Government and the ALP Opposition. In particular it provides the ALP with a clear opportunity to take a stand on some of the basic elements of its social democratic beliefs.

If you fail to take this opportunity to the fullest, it seems to me entirely possible that the party will once again in my lifetime fall into semi-permanent opposition and irrelevance. In the present political climate, you cannot assume that such a party is guaranteed to survive.

I am not a member but have been an ALP voter all my adult life. There have been occasions when I found that I disagreed with some policies, but never sufficiently to shift my allegiance. That is, until recently.

Last year while working in China I watched the national election campaign unfold with a feeling of disbelief. I waited for some expression of policy and approach that would even hint at providing the nation with a way forward in redressing the effects of five years of Howardism. Nothing worthwhile was placed on the table. Issues such as the GST were obviously too hard to address in a sensible way. There seemed to be no clear attempt to hold Howard accountable for five years of appealing to the worst in us, even as new events unfolded during the campaign itself.

The face of ALP policy for that period was a mix of me-tooism and what I felt was fear of the electorate. This latter factor is something new to me and to ALP policy and politics as I have always experienced it.

Not necessary to point out that much good it did the party. Both factors demonstrated to voters at a gut level that leadership was lacking. In hindsight, how much better to have failed while at least tackling the difficult issues and stating a coherent policy and a vision of the future, all features lacking in government for five years. The 1969 Whitlam election points to the benefits of clarity in policy and direction, even when losing, as a means of showing discipline and leadership. And also readiness to enter the responsibilities of government.

As a result of last year’s campaign, it seems to me that the party is no nearer to, may be further from, electoral success than before. Nothing that has happened since has suggested to me that we can expect any fundamental change in this flawed approach.

The challenge you now face with the anti terrorist bills provides an opportunity to significantly change this situation, and one that must be grasped. The bills demonstrate either extraordinary cynicism or wedge politics on a scale not attempted since Menzies. Either way it provides a great chance for the party to claim its rightful place as a proclaimer and defender of true democratic values and as an important element in Australian political life. In the process you may well reclaim many of the instinctive ALP voters who, like me, are now feeling serious doubts about the ability of the party to speak for those of us with centre-left views.

You must reject these bills. It is not enough to support them with amendments and qualifications, unless those are so deep as to fundamentally change the government’s approach, a situation the government will probably

not accept. The best line, as you have already shown, is to pursue the

complete failure of the government to display just where current laws fail

to address the present situation.

If this results in the infamous wedge, so be it. The ALP should be prepared to wear with pride the badge of the refusenik.

The fear and loathing that will no doubt be stirred up by the government (aided by Jones, Laws et.al.) should be addressed by serious efforts to get out to the electorate and conduct a campaign involving some education of the public. There is some precedent in the Evatt situation of so many years ago.

In all areas of policy there is scope for this approach. It seems to me that one of the principal difficulties of the party since the Hawke years (particularly from 1988 to 1991) and the Keating era has been its turning inward to solve problems. Looking to the factional system and left-right deals for answers in policy and leadership debates may seem to provide some relief, but to ALP supporters among the public (and I suspect many Branch members) it is transparent unproductive and unattractive. The party must learn to trust its public supporters and risk the appearance of a division of views which most people in any case accept as fairly normal in the development of policy.

Open up the party. Let the party groups and members bring forward policy proposals for open discussion in party assemblies, the media and (once again) the homes of the nation. You must once again learn to trust the electorate. I have the view that there is a natural centre left majority out here awaiting information and a chance to see our wishes once again expressed by a major political party.

Don’t keep us waiting too long.

Best regards

John Fielding

Zagreb, Croatia

***

SHINING PATH

A-G’s war swings from tragedy to farce

By Brian Toohey, Australian Financial Review, March 9, 2002

Some pretty rough justice is being meted out in the war on terrorism, as a Melbourne businessman, James Milne, has discovered to his cost. Milne had his bank accounts frozen three months ago, without the slightest scrap of evidence that he was in any way connected to terrorism.

Milne’s sin was to unwittingly name his music business Shining Path – which happens to be the same name used by a violent political movement in Peru. Milne had never even heard of the Peruvian group until he asked the manager of his Commonwealth Bank branch what was going on after his cheques started to bounce in January.

The answer was that his business’s name was on a list of terrorist groups sent to banks by the Attorney-General’s Department. The accounts were only unfrozen after Milne went to the Herald Sun in mid-February.

Shining Path was one of the names gazetted by the Foreign Minister, Alexander Downer, and the Attorney-General, Daryl Williams, on December 21. Why anyone would assume, however, that Milne would finance terrorism, via bank accounts opened in the same name as a Peruvian terrorist group, is a complete mystery.

Although Williams refuses to discuss the issue, Downer at least has the grace to admit that the accounts were frozen as a result of a case of mistaken identity.

The Australian Federal Police administers the crackdown on suspect bank accounts under the quaintly named Operation Drava. Milne says that he has asked the AFP to clear his name by giving him a letter stating he is not a terrorist. But an AFP spokeswoman denied on Friday it had received a “formal” request. If one were received, it would be considered.

The spokeswoman said the AFP could refuse to give the letter admitting the error, even though it accepts Milne is innocent. The AFP has asked this newspaper not to publish its background explanation about how national security could be threatened by such an acknowledgment. The explanation is nothing short of ludicrous. Essentially, the attitude appears to be that the accounts have been unfrozen, so what is Milne complaining about?

When asked about the case, a spokeswoman for Williams refused to comment, other than to say she was surprised that Milne would want his name mentioned in a terrorist context. This might well be true if he were a terrorist. But he’s not. He’s a Collingwood pub owner and rock music entrepreneur who has every right not to have his bank accounts frozen in such a capricious manner.

Williams, as first law officer of the Crown, would seem to be getting a little carried away by the war on terrorism in other regards. Apart from drawing up legislation to jail people associated with leaks of government information even where it has nothing to do with national security he has conspicuously refused to protect the rights of Australian citizens imprisoned without charge.

Williams has described a young Adelaide man, David Hicks, who was captured in Afghanistan during the fall of the Taliban, as “about as dangerous as a person can be in modern times”. At the same time, he is investigating whether Hicks should be brought back to Australia to face criminal charges. Given that an attorney-general has described Hicks in such extraordinarily prejudicial terms, it is difficult to see how he could get a fair trial in Australia.

Hicks is being kept in a cage at a US military prison in Cuba. He has still not been charged with any offence, despite being captured three months ago. If the US ever gets around to charging him, it will be before a military tribunal where the normal protections of a civil court do not apply.

Despite some hysterical legal commentary in Australia, based on the implausible presumption that Hicks helped plan the September 11 terrorist attacks, the US has not said whether it has any evidence against him.

But Williams has refused to ensure Hicks is allowed normal consular assistance, let alone access to his own lawyers, which should be the right of any Australian citizen locked in a cage on a US military base without charges. The lack of charges might be acceptable if Hicks were regarded as a prisoner of war, but he’s not. If he is not returned to Australia as a prisoner of war, Williams should insist he is either charged or released.

In the meantime, he should ensure that law-abiding Australian citizens do not have their bank accounts closed without some minimal attempt to stop the process descending to farcical levels.

PS: The Senate Committee wanted answers on this matter, but despite prior notice the Federal Police bosses turned up unbriefed. They did admit that they did nothing to get Shining Path out of the jam the AFP got it into. Instead the AFP walked away and expected the Commonwealth Bank to clean up the mess. And no compensation, either, just like there’s no compensation for wrongs done by Daryl if he gets the powers he wants to ban political organisations.

For those who give two hoots

“Webdiary seems to have degenerated largely into another outlet for the views of the leftie elite … the ‘Radio National set’, whose views on most issues are entirely predictable and formulaic.”

To end the week, contributors take over. After one liners, comment from Graham Bousen, Greg Loder, Peter Gellatly and Suresh Rajan. on Max Moore-Wilton and the children overboard scandal. (See Edging towards the desk where the buck stops and PM’s man out on a shaky limb.)

Then a tart contribution from ‘Richard’ on the IVF debate (see Sperm for singles – round three) and David Davis, James Woodcock and Robert Lawton on the medical insurance crisis (see Blaming the victim, again).

To end, early reaction to Tim Dunlop’s attempt to destroy Mark Latham’s ‘Third Way” and Carmen Lawrence’s attempt to resurrect the caring left from Aaron Oakley and Paul Walter. (See The Third Way: Window dressing for capitulation and The Carmen Way.)

ONE LINERS

John Clark: On the search for a definition of ‘bleeding hearts’, Alex Downer seems to see it as bleeding obvious: ”Pseudo- intellectual bourgeois lefties”. And Mark Latham had the balls to point out those in the Libs party who have deformities: Well done Mark for a bit of pot calling the kettle aggression.

Paul Walter: After reading The Carmen Way I now clearly see my future. When I read people like you and Carmen Lawrence it’s like talking to a brick wall. What’s Left? Become a scab, look after number one and f… the lot of you?

Peter Woodforde in Canberra: Did Mark Latham suggest that Staley get kicked off his disability allowances and pushed into Newstart?

Peter Kelly: Tim Dunlop has revealed the “third way” to be simply a game of “good cop, bad cop”. One sentence summed it up. “…the third way is not an alternative to the market it claims to want to ‘knock the rough edges off’, it is merely window-dressing for it”.

***

MAX

Graham Bousen

Margo, the punter does not give two hoots about this children overboard inquiry. They have been told that on other occasions children were used as pawns, so if the Government was wrong on this one, they were right on the rest. Hence the apparent forgiveness for the fibs. It really is old news that the media keeps perpetuating with its holier than thou indignant approach – have they never fudged the facts themselves?

Sad is it may be, the punter does not give a damn.

***

Greg Loder

As a long standing public servant, albeit in the State system, I find it inconceivable that the information on the kids overboard photos did not go to the top of the Department of Prime Minister and Cabinet (at least).

The passing on of information is basic modus operandi for public servants of all persuasions, and they are taught from day one to keep the boss informed, even about gossip! I would go as far to say that if there was a situation that involved sensitive material (as the kids overboard material was) then any public servant down the line who did not pass on the info would find themselves sitting on the very rough end of a pineapple, perhaps counting tins of jam in a container on a wharf somewhere.

Moore-Wilton, more than any of his predecessors, has brought USA-style government to the Australian public sector. His clear political stance and his “personalised” remuneration package (outside the norms) reflect a vision of a public sector which will not provide the public with the civil service it deserves.

He said over the issue with his son, “Who would want to be a senior public servant?” Unfortunately the answer is increasingly fewer because of the way in which people like he have taken the service.

Keep the blowtorch alight: To flourish our democracy needs those who serve us to be accountable, and no one does this better than the press.

***

Peter Gellatly in Canada

You say: “…it is now crystal clear that traditional public service culture – we are servants of the people not the government, we are apolitical, we give honest advice, we tell politicians the facts – has virtually collapsed under pressure from government and hand-picked department heads on short-term contracts and performance pay.”

Maybe short-term contracts and performance pay for top officials have made things worse (I’m too far away to make an assessment), but I doubt whether your idealised “traditional public service culture” ever really existed. Certainly, during my own brief 1980s involvement, I perceived the whole spectrum: from principled stance or (separately) dispassionate advice/execution, through fearful self-coercion, to outright toadyism and careerist currying of favour.

But that assertion itself reflects a personal view. The public service is, after all, comprised of individuals who hold disparate political and moral outlooks. My stickling for independence and/or “factual” analysis might be someone else’s obtuse intransigence and yet another’s interference with legitimate government policy by the unelected.

If there are firmer grounds for criticism, they might be these:

(1) ‘Protecting the Minister’s backside’, an all too well worn intra-service value aphorism, is diametrically opposed to the notion of Ministerial responsibility.

(2) Information is subject to ‘interpretation’ at each level as it passes up the chain of authority. Thus, it does not require outright dishonesty or malice for an original report from a journeyman analyst or observer to be fundamentally metamorphosed by the time it reaches a Ministerial desk. (Margo: Unless, of course, the original report has been put in writing, something allegedly no-one seemed to do on this occasion.)

(3) One of the historical attractions of the public service has been its ‘career for life’ security. This security included a reasonable prospect of plodding advancement for those who were diligent but thoroughly inoffensive, and the sanction of ‘transgressors’ (ie the independent minded, be they correct or in error) – not by sacking, but by transfer to internal oblivion.

Frankly, my expectation has been that the introduction of short term contracts for middle managers – and even for the rank and file – would improve public service independence by increasing the proportion of self-reliant candidates, ie those who would rather quit or be sacked than knuckle under. After all, pressure from above is less successfully applied when it is vigorously resisted by its targets.

However, base as things may generally appear, this Senate Enquiry demonstrates – as have earlier reported snippets concerning the “overboard” affair – that principled individuals who know the identity of their true employer are still to be found below the hallowed pinnacle of the public sector. Whatever their nominal service rank, they are the ones who deservedly carry the public’s trust.

***

Suresh Rajan in Perth

Congratulations for highlighting the important issue in this whole sorry saga: Who exactly is running the defence of this country? Max Moore-Wilton seems to have achieved a level of control that defies the classic definition of the need for separation of Administration and Policy.

We now have a totally politicised bureaucracy that takes their orders from a Prime Minister keen only to have his political will imposed on the people of the nation. So what happened to the separation of the military from the government? Are we any different to a number of military regimes that have the control of the defences in the hands of the Prime Minister and his cronies?

The Four Corners programme exposed the line of command that went from the Navy Frigate to the Tampa straight through to the Prime Minister’s Office. We now have to concern ourselves about where this leads to. The chain of command issue has to be examined critically.

Already we have seen the interception of the phone calls to the Tampa. Is this the start of something far more sinister being perpetrated on us, the unsuspecting people of Australia? And before anyone starts accusing me of being a conspiracy theorist, take a deep breath and start thinking about where this can lead? Will Prime Minister assume control over some of our other essential services?

***

IVF

Richard

I am a new contributor, although I’ve followed Webdiary for some time. Because of the position I hold for the time being, I’d like to be known simply as “Richard”.

It is a pity that Webdiary seems to have degenerated largely into another outlet for the views of the leftie elite – what I’d call the ‘Radio National set’, whose views on most issues are entirely predictable and formulaic. A bit boring really, all that whingeing in unison!

Is the ‘everyone has a right to a baby’ issue passe now? If not, I’d like briefly to pose an open question or two to the woman in Melbourne whose Court proceedings sparked the current debate, and all women like her who want to reproduce without male involvement, except in the minimal mechanical way necessitated by the technology:

If you do succeed in your desire, and the resulting child is a son, what will you tell him about his expected role in family life when he grows up? Will you tell him that his opportunities for real involvement in a loving family of his own have significantly reduced and are continuing to do so, as women increasingly make the choice you made?

What do you think the consequences will be for the society he will experience of a substantial proportion of males being alienated from deep involvement in family life?

What do you think will be the effect on his chances of living a happy life, or for that matter of people generally experiencing a safe and secure society?

Are these issues perhaps ones that governments, and society as a whole, are entitled, perhaps even have a duty, to take into account when considering the uses of reproductive technology?

Or perhaps I’ve simply missed the point here. Perhaps this is simply a single step in a broader agenda. Is perhaps the next ‘right’ women will demand of science and society that of choosing the gender of their children, so as to eliminate the problem altogether?

***

MEDICAL INSURANCE WOES

David Davis in New York

I can confirm there is a medical crisis going on via direct experience. My mother was involved in an accident recently in Brisbane and had to go to hospital to be operated on within hours. She was still drowsy from anaesthetic as I spoke to her a few hours ago.

We certainly had more things to be concerned about than insurance or politics, but she did make the comment that she was turned away from the first hospital because of the professional indemnity insurance crisis. Understandably, she did not seem impressed by that aspect.

In terms of medical outcome I am sure she is in the best hands now. She also says that where she is now is better because of recovery and rehabilitation facilities. As a son that is the main thing but I have made a BIG TIME mental note about this.

The reality is my mother was rejected from a top hospital when she was in pain, in a crisis, in an ambulance. Why? Over an insurance issue! Not her insurance (she is in top cover) but the DOCTOR’S insurance. Who is to blame for such a situation developing? How can it get to such a ridiculous stage?

You mentioned the New Zealand scheme. I am not so sure about that either. I have a friend who is an Australian doctor over there (in the ski season) and he thinks the New Zealand system promotes a lack of concern for safety and is unfair on victims. He strongly supports the current system in Australia, with modifications. We should be careful about removing blame from the system in Australia. The “duty of care” is fundamental and ought not be removed lightly. Be very wary of the NZ model.

I may be offering two conflicting anecdotes, but the one involving my mother is as close to home as it can get. In her case I can confidently say it had zero negative outcomes in a technical medical sense, but it leaves me with an uneasy feeling. More than that, it leaves me angry. Insurance shouldn’t come into a decision when people are in need of help. Call me naive, call me old fashioned, but most of all call me NORMAL and reasonable.

We shouldn’t run away from blame. Blame exits. People get things wrong. Every one likes to blame the lawyers. Some of my best friends are lawyers (hahaha) BUT don’t blame them for operating within a legal framework. Who develops the legal framework? The courts and the legislators. I say blame the legislators, blame the government. Only they can correct a broken system. How unfortunate we cannot sue them for THEIR negligence.

This is a debacle. For my mother it didnt have serious consequences but for others I fear it may have.

***

James Woodcock

I could not agree with you more regarding the NZ no-fault accident compensation scheme. Readers may like to go to the NZ scheme’s website for a definition of the basic principles, www.acc.org.nz. Although not originally included, ‘medical misadventure’ and sexual assault crimes are now covered, and The NZ government has recently pulled Workers Comp back into the general no-fault system.

PS: I am not a New Zealander!

***

Robert Lawton in Adelaide

Working as I do in the world of worker’s compensation, the wrap you give to the NZ accident comp scheme is perhaps a bit too big.

Schemes that emphasise a continued ‘pay packet’ each week of incapacity for work and pay medical costs rather than a pot of gold and the end of a legal process require real effort by governments to avoid creating lifetime welfare dependence. This has been the bane of the NZ system.

The key is the rehabilitation process: The creation of a profession which is prepared to be unpopular with both claimants and employers, and which states its goal to the whole of society: getting injured people well AND back to productive work.

***

THE THIRD WAY

Dr Aaron Oakley

Why is it that people with little understanding of economics like Tim Dunlop feel free to give economic advice? Perhaps he should also be telling brain surgeons how to do their jobs.

He asserts that “far from being the beneficiaries of ‘free trade’, the economies of East Asia owe any success they’ve had to an increase in international trade made possible by and coupled with strong government control”. This myth was debunked by my editor, Gerry Jackson, some time ago. See Singapore and industry policy: another interventionist failure at newaus and The truth about Asia’s growth rates at newaus

Perhaps Mr Dunlop could tell us where Mr Jackson has erred. I won’t be holding my breath. My experience is that the Tim Dunlops of our world fall silent when challenged by the genuinely economic literate.

Clearly, Dunlop has simply chosen economic thought that reinforces his prejudices, and cobbled it all together in his long-winded article.

***

Paul Walter in Adelaide

I don’t think you like Mark Latham, Tim Dunlop. I too was taken aback by Latham’s comments on share ownership last week, as Labor’s persistent perseverance with its flirtation with neo-liberalism frustrates me, too. But I think the real reason you dislike him is because he has,in effect, ‘crossed’ you over the boat-people.

I thought you press people would have latched onto the ugly farce occurring at Port Pirie at this time, as a foreign shipping line attempts to dictate labour policy to the working people of this country with the connivance of John Anderson. A little bit of solidarity and support for these people whose livelihoods are under such dire threat from the media, Labor, Greens and Democrats may have restored a little confidence in the masses of ordinary people in this country.

These, feeling threatened by neo-liberalism, have retreated from embracing large numbers of new arrivals coming here for fear of further disempowerment. Ordinary people know from long, hard experience what Tim Dunlop is talking about; they know all about ‘reform’ and ‘freeing up the market’ and all the other twaddle neo-liberals crap on about; what that stuff is REALLY worth!

So, a little support from the right quarters for an issue close to their hearts may have convinced them to be less cautious on the boat-people issue, confident that if the occasion arose there would be adequate defenders of sufficient quality to also help them protect own their interests when, invariably, they were threatened again by the Howardists. Never mind.

Sniffing terrorism

Now NSW Labor’s latest outrage, putting sniffer dogs on public transport. A pattern is emerging across the mainstream parties – ever increasing surveillance and control over our personal lives and beliefs, coupled with the dumping of rights and freedoms we had taken for granted. No free market on this circuit, folks.

Today, Rebecca Saunders and Andrew Mclean on sniffers, an update of the government’s line on its terror laws and views on the matter from Jozef Imrich, Daniel Maurice, David Davis, Jess Rosman, Gavin Greenoak, Ian Farrell, Anthony Clark, Martin Oliver, Alistair Noble, Martin Davies and Peter Kelly .

***

Dog sniffers

Rebecca Saunders

I’m not usually one to broadcast my opinions in an open forum but I am amazed and disgusted at the audacity of Michael Costa in proposing to allow sniffer dogs on public transportation.

Do the words public transportation mean anything to Mr. Costa? We have not been told to what degree these dogs are going to operate, nor whom they are going to target – indeed, if there will be any discretionary measures taken.

I happen to have friends who occasionally use marijuana on a recreational basis, and I would imagine therefore that I carry the smell on me at times, so does that mean I will be subjected to the indignity of a public search for something I do not partake in, or use?

Where is the line to be drawn? Surely this does not do anything towards targeting the real perpetrators in this, the dealers. I do not condone drugs but neither do I see the point in targeting the end user.

And is this not a gross invasion of privacy? Do I not have the right to refuse to be searched? Or does that extend only when I’m walking down the street and not while I’m taking a train home?

This is ludicrous, and I do not recall the public being asked in any way what their opinion of this is. I do not appreciate being told what I must accept, with no recourse for argument. Again I reiterate my point that I do not condone drug use…but what is the point going after the workers when the main target should surely be the queen bee?

***

Andrew Mclean

I do believe the government is determined to get people off public transport and into their cheap smelly cars. The Olympics cruelly gave Sydneysiders (indeed people from all over) a taste of what public transport can be like – on time, efficient, consistent – but that is all merely an illusion.

I rarely use public transport as I’m rarely in need of it, however next time I go to or from a party, club or pub and require transport, I shall either take a taxi (often not possible as I have no money left) or drive. And what the hell, I’ll probably drive under the influence of drugs AND alcohol!

Hmmmmm, but that has it’s legal dangers as well. Oh well, I reckon I’ll just stop going out and I’ll encourage any tourists, family and friends who visit Sydney to do the same because Big Brothers are increasing in numbers and are just around every corner.

***

Terrorism laws

1. Daryl

Since Daryl Williams is the architect of the terror package and will gain the most power if it passes, it’s important to know where he’s coming from. Here’s an extract from his speech on terrorism yesterday.

”We have introduced a package of legislation designed to bolster our ability to combat terrorism. The bulk of this package of legislation has passed through the House of Representatives and is now being examined by a Senate Committee. In short, the proposed legislation will:

* Create a specific offence for involvement in terrorism.

* Dry up the funds that terrorists rely on.

*Allow life imprisonment of those found guilty of delivering or placing a bomb with the intent to cause death or economic destruction, and

* … strengthen the capabilities of our intelligence agencies to prevent and combat terrorism.

”The clear purpose of this legislation is to allow us to identify terrorist plots, to prevent the terrorist acts and to prosecute those involved. The Bills are aimed at denying terrorists the means to organise, legitimise and carry out their activities. This legislation gives our security agencies the tools they need to protect the Australian community. And we have balanced those tools with safeguards for the rights of law-abiding individuals and groups.

”There are some who seem incapable or unwilling to accept the need for or the intent and application of the legislation.

”They can not accept that since September 11 our world has changed forever and that the changed security environment has necessitated the type of legislation currently before the Parliament. It is simply naive to suggest that what we are proposing is unnecessary or an over-reaction on the basis that there is no known specific threat of terrorism in Australia. The reality is that our involvement in the war against terrorism has raised our profile as a terrorist target.

While I support healthy debate as a reflection of our strong democracy, it must be a debate on the facts, not simplistic slogans. The Australian Government is not in the business of outlawing legitimate political and community organisations. And we are not in the business of confiscating their funds.

”We understand and we share the broader community’s instinct to protect our civil rights and liberties. And we have worked hard to ensure an appropriate balance between these and the need to protect our families and our friends from the devastating impact of terrorism

In the current debate, some critics seem not to fully understand the legislation and the safeguards within it, or they are deliberately misrepresenting the legislation to further their own political agendas. Either way they are not contributing to informed public debate.” ……

So who are these critics who are either too stupid to understand the package or are wilfully misrepresenting it? John Dowd, perhaps, the former NSW Liberal Attorney-General who now heads the International Commission of Jurists? The Law Council of Australia, the body Williams chaired before he entered politics?

No, it must be Liberal Senators Payne, Scullion and Mason, who determined after hearing the facts, not the simplistic slogans of Daryl, that the package needed extensive tightening to stop people engaging in normal political behaviour from coming within its net, and the dumping of William’s plan to give himself power to ban political groups which don’t suit the government’s political interest.

We believe you, Daryl Williams QC, really truly, that ”the Australian Government is not in the business of outlawing legitimate political and community organisations”. But you more than anyone in the government understand that it’s not what you say you intend that matters, it’s what the law actually says, and that laws apply to all future governments, not just yours. And if you assume that the Courts will clean up your mess, this wouldn’t be the same Courts your government constantly vilifies and tells not to make law, would it?

If Williams had bothered to read the evidence before the Committee, he’d know that his critics understand the legislation than he does, if his comments are anything to go by. They don’t deny the terrorism threat, and several have proposed amendments and alternatives which would mean what you say you intend to mean.

Notice that Williams fails to respond to any of the factual criticisms of the bill. Citizens are not concerned with what Williams allegedly ”intends” the bill to do, but what it DOES do. Do we really want the writer of this speech to have the power he wants? Rhetorical abuse, no facts, and non-engagement with the genuine and informed criticisms marks a man unfit for them.

***

2. Howard

The only thing I’ve found from Howard on this issue recently was in an interview with Neil Mitchell on Melbourne Radio 3AW last week. Mitchell asked about the ASIO bill, on which Parliament’s ASIO committee will report next month.

John Howard: Well I want it (the terrorism package) to arm us with what is needed consistent with our traditions as a liberal democracy, what is needed in order to fight terrorism.

Neil Mitchell: How far do you go with that?

Howard: Well you’ll never get complete agreement on that. We think this legislation – which goes a little further than in the past particularly in the relation to the 48 hour period (new ASIO power to detain a citizen without arrest for two days without Court approval) – we think that is justified in relation to the sort of threat that we now face. You have this eternal dilemma. People say what’s the Government doing about the new terror threat, when we do something about it we are then accused of going too far. We think we’ve got the balance right but we’re listening to what people have got to say. I don’t want this country to lose its strong tradition of civil liberties and its tradition of being a liberal democracy. Its treasuring of the principles that somebody is innocent until proven guilty. All of those things are very important to our society.

Q: Can people be jailed for five years for not answering questions?

Howard: There are new offences created by this and we think they are fair.

Q: Can people be jailed for five years for not answering questions?

Howard: That is one of the new offences created by it yes.

Q: How is that fair? If you’ve got a presumption of innocence surely you’ve got a right not to answer questions?

Howard: Well, but if that is part of a pattern of deliberately obstructing the proper investigation of an allegation I’m not sure that I would agree with you.

Q: But how far do you extend that, I refuse to answer questions? Five years?

Howard: So you think it’s perfectly alright for somebody to do that indefinitely no matter what the circumstances?

Q: I think it’s the base of any democratic judicial system at the moment that you have the right to refuse to answer questions.

Howard: I think you have to look at the whole bill in the context of the new environment in which we are.

Q: So how far do we go?

Howard: I think the bill strikes a good balance.

Q: I’ve just had a line from a caller you’ll love, they said if you put people in jail for not answering a question you wouldn’t have many politicians walking around free. Do you agree with that?

Howard: Well we don’t always answer questions, no.

***

3. Recommendations

Readers have suggested these sites for articles on the package:

Political scientist Jude McCulloch’s ”The end of our liberal democracy” at theage

”Terrorism and Terrible Laws: An Open Letter to Australians” at globalist

The Commonwealth Parliamentary Library research paper ”Terrorism and the Law in Australian: Legislation, Commentary and Constraints” at library

Harold Hark has forwarded an email being circulated by Damien Lawson of the Federation of Community Legal Centres in Victoria

URGENT ACTION NEEDED

Public hearings of the Joint Committee on ASIO, ASIS & DSD finished in Melbourne yesterday. With the Senate inquiry finishing the week before. The two inquiries will now report back to Parliament and the legislation will be debated and voted on in the Senate.

The next two weeks will be crucial in determining the ALP’s policy on the legislation, with their Federal caucus meeting on May 13 to determine their position, and therefore what laws are finally passed.

It is clear that public pressure and growing debate in the media has already had some affect with the ALP indicating they are considering some amendments, but amendments are not enough as these laws are fundamentally undemocratic and no amount of tinkering will change that. It is crucial we all do what we can to influence the ALP to join with the Greens and the Democrats in opposing these laws.

If you do nothing else in the next two weeks you must ring, fax or email (or all three) the ALP Senators in your State and the office of Simon Crean and John Faulkner. For most this is just a few calls – please make the effort.

If you have time also make contact with as many other Senators or Representatives you can. You can find their details at www.aph.gov.au

The crucial issues remain the same:

1) no new terrorism offences, the existing criminal law can be used

2) no banning of organisations or lists that label individuals or organisations as terrorists

3) no new powers for ASIO

Simon Crean: Parliament House: Tel (02) 6277 4022, Fax (02) 6277 8495, S.Crean.MP@aph.gov.a=u. Electorate Office: Tel (03) 9545 6211, Fax (03) 9545 6299, 401 Clayton Road, Clayton Vic 316, PO Box 5295, Clayton Vic 3168

John Faulkner: Tel 02-9719-8100, Fax 02-9719-8078, Senator.Faulkner@aph=.gov.au

***

4. Reader views

Jozef Imrich

I can only imagine how the devil is rejoiced by the ASIO taking steps of becoming STASI. I doubt that anyone can stop the current madness just as my parents could not stop WWII or the spread of Stalinist communism. However, at least today we know what we are really buying when we engage in terrorism to combat terrorism.

The terrorists have won. The devil is pleased with himself.

***

Daniel Maurice

I’ve come back to your Webdiary after a few days absence to discover that you (and apparently lots of your readers) are riding a new wave of hysteria, this time about anti-terrorist legislation. The way you tell the story anyone and everyone will soon be liable to draconian penalties because of these proposed laws.

Time to get a grip, I think. Whatever their “theoretical” application, do you seriously consider that any Australian government would get away with applying these laws to garden variety dissent? This in a country where even the most minor transgression by a political figure regularly generates media and public outrage? (Elsewhere governments kill thousands of their citizens, or siphon off billions of dollars through graft and corruption – in Australia we have weeks of page one headlines because a Minister gave his son access to his government-provided phone card!).

A simple question: if we are to focus on the literal, or potential application of these anti-terrorist laws, why aren’t you campaigning to curb the “dictatorial” powers of the Governor-General? The last time I looked the G-G is perfectly entitled under the constitution to sack the Government, take personal control the armed forces and declare war, among other things. Actually your average policeman already has the power to arrest you on the flimsiest of pretexts, from jay-walking to swearing at him. Yet as individuals we enjoy personal liberty, protected by democratically elected governments, free press and an independent judiciary, to say nothing of common sense, convention and shared social values.

In this, as in so many other of the issues that Bleeding Hearts take up, a reasonable point of view – in this case the need for carefully crafted legal responses to terrorism – is lost because of absurd exaggeration born of blind hatred of your political opponents.

Margo: Daniel, these laws don’t just apply to this governments but all governments which follow. The idea of the rule of law, especially in criminal law where the citizen’s liberty is at stake, is for offences to be clearly, tightly, set out so the Court can readily apply them. To argue, as you do, that it’s not dangerous to leave citizen’s liberty and democratic rights to the discretion of police and government is, I reckon, a recipe for losing the very democracy you and I treasure.

***

David Davis in New York

No one is closer to the catastrophic impact of terrorism than New Yorkers, so in that sense it makes it all the more interesting to see that they are hotly debating the attack on civil liberties post September 11.

Here is a link to a special in the Village Voice on the topic of “The Attack on Civil Liberties”: villagevoice.

On the other hand it is not so surprising. New York is about as diverse a place as you would find on the planet, and of course it is the home of the world’s most renowned monument to liberty. If New Yorkers stop caring about civil liberties, then we are all in trouble! The good news is: they haven’t.

***

Jess Rosman in Sydney

I found out about these laws at a public meeting in Newtown about a month ago I was horrified. As a student of history I often wondered how full on police states managed to get the power they did, why people allowed the passing of laws that would deny them basic freedoms. After that meeting I got a frightening glimpse into how this could happen.

I was at a large meeting of about 100 people, but if you think of how big Sydney is, it’s a painfully small amount. To stop things like this from happening you need tens of thousands to say no, not hundreds.

Once laws like these are passed, there is more room for the government of the day to do what ever it wants. Any opposition can be locked up as threats to the ‘state.’ So far the media has been incredibly quiet on this issue, considering the ramifications. Imagine how quiet they’ll be if it gets through.

The other aspect of these laws I’d like to address is the threat of ‘terrorism.’ So far there has been no critical understanding of why terrorist acts like suicide bombings happen. I would support the bill being scrapped completely, and not replaced with anything.

***

Gavin E. Greenoak in Sydney

I was invited to present my position on the anti-terrorism bills at a Senate public forum held at the Mitchell Library on May 1. It would be difficult to fault the forum given the organisational limitations of such a meeting. We spoke, some listened, none replied, we were recorded.

The problem for me, and I suspect for many Australians who have not been whisked away from themselves in the gale of propaganda, is that fundamental issues underpinning the War on Terrorism are beyond the pale of serious scrutiny, and yet, I would suggest, that these are the real issues.

For example: I have no prejudice against the people of any race or nation, but I do have a prejudicial suspicion of all governments, which history insists upon. Australia is NOT its government. Australians do not at its intelligent heart merely go along with the US Government which by the same token is not “Americans”.

Howard made all Australians a target for terrorism on the basis of an allegiance which did not undergo the scrutiny it absolutely should have received. A mere glance at the the Israel/Palestine conflict returns the impossibility of using this word “terrorist” with any likelihood of clear and sober meaning.

The Western Alliance has already moved to a position where the terrorist and terrorism is like a virus and its disease rather than a human violence which proceeds from human violation. Who the terrorist is, and why, has submerged beyond view and with these questions, the absolute need for critical self-examination.

There was a real choice after September 11. It is crucial to understand that while governments have made the choice for a radical demonisation of the terrorist threat, this choice is not a representative choice, and is a real departure from the often difficult requirements intelligence demands before going off and killing people.

Very little courage was required to invade and attack an already stricken Afghan Nation which had already been a target for an oil hungry government. Great courage was required to forestall yet another escalation of the revenge cycle, and it was not forthcoming.

Speaking on May 1 at the Senate Public Forum, I knew that I was merely going through the motions, and it was a very bad feeling. Far, far away from what seems to be acceptable public debate linked to any reality of action which might make such debate worthwhile, is that the Western Alliance is like a ship in a storm which stays afloat against first this wind, then that wave, and so on, but not because it has anything resembling a firm grip upon where it is going.

Such a grip can only come from the strong and sober heads, clean hands, open hearts, and clear eyes of individual men and women for whom a self-responsibility must underpin any public one if it is to hold that power of integrity which alone saves it from mere expedience. Only these men and women command the reality of respect. To ask where they are seems a vain exhortation.

I opposed the Bills because they confirm our target status, will not protect Australians, will conceal if not prevent necessary self-examination, and cannot be drafted in a way that will prevent the threat of terrorism becoming the threat of government.

These Bills doubtless will go through, because it is in the interests of government(s) that they do so. That these interests in no way engage with those of any human being seeking to dissolve barriers and transform necessary boundaries between people is blindingly obvious, and utterly shameful.

In a participatory democracy no adult is innocent, which is why I write, albeit against a tide, but not I believe against the tide of life more abundant.

***

Ian Farrell in the United States

I am a former lawyer currently doing my PhD in law and philosophy and am working on an article about the hunger strikes at Woomera, placing their actions in the context of the tradition of civil disobedience from Thoreau through Gandhi and MLK. The incredibly broad definition of terrorism would appear to include all acts of civil disobedience, including Gandhi and MLK’s principled, peaceful law-breaking.

Do we really want to set up a situation in which the fact that people are protesting what they consider to be an unjust law is IN AND OF ITSELF is a crime?

Further, the power of ASIO to hold people incommunicado has disastrous consequences for those involved in civil disobedience, because one of the primary functions of civil disobedience is communication: to communicate to the public the strength of ones convictions, and demonstrate the injustice of the laws being protested and the lengths the authorities will go to in order to enforce them. None of this will be possible if people can be held incommunicado.

I am working and studying in the US right now, and the government’s actions are making it harder and harder for me to be proud to be Australian.

***

Anthony Clark in Dundas, NSW

I was wondering just how widely the anti-terrorist legislation could be interpreted, in particular the phrase ‘serious harm to a person’. Does this just mean physical harm? Or can it mean psychological harm? Emotional harm? Harm to a person’s reputation?

If it has any meaning other than physical harm, then arguably the teachers’ union, in committing a political act by banning the Governor-General from entering public schools, has committed a terrorist act. As all teachers are indirectly involved in directing how the union operates, every single teacher in Australia (who is a member of the union) could end up being jailed for life.

Of course this is an extreme interpretation of the legislation and would not happen, but it does illustrate the problem with having poorly drafted legislation.

***

Martin Oliver

The government has now admitted that ASIO would be able to hold people incommunicado for more than 6 days – because the allowed 48 hour periods are infinitely renewable. Under the ASIO bill, a member of the Free Tibet Movement in Australia could be charged with terrorism and extradited to China as long as an extradition treaty had been previously set up. It’s like a bad comedy skit.

***

Alistair Noble

I can’t believe this “anti-terror” legislation isn’t the scandal of the century in Australian politics and law. I have no doubt it will one day be viewed as such – probably when it’s way too late.

Just as in pre-Nazi Germany, ordinary folk like us think the legislation will never be applied to us. It’s surely only for really, really naughty people. The trouble is a government’s definition of naughtiness can change from moment to moment and is, as you point out, subject also to external pressures.

Australians, be very afraid. It’s not only Free Tibet stickers or a coffee with the nice Moslem family next door that might land you in jail – writing an email like this might have the same result.

***

Martin Davies in Canada

After your summary of the anti-terrorism bills I realised once again how draconian the proposal is in light of the fact that Australia does not have a bill of rights or charter to at least provide some sort of constitutional protection against such legislation.

Oe thing these bills take aim at “freedom of association”. Now I’m not saying I would feel comfortable with this legislation if Australians were constitutionally protected in this way, but it would be a way that citizens could defend themselves.

To continue placing faith in Governments to extend citizens the rights and freedoms that are specifically declared in both the US and Canada is no longer acceptable. The Howard Government through legislation like this and the way it has sought to challenge the legitimacy of the Courts makes me no longer willing to have that faith.

The sooner we begin to talk about promoting a bill of rights for the nation the better we might all sleep. The reason a constitutional bill of rights is worthy of consideration is that it it not only makes our behaviour less suspect but more defensible if and when the Government decides it is time to lash out and penalize our associations. To not have such protection means we are more vulnerable than we ever cared to admit.

***

Peter Kelly

The anti-terrorist bill before parliament is the biggest threat to democracy since Menzies tried to outlaw the communist parties. It is interesting to compare those times to the present and it is interesting to compare the sort of party the Labor Party was back then to what it is today.

Doc Evatt courageously took an unpopular position at a time when the party was at pains to present itself as NOT being in sympathy with communists. The “threat” facing the world was the red scare and Menzies was using the same sort of language to describe the “changed” world as Howard is today.

Principle counted for something. It was thanks to the Doc that Australia was saved from a truly draconian law. But 50 years latter it seem we are to get it in spades, with more to come, and Australians don’t care. Keep the masses scared about the “millions of refugees” and the “open flood gates” and you can get away with anything, up to, and including, instituting a police state.

In Menzies’ time it was the “yellow peril” and it tied in nicely with his political agenda. The Petrov affair was played so skilfully by Menzies that the Labor Party was denied any chance of government for at least the following 10 years and did not gain government in any case for another 20 years.

The opposition is scared of being called names by the government and will do anything up to, and including, selling democracy down the drain, to avoid this. They are moral cowards and well deserved their loss at the last election. They are a bunch of pussy cats. I believe history will identify the Tampa incident as the one event that kept Labor in opposition for over 20 years. It to early 21st century Labor what Petrov was to 1950s Labor.

Labor is a dead carcass floating in the water legs up, drifting past the smoking ruins of freedom and democracy. One difference between the 2 Labor Parties is the absence of anyone like Doc Evatt today.

The Carmen Way

The future of the Left in Australia, indeed worldwide, has been much discussed in Webdiary since it began in July 2000. Now that Tim Dunlop has ripped into the Labor leadership’s latest ‘vision’ (The Third Way: Window dressing for capitulation), you might be interested in what the disenfranchised fringe of the Party is doing.

Carmen Lawrence and others in the Western Australian Labor Party have started a website called Labor 21 (labor21). It has a draft charter for a new Labor and invites ALP members past and present to contribute ideas on policy and internal reform.

Lawrence now sees herself and others on the ‘left’ as dissenters from both Coalition and Labor policy. On April 26, she gave a speech to the Labor Women’s National Conference on dissent, and how to increase dissenter numbers.

Take one example of where mainstream Labor is right now. Federal Labor has had nothing to say about the rush of the Labor States, with federal support, to wipe out rights of the victims of negligence by professionals, builders and the like. Why tackle the problem at the little end of town – and with a sledgehammer – with nothing done about the structures of the insurance industry and the lawyers who feed off it? (See Webdiarist Dell Horey’s analysis of medical insurance in Blaming the victim, again)

The least you’d expect from Labor is a holistic approach – alternative dispute resolution, perhaps, small claims courts, a reduction in legal costs scales, tax reform to encourage regular payments rather than lump sums, a clean-up of hospital work practices. It would be fanciful to hope they’d go for something more radical – pushing the insurers and the lawyers and their fat profits out of the equation and having a national insurance scheme, but surely SOMETHING. Nothing on policy at all; instead the usual political pointscoring against the Coalition. .

Today, Lawrence’s answers to questions on Labor 21 which I sent her late last month, and an edited text of her speech.

***

Question: How did Labor 21 begin life, who is involved, and what is its purpose?

Lawrence: Following the last election, a number of members (and ex-members) of the ALP here in WA got together to discuss the disappointing election result and the direction in which the Labor Party was headed. One described it as a meeting of the “shrieking Diaspora”. Labor 21 is the initiative which resulted and it reflects our belief that the time is right for a fundamental re-evaluation of the Party. Although triggered by the November 2001 Federal Election result, the initiative goes far beyond identifying what Labor needs to do to be elected in 2004. The objective is clarification of the raison d’etre and processes of the party to ensure that it is a powerful, progressive force in Australian politics in the years and decades ahead – Labor for the 21st century.

We believe that there is very little chance that any review of the party’s objectives and policies will succeed without such reform. Membership needs to be broadened, real participation facilitated and a genuinely democratic structure devised. Only a radical rethink of the ALP’s membership and procedures will produce the necessary long-term improvement in the Party’s political fortunes and in our democracy.

Our party was founded on the great struggle between capital and labour in the early 20th century and is responsible for most of the progressive social outcomes in Australia of the last century. However it is a new century and we need to evolve to meet the new priorities we confront. Only a broadly based, genuinely democratic party with strongly enunciated principles can begin to address these priorities and meaningfully re-engage the Australian public in the political process that is at the heart of our democracy.

We have devised, as a starting point, a Draft Charter that we have called Labor 21. It is a brief document that, we hope, distills the key principles that should guide our policy development and internal reform.

Labor 21 has no factional affiliations – it is a forum dedicated to an open and public dialogue leading to specific proposals for change – and welcomes participation from all party members and supporters.

The objective of Labor 21 is re-invigorate the Labor Party by engaging in a broad-ranging public debate about:

* The party’s principles

* Membership, party organisation and processes

* The major issues confronting Australia

The direction of Labor 21 has been formulated to date by small group of people who have pooled their resources to establish this website and to organize public events and discussions. We are keen to expand this group as the initiative develops. We also hope to contribute to the formal review of the Federal ALP that is currently underway. We want to reach as many ALP members and supporters as possible and encourage them to develop a Labor 21 group in each state/territory to progress the initiative, and of course make suggestions about future policy and party reform. We will also facilitate an on-line discussion forum and, if we can get support around the country, public meetings and forums as well.

Q: Is this the first attempt to seriously engage Labor members, supporters and former supporters in helping to define a new vision for the Party? How successful has it been so far, and, ideally, how would you see its role in discussion about the party’s future?

We believe it is. The Hawke – Wran review is, unfortunately, not particularly visible to the wider community and the process does not allow for discussion. Neither does it include former members or supporters from whom a lot can be learned both about the Party’s failings and what needs to be done to maintain our appeal in the wider community.

While we still need to publicise the site more substantially and engage a more participants, we are pleased with the initial response. The fact that it is largely a voluntary effort, however, does limit our capacity to keep it fresh and relevant. We’re working on it.

Q: What’s gone wrong with the Labor left, when did the rot start, and is it united in seeking to regain a strong influence on policy?

That’s partly what we’re trying to flesh out – and a number of contributors to the discussion forum have already posted some of their analyses. We have also invited a number of academics and policy analysts to contribute to the discussion. It is my belief – shared by many on the left, that a fairly fundamental reworking of the Party’s principles and processes is required.

Q: What percentage of Labor members and senators would you see as left, what subfactions exist within the left, and why is it so divided?

I’ve, personally, given up on trying to understand the factions and their arcane rivalries. They are increasingly Balkanised and revolve around personalities and ancient regional and union disputes rather than differences in philosophy. There are people in the Left who are right of the Right and in the Right who are left of the Left ad absurdum. This is one of the features of the contemporary Labor Party which most alienates branch members and potential members.

Unfortunately, the grip of the factions is so firm, that most new members quickly find that there future in the Party is pretty bleak unless they attach themselves to a faction to provide them with a support base. It’s one of the reasons that reform is so important.

Q: Does the left as a whole support the Labor 21 vision, and if not, which faction/s of the left is behind it and why do other factions oppose the concept?

We haven’t sought endorsement and there are interested members from all factions. A lot of the people who contacted us are trying to break out of the factional constraints.

Q: Is the party itself generally supportive of Labor 21?

We seem to be tolerated, as long as we do not purport to be an official Labor Party website – which we are not.

Q: If Webdiarists would like to contribute to Labor 21, what particular areas are you most keen to seek their views and ideas on?

We’d be delighted to hear from webdiarists. We are seeking structured feedback in the form of short papers or comments that address the key policy and organisational issues confronting the party.We would also like comment on the Draft Charter and suggestions for improvement. We regard it as a “work-in-progress” to be improved via the dialogue generated by this forum.

We will try to stimulate debate on a range of issues under broad headings then assimilate these, firstly to finalise the Charter, and then to formulate specific proposals that can be communicated to the Party. We would also welcome suggestions on which issues should be the focus of our discussions over the next few months.

Short papers/suggestions are invited. We will add to and expand over the next few months. We will also post papers/articles that are pertinent to the discussion in the Discussion Papers section.

We are committed to achieving:

A fair, just and cohesive Australian society, respectful and proud of its aboriginal history and cultural diversity, mindful of its responsibilities to the global community, and unified by a commitment to secure sustainable quality of life for all its peoples through an inclusive political and community agenda which integrates social, economic and environmental priorities.

We will work to develop a society that:

Creates a new, inclusive national identity built on the diverse cultures of its citizens;

Is built on the genuinely democratic will of its members;

Applies sustainability principles to align economic, environmental and social goals;

Ensures that all share fairly in the wealth and resources of the community;

Respects the human rights of its citizens and peoples everywhere;

Values and respects our indigenous people;

Encourages and rewards education and innovation;

Emphasises the well-being of its citizens and prevention of illness and disability;

Treats stewardship of the environment seriously and effectively;

Regards creativity and freedom of expression as essential components of everyday life; and

Ensures that the satisfaction and security associated with a rewarding job is within the reach of everyone.

***

Fighting the ‘fingers in the air’ brigade

By Carmen Lawrence

We need to ask ourselves – why we got involved in politics, why we joined the ALP or why we support it. I’m sure, like you, I did not get involved in politics simply to be a loyal foot soldier for the ALP no matter what it stood for or what it did.

I’m sure we did not agree to abandon our principles and passions.

It is certainly reasonable to ask for the majority views to be reflected in policy and strategy. But are they? The Party should be, after all, what its members agree it to be But is it? And in any case, should we always abide by the majority decisions without demur? Are there occasions when dissent is the only honourable course?

Have women fought so hard to become involved only to be engulfed by the lowest common denominator of decision-making, by the dealmakers and fixers, by those who regard themselves as hard-headed realists and the rest, presumably as softheaded idealists?

We are at risk of being overwhelmed by those who’re obsessed with process and not principle, for whom open and energetic debate is said to indicate division and to be avoided at all cost. By those who fear the community and would rather follow it, with fingers in the air to see which way the wind’s blowing rather than taking a lead and bringing out the best in us. The alternative is the Howard mode, as Peter Carey put it of “feeding on the worst”.

I believe we are at a critical juncture in Australia’s history and that of the ALP. We are in disputed territory where all transformation occurs. A lot of the certainties of the past are under challenge – it takes brave souls to ride the boundaries and dispute the certainties of Howard’s brave new world.

We need progressive women who:

1. Oppose and argue against equating our well-being solely with the acquisition of more and more material possessions, although for those who genuinely have little this may be important.

As Mungo MacCallum writes entertainingly about the discovery of the “aspirational” voter,

“Of course, all voters are aspirational in that they aspire towards something, in most cases, a better life for themselves and their children. But today’s commentators are talking about someone with narrower goals. This key inhabitant of marginal seats is assumed to have (wrongly, I think) only one real aspiration: to gain as much as possible as quickly as possible and to hell with everyone else. He is uninterested in community and contemptuous of altruism; if he had a theme song, it would be that of the old working-class favourite, “The working class can kiss my arse, I’ve got the foreman’s job at last,” performed with immense gust and not a trace of irony. The aspirational voter is in fact the old Up-You-Jack punter a couple of steps further up the ladder.”

We need progressive women who:

2. Assert that inequality, not just poverty, does matter; that it corrodes the sense of commitment we have to one another; that is makes us uneasy; that it produces social problems and poor outcomes in health and education.

3. Resist the push toward individual solutions for all our social and economic problems; who argue persuasively for the adoption of solutions which narrow the gaps between us; which, “shock, horror”, redistribute wealth.

4. Are not afraid to stand against what are said to be majority views on Indigenous Australians and on asylum seekers; who affirm decent human rights standards. And who are prepared to say unequivocally why we do so – it’s not about process but about principle.

5. Who recognise that part of our task should be to bring the Australian community with us; not to treat them as incapable of changing their views and of being terminally bigoted. If people hear their leaders telling them that it’s OK to be racially intolerant – as Howard has often done- they may well be encouraged to do so. Howard has often signalled in code that bigotry is natural, that it is not only expected, but accepted.

6. Who also understand just how determined Howard is to remake Australia in his own image.

If we are to develop good polices, consistent with our claim to be progressive, we need to start with as set of values, yes, of ideals, to which we aspire as political activists.

They should not be for decoration, the detachable preamble to our policy documents. Rather, they should underpin everything we do – and they should not be abandoned at the faintest whiff of grapeshot.

Yes, there will always be a need to compromise and sometimes we will get it wrong (and I’ve done both), but I know that there are many people on the left of the political spectrum (not the ALP) who are feeling rudderless, even abandoned by our Party.

This is not just some pathetic nostalgia, or baby boomers being totally unrealistic or lacking in pragmatism; it is, I believe, born of a genuine desire to do better.

Many of those most vocal in expressing their discontent are indeed the young – and we are losing a great many of them.

I’m sure none of you got involved in politics just to play the game, satisfied with being in power to oversee incremental change; to aspire to modest gains, barely distinguishable from those which might be achieved by our political opponents.

I know we are constantly told that when it comes to the economy and the role of government – there is no alternative.

There are alternatives.

I believe we should at least explore an alternative intellectual framework which gives due weight to the distribution of wealth and work, which advocates environmentally sustainable growth, which encompasses the special circumstances of our Indigenous people, which rebalances the shares going to wages and profits; which improves working conditions, which sees that the huge gaps between the wealthy developed world and the desperately poor billions is not sustainable – or just.

There are alternatives – one size need not fit all.

As I said earlier, progressive women need to reignite enthusiasm for the protection of human rights; to affirm basic decency in our policies for Indigenous people and asylum seekers.

We need to repudiate prejudice and hatefulness wherever it occurs.

Good policy development should be based not only on values and the collection of evidence, statistics and information, but, fundamentally, on an understanding of the experiences and circumstances of those for whom policy is developed.

We should not enmesh ourselves in abstract issues and deflect attention from individual experience.

Understanding begins with sympathy – recognition of the shared human condition. We need to employ empathic imagination- how would I feel? What would I do in these circumstances?

We need to piece together the circumstances of people’s lives; to infer the intentions behind their actions from our general store of knowledge about human motivations and responses.

We should not fall for the propagandist’s three-card trick, which as Aldous Huxley put it is to “make one set of people forget that certain other sets of people are human”.

We need to remind ourselves in framing our policies that luck, rather than virtue, is one of the great determinants of life. H.G. Wells and his socialist friends began their influential Declaration of Rights with the observation that “since a man (sic) comes into the world through no fault of his own” and they might have added and with no choice over where and in what circumstances

I believe we need to revive Labor’s position as a champion of Human Rights – we were energetic in framing the original U.N. declaration and influential beyond our size in pulling others with us.

This is all the more important because as Mungo MacCallum put it so vividly in his essay “Girt by Sea”, “Having discarded politeness, the Howard mob now seeks to promote a sort of Forrest Gumpish ignorance as the national ideal.” Add to that a big dollop of meanness.

Of all nations, we should be in an ideal position as a people to understand and empathise with those who come to our shores:

* Some of us are descended from convicts who were extruded from their homelands and abandoned;

* Many of us are the grandchildren and great grandchildren of the Irish, exiled by oppression and starvation;

* Many of us are the children and grandchildren of the post-war refugees who were fleeing loss and persecution.

It doesn’t take a giant leap of the imagination to understand the self destructive and irrational behaviour of those who are detained in remote, dehumanising camps in remote locations; people who are held without the support of family, with no knowledge of their likely fates; without hope.

And all this after fleeing destruction, persecution and trauma.

The responses of depression, frustration, anger and destructiveness of self and others are all predictable – and most of us would do the same in comparable conditions.

Through hunger strikes and self harm many of these people are actually trying to maintain a modicum of control – albeit perversely- over their own loves.

They are also resisting the exercise of absolute power over their lives.

To deal with these issues – and the many others we face as a nation – we need progressive women, brave women, women of purpose and passion. We need you.

Liberalism fights back on terror laws

The Senate’s Legal and Constitutional Affairs Committee today released its report into the anti-terrorism package I’ve been banging on about in Webdiary (Coming soon: too many terrorists, Come in, Big Brother) And it’s a sensation! There’s hope!

Committee chair, Liberal moderate Marise Payne, and two Coalition Senators who cannot be described as moderates – Nigel Scullion (Northern Territory Country Liberal Party) and Queenslander Brett Mason – have joined Labor Senators Jim McKeirnan and Barney Cooney and Democrat Brian Greig to trash the Government’s package.

In unanimous findings, the Committee recommended comprehensive changes to protect our liberties and the dumping of the section giving the Attorney-General the power to ban at will virtually any organisation involved in political activism.

The significance of this report cannot be overstated. Three Coalition Senators have stripped Attorney-General Daryl Williams and the Cabinet which backed his package of any pretence that they are worthy judges of the delicate balance required to protect our democracy and our freedoms.

The word is the Committee feared a leak of its report because the Government would send the heavies in and force the gutting of the report. It will probably get its revenge by dumping Payne as chairperson of the Legal and Constitutional Affairs Committee when her term expires in June. That’s what the party does to Liberals who believe in Liberalism these days.

Most importantly, the report gives a timid Labor party desperate to avoid a Howard onslaught of ”You’re terrorist lovers” if it tries to fix the bill in the Senate a powerful tool to do it anyway.

All in all, this report is a wonderful battle victory in the long war ahead on the terrorism package. (Another Committee reports on the ASIO bill next month.)

Apart from the triumph of Liberalism in the report – however short term – the report proves once again that the Senate is vital to protecting Australia’s democracy and ensuring good, considered law is passed by the Federal Parliament. Paul Keating called Senators ”swill” and John Howard wants to gut its powers, but it is only through the Senate and its committees that Australians have a chance to discuss proposed laws, and where there is some possibility of arguments being assessed on the merits.

More than 400 individuals and groups made submissions to the committee in an almost impossible timeframe. That’s hundreds of hours of largely unpaid work on research, thinking and writing, and that effort too is proof that our democracy still has vitality.

I’ve been going through many of your emails on the terrorism package, and hope to put some up tomorrow. For those of you who are interested, I’ve published below the key chapter of the Committee’s report. For the full report, go to Report

***

CHAPTER THREE

3.1 This chapter considers the Security Legislation Amendment (Terrorism) Bill 2002 [No. 2] (the Security Bill) and discusses the following key issues:

* whether there is a need for the legislation;

* other major concerns about the enactment of the legislation;

* the proposed treason offence;

* the definition of terrorism; and

* the proposed proscription power.

3.2 Unless otherwise indicated, the references to proposed sections are to proposed sections of the Criminal Code.

The need for the legislation

3.3 Many submissions opposed the Security Bill in particular on the basis that the need for such legislation in Australia had not been demonstrated and that existing criminal offences such as murder, grievous bodily harm, criminal damage, arson, conspiracy and attempt were adequate to address terrorist acts.

3.4 The Honourable Justice John Dowd, President of the Australian Section, International Commission of Jurists, noted Australia’s obligations to comply with resolutions of the United Nations, including Resolution 1373, and stated that the International Commission of Jurists did not oppose the legislation as such. However, ‘the infelicity of expression and the width’ of the Bill was of serious concern.

3.5 The Law Council of Australia pointed out: ”It is by no means clear that Australia’s international obligations require the creation of separate terrorism offences. Security Council resolution 1373 requires that Australia ensure that ‘terrorist acts are established as serious criminal offences in domestic laws and that the punishment duly reflects the seriousness of such terrorist acts’.”

3.6 The Law Council of Australia argued that the Government needed to justify the creation of new statutory offences and powers ‘and to demonstrate that these strike the right balance between the needs of security and the rights and liberties of the individual’. The Council referred to the range of legislative and administrative measures already in place in the event of a mainland terrorist incident in Australia, noting:

”In its first report to the UN Counter-Terrorism Committee on implementation of Security Council resolution 1373, Australia stated that it had ‘a highly coordinated domestic counter-terrorism response strategy incorporating law enforcement, security and defence agencies’. The report stated that Australia ‘already had in place extensive measures to prevent in Australia for financing of, preparation and basing from Australia of terrorist attacks on other countries’, and that it had ‘an extensive network of law enforcement liaison officers and bilateral treaties on extradition and mutual legal assistance to facilitate cooperation with other countries in the prevention, investigation and prosecution of terrorist acts’.”

”Existing Commonwealth and State and Territory legislation covers offences of murder, conspiracy, aiding and abetting, kidnapping, conduct likely to involve serious risk of life, personal injury, damage to property, all involving heavy penalties, as well as dealing with proscribed organisations, intelligence, investigation and enforcement. At the Commonwealth level alone, legislation includes:

* Laws dealing with investigation and enforcement: Australian Federal Police Act 1979; National Crime Authority Act 1984; Telecommunications Act 1977; Australian Security Intelligence Organisation Act 1979; Measures to Combat Serious and Organised Crime Act 2001;

* laws dealing with criminal procedure and international cooperation: Extradition Act 1988; Mutual Assistance in Criminal Matters Act 1987; International Transfer of Prisoners Act 1977;

laws creating specific offences: Crimes Act 1914 (including treason, treachery, sabotage, sedition, unlawful drilling, espionage, official secrets, being in a prohibited place, harbouring spies, taking unlawful soundings, computer related acts, postal and telecommunications offences); Air Navigation Act 1921; Public Order (Protection of Persons and Property) Act 1971; Crimes (Biological Weapons) Act 1976; Crimes (Foreign Incursions and Recruitment) Act 1978; Nuclear Non-Proliferation (Safeguards) Act 1984; Crimes (Hostages) Act 1989; Crimes (Aviation) Act 1991; Crimes (Ships and Fixed Platforms Act) Act 1992; Chemical Weapons (Prohibition) Act 1994; Weapons of Mass Destruction (prevention of Proliferation) Act 1994;

* laws dealing with the proscribing of organisation: Crimes Act 1914 (Part 11A concerning unlawful associations); Charter of the United Nations Act 1945;

* laws regulating the entry and deportation of aliens: Migration Act 1958;

* laws concerning intelligence services agencies: Intelligence Services Act 2001; Australian Security Intelligence Organisation Act 1979; and

* laws concerning suspect transactions (Proceeds of Crime Act 1987; Financial Transaction Reports Act 1988; Charter of the United Nations Act 1945).

3.7 Ms Sandra Cornish, National Executive Officer of the Australian Catholic Social Justice Council noted: ”While the government must ensure that Australia’s national security arrangements are adequate especially in the light of last year’s terrible terror attacks, it is essential that all such arrangements respect and protect human rights. It is the experience of the church that national security legislation in many countries in our region is often misused as a tool of oppression. While we do not believe this to be the intention of the Australian government’s counter-terrorism legislative package, we do want to be sure that Australian national security legislation will not be open to such abuse … To fight terrorism effectively, we must ensure that our methods respect and protect human rights and do not fall into the logic of ends justifying means, as this is the logic of terrorism itself.”

3.8 Justice Elizabeth Evatt argued that if the legislation were enacted, it should be brought into force only if the need were established and then only for a limited time, with a sunset clause applying. The Human Rights Council similarly argued that if the Bill were enacted it should be ‘subject to renewal on a regular basis’, perhaps annually following a review by a parliamentary committee.

3.9 In querying the need for new legislation, various submissions noted that the Hope Review of Australia’s protective security powers and arrangements in the late 1970s did not call for any more offences to address the threat of terrorism. They also pointed to the Attorney-General’s statements that there is no known specific threat of terrorism in Australia and that Australia had ‘well practiced and coordinated national security arrangements’.

3.10 Dr Jenny Hocking, Head of the National Key Centre for Australian Studies at Monash University, told the Committee: ”I think the Attorney-General is correct in his comment that we do not have a high level of threat and there is no known specific threat at this stage – and historically we have not had a high level of terrorist threat either. We need to ask why that is the case. Justice Hope addressed that briefly in the early eighties, when he said that it is possible that in part a functioning democracy that protects the rule of law is one of the best protections against the use of political violence.”

”A marginalised political society is more likely to give rise to political violence than is a society in which all elements of society feel that they can have an avenue, through the political and parliamentary process, for some voice. What worries me about this particular package of bills is that it starts to chip away at that through the avenue that it allows for the criminalisation of support for political positions that are being proscribed and so on. So I think one of our great protections is in fact, as Justice Kirby said, to maintain our constitutionalism and adhere to the great principles of the rule of law.”

3.11 Social commentator and activist Ms Eva Cox expressed similar views:

”[I]f you deny people the capacity to sometimes be unlawful in minor ways, as a form of protest, this is exactly the sort of situation that leads people to take up terrorism … he provision of good civil interactions, the ability to demonstrate, and accountability and transparency in decision making are keys to people accepting the rule of law.”

3.12 The Committee was keen to explore with government agencies why such legislation was necessary. The Australian Security Intelligence Organisation (ASIO) advised the Committee that the events of September 11 ‘represented a profound shift in international terrorism’ and that: ”Threat levels to Australian interests at home and abroad have risen. While there is no known specific terrorist threat to Australia at present, the heightened threat levels can be expected to remain for some years at least. Threat levels to United States and United Kingdom (and a number of other countries) interests in Australia have also risen and can be expected to remain for some years at least.”

3.13 ASIO pointed to several factors which it considered had raised the level of threat against Australia, including ‘the specific mention of Australia by Osama Bin Laden on two occasions since 11 September, including his description of Australian troops in East Timor as a “crusader force”.’ ASIO also noted that some international militant groups which view terrorism as legitimate have ‘a small number of supporters in Australia’ and that ‘a small number of Australians have trained in UBL terrorist camps in Afghanistan’.

ASIO advised: ”None of this is to suggest that there is any reason for assessing that Australia is a prime terrorist target. Clearly, the interests of a number of other countries are at considerably greater risk, such as the United States. At the same time, 11 September does mark a profound shift, with real implications for Australian interests themselves and in respect of our responsibilities for foreign interests in Australia.”

3.14 During public hearings the Director-General of Security Mr Dennis Richardson explained why he considered the proposed legislation necessary and why existing laws were inadequate: ”The proposed bills certainly will not stop terrorism, any more than legislation against murder and robbery of itself stops those crimes. But the legislation is, in my view, necessary to deter, to punish and to seek to prevent. It is the latter – that is, prevention – which is a central element in the legislation.”

3.15 The Director-General stated that current criminal laws did not provide an effective legislative framework for prevention, citing as an example training with a terrorist organisation: ”The Crimes (Foreign Incursions and Recruitment) Act makes it an offence to receive training in the use of arms or explosives or to practise military exercises for certain purposes. These purposes include the overthrow by force or violence of the government of a foreign state and causing by force or violence the public in a foreign state to be in fear of suffering death or personal injury. However, the provisions are dependent upon proof that the training was provided for those specific purposes. There is no criminal offence of undertaking training with an identified terrorist network, such as Al-Qaeda. I understand that not everyone would agree with my view, but I think it ought to be a criminal offence to undertake terrorist training with a network such as Al-Qaeda. No existing legislation caters for this. The proposed legislation would.”

3.16 The Director-General noted that in recent years the movement of people, money and goods across international borders had grown enormously, particularly with the growth of the Internet, and that those changes had ‘presented opportunities for those committed to using violence for political, religious or ideological reasons’: ”In order to properly combat terrorism, it is necessary to institute measures which will deprive terrorist networks of the means of support and assistance which they exploit for the purpose of conducting their activities. This includes financial support, the provision of training and the provision of materials which may be used in the commission of terrorist acts in Australia and overseas. Although the instruments used in terrorism may sometimes be crude, various networks have become increasingly sophisticated in their use of communications, movements and methods to achieve their objectives. The nature and level of threats posed by particular groups may, as demonstrated on 11 September, change quickly and without forewarning.”

3.17 The Australian Federal Police also supported the Bills on the basis that they would address ‘identified inadequacies’ in existing legislation, particularly in relation to the financing of terrorism: ”Importantly, the overall package of bills will allow law enforcement to meet the increased expectations of government and the community who want to see those responsible for terrorist activity brought to justice.”

3.18 In response to questions on notice from the Committee and to issues raised in the public hearings, the Attorney-General’s Department gave several reasons why the existing legislative framework was inadequate: ”The counter-terrorism legislative ‘package’ clearly expresses Australia’s commitment to act to prevent terrorism and prosecute those who participate, and has the advantage of dealing with terrorism comprehensively rather than relying on a myriad of other laws which may apply.

”Specific laws are needed to address legislative gaps, particularly in relation to providing or receiving training, directing an organisation that fosters preparation for a terrorist act and possessing things connected with a terrorist act.

”The laws concerning conspiracy, attempt, incitement and aiding and abetting are problematic, in that many ancillary offences can only be proven if they attach to a specific primary offence. The nature of terrorism is such that many persons involved in terrorist activity may not know the specific details of the act or offence that will be committed.

”Existing provisions relating to the proscription of unlawful associations under Part IIA of the Crimes Act 1914 are primarily directed at politically-motivated organisations rather than those inspired by religious or ideological motivations. In addition, the penalties for those offences (maximum two years’ imprisonment) are clearly inadequate.

”The primary reason for developing terrorist offences is prevention, whereas existing laws generally relate to acts that have already been completed.”

Other concerns about the enactment of the legislation

3.19 Three other major concerns relating to legal and social issues were reflected in submissions and during public hearings, and are discussed below:

* whether the Bill would be held to be constitutionally valid;

* whether the Bill might breach provisions of international law; and

* concerns about possible adverse effects on Muslim, Arab and other ethnic communities.

Constitutional issues

3.20 Proposed section 100.2 sets out the constitutional basis for the terrorism offences in the Bill. Without limiting the grounds, the provision specifies fifteen sets of circumstances in which an action or threat of action would give rise to an offence. They include where the action: affects the interests of the Commonwealth or a Commonwealth authority; affects foreign or interstate trade or commerce; involves the use of a postal service or electronic communication; or takes place outside Australia.

3.21 A submission from Professor George Williams and Mr Iain Gentle noted that the primary heads of constitutional power which could support anti-terrorist legislation were the powers over defence, external affairs and the implied ‘nationhood’ power. They stated that in their view there were ‘significant questions’ as to whether those powers could support the Bill ‘in a time of relative peace’ because of the need for the laws to be reasonably appropriate and adapted to that purpose:

”Members of the High Court have made it clear that a law may fail this test if, for example, it unduly infringes upon basic rights, such as freedom of speech (see Davis v Commonwealth (1988) 166 CLR 79), or contains retrospective criminal sanctions (see Polyukhovich v Commonwealth (War Crimes Act Case) (1991) 172 CLR 501).

”Certain provisions in the [Security] Bill may exceed what the High Court would consider to be appropriate and adapted to the purpose of combating terrorist activity. For example, it is arguable, but unlikely, that the Court would consider that life imprisonment for an offence prosecuted under absolute liability is disproportionate to the threat facing Australia. A more likely basis of attack would be upon the proscription power in [proposed] section 102.2

3.22 The particular concerns about the validity of the proposed proscription power are discussed in more detail at paragraphs 3.101-3.158 below.

3.23 The Committee notes that at a recent COAG meeting on 5 April 2002, State and Territory governments agreed to refer further powers to the Commonwealth in the future to ‘plug any gaps’.

Possible breach of international law

3.24 Several submissions expressed concern that the Security Bill could breach international human rights standards, particularly the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR).

3.25 For example, in its submission, the Law Council of Australia noted its concern about ambiguous and imprecise language in the definitions of ‘terrorist act’ and related offences, which do not include any requirement of intention to terrorise the government or the public through intimidation, coercion or the evocation of extreme fear, and which include action involving serious damage to property.

3.26 The Council also considered there was no justification for the creation of absolute liability in respect of crimes involving serious criminality and penalties involving life imprisonment. Non-compliance with important international human rights standards, such as the right to personal liberty, freedom from arbitrary arrest or detention, the right to a fair trial, the protection against arbitrary interference with privacy, freedom of expression, the right of peaceful assembly, and freedom of association was manifest.

The Council noted: ”Some may argue that little harm is done by the creation of such offences, as ultimately the prosecutorial authorities are unlikely to lay charges of terrorism in relation to other than the most serious of acts and against other than the most dangerous and threatening of organisations. The Law Council does not accept such arguments and is vigorously opposed to the conferral on the prosecutorial authorities of such sweeping and arbitrary powers in the characterisation of offences and laying of charges.

”Such conferral of power is contrary to the prohibition of arbitrary arrest and detention in article 9(a) of the ICCPR “arbitrariness” must be interpreted broadly to include elements of inappropriateness, injustice and lack of predictability. This means that deprivation of liberty provided for by law must not be manifestly unproportional, unjust or unpredictable.

”The Law Council considers that an unacceptable element of arbitrariness and unpredictability arises in that determining whether or not a person is charged with a terrorist offence, with another offence or with any offence at all (a determination which has profound implications in terms of the onus of proof, available defences, stigma of conviction and heaviness of penalties), is left to the prosecutorial authorities without any transparency or public scrutiny.”

3.27 While the ICCPR allows for derogation from the prohibition against arbitrary arrest and detention in article 9 in time of ‘public emergency which threatens the life of the nation’, the Human Rights Council of Australia noted that there was no evidence of such an emergency.

3.28 It was also argued that the Security Bill could infringe other fundamental rights recognised by the ICCPR, including the rights to freedom of association, freedom of expression and the right to be presumed innocent until proven guilty. The Law Council of Australia also noted that the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights in a document to guide States reporting their compliance with Resolution 1373 stressed the importance of observing international human rights principles.

Adverse effects on particular groups

3.29 During public hearings Mr Bilal Cleland, Secretary of the Islamic Council of Victoria, raised concerns about the potential adverse effects the passage of such legislation might have on Muslim communities in Australia: ”We are concerned that the definition of terrorism will take on a religious, bigoted tone, and it could mean that the Muslim community here will become unjustified targets of interference and hostility from the state authorities.”

3.30 Similar concerns about the possible impact on Muslim and Arabic communities were expressed by the Supreme Islamic Council of NSW Inc, Liberty Victoria, Fitzroy Legal Service, the Federation of Community Legal Centres (Vic) Inc , the Australian Arabic Council and the Ethnic Communities’ Council of Victoria.

The Victorian Council of Social Service stated that after September 11: ”Arab and Muslim communities in Australia, and women in particular, were, and continue to be, the targets of high levels of racial and religious vilification and discrimination.”

3.31 Mr Victor Borg, representing the Ethnic Communities’ Council of Victoria, told the Committee that the incidents of September 11 had a ‘tremendous impact’ on the community, particularly in Sydney and Melbourne. Mr Laurence Aboukhater, the Deputy Chair of the Council, elaborated on this impact: ”This is an important point. It is affecting the diversity of Australia, it is affecting multiculturalism and is affecting our community. The first failing of this Bill is that it is attacking a portion of the community.”

3.32 The Director-General of Security, Mr Dennis Richardson, told the Committee that he understood the concerns that had been expressed, and noted that it was important to ensure that organisations such as ASIO had good relationships with communities and community leaders. If there was a legitimate concern about particular individuals, it would be clear that those individuals were targeted, rather than particular communities.

Committee conclusion

3.33 The Committee notes the concerns expressed by many organisations and individuals about whether the legislative package, particularly the Security Bill, is necessary. The Committee also notes serious reservations about the breadth of the proposed legislation in relation to constitutional issues, potential breaches of international law and possible adverse effects on particular groups within the Australian community.

3.34 While acknowledging that existing criminal laws would cover the results of many terrorist acts, the Committee also notes that Australia has signed various international treaties that seek to address terrorism, including the Convention for the Suppression of Financing of Terrorism and the Convention for the Suppression of Terrorist Bombings that are the subject of two of the Bills under consideration. United Nations Security Council Resolution 1373 adopted on 28 September 2001 indicates a worldwide determination to develop measures to address terrorism and demonstrate a commitment to prevent acts of terrorism and punish those who commit them. The Committee has also heard evidence of certain gaps in Australia’s current legislative framework. Consequently the Committee considers that new legislation to achieve a comprehensive approach to dealing with terrorism is justified.

3.35 The Committee considers that there is no intention that the Bill should have any adverse impact on particular communities, but notes the concerns that have been expressed during the inquiry. The Committee is also mindful of the serious concerns expressed about the width of various provisions of the Security Bill in particular, and for that reason considers that certain amendments must be made. Particular concerns and the Committee’s recommendations in response to them are discussed in more detail in the rest of this chapter.

The treason offence

3.36 Proposed section 80.1 contains a new treason offence which is designed to replace the existing treason offence (contained in section 24 of the Crimes Act 1914). The Bill modernises the wording of the treason offence and provides a new ground for the offence, namely, engaging in conduct that is intended to assist and does assist, by any means whatever, another country or an organisation engaged in armed hostilities against the Australian Defence Force (ADF) (paragraph 80.1(1)(f)).

Criticism of the provisions

3.37 The definition of treason was the focus of a number of submissions. The Association of Criminal Defence Lawyers argued that proposed paragraph 80.1(1)(f) broadens the definition of treason in an unacceptable manner. The Association argued that this definition would include non-military assistance and humanitarian aid such as medical assistance, sustenance and disaster relief.

3.38 The Human Rights Council supported this view, adding that the lack of a definition of the word ‘assists’ exposes humanitarian organisations such as the International Committee of the Red Cross and Medicins sans Frontieres and their members to criminal liability. The Law Council of Australia pointed out that the potential for the criminalisation of humanitarian aid was made particularly acute ‘given the increased deployment of the ADF in peace keeping, border protection, disaster relief and other forms of non-military action’. NOWAR (Adelaide) expressed concern that the definition could also encompass those people in Australia demonstrating in support of a country or organisation against whom the ADF was engaged in conflict.

3.39 Concerns were also expressed about the definition of ‘enemy’ and the meaning of ‘armed hostilities’ in proposed paragraphs 80.1(1)(e) and (f). During the public hearings, Ms Dimity Fifer of the Victoria Council of Social Service (VCOSS) noted that the Explanatory Memorandum states that an ‘enemy’ may be a country or an organisation, and raised the question of who exactly was the enemy in the current conflict in Afghanistan – the people, or the suspected terrorist organisation. VCOSS called for ‘enemy’ to be defined.

3.40 The Hon Justice Dowd on behalf of the International Commission of Jurists suggested that paragraph (f) could have the effect of rendering guilty of treason any person involved in the Afghanistan civil war who fought against an Australian soldier. The NSW Council for Civil Liberties argued that it would have been ‘a simple matter’ for the government to proclaim the Taliban or Al-Qaeda to be an enemy under existing law, so as to make it clear that activity with them would be treason. By contrast, the Council said that the new provision in paragraph (f):

”Now makes it such that you could be convicted of treason for fighting the Australian Defence Forces whether you are aware that they are involved in the activities or not. Particularly in covert sorts of operations, you could find yourself fighting the ADF without knowing about it and in those circumstances be guilty of treason.”

3.41 In response to the concerns about the ambit of proposed subparagraph 80.1(1)(f), the Attorney-General’s Department acknowledged that the offence could apply in a circumstance that had begun as a civil war, but that: ”In practice the offence would only be used when an Australian or a person connected with Australia assisted a country or organisation engaged in armed hostilities against the ADF.”

3.42 Further concerns were expressed by Justice Dowd and Liberty Victoria about proposed subsection 80.1(3), which requires the Attorney-General’s consent before proceedings for treason can be brought. They argued that this provision could politicise the prosecution process.

3.43 On another point, the NSW Council for Civil Liberties also noted that while the Second Reading Speech referred to an intention to ‘modernise’ the law of treason: ”We still have the rather odd situation that killing the Duke of Edinburgh is an act of treason but conspiring to blow up the federal Cabinet or the federal parliament is not an act of treason.”

3.44 Justice Dowd on behalf of the International Commission of Jurists also drew the Committee’s attention to proposed paragraph 80.1(2)(b), which creates an offence that used to be called ‘misprision of felony’. The provision, which effectively restates in modified form the existing provision in the Crimes Act 1914, creates an offence if a person ‘knowing that another person intends to commit treason, does not inform a constable of it within a reasonable time or use other reasonable endeavours to prevent the commission of the offence’. The maximum penalty for such an offence is imprisonment for life. Justice Dowd observed that most countries and most Australian States have ‘moved away from misprision of felony’ and that it was often difficult to know whether someone was going to commit an act of treason or whether it was mere talk or rumour.

3.45 The Committee referred these concerns to the Attorney-General’s Department, who advised that misprision is recognised both in the USA and the United Kingdom, attracting severe penalties.

Committee conclusion

3.46 The Committee considers that there are serious problems arising from definitional issues in proposed subsection 80.1(1).

3.47 The Committee notes the concerns expressed by the Victorian Council of Social Service in relation to the definition of ‘enemy’ in proposed paragraph 80.1(1)(e), but considers that, since that paragraph merely restates the existing provision and requires an enemy to be specified by proclamation to be an enemy at war with the Commonwealth, this provision does not require amendment.

3.48 Nevertheless, the Committee considers that the breadth of terms such as ‘engaged in armed hostilities’ and the potential for humanitarian aid to be included as a treasonous activity require review.

3.49 The Committee notes that the courts must have regard to legislation as drafted. Where there are definitional gaps, or definitions so broad that there is potential for inappropriate interpretation, the legislation must be amended to ensure the courts have a clear view of what the legislation is intended to achieve. In the Committee’s view, it cannot be intended that the legislation includes the possibility – however remote – of an aid worker being convicted of treason.

3.50 Accordingly, the Committee recommends that the Attorney-General review the provisions in order to clarify their meaning, as set out in the following recommendation.

3.51 In relation to the concerns expressed about possible politicisation of the prosecution process because of the need for the Attorney-General’s consent for proceedings, the Committee notes that this provision merely restates the existing law. As the Commonwealth Director of Public Prosecutions (DPP) will still need to be satisfied that prosecution would be appropriate, the Committee considers that this extra requirement will act as an additional safeguard rather than displacing the DPP’s discretion.

3.52 In relation to NSW Council for Civil Liberties’ point about the failure of the proposed ‘modernised’ offence to include any reference to Australian democratic institutions or heads of state, the Committee urges the Attorney-General to consider whether further amendments should be made in the longer term.

Recommendation 1

The Committee recommends that proposed section 80.1 in the Bill be amended so that the terms ‘conduct that assists by any means whatever’ and ‘engaged in armed hostilities’ are defined, in order to ensure that the humanitarian activities of aid agencies are not caught within the ambit of the offence of treason.

***

The definition of terrorism

3.53 There is an acknowledged difficulty in defining terrorism at international law.

3.54 As noted in Chapter 2, proposed section 100.1 of the Security Bill defines a terrorist act as action or threat of action where:

* the action is done or the threat is made with the intention of advancing a political, religious or ideological cause; and

* the action:

– involves serious harm to a person;

– involves serious damage to property;

– endangers a person’s life (other than that of the person taking the action);

– creates a serious risk to the health or safety of the public or a section of the public; or

– seriously interferes with, seriously disrupts, or destroys, an electronic system, including an information, telecommunications or financial system, a system used to deliver essential government services, or a system used by an essential public utility or transport system.

3.55 The same definition is used in the other Bills under consideration.

Intent to intimidate or coerce

3.56 A submission from Professor David Kinley from the Castan Centre for Human Rights Law at Monash University argued: ”There is no mention of an intention to cause harm to persons or property, or to instil fear in the public and government. These should be a key element of any definition of terrorism.”

3.57 Professor Kinley told the Committee that the inclusion of this element would avoid some of the potential problems identified during the inquiry as to the breadth of the activities that could be caught: ”The notion of intention would provide an extra safeguard for those who would otherwise fall under the current scope [of terrorism] when their intention was never anything to do with terrorism but rather some sort of other consequential damage or criminal act.”

3.58 The submission listed examples of definitions of terrorism used elsewhere:

* ‘intended or calculated to provoke a state of terror’ (UN General Assembly);

* ‘calculated use of violence or the threat of violence to inculcate fear’ (USA);

* ‘intended to intimidate or coerce’ (USA); and

* ‘calculated to evoke extreme fear’ (a 1993 Australian counter-terrorist review).

3.59 The same point was made by other submissions. Some noted that the omission in the Bill of such an element differed from the definition outlined by the Attorney-General when he announced Cabinet’s agreement to the development of new terrorist offences in 2001.

3.60 The Committee notes that legislation in the United Kingdom , the USA and Canada and the proposed NZ legislation also include the element of intention to intimidate the population and/or coerce the government.

3.61 When questioned by the Committee about why the Security Bill does not include such an element, a representative from the Attorney-General’s Department explained: ”The argument for not including that extra limb in the definition is that, if a terrorist’s objective is pure destruction and their intent or agenda is merely to impair the functioning of the nation, to destroy its buildings, to kill people, but they have no broader purpose beyond that in terms of how people will react to that, as to whether people will be intimidated or as to whether government policy will be influenced, that can still be seen as terrorism. So that is the additional category of cases that is caught.”

3.62 The Department argued that inclusion of such an element ‘would potentially exclude an important category of cases where the objective is just pure destruction’. The Committee notes the Department’s explanation but is concerned about the width of the definition, as discussed further at paragraphs 3.75-3.78.

Specific concerns about the definition of terrorist action

3.63 Particular concerns about the width of the definition of the action required in proposed section 100.1 for a terrorist act to be committed included:

1. The width of ‘serious’ harm or ‘serious’ property damage.

The meaning of this term is potentially very broad. Witnesses argued that serious damage to property could include putting something on the wall of a building, damage by protesters to the walls or fences of embassies, immigration and other detention centres, or damage to logging trucks, chicken sheds or fishing nets. It was also argued that ‘harm’ should be restricted to physical harm, and that damage to property should be restricted to ‘destruction of property that threatens life or serious injury’. The Attorney-General’s Department when asked to respond on this matter commented only that ”A court would interpret “serious” in the context of this provision as meaning damage on a very substantial scale. It is very common for offences to include the word “serious” and for the court to interpret the term in the context of the relevant legislation.”

2. The use of the word ‘involving’, rather than causing, such serious harm or damage.

Victorian law lecturer Mr Joo-Cheong Tham argued that this phrase ‘significantly loosens the nexus’ between the person carrying out the act and the harm or damage that is caused, so that it is ‘seriously arguable’ that the definition would be satisfied where a person’s act results in a third party inflicting the harm or damage.

3. The width of ‘creating a serious risk to the health or safety of the public’, which could arguably include industrial action by police officers, nurses or other emergency services personnel resulting in reduced essential services.

4. The width of ‘serious interference’ or ‘serious disruption’ of electronic communications systems. It was argued that this could include flooding a system with emails as part of a protest; air traffic controllers taking industrial action; or the destruction of traffic lights.

The proposed exemptions

3.64 The definition of ‘terrorist act’ in proposed section 100.1 specifies that it does not include ”lawful advocacy, protest or dissent’; or ‘industrial action’.

3.65 These exemptions also attracted much criticism during the inquiry. Many submissions noted that unlawful acts, such as property damage, obstructing police, unlawful assembly and offensive behaviour, frequently occurred in the course of protests or industrial action. There was concern that what is intended to be industrial action could be labelled as political, and when any violence is involved it may mean that it ceases to be an industrial action.

3.66 Particular examples given in submissions and during public hearings included protests outside Parliament House resulting in damage to the building, or the recent protest at the detention centre in Woomera. For example, the Monash Student Association and Law Student Society noted that the unplanned dismantling of perimeter fencing by activists at Woomera could be construed as a ‘terrorist act’, since it could be described as serious damage to property and was done with the intention of advancing a political and ideological cause. Moreover, those who had acted in any organisational capacity, who had circulated information about the planned protest or who had been found in possession of items such as screwdrivers or bolt cutters, even though they had not used them, would potentially face penalties of life imprisonment.

When questioned by the Committee, the Attorney-General’s Department noted that while such acts might satisfy the definition of ‘serious’ damage to property, all the circumstances of the offence, including the specific purpose of the legislation in combating terrorism, would need to be considered.

3.67 Questions were also asked about whether acts of civil disobedience would be caught, and whether the word ‘lawful’ was confined to advocacy or extended to ‘protest and dissent’.

3.68 The Director-General of Security noted that the phrase ‘lawful advocacy, protest or dissent’ was a phrase used in the legislation governing ASIO’s functions and that it was ‘designed to limit, not expand’ the ambit of that legislation. In response to a question from the Committee, the Attorney-General’s Department noted that the Office of Parliamentary Counsel had confirmed that the word ‘lawful’ was intended to qualify each of the words ‘advocacy, protest and dissent’, rather than being confined to ‘advocacy’.

3.69 Both the Attorney-General’s Department and the AFP submitted that police and prosecuting authorities would not proceed against people with terrorism offences in such cases. AFP representatives referred to various safeguards in the process for charging and prosecuting offenders:

”In practice, police officers have a look at the offences that exist in legislation and then have to take additional steps, all of which involve safeguards – some of which are enshrined already in the criminal justice system and some of which are enshrined in policing practice. Once an officer forms a reasonable suspicion that an offence is being committed they have to exercise their discretion guided by the ultimate brief of evidence that will be scrutinised and adjudicated by the courts. They will also need to respect people’s civil liberties and rights while interacting with them face-to-face and with regard to whatever they may subsequently follow up with that person. Policing practice is governed formally and informally -formally, by our commissioner’s instructions and informally by being embedded within the police officer’s training and professional development in terms of exercising their discretion.”

3.70 The Attorney-General’s Department also argued that: ”Read literally and out of context, many statutes could be construed so as to create unintended consequences with the result that virtually all Australians would commit an offence every day … [A] court would read the counter-terrorism provisions as a whole in the context that they are provisions directed at terrorism, not minor instances of civil disorder.”

3.71 However, Justice Dowd on behalf of the International Commission of Jurists noted that the very existence of such offences created the potential for abuse:

”Once you give this power, you give the power to investigating policemen or policewomen to say, ‘I can charge you with this’. It makes it very easy when you have alternative Commonwealth and State offences to say, ‘We could charge you under the Terrorism Act,’ and it becomes much easier for you to plead guilty to a street offence or a minor property offence under a state law because you have that sanction. Do not lightly give law enforcement agencies powers because, although we have a very good record in Australia with law enforcement agencies, available powers can be abused.

3.72 Another key concern was the meaning of ‘industrial action’. Submissions noted that the term was not defined in the Bill and argued that the definition in the Workplace Relations Act 1996 would be considered highly influential in a court’s interpretation of the term. Mr Joo-Cheong Tham argued that as the Federal Court had found that ‘industrial action’ in the Workplace Relations Act 1996 excluded picketing, picketing might be excluded from the exemption in the Security Bill. The ACTU and Liberty Victoria expressed similar concerns.

3.73 However, representatives of the Attorney-General’s Department noted that the definition of industrial action in the Workplace Relations Act 1996 was limited in order to protect the rights of those involved in picketing, because a court could make an order prohibiting industrial action in certain circumstances. In the current Bill, the context was different, ‘and clearly industrial action is meant to have a more expansive meaning that would encompass actions like picketing’.

3.74 During the public hearing, AFP representatives also emphasised that police would not use the new provisions ‘for something that fell within the public order regime’:

”Picketing is clearly a tool of industrial action … It is to stop entry or egress from a work site or to stop access to materials coming in and out and so on. That is why people picket. When that sort of behaviour is apparent and it is causing disruption to people’s lawful movement around a city, police have access to a range of legislative powers to remove people who are picketing, to ensure that public access is available and so on. Those powers are available already to deal with that sort of activity.”

Committee conclusion

3.75 The Committee notes the significant concern expressed about the width of the definition of ‘terrorist act’ in proposed section 100.1.

3.76 The Committee considers that there is no compelling reason why Australian legislation should reach further than legislation enacted in the United Kingdom, the USA or Canada, or as proposed in New Zealand. The United Kingdom and the USA have experienced significantly higher levels of terrorist threat and, indeed, acts of terrorism than Australia has faced or is considered to be facing. While the Committee acknowledges the difficulties that have been experienced internationally in defining terrorism, all the definitions that have been drawn to the Committee’s attention during this inquiry contain some element of intent to cause extreme fear to the public and/or coerce the government. The Committee considers that this element is at the very heart of the nature of terrorism.

3.77 The Committee is also mindful of the concerns about the potential width of other elements of the definition, in particular ‘serious damage’ and ‘serious harm’, and interference with electronic systems, as well as the lack of clarity in the proposed exemptions for ‘lawful advocacy, protest or dissent’ and ‘industrial action’. The Committee considers that the inclusion of the necessary element of intimidation/coercion in the definition of ‘terrorist act’ would go a long way towards addressing the concerns it has heard that terrorist offences might otherwise be broad enough to capture those people who cause damage or commit other less serious offences as a consequence of protest, civil disobedience or industrial action.

3.78 Accordingly the Committee considers that the definition of ‘terrorist act’ should include reference to a design to influence government by undue intimidation or undue coercion, or to intimidate the public. The Committee notes that it is not clear that the term ‘government’ would necessarily include all elements of Australia’s system of government, including non-government members of Parliament, State and Territory governments and the judiciary. The Committee notes, for example, that the equivalent definition in the Canadian legislation refers to individuals, government and domestic and international organisations. The term ‘government’ should be clarified in any proposed amendments to the Bill.

Recommendation 2: The Committee recommends that the definition of ‘terrorist act’ in proposed section 100.1 in the Bill be amended to include a third element, namely that the action or threat of action is designed to influence government by undue intimidation or undue coercion, or to unduly intimidate the public or a section of the public.

***

The new terrorist offences

3.79 The new offences, all of which are punishable by imprisonment for life, are:

* engaging in a terrorist act (proposed section 101.1);

* providing or receiving training for a terrorist act (proposed section 101.2);

* directing organisations concerned with a terrorist act (proposed section 101.3);

* possessing things connected with a terrorist act (proposed section 101.4);

* collecting documents likely to facilitate a terrorist act (proposed section 101.5); and

* acts in preparation for a terrorist act (proposed section 101.6).

3.80 Apart from the offence in proposed section 101.1 (engaging in a terrorist act), there is no need for a terrorist act to have actually been committed.

Absolute liability

3.81 In addition, the offences of providing or receiving training (proposed section 101.2), possessing things (proposed section 101.4) and collecting or making documents likely to facilitate terrorist acts (proposed section 101.5) contain an element of absolute liability. That means that the prosecution need not prove that the person knew or intended that the training, thing or document was connected with a terrorist act, and the defence of honest and reasonable mistake of fact is not available. The legislation contains, however, a limited defence that applies where the person can prove that he or she was not reckless with respect to the connection with a terrorist act.

3.82 The imposition of absolute liability in respect of certain elements of the offences caused significant concern in submissions and during the public hearings, particularly in light of the high penalties and the fact that no terrorist act need be committed for the offences in proposed sections 101.2, 101.4 and 101.5. Many submissions noted that absolute and strict liability offences have traditionally been limited to relatively minor or regulatory offences, such as parking or traffic offences.

Justice Dowd on behalf of the International Commission of Jurists noted: ”We in Australia have a system of law which obliges the prosecution, in almost all offences and in all serious offences, to prove all the elements of the offence and to negative self-defence and other defences. This [Bill] obliges the person to go into evidence That is not reasonable here, no matter how much we may be concerned with terrorist acts.”

3.83 The Scrutiny of Bills (Senate) Committee also drew attention to these provisions on the grounds that they may be considered to trespass unduly on personal rights and liberties.

3.84 The Law Council of Australia noted: ”Reversed onuses are potentially very oppressive, particularly where it is difficult to grasp what an ordinary person should do in the relevant circumstances in order to exhibit sufficient care to avoid imprisonment for life.

3.85 Several organisations such as Amnesty International and the Human Rights Council argued that such provisions violate article 14(2) of the ICCPR and article 11 of the Universal Declaration on Human Rights, which provide that everyone charged with a criminal offence has a right to be presumed innocent until proved guilty.

3.86 The Association of Criminal Defence Lawyers also noted that the proposed offences in the Criminal Code Amendment (Suppression of Terrorist Bombings) Bill 2002 require proof of intent to cause death or serious harm or extensive destruction to a place. Consequently two different standards of proof could apply to the same activity, depending on which Act was used.

3.87 In relation to the proposed training offence, ACTU representative Mr Robert Durbridge told the Committee that the absolute liability element and the defence of recklessness were inappropriate. He gave as an example TAFE teachers who instruct mining personnel in the use of explosives:

”How do they know that any of the people that they have trained will use that knowledge in ways other than intended? They could be completely unaware that a trainee later intended to use that knowledge at some time in the future to blow up something in Australia or somewhere else in the world. They would have to prove that they were not reckless in not knowing that the training could be used or was being undertaken with a terrorist act in mind – or later formed – to avoid conviction and imprisonment for life How do you show that you were not reckless in the provision of training? TAFE colleges do not conduct security checks on their students.”

3.88 Similarly, the New South Wales Bar Association argued that in relation to providing training at a rifle range: ”There should be a requirement of some degree of actual knowledge of circumstances indicating connection with a terrorist act before otherwise lawful and innocent training is so seriously criminalised.”

3.89 In response, the Attorney-General’s Department stated that the question of whether the person providing training was reckless would be determined with regard to the facts known at the time he or she conducted the training. The Department asserted that it would not be necessary for the person to make inquiries or obtain additional information to confirm the students’ bona fides.

3.90 The Committee heard similar arguments that the offence in proposed section 101.4 of possessing a ‘thing’ (not defined in the Bill) that was connected with preparation for or assistance in a terrorist act was unacceptably broad. Mr Joo-Cheong Tham argued that this provision would unduly impact on businesses that sold items that could be used for terrorist acts. It would effectively require businesses to determine customers’ use of the items sold if they were to avail themselves of the defence that they were not reckless.

3.91 Similar arguments were also heard in relation to proposed section 101.5 which concerns collecting or making a ‘document’ connected with preparation for or assistance in a terrorist act. Oz Netlaw, the Internet law practice of the Communications Law Centre at the University of New South Wales, argued that the offence could apply to journalists and news organisations who receive information in the course of their investigations, or to people who merely download information from a website. The submission also argued that it was the use or disclosure of the documents, rather than their collection, that should attract fault, and that the onus of proof should in any case remain with the prosecution.

3.92 In relation to this concern, the Law Council of Australia told the Committee:

”The absence of any requirement of some degree of actual knowledge of circumstances indicating connection with a terrorist act, or of an intention to assist in an act of terrorism is surely a most objectionable aspect of the proposed treatment of terrorist acts. Thus, s.101.4 would criminalise the possession of things connected with preparation for, the engagement of a person in, or assistance in a terrorist act, such as objects and documents, by persons such as scholars, researchers and journalists who have no intention of assisting in a terrorist act and whose scholarship, research of journalism may in fact be in opposition to or intended to expose terrorist acts. The defence in s.101.4(4) would not save such scholars, researchers or journalists because that defence would apply only where such persons could prove on the balance of probabilities that they were not reckless with respect to the thing’s connection with a terrorist act. Such persons would, notwithstanding the absence of any intention to assist in a terrorist act, be guilty of an offence and, potentially, liable to life imprisonment.”

3.93 However, the Attorney-General’s Department pointed to the dangers of defining terrorist activity too narrowly:

”It is difficult to conceive of the exact nature of a terrorist attack before it has been completed. The unprecedented attacks of September 11 clearly demonstrated this. It is even more difficult to create a legislative scheme that effectively addresses the problem of terrorism and terrorist networks. If legislation is worded too narrowly, activity that is clearly terrorist in nature may be immune to prosecution and, worse, still, may not be affected by the measures aimed at preventing it.”

3.94 While acknowledging that the provisions ‘depart from general practices’, the Attorney-General’s Department noted two examples of serious Commonwealth offences which contain elements of strict or absolute liability. They are the offence of murder of United Nations or associated personnel and the child sex tourism offence.

The Department concluded: ”All Government action requires a balance to be achieved between different interests. In this case, the balance is between the need to safeguard the security of all Australians, and the need to preserve individual liberty. The evil at which the proposed legislation is aimed justifies the balance that has been achieved.”

3.95 However, Justice Evatt told the Committee that the proposed offences were not sufficiently precise to satisfy fundamental criminal law principles:

”Being put in fear of prosecution will lead to many organisations and individuals not knowing whether they have committed an offence [P]art of the rule of law [in a just society] is that people should know with certainty whether their acts are likely or not likely to be criminal. I defy anybody to know, if this bill were enacted, whether certain actions would be or would not be seen by the security forces or the Attorney-General as contrary to law. It will never be known whether they are contrary to law until it has been through the courts. It is very risky stuff, this.”

Committee conclusion

3.96 The Committee considers that the significant concerns expressed in many submissions and during public hearings about the very broad nature of the proposed terrorist offences and the reversal of the onus of proof for the ‘ancillary offences’ connected with terrorist acts must be addressed.

3.97 The concerns are even more pressing given the proposed maximum penalties of life imprisonment. In Australia’s system of law, it is not the practice to create strict or absolute liability offences for other than regulatory or minor offences. Such a departure from fundamental principles of criminal law needs to be justified. While the Committee acknowledges that the nature of terrorist offences is very serious and that the safety and interests of the Australian population must be protected, the rights and liberties of individuals, including those charged with criminal offences, must also be safeguarded. The fact that the offences are very broadly defined and could potentially cover a wide range of activities and items make this even more compelling.

3.98 The Committee notes advice from the Attorney-General’s Department that the approach in the Security Bill is consistent with that in the United Kingdom Terrorism Act 2000. However, the Committee also notes that the UK legislation contains a narrower definition of ‘terrorist act’, as outlined in paragraph 3.60 above. In addition, the Committee notes that legislation in both the USA and Canada requires intention that the act causes serious harm or other serious consequences, rather than the looser connection of ‘involving’ serious harm that the Security Bill requires (discussed in paragraph 3.63 above). Thus a more onerous burden of proof would appear to be required in those jurisdictions than will apply under the current provisions.

3.99 The Committee considers that the fact that the Scrutiny of Bills Committee drew attention to the danger that these provisions could be considered to trespass unduly on personal rights and liberties emphasises the seriousness of this issue. The Committee notes also that intent to cause death or serious harm or extensive destruction to a place must be proven in the proposed offences in the Criminal Code Amendment (Suppression of Terrorist Bombings) Bill 2002 (discussed further in Chapter 4). Consequently the burden of proof which the prosecution must discharge would differ markedly if a person were charged with the same offence under the two different sets of provisions.

3.100 Accordingly the Committee concludes that the Bill should be amended to remove the absolute liability elements in proposed sections 101.2(2), 101.4(2) and 101.5(2). The Committee notes that there may be concerns raised by law enforcement agencies about the difficulty of proving that a defendant who was peripherally involved in preparation for or the commission of a terrorist act intended that this should be the result. To address those concerns, the Committee considers that recklessness as to that result should suffice, but that the onus of proof should remain with the prosecution. The Bill should provide that the offences are committed if the person knew or was reckless as to the required element in 101.2(1)(b), 101.4(1)(b) and 101.5(1)

Recommendation 3

The Committee recommends that:

(i) the Bill be amended to remove proposed subsections 101.2(2), 101.4(2) and 101.5(2), which impose absolute liability in respect of certain elements of those offences; and

(ii) the offences in proposed subsections 101.2(1), 101.4(1) and 101.5(1) be amended to provide that they are committed if the person knew or was reckless as to the required element in 101.2(1)(b), 101.4(1)(b) and 101.5(1).

The Attorney-General’s proposed proscription power

3.101 The provisions of the Bill dealing with the Attorney-General’s proposed proscription powers raised the most concern in submissions and during public hearings. The overwhelming view was that the provisions as currently drafted are inappropriate and should be rejected. The Committee recognises that the proposal to proscribe organisations is a very serious one and has considered the circumstances and elements of the process in detail.

3.102 The remainder of this chapter discusses:

* the provisions;

* constitutional issues;

* the grounds for proscription;

* the delegation of power;

* revocation procedures;

* review procedures;

* alternatives to the current model; and

* the Committee’s conclusion.

The provisions

3.103 Proposed section 102.2 allows the Attorney-General to declare an organisation to be a proscribed organisation if he or she is satisfied on reasonable grounds that:

* the organisation, or a member of the organisation, has committed or is committing a terrorism offence, whether or not the organisation or member has been charged with, or convicted of, the offence;

* the declaration is reasonably appropriate to give effect to a decision of the UN Security Council that the organisation is an international terrorist organisation; or

*the organisation has endangered or is likely to endanger the security or integrity of the Commonwealth or another country.

3.104 A submission from the Law Council of Australia typified the concerns of many organisations and individuals in outlining its reasons for opposing the proposed proscription powers.

The Council called the provisions: ”A serious departure from the principle of proportionality, unnecessary in a democratic society, subject to arbitrary application, and contrary to a raft of international human rights standards including the right to personal liberty, the right to a fair trial, protection against arbitrary interference with privacy, freedom of expression, freedom of association and rights of participation. Important principles of the rule of law are infringed, including the need for effective judicial remedies when a person breaches the law, and the requirement that criminal offences for which liberty can be deprived after conviction, be clearly defined so that citizens can know permissible limits of activity.”

3.105 Mr Cameron Murphy, President of the NSW Council for Civil Liberties, argued: ”It allows the government to outlaw virtually any group – any church, any political party or any human rights activist … It destroys the fundamental principles of our democracy in order to suppress and prevent terrorism. Many people around the world who were once labelled as terrorists are now regarded as international leaders or even statesmen. People such as Gandhi and Nelson Mandela have been labelled as terrorists in the past. Hindsight shows us that these people are not terrorists but freedom fighters. Even today, Aung San Suu Kyi, Xanana Gusmao, or the Falun Gong movement – who have groups in Australia that support and assist them – could be regarded as terrorists under this legislation.”

”There is a belief that this power is safe because none of us would use it to outlaw the Catholic Church or the Australian Labor Party or some other group that might not be supporting the government of the day. But none of us can predict who will be in power or when this legislation will be used, and that is the danger of putting this sort of legislation on the statute books.”

3.106 Dr Jenny Hocking emphasised similar concerns, arguing that: ”[T]here can be no adequate safeguards [against] the dangers raised [by] the workings of such a Bill, for the danger is the Bill itself. It is subversive of the rule of law in its failure to allow for a trial in this aspect, it breaches the notion of equality before the law in its creation of groups for which the usual judicial process does not apply and it breaches absolutely the separation of powers in even allowing for such a use of Executive power.”

Constitutional issues

3.107 Professor Williams raised the ‘disturbing similarity’ between the Security Bill and the Communist Party legislation that the High Court found invalid in the 1950s.

3.108 The Communist Party Dissolution Act 1950 granted the Governor-General an unfettered and unreviewable power to declare an organisation to be unlawful or a person to be a communist, relying on the defence power. By a 6:1 margin the High Court found the Act constitutionally invalid, holding that it was beyond the Parliament’s power to suppress an organisation under its defence power on the opinion of the Governor-General in a time of relative peace.

3.109 Professor Williams argued that the Security Bill might similarly be struck down by the High Court if passed in its current form. While the Bill contains some provision for review of the Attorney-General’s decisions, he noted that, while the High Court has not yet determined a case on an implied freedom of association, it was ‘clearly arguable’ that the High Court would find such a freedom and that the proscription power might infringe that freedom. He noted that the Security Bill ”is different in some critical respects, but still there are definite constitutional issues there.”

”But, apart from those constitutional issues, you would have to say we ought to have learnt our lesson from that legislation: do not vest powers of this kind in the executive and do not vest powers of this kind where there is not adequate review. As the High Court itself reflected in that case, the dangers to our civil liberties do not just extend from at that point communism or at this point terrorism; they extend from the fact that we might unbalance our democracy by giving too much power to any arm of government. ”

The grounds for proscription

3.110 Several submissions and witnesses to the inquiry, including the NSW Council for Civil Liberties, noted with concern that it is sufficient for a member to state that he or she is acting on behalf of the organisation, for the organisation to be proscribed, and that more extreme or ‘fringe’ members would therefore pose a real danger to organisations. Others argued that as criminal acts were committed by individuals, those individuals should be punished under existing criminal laws, rather than enacting laws to allow organisations to be banned.

3.111 A particular concern was the width of the power in relation to a threat to ‘security and integrity’ of Australian or any other country. The meaning of ‘integrity’ was queried, given that the term is not defined in the Bill. For example, Professor Williams told the Committee, ”integrity’ has no fixed meaning that is clearly understood in the popular or legal community”.

”We have searched through cases to find out what ‘integrity’ might mean and we have found nothing which would suggest a clear meaning of that word. This means we have a word which is malleable in the sense that an Attorney can use it to mean what he wants it to mean, and there is nothing in the law or otherwise that might be used to suggest otherwise. It is a word that clearly on the current meaning – an unbounded, open meaning – would extend to organisations such as freedom fighters using violence and whether or not they should be proscribed, and also to organisations that might seek to challenge the territorial integrity of nations by peaceful means, organisations such as those supporting independence for Tibet or organisations perhaps supporting independence for East Timor in prior periods. This legislation, in extending to those organisations, is clearly far too broad. Australians do not regard those organisations as terrorist organisations. Those organisations ought not to be within the ambit of this power, and it is disturbing to see how broad it might go.”

3.112 The ACTU argued that if such a provision had been law in the past in Australia, membership of organisations that supported the East Timor independence movement or the anti-apartheid movement in South Africa could have been caught. Similarly, the New South Wales Bar Association stated that the power could apply to ”(p)eople banding together, raising money, publishing arguments, encouraging otherwise lawful protests, to secure the downfall of a tyranny elsewhere”.

3.113 Ms Eva Cox pointed to the difficulties international aid organisations might face, querying what would have happened if the proposed laws had been in place when Care Australia workers in the former Yugoslavia were imprisoned some years ago:

”What would have happened if the Yugoslav government had requested that the Australian government declare Care a terrorist organisation on the grounds that they had arrested some members of Care who had come to their country’s notice for what they deemed to be terrorist-type activities? It sets Australia up in a very difficult position.”

3.114 Ms Cox also argued that groups in Australia ‘which are probably perfectly innocent but noisy’, could be deemed by certain countries to be against the government and as threats to their security and integrity. She gave as an example the YWCA whose projects supported women in other countries in relation to such issues as genital mutilation. She expressed concern that such projects might be closed down because of the organisation’s fear of being seen to be opposing a particular government or undermining the security of the country in some way, thus leaving the organisation or its staff vulnerable.

3.115 During public hearings, the Attorney-General’s Department told the Committee that the phrase ‘integrity of the Commonwealth’ was used in various international conventions, and would be interpreted as meaning ‘territorial integrity’ of the Commonwealth. However, there is no reference to this in the Explanatory Memorandum. The Committee raised with the Department the concerns expressed by witnesses and in submissions about support by Australians for pro-independence or other similar movements in other countries, but was not persuaded by the Department’s response. The Committee considers that any review of the proscription provisions must ensure that such organisations would not be caught by the provisions.

3.116 Professor Williams opposed making a decision by the UN Security Council sufficient grounds for proscription: ”You are setting up quite severe penalties based not upon ascertainable or knowable criteria but upon a decision of that council that might have been made that day or the day before. It is very hard for anyone to take account of what that council might do. When you think of current conflicts in the Middle East and other issues which can change so rapidly-today’s freedom fighter can be tomorrow’s terrorist-that is quite dangerous in this context.”

3.117 Professor Williams argued that organisations should only be targeted ”because of their relationship to clear, identified criteria that target terrorist acts”.

”So, if an organisation bombs or does something else, that is why you target them; you do not do so because of some other more convoluted process. In a sense, what you have here is that you become proscribed because of a political decision made by the United Nations.”

Delegation of power

3.118 Justice Dowd on behalf of the International Commission of Jurists raised concern about the fact that the Attorney-General’s power could be delegated to any minister (proposed section 102.2(4) and 102.3(5)). He argued: ”The most junior minister in the government may in fact be the person with a power to delegate to deal with proscribed organisations … That power should be subject to review, not just disallowance by a parliamentary committee controlled by the government. It should be reviewable as a matter of law by the courts.”

3.119 Similar concerns about the delegation of the Attorney-General’s power were expressed by the Australian Catholic Social Justice Council.

Revocation

3.120 Amnesty International raised concern that the Bill does not spell out procedures for having a proscription revoked, and stated: ”The legislation should make provision for the organisation to apply directly to the Attorney-General to have their status reviewed. Further the legislation should allow the proscribed organisation to make representations as to their status during a review process – a failure to provide this may breach the principles of natural justice.”

3.121 The Committee notes that the UK legislation includes specific provisions providing for an application by a proscribed organisation or any person affected by the proscription to the Secretary of State, and establishes a Proscribed Organisations Appeal Commission to hear appeals against a refusal to deproscribe an organisation.

3.122 Amnesty International and Liberty Victoria also argued that compensation should be available where an organisation is wrongly proscribed and suffers consequent damage, on the basis that such provision is consistent with the principles of natural justice.

The new proscription offences

3.123 Many submissions expressed concern about the width of the new offences connected with the activities of proscribed organisations. Those concerns are discussed below.

The new offences

3.124 A wide range of new offences connected with the activities of proscribed organisations is created under proposed section 102.4:

– directing the activities of the organisation;

– directly or indirectly receiving funds from or making funds available to the organisation;

– being a member of the organisation;

– providing training to or training with the organisation; or

– assisting the organisation.

3.125 The offences are punishable by imprisonment for a maximum of 25 years.

3.126 Strict liability applies to the element of the offence that the organisation is a proscribed organisation (proposed subsection 102.4(2)). In other words, the prosecution need not show that the defendant knew or was reckless as to the fact that the organisation was proscribed. Instead, the defendant must prove that he or she did not know and was not reckless as to whether:

– the organisation or one of its members was committing a terrorist offence;

– the UN Security Council had decided that the organisation was a terrorist organisation and that decision was in force; or

– the organisation had endangered, or was likely to endanger, the security or integrity of Australia or any country (proposed subsection 102.4(3)).

3.127 Strict liability offences differ from absolute liability offences in that the defence of honest and reasonable mistake of fact is available for strict liability offences but is not available for absolute liability offences.

3.128 It is an additional defence to a prosecution for membership if the defendant proves that he or she took all reasonable steps to cease to be a member ‘as soon as practicable’ after the organisation was proscribed (proposed subsection 102.4(4)).

3.129 The Attorney-General explained during the Second Reading Speech that: ”Placing the onus on the defendant is justified by the need for strong measures to combat organisations of this kind, and the fact that a declaration that an organisation is a proscribed organisation will not be made lightly.”

Membership and ‘informal’ membership

3.130 A member of an organisation is defined to mean a person who is an ‘informal member’; a person who has ‘taken steps to become a member’; and a director or officer of the body corporate (proposed section 102.1). ‘Informal member’ is not further defined.

3.131 Several submissions and witnesses referred to concerns about the width of this definition, particularly in light of the strict liability that applies to the element that an organisation is proscribed. Ms Eva Coxnoted: ”You can be declared a member of an organisation where you have done no more than having been rung up and then making a donation, and your name then appears on some list somewhere, particularly these days when you seem to get onto email lists with incredible ease. Given the fact that one could easily offer donations or -as someone said earlier – you have gone to a concert in support of Palestinian refugees or to a fundraiser for some particular group, you may well find that you are suddenly part of a proscribed organisation.”

3.132 The Law Council of Australia noted that the provisions ‘would potentially render persons only remotely connected with an organisation’ liable to imprisonment for up to 25 years, and that ”the more remote a person is from a proscribed organisation and its activities, the more difficult it will be to discharge the onus of disproving recklessness”.

3.133 Dr Hocking asked on what basis it would be alleged that a person was an informal member and who would make this claim: ”The Communist Party Dissolution Act notion of affiliation included people who ‘shared policy concerns’ with that proscribed organisation, who attended meetings or who are claimed by others ‘to have been associated with’. So, clearly it seems to me, it is one of the areas where both an open-ended aspect comes into the bill and where an element of arbitrary decision making can come in through the proscription power.”

3.134 However, the Attorney-General’s Department explained that the rationale for the definition was to ensure that a person could not evade liability by a technical argument about their lack of formal membership status and to ensure the provisions could not be avoided by a terrorist group that avoids a formal membership structure.

3.135 On another point, Justice Dowd criticised as ‘absurd’ the defence in proposed subsection 102.4(4): ”All the defendant has to do is prove that he got out as soon as he knew. So if there is a bomb and the person leaves the organisation after the bombing – files his resignation the next day – he does not commit an offence, which is absurd.”

‘Assisting’ a proscribed organisation

3.136 The width of this term also attracted criticism. Mr Joo-Cheong Tham pointed out that this could include those who provide legal advice and representation to organisations that have been proscribed and seek to challenge that proscription. In response, representatives from the Attorney-General’s Department noted that because the intention was clear that a declaration of proscription could be subject to judicial review, there would be a ‘good argument’ that the provision could not have been intended to include legal advice and representation.

3.137 The Committee also asked the Attorney-General’s Department why the offence could not be limited to the more specific definition adopted in the USA legislation, namely, providing ‘material support or resources’. The Department responded that the US definition, which lists specific examples such as the provision of financial services, expert advice, safehouses, false documentation or identification, transport and personnel, ‘creates a risk that some types of support may not be covered’.

Review of the Attorney-General’s decision

3.138 The Explanatory Memorandum states that the lawfulness of the Attorney-General’s decision making process and reasoning is subject to review under the Administrative Decisions (Judicial Review) Act 1977 (the ADJR Act), although there is no mention of this in the Bill.

3.139 Many submissions criticised the adequacy of such a review on several grounds.

First, such a review is not a review of the merits of the decision.

Second, review under the ADJR Act is only available on narrow grounds. Section 5 of the ADJR Act provides that a person who is aggrieved by a decision may apply for an order for review in respect of nominated grounds, including: that a breach of the rules of natural justice occurred; that procedures required by law to be observed were not observed; that the decision was not authorised by the relevant legislation; that the making of the decision was an improper exercise of power; that the decision involved an error of law or was induced or affected by fraud; or that there was no evidence to justify the making of the decision.

Third, it was queried how meaningful a review could be where the basis for the Attorney-General’s decision was national security considerations or highly political matters, as courts have traditionally been reluctant to review such matters.

3.140 During public hearings Professor Williams told the Committee: ”Where a decision is made where reasons do not need to be given, where someone can be proscribed under any one of four criteria, the onus resting upon the organisation to disprove that the decision was properly made is too high a burden. It is very hard to ever marshal evidence to show that there were not adequate national security grounds for making such a decision. It is stacked against the organisation and against the courts in such a way that there is unlikely to be adequate review.

”Even if you overcome the national security problem, even if you overcome the evidence problem, there is simply no scope under the Administrative Decisions (Judicial Review) Act for any review of the merits of the decision. There are very narrow, well-tailored grounds for review that relate to the legalities of the decision but they do not relate to the merits of the decision. So, indeed, the Attorney could make a decision that might be wrong on the merits but there will not be any review of that.

”I think what that means is that, where we have a decision where the power is vested solely in a member of the executive, without any meaningful possibility of review, we simply cannot rely upon retrospective judicial review to cure this decision making process of its obvious problems. Not only would it take a lot of time but the likelihood is that an organisation would be damned by the process by the time the courts could look at it.”

3.141 Professor Williams also argued that a ‘serious limitation’ in the scope of the proposed review was that: ”Even though it is possible to ask whether the Act itself is constitutionally valid by applying a proportionality text, no such test would be applicable in reviewing decisions actually made under the Act. In other words, it could not be argued that a decision was wrongly made because it was not ‘reasonably appropriate and adapted’ to the relevant purpose or object.”

3.142 Submissions from Professor Kinley and the Law Council of Australia supported those concerns.

Alternatives to the current model

3.143 During the inquiry, various alternatives to the proscription provisions were suggested. They were:

– determination by the courts, possibly by use of the existing unlawful association provisions in the Crimes Act 1914;

– review of the merits of the Attorney-General’s decision by the courts; or

– parliamentary involvement, either by disallowance of the Attorney-General’s declarations or by determining proscription itself.

Determination by the courts

3.144 Professor Williams suggested that a preferable approach would be determination by the courts of whether an organisation should be proscribed, because of his belief that no form of subsequent judicial review could ever be effective in this context:

”Any form of independent involvement must be at the decision making stage because, once an Attorney makes a decision on national security or other grounds, a court simply is not well equipped to review such a decision, even if you gave it the power to do so on the merits. That means that, if you want a power to proscribe organisations, ideally it would work in such a way that the decision would be made only by an independent and open tribunal-or perhaps in camera, in very limited circumstances. It would be a tribunal that might be required to exercise a decision at extremely short notice, and courts have often proved able to do that.”

3.145 The Association of Criminal Defence Lawyers also supported a full court hearing to determine proscription, giving affected parties the opportunity to be heard.

3.146 A precedent for declaration of proscription of ‘unlawful organisations’ by the courts currently exists under Part IIA of the Crimes Act 1914. Those provisions apply to bodies which advocate the overthrow of the Commonwealth Constitution or the government of any country, or the destruction of Commonwealth property, or the carrying out of a seditious intention.

3.147 The provisions specify that:

– the Attorney-General must apply to the Federal Court for an order to show cause why the organisation should not be declared to be an unlawful association;

– any officer or member of the body may appear on behalf of the body;

– if the court is not satisfied of cause to the contrary, it may declare the body to be an unlawful association; and

– any interested person may apply to the Federal Court within 14 days to have the order set aside, with such application to be heard by the Full Court.

3.148 Some witnesses queried why the existing provisions, which at least provide for judicial determination, could not be used. For example, Professor Williams told the Committee that he supported this model on the basis that there would be ‘community confidence in the process’ and issues concerning the separation of powers would be avoided.

3.149 The Attorney-General’s Department commented that as far as they were aware, there had been no prosecutions under the unlawful association provisions. The Department also noted that the maximum penalties for the relevant offences under Part IIA, ranging from six months to two years, were ‘clearly insufficient’ for acts of terrorism.

Merits of the decision reviewable by the courts

3.150 Another option suggested by Amnesty International was that proscribed organisations should be entitled to appeal against a proscription decision and to have an external review of the merits of the Attorney-General’s decision.

Parliamentary involvement

3.151 A further option that was explored at public hearings was the option of parliamentary review of Attorney-General’s decision through disallowance.

3.152 The Committee notes that the Scrutiny of Bills Committee drew attention to the exercise of the proscription powers as ‘being more of a legislative function than an administrative one’ and queried why the function should not be subject to Parliamentary scrutiny.

3.153 Justice Dowd went even further in arguing that proscription of an organisation should be a decision by Parliament: ”Let the parliament go over the whole issue and say why or why not. Let the people’s parliament decide and not, in effect, an official in the Attorney-General’s Department with the approval of the Attorney-General.

”Remember: governments are very quick to come to Australia to get their enemies in their own countries proscribed Those things will happen very quickly and are going to be very difficult with the comity between nations.”

3.154 A final alternative was to have a sunset clause on proscription of any organisation. Ms Eva Cox suggested that proscription should have an initial period of 30 days and the proscription should then be reviewed.

Committee conclusion

3.155 The Attorney-General’s proposed proscription power in the Security Bill was clearly one of the most significant issues of concern during this inquiry and aroused the most vehement opposition.

3.156 The Committee is particularly mindful of the history of proscription in Australia. Based on the submissions made to and the evidence received by the Committee, the Committee believes that the proposed provisions are not acceptable to a large proportion of the Australian community and contain significant omissions. In particular:

– the broad discretion given to a member of the Executive to proscribe organisations is inappropriate, particularly by reference to a perceived threat to the ‘integrity’ of any country and in light of the fact that this power may be delegated by the Attorney-General to any other minister;

– the decisions on proscription are effectively unreviewable, because of the limited scope of the available review under the ADJR Act and the traditional reluctance of the courts to examine issues relating to national security;

– although the Bill provides for revocation, it contains no procedures under which a proscribed organisation may apply for consideration of that option; and

– the proposed offences in relation to proscribed organisations are excessively broad, particularly in relation to the offence of ‘assisting’ such an organisation and in light of the strict liability element.

3.157 During the inquiry, while many submissions opposed the proscription powers completely, the Committee heard various suggestions as to how the provisions might be improved if some means of declaring organisations to be ‘terrorist’ were to be included in the legislation. These suggestions included allowing the courts to conduct a review of the merits of the Attorney-General’s decision; making use of the existing unlawful association provisions under the Crimes Act 1914; and giving the Parliament power to decide these matters or at the very least to disallow the Attorney-General’s declarations.

3.158 The Committee recommends that the proscription provisions in proposed Division 102 should not be enacted. The Committee urges the Attorney-General to reconsider the proposed proscription powers and to develop a procedure which:

– does not vest a broad and effectively unreviewable discretion in a member of the Executive;

restricts the ground under which an organisation may be proscribed if it has endangered or is likely to endanger the ‘security or integrity’ of the Commonwealth or any country, by defining ‘integrity’ as meaning ‘territorial integrity’;

– provides detailed procedures for revocation, including giving the right of a proscribed organisation to apply for review of that decision;

– more narrowly defines the proposed offences in relation to proscribed organisations, particularly in relation to the offence of ‘assisting’ such an organisation and the broad notion of ‘membership’; and

– does not create offences with elements of strict liability, given the very high proposed penalties.

Recommendation 4

The Committee recommends:

(i) that proposed Division 102 in the Bill in relation to the proscription of organisations with a terrorist connection not be agreed to; and

(ii) that the Attorney-General review the proscription provisions with a view to developing a statutory procedure which:

– does not vest a broad and effectively unreviewable discretion in a member of the Executive;

restricts the proposed ground under which an organisation may be proscribed if it has endangered or is likely to endanger the ‘security or integrity’ of the Commonwealth or any country, by defining ‘integrity’ as meaning ‘territorial integrity’;

– provides detailed procedures for revocation, including giving a proscribed organisation the right to apply for review of that decision;

– provides for adequate judicial review of the grounds for declarations of proscription;

– more appropriately identifies and defines the proposed offences in relation to proscribed organisations, particularly in relation to the offence of ‘assisting’ such an organisation; and

– does not create offences with elements of strict liability, given the very high proposed penalties.

The Third Way: Window dressing for capitulation

Last year Webdiarist extraordinaire and new Doctor of Philosophy Tim Dunlop stirred up a hornet’s nest with an epic piece on dairy deregulation. This year, as Webdiarists fire up on the future, if any, of the Left, Tim has written a tome trashing Mark Latham’s Third Way, now in vogue within the Labor Party. To end, a postscript on Latham’s ‘let’s all be shareholders’ idea by Ivana Bottini.

THE THIRD WAY: OUR MORAL DUTY TO ‘FREE MARKETS’

By Tim Dunlop

Introduction and scene-setting

There’s an old joke that goes, why is golf called golf? Answer: because fuck was already taken. That’s pretty much how I feel about the third way. There’s also that Turkish proverb that says: When the axe came into the forest all the trees said, ‘at least the handle is one of us.’ That comes even closer. But given that the left in Australia is hardly overflowing with presence, new ideas or influence at the moment, it is worth our while at least considering the third way. Given also that it is the pet project of an almost certain future Labor leader – Mark Latham – it warrants our particular attention. So where do we start?

It was George Orwell who suggested that saints should be judged guilty until proven innocent, and outside of a criminal trial, it is probably a presumption that should be applied to every intellectual endeavour. So I begin an examination of the third way from the same point of view: guilty until proved innocent.

Of course, to its advocates, this approach will reek of defeatism and the very sort of small-mindedness their new grand scheme is meant to confront. Well, bad luck. If I’m going to be expected to live under the dictates of any system that claims to be the only thing around that will offer me a life worth living, then I absolutely reserve my right to Orwellian scepticism. As citizens in a democracy, we are under no obligation whatsoever to accept what we are told at face value by those who exercise power over us and we have every right to expect from them a full account of their schemes.

Having said that, advocates of the third way are often, with good reason, annoyed by the sort of criticism they receive. It is true, as Mark Latham notes in his article ‘Defending the Third Way’, that too much time has been wasted on concerns about the name (third way) and unrealistic expectations that it should present a complete and foolproof game plan to transform society now. The challenge Latham offers critics is simply to find something of substance to say about third way proposals or shut up.

Okay then.

Let’s not bother with peripheral matters like the name and do him and everybody else a favour and just kill off the concept in its entirety so that no-one ever has to bother dealing with it again. The third way, as currently presented by advocates like Mark Latham, is a hodge-podge of catchphrases and buzz words that don’t amount to a significant reappraisal of social democratic and leftist politics. In fact, in too many ways, they submerge social democratic principles within the dictates of neo-liberalism, the very thing they claim to be avoiding (axes and forests and all that). As presented by Mr Latham and others, third way theory can never achieve the social aims it claims it can because they are undermined and even negated by their economic aims.

The problem that kills the third way, therefore, is its internal incoherence. The nature of that incoherence is this: at the social level it advocates a enhancement of community, shared morality and trust and participatory democracy, but at the same time it advocates at the economic level policies that undermine the conditions for that social program. It plants a white picket fence in the path of the bulldozer it is itself driving. This is the third way’s fatal contradiction and unless third wayists can answer it, it is they who should shut up.

What is the third way?

When supporters try to encapsulate the project in a brief definition it gets a bit vague, perhaps understandably, but most at least agree that it positions itself between the unbridled forces of completely ‘free’ markets and the monolithic control of a centrally planned economy. It is often associated with the ‘centre left’ parties like Tony Blair’s New Labor or Bill Clinton’s New Democrats, and both are held up as exemplars of the sorts of governments that the third way should bring about.

The third way wants ‘free markets’ and the alleged benefits of them (such as economic efficiency, growth and competition), but it wants a kinder and gentler form of this ‘new capitalism’, one that takes society and democracy seriously. Different theorists and proponents give different emphasis to different aspects. Latham endorses John Lloyd’s summation: ‘[The third way] is an attempt to construct societies that can protect their citizens in an age of globalisation; to democratise the content and practices of globalisation; and to recast the explicit and implicit contracts that citizens make with the state.’

The sorts of catch-phrases that go with this sort of thinking are ‘civilising global capital’, ‘knocking the rough edges off globalisation’ and other vague terms of amelioration.

Amatai Etzioni, sometimes citied as the father of the third way, resents the label of vagueness, although he is happy that the concept is a bit ‘blurred’: ”True, it has a somewhat blurred margin – and thanks be given that it is far less detailed than a Soviet dogma or a Catholic doctrine.” But it is a bit more than blurred when major theorists contradict each other. Etzioni, for example, is clear that it tries to find a path between free markets and centralised state control.

For me, the Third Way is a synthesis of two principles often considered contradictory. There was a school of government (maybe the First Way) which believed that the state is the agent of society and the more the state controls centrally and in finer detail (not only economic life but also social life), the better the society. This is a project that the Soviet Union tried to lead on. The First Way allowed some minor corners for capitalism; it saw capitalism as evil, and market forces could be slightly tolerated but were in principle wrongheaded.

The Second Way took, in effect, the opposite view. It believed that the state (as President Reagan said) was not part of the solution – it was the problem. It recognised that there needed to be some place for the state, but basically it was an evil. The good was in the free market and the freedom of choice that engendered.

So here you have two fairly radical and opposed views, both of which the Third Way swears are useful. Both have a positive role to play, both are part of the solution and neither is the problem. We surely need an active state, we surely need a free market, and actually it is just a question of the proper balance.

Giddens, the other great international theorist of the third way, says almost the opposite: ”Third way politics, as I conceive of it, is not an attempt to occupy a middle ground between top-down socialism and free-market philosophy. It is concerned with restructuring social democratic doctrines to respond to the twin revolutions of globalisation and the knowledge economy.”

Third wayists will have to excuse us if we’re confused.

Mr Latham, to his credit, tries to extract a core element, a unifying theme from his well-read excursions through the literature of the third way: ”I believe the Third Way has a guiding ideology – a single philosophy which links all parts of its policy program. It is this: the true socialist principle of our time is the dispersal of economic, social and political power. This is the defining feature of information age politics: the chance to break down hierarchies and democratise power and social opportunity.”

This is a brave call, and a reasonable conclusion. But it is also the very thing that brings us up against the central contradiction of the third way and helps explain why we should discard it as a viable program of leftist action. If we can show that the program fails to deliver on this core element, then we have shown that the program is fatally flawed.

One way of doing this is by the use of some examples, and the more compelling those examples are, the more reasonable it is to assume that the same problems will arise in other examples. The real test for critics of the third way, however, would be to show that in principle it cannot deliver on this promise to ”break down hierarchies and democratise power and social opportunity” because of some basic flaw in their thinking. Not only is this possible, it is obvious, once you start to think about it.

A closer look

The third way installs ‘free markets’ at the heart of its program. It cannot do without them and doesn’t want to. Everything else in the program flows from this one simple fact and in this one simple fact the third way is completely at one with right wing advocates of the ‘free market.’ It stands to reason therefore, that any problems that arise in the application of the idea of ‘free markets’ will cause problems in the application of the third way. This is our starting point.

Again we have a terminological problem. We can’t just accept the term ‘free market’ as if we all knew what it meant or even as if it meant what it said. When neo-liberalists speak of ‘free markets’ they don’t actually mean a system of exchange between people with no interference between them. Without laws of private property, national and international trade agreements, the power to enforce contracts and other such restraints we truly would have free trade, and we’d be living in a Hobbes jungle.

No-one wants that, least of all the corporate and political leaders who constantly advocate ‘free markets’. In fact, far from being a restraint on trade, such controls provide the conditions for trade to happen effectively in the first place. As Donald Livingston has put it, ”economic relations cannot exist outside of noneconomic restraints”.

What advocates actually mean by ‘free market’ is an historically specific set of social, legal, political and cultural conditions in which exchanges take place. And while it is true that ‘free market’ advocates wish to minimise the role of government and other non-economic considerations in their ability to exchange goods, this is not same thing as saying they don’t want any controls on exchange at all.

What they want, in fact, is a particular set of restraints on the exchange of goods and the workings of labour, ones that, naturally, favour their own circumstances. If this wasn’t so, governments, businesses and bodies like the World Bank and the IMF wouldn’t spend years and years negotiating ‘free trade agreements’. If we were literally talking about ‘free trade’, then a ‘free trade agreement’ would almost be an oxymoron.

The particular form of non-economic constraints that provide the conditions for what neo-liberalists and third wayists call ‘free trade’, which has its greatest realisation in ‘globalisation’, that other buzzword of the nineties, are summed up in a group of policies known variously as the ‘Washington consensus’, neo-liberalism, or, in Australia, economic rationalism.

Its key features include minimising legal controls over how business operates, especially in regard to international finance (deregulation); the application of business models to government operations and the wholesale shift of these from the public to the business sector (privatisation); minimising controls over the employment of labour, including abolition of minimum wages, scaling back of working conditions legislation, including dismissal laws, an emphasis on boss-to-worker negotiation of pay and conditions rather than on collective bargaining (‘workplace flexibility’); an emphasis on the control of inflation rather than the control of unemployment; and an emphasis on economic growth as the basis and measure of a successful economy.

So this is what advocates mean when they talk of ‘free trade’ in the neo-liberal system at the heart of the contemporary process of globalisation. And as I say, third wayists insist that this is the essential condition of their political program. It therefore requires some consideration in its own right and the first question to ask is does it provides the benefits they claim?

We need to be honest here: for every expert I can throw up to dispute the glories of the Washington consensus, I’m sure third wayists, and neo-liberalists for that matter, can throw up another who will dispute such conclusions.

So I’m not pretending that a couple of quotes from a couple of experts is a knock-down victory for my side of the argument. All I am doing at this stage is accumulating some evidence that at least shows that there is considerable doubt to be cast over the over-weening certainty of those third wayists who suggest that ‘free markets’ are the only true road to social and economic freedom. So ripe with conviction are the writings of most third wayists that it is easy to be overwhelmed by their enthusiasm and to be fooled into thinking that all arguments have been won and there is nothing left to discuss. But this just isn’t so, as economists like James Galbraith and Paul Omerod have pointed out.

Galbraith wrote in 1999: ”The doctrine known as the Washington Consensus was, after its fashion, the Apostle’s Creed of globalisation. It was an expression of faith, that markets are efficient, that states are unnecessary, that the poor and the rich have no conflicting interests, that things turn out for the best when left alone. It held that privatisation and deregulation and open capital markets promote economic development, that governments should balance budgets and fight inflation and do almost nothing else.

”But none of this is actually true.The push for competition, deregulation, privatisation and open capital markets has actually undermined economic prospects for many millions of the world’s poorest people. It is therefore not merely a naive and misguided crusade. To the extent that it undermines the stable provision of daily bread, it is actively dangerous to the safety and stability of the world, including to ourselves. There is, in short, a crisis of the Washington Consensus.”

Remember, you of the left looking for a way to reinvigorate leftists politics, this is the economic prescription the third way considers essential to that project.

Ormerod, an economist and economic forecaster, is just as blunt: ”The advice to follow pure free-market policies seems in any event to be contrary to the lessons of virtually the whole of economic history since the Industrial Revolution.

”With the possible exception of the first wave of industrialisation in Britain, every country which has moved into the strong sustained growth which distinguishes industrial, or post-industrial, societies from every other society in human history, has done so in outright violation of pure, free-market principles. Markets, competition and entrepreneurship are all very important, but by themselves they are not enough. Infant industries – even when they have become industrial giants – have sheltered behind tariff barriers; government subsidies have been widespread; there has been active state intervention in the economy; and, perhaps most important of all, successful companies have exercised power and control over their markets.

”Even Far Eastern economies such as South Korea and Singapore, which are held up as models of free-market principles, do not in practice conform to the ideal. The governments of these countries possess a degree of internal power which is far greater than is the norm in Western societies, and they are not afraid to use it.”

And yet, Mark Latham and other third wayists are adamant about this point: ”Free trade is the most powerful force the world has known for ending poverty. Over the past three decades the development of trading economies in East Asia has lifted 150 million men, women and children out of abject poverty. The countries which have been unable to break the poverty cycle – most notably, in Africa, parts of Latin America and the old Soviet Union – are those which have been most resistant to clean institutions and free trade.”

Now each side of the argument can throw up their experts to debates the merits of ‘free trade’, and as I’ve conceded, there are probably no knockdown arguments. But statements like this from Mr Latham are simply brazen. No respected economist would endorse the interpretation he gives here.

Far from being the beneficiaries of ‘free trade’, the economies of East Asia owe any success they’ve had to an increase in international trade made possible by and coupled with strong government control. Not only have they not administered anything that could be called ‘free trade’ in the literal sense, they have also not administered anything that resembles the neo-liberal concept that advocates call free trade. In fact, the closer they have come to fulfilling this prescription, the worse the results have been.

The most successful of these countries, China, Korea and Singapore, are the ones who maintained the tightest government control over the ‘opening up’ of their economies, the very opposite of what the neo-liberal prescription dictates. When the Asian meltdown of the nineties kicked in, the neo-liberal acolytes blamed ‘crony capitalism’, not the flight of footloose foreign capital doing exactly what the neo-liberal agenda mandates.

When Malaysia, in response to the meltdown, reintroduced capital controls – almost the biggest sin against ‘free trade’ possible – they were castigated by the neo-liberal intelligentsia and assured that it would cause even more problems, particularly in terms of capital flight. In fact, the controls worked, again flying in the face of the received wisdom of neo-liberal brotherhood.

So, far from being the thankful beneficiaries of ‘free trade’, the people’s of Asia, to the extent they have benefited, have benefited from large scale government intervention and management.

On the other hand, the one country in the ‘developing’ world that most closely adhered to the neo-liberal prescription was Russia. As it has been an abject failure, no-one in the neo-liberal community wants to claim it.

Mr Latham goes so far as to say it has been ‘most resistant’ to the preferred agenda (of neo-liberalism) but this is an inexplicable comment from an honest reporter. Far from being ‘resistant’, it is the one country that most openly embraced the neo-liberal project. Thus advocates who do seek to explain the Russian failure generally take the opposite approach to Latham and claim that the ‘reforms’ did not go far enough. Jeffrey Sachs of Harvard, one of the key economic advisers to the Russian government, argued exactly this point in The Independent in October 1993. Whatever form of mitigation is offered, Russia is simply the most obvious example, not of a country being resistant to ‘free trade’ as defined in neo-liberal terms, but of adopting it wholesale and suffering the consequences.

So although the quotes from Ormerod and Galbraith may not of themselves be knockdown arguments, they do at least have the benefit of coinciding with what actually happened in Asia and Russia.

Mr Latham himself puts Australian competition policy at the heart of his understanding of the free trade he advocates, which is bit like leading with your chin. Always an over-rated manoeuvre, its credibility fell in a heap with dairy deregulation. Rather than delivering the promised cuts in the retail price of milk and a more efficient industry, it has delivered higher retail prices, a decimated industry, disrupted rural communities, and about half-a-billion dollars extra a year to the largest retailers – virtually the exact opposite of what it promised and certainly the exact opposite of what third wayists claim their approach will deliver. If this is what they mean by ‘civilising global capital’ or ‘knocking the rough edges off’ free markets, then we certainly have reason to pause.

The debacle of dairy deregulation, along with the collapse of major firms within deregulated industries of airlines and insurance, brought the ‘father of competition policy’, Fred Hilmer, out in defence of his baby. Writing in The Sydney Morning Herald, Professor Hilmer defended competition policy in these terms: ”In these difficult times, as you phone friends and family overseas, have you noticed a little good news? Overseas phone calls have become quite inexpensive. Similarly, as petrol prices rose and rose again, did you notice how stable your electricity and gas bills have been? And as you speculate on these and other matters over a drink, have you noticed the wide variety of interstate products, from Cascade to Coopers, available at close to prices of local beers, compliments of lower freight costs throughout Australia?”

Pardon me if I’m underwhelmed. This is the father of competition policy and the best arguments he can muster are cheaper international phone calls (a dubious claim probably more attributable to technological advance than deregulation) and better availability of boutique beers? Gee. And as for the stability of utility bills, the word to invoke is ‘Enron’. Wait till we get our version of that particular debacle of the ‘free market’ and deregulation.

An even closer look

As I’ve said, because neo-liberalism is so central to the third way project, any doubt cast upon the former must be shared by the latter. But my aim is to show a fatal internal contradiction, so let’s return to Mark Latham’s core principle of the third way, ‘the chance to break down hierarchies and democratise power and social opportunity’.

This is such an enormous claim that it is hard to overstate it. It means that by employing neo-liberal economic policies we can create a situation whereby more and more of us (eventually everyone who is willing to participate) will be freed from the drudgery of the sort of mindless, repetitive work associated with industrial capitalism and we will all become something like independent contractors, negotiating our own wages, working our own hours, living in communities of respect and trust. The claim makes a causal link between neo-liberal economic policies and the new social-democratic world of ‘civilised’ global capital, of active citizens and coherent, functioning communities.

The third way puts a lot of faith (all of it, in fact) in the ability of deregulated, internationalised market forces to create improved work conditions, as Mr Latham testifies: ”In the new economy, semi-skilled jobs are to be found in the services sector. The extraordinary growth in tourism and leisure services in Cairns is a good example of this process. These jobs provide a more comfortable and interesting work environment than their equivalent in the old economy – the degrading tedium and discomfort of production-line work. A defining feature of the new economy is the upgrading of workplace skills. Jobs which were previously regarded as semi-skilled, such as motor mechanics, now require qualifications in computing and electronics. This is the great benefit of the information revolution. Across the board it is producing cleaner, safer and more stimulating work. For most of human history, technological change was used to replace labour in the production process. In the information economy, however, it is being used to support the creative skills and instincts of people. This is an opportunity for workers to take greater control of their labour and improve their economic bargaining position.”

As a general response, we can look to the work of sociologist Richard Sennett. He is less than convinced: ”Flexibility is used today as another way to lift the curse of oppression from capitalism (the very thing Latham is getting with phrases like ‘civilising global capital’). In attacking rigid bureaucracy and emphasising risk, it is claimed, flexibility gives people more freedom to shape their lives. In fact, the new order substitutes new controls rather than simply abolishing the rules of the past – but these new rules are also hard to understand. The new capitalism is an often illegible regime of power.”

Sennett gives a telling specific example that involves a Boston bakery, a place whose work practices and social interactions he first studied in the sixties and then revisited in the nineties. It had gone from being a site of manual labor performed by a group of professional bakers, highly unionised and more or less having a job for life, to being a hi-tech bread factory that ‘works according to principles of flexibility, using sophisticated, reconfigurable machines’ that allow, by the push of button, the bakery to churn out anything from French bread to bagels to Italian loaves.

This shift from labour intensive work to a highly automated, hi-tech, modern whizz-bang set-up is precisely the sort of change that third wayists applaud, encourage and claim will improve working conditions by ‘dispersing power’ and freeing people to ‘live better’. What Sennett found in the Boston bakery was something far less positive and far more complex than the simple ‘technology = good’ slogan of the third wayists.

Let’s not get all starry-eyed about the old bakery and the old way of doing things as if the technology is in essence bad and has displaced some sort of working man’s paradise. No-one should romanticise the pre-technological past: certainly the bakers didn’t. As Sennett reports, most of them hated the work – it was physically hard and the hours we long and generally at night. The bread made by the new machines is ”excellent, an opinion shared by many Bostonians, since the bakery is popular and profitable”. I join Mr Latham and others in their contempt for any sort of sentimental longing for a more ‘pure’ past. The reality of the bakery was probably more like the conditions described in Upton Sinclair’s The Jungle, and only a dunderhead could not join George Orwell in his view that ”how right the working class are in their materialism”.

Another side effect of this technological ‘upgrade’ is that there is now huge wastage at the bakery. The machines, it seems, the technological marvels, are not that marvellous. They wrongly estimate yeast levels, cooking temperatures, the timing of the bread rising and though the ‘bakers’ can ”fool with the screen to correct somewhat for these defects”, they can’t actually ”fix the machines, or more important, actually bake bread by manual control when the machines all too often go down”. As Sennett notes, ”In the old days, I saw very few waste scraps in the shop; now each day the huge plastic trash cans of the bakery are filled with mounds of blackened loaves.”

The point to note is that the technological advances led to a deskilling of the workforce – no-one could actually make bread anymore. The replacement skills, a little bit of computer operation, could be learned in five minutes and in terms of job satisfaction offered no more, and perhaps considerably less, than the production line process that third wayists disparage. But more important still was what the technological upgrading had done to the workers themselves and their work environment.

In the old, manual bakery, where the bakers could actually make bread, the men (it was only men) were all of the same community and could and did relate to each other on a social and professional level: they literally lived a life in common. In the new hi-tech bakery, ”Workers come and go throughout the day; the bakery is tangled web of part-time schedules – the old night-shift replaced by a much more flexible labor time. The power of the bakers’ union has eroded [and] as a result, the younger people are not covered by union contracts, and they work on a contingent basis as well as on flexible schedules. What is truly new is that, in the bakery, I caught sight of a terrible paradox. In this high-tech, flexible workplace where everything is user-friendly, the workers felt personally demeaned by the way they work. Operationally, everything is so clear; emotionally, so illegible.”

Again, we don’t need to romanticise the pre-tech past and completely disparage the new flexible conditions. It is not that the technology has displaced some utopian world of happy, content workers, but that it has not produced anything much better. It is the nature of the oppression that has changed: oppression itself has not altered at all. Far from ‘dispersing’ power and providing more worker freedom, it has simply concentrated power in other, less obvious ways. In addition, it has corroded the sense of community (or solidarity) between the workers, isolating people rather than bringing them together in new ways as the third wayists insist. But as it is this relationship – that between contemporary work practices inspired by a globalised economy and social relationships – that is at the heart of my criticism of the third way.

A further example: Communication technologies

A more telling example of how the claims made on behalf the new capitalism by third wayists are grossly exaggerated comes from one of their favourite industries, that of the new communications industry and the internet. No industry is more dear to the hearts of third wayists than this. Not only does it represent the sort of hi-tech workplace that is going to be more conducive to self-fulfilling work, the products of this industry – computers, the internet, the web, cables, satellites – are meant to be the tools of social and political empowerment. They are the tools that are going to reconnect us with community and put us in charge of our own political destinies.

I am not setting out to disparage the new technologies or their potential as tools of democracy – I’ve written my own paeans to this potential. But to argue that they currently represent a tool of power dispersal and equalisation is not to be living in the real world. Anyone who doubts the glories of globalisation and free markets is, in Latham’s terms, a ‘pessimist’.

But consider the claim being made: ”The pessimists correctly point to the concentration of capital in the old industries of manufacturing, mining and agriculture. In the information technology and personal services sectors, however, a different trend is taking place. Advanced IT is wiping out the middle person, collapsing hierarchies and challenging traditional centres of economic power. This dispersal of information skills and economic opportunities is a positive force for change.”

Is this true? Fortunately, we can test it. Dan Schiller, a professor of communications at the University of California, San Diego, has done the work for us in his book, Digital Capitalism. It is a painstaking and readable account of the shift of the new technologies from being public goods to being private property. He isn’t specifically addressing the claims of the third wayists, but he could be: ”Hopes that a wired future will prove blissful are generally conditioned by fears that our system of schooling is inadequate, that civic commitment has flagged, that social groups are polarised and economically unstable.” As I say, this could be addressed to an essay by Latham or Giddens. Schiller goes onto say:

”I argue that we should be skeptics about the potential of cyberspace. Knowledge carried through the Internet is no less shaped by social forces than it is elsewhere. Far from delivering us into a high-tech Eden, in fact, cyberspace itself is being rapidly colonised by the familiar workings of the market system. Across their breadth and depth, computer networks link with existing capitalism to massively broaden the effective reach of the marketplace. Indeed, the Internet comprises nothing less than the central production and control apparatus of an increasingly supranational market system.

”The shift from public to private – that is, from public ownership of technologies to their ownership being concentrated into a few, private, hands – begins in the 1950s in the US. A number of trade organisations were established whose sole purpose was to ‘undertake a long march through the nations regulatory arena’. At this stage, it was the government and a number of universities and schools who owned and operated almost three quarters of the country’s computers.

”Into the 1960s, this balance shifts, as a number of industries, particularly banking, oil, insurance and large retailers look to streamline functions such as payroll, credit authorisation and accounting. Still, only thirty-one computers were online – that is connected to each other – in 1960.

”Telecommunication companies were classified as public utilities and common carriers and were highly regulated, especially in regard to their public obligations: they were expected to provide services on a non-discriminatory basis, so that everybody in the country got just about the same level of service. It was this principle that the private firms sought to over-turn and to replace with a ‘systematic discrimination in favour of their own special-purpose networks and against the general-purpose system on which ordinary telephone users relied’.”

Space does not allow me to do justice to Schiller’s work, but we can briefly consider the example of the internet itself. It has its origins largely within the US military and to a lesser extent the university system, with a network known as Arpanet. It was the military’s desire to connect disparate computer systems and the need for uniformity between them that led to the establishment of certain protocols, that is, standardised instructions that allowed one computer to communicate with another. This is the origin, in the early 1970s, of the TCP (Transmission Control Protocol) that the internet as we know it uses today.

The important point to note is that all this technology lay in the public domain: that is, it was free to use and nobody made money from it. Without these developments in the public sector, it is unlikely that the internet would have developed into what we have today.

With the protocols in place, the stage was set for commercial exploitation. The Arpanet system was not only a ready-made ‘backbone network’ for them to exploit, it was also one that had cost them nothing to develop. Already, companies had been searching for ways of streamlining their own computer telecommunication systems, and they had been lobbying the government hard to allow them to operate proprietary systems. Initially it was the National Science Foundation (NSF) system that allowed the system to be exploited beyond its military application. This public network (called NSFNET) connected university, government departments and a certain number of think tanks.

As Schiller explains: ”By 1992, the interconnection of disparate networks via the NSFNET had grown to the point that 5,000 systems, to which an estimated 4 million users had access, were making use of Internet technology. The not-for-profit system’s growing mass and escalating momentum were now such as to draw a full-scale entrepreneurial intervention.

”Thus an effort commenced to restructure the Internet on starkly neoliberal lines. In February 1994, the NSF announced that four Network Access Points (NAPs) would be built so that a new class of Internet operators might interconnect directly with each other to exchange traffic. The purpose of the scheme was to cede provision of the Internet backbone network directly to commercial carriers. Little more than a year later, the NSFNET was indeed supplanted by the NAP architecture, and the latter in turn became the internet.”

No-one who uses the internet regularly needs to be told of its commercialisation. I, like millions of others, are spammed with electronic commercial flyers daily. I am surveilled by electronic spies like cookies and trojans. Little programs get into my system and change my homepage without my foreknowledge or permission. They dump adware on my hard-drive and activate it at their convenience. More and more sites – The Financial Times, The Wall Street Journal, my former favourite search engine, Northern Light – are pay-for-view only. Google is kite-flying the prospect of a fee-based service as we speak. Access to archived newspaper articles is on a user-pays basis. I even have to click through ads when I want to read posts on discussion lists I’m subscribed to: when I want to read a post someone has sent to certain lists, I am forced to read an ad before the system will allow me to read the post.

In addition, eighty percent of internet users access sites through huge corporate portals such as America Online. Far from being sites of the dispersal of power and the democratisation of knowledge and information, the services offered by new technologies like the internet are tending to concentrate power and ownership and work purely on market principles.

Again, this is not to say that there hasn’t been an upside to the development of the new technologies. But the history of their development does force us to confront the claims that third way policies that enshrine market forces at their centre are somehow going to provide the conditions for more democracy and more power for the people. Working from the evidence available to us, the opposite seems to be the case. I am more inclined to agree with Sennett’s analysis that far from dispersing power, the ‘new capitalism’ (the thing the third wayists want to let free and tame at the same time) just concentrates power in different, less obvious, ways. In all good faith, third wayists should at least confront this possibility (or, I really should say, this reality).

Concentration without centralisation of power

It is worth considering Sennett’s conclusion. (Unfortunately he uses the abstruse language of the sociologist, but it isn’t too difficult to follow the thrust.) He concludes that far from dispersing power, the ‘new capitalism’ hides a new form of centralisation behind its rhetoric of flexibility; that the ”system of power that lurks in modern forms of flexibility consists of three elements: discontinuous reinvention of institutions; flexible specialisation of production; and concentration without centralisation of power”.

In outlining the first of these – discontinuous reinvention of institutions – Sennett is at one with Mr Latham in his analysis: hierarchical structures of order and command are replaced with network-like systems where one part can be replaced or cancelled without, theoretically, upsetting the entire system. Such flexibility is enhanced by the use of computer programs that map and simulate this loose corporate structure and that enables management to look for areas of non-performance or redundancy and to eliminate or restructure them. It is such organisational structures that allow the ongoing downsizing of businesses that has become commonplace in the last twenty years.

But as Sennett and some managers and management consultants point out, the promised returns on productivity are illusory. What sets in is another sort of logic born of this flexibility, namely the belief that any change, or at least the ability to change, is a good in and of itself, and this is reflected in higher stock prices for those companies that show themselves to be capable of such change.

Thus, while the promised productivity returns may not materialise, the signal of ‘flexibility’ given through constant reorganisation and downsizing serve to increase a company’s share price so that ”Perfectly viable businesses are gutted or abandoned, capable employees are set adrift rather than rewarded, simply because the organization must prove to the market that it is capable of change”.

Within such a system, individual units may be accorded a great deal of autonomy – much more than in traditional, Fordist businesses, just as third wayists claim – but their autonomy is only to be found within a system that may allow their unit to disappear from underneath them. In some senses, as Latham claims, power is dispersed, but fundamentally, it isn’t. At the demands of ‘the market’, those who are really in control can simply zap a unit from the overall network. Not only do the workers suffer when this happens, but they live and work in an environment with the full knowledge that it could happen anytime. Insecurity becomes embedded, ingrained in the day-to-day practice of such firms. You simply don’t need the same sort of day-to-day management oversight and control to ensure that the work is done: all that control is internalised and thus the dispersal of power is illusory.

The new corporation, as described by writers like former US Secretary of Labor Robert Reich, is an outsourced hodge-podge of decentralised units coordinated by a central firm who brings all the parts together. So while each individual unit – the private company that makes the headlights for a car, the other company that makes the rubber seals, the yet other company that tints the windshields – is much more independent of the production line manufacture of cars than in the past, they are nonetheless bound to the controlling organisation in a far-from independent way. Control is exercised through the setting of production and profit targets and by the ongoing tendering for parts supplied. For workers at the window-tinting company, the power is felt secondhand, even if they are all independent contractors.

But again, Mr Latham is adamant: ”The most powerful trend in Australian politics is the emergence of free agents – the new class of consultants, contractors, knowledge workers and entrepreneurs in the new economy. These are people who have broken free from large, hierarchical organisations and become agents of their own economic future.They use this freedom to create their own rules and lifestyle options. Part worker, part owner, free agents have crossed over the industrial relations divide. Small and self-reliant, they see no need for union or employer representation. Their idea of a good society is a deregulated economy, quality education and safe and supportive neighbourhoods.”

So what about these ‘free agents’ who get to work at home? On the surface it seems attractive, but anyone who has ever done it knows that it requires a whole new layer and level of control, beginning with a strict personal discipline. Additionally, as Sennett shows, the level of surveillance of such workers actually increases and the micro-management of their time is reflected in the keeping of work logs and the constant monitoring of the computer systems themselves, where email is read, key strokes are counted.

So this sort of flexibility has allowed people to work from home and exercise some extra control over exactly when the work is done, but it has given the worker absolutely no control over the production process itself. Sennett: ”Time in the institutions and for individuals has been unchained from the iron cage of the past” [just as Latham says] but subjected to new, top-down controls and surveillance. The time of flexibility is the time of a new power. Flexibility begets disorder, but not freedom from restraint.”

Thomas Geoghegan, a Chicago lawyer, cites some interesting statistics and offers an interesting analysis that goes hand in hand with this move towards ‘free agents’ and ‘flexible’ workplaces: ”But is there full employment?”, he wonders in reviewing US labour statistics. ”No one can measure it, I believe, in the way we did 30 years ago.”

”Consider: About 30 percent of American workers who work part time are transient workers or self-employed. According to the Economic Policy Institute, the vast majority of free-lancing workers – two of three women or three of four men – would like to find full-time work, or a real boss who pays Social Security or just a permanent port to pull into. But what about the other 70 percent? According to the Wall Street Journal, by the age of 30 or so, a worker today has held 9.2 jobs. And what’s in this young, often college-educated person’s cash balance plan, or pension, or 401(k)? Zero, most of the time. Nothing. Not a cent. Now imagine that the same person at age 30 has been married 9.2 times. Can we say that such a person has been married really even once? “Job,” or the notion of “job,” is about as impermanent in this country as the elaborate mandalas Buddhist monks construct from grains of colored sand then sweep away upon completion.In addition, there are millions of people who have simply dropped out of the labor market. Vanished. Not there. Not even in these ephemeral short-term jobs, with the half-lives of specks of carbon. Now it seems to me, any tiny little wage bubbles get pricked every time people move. In any given year, a new job, a new HMO, a million tiny things that we can’t pick up with our crude measures, wipe these bubbles out.”

And remember, these are foundations on which the third way wishes to build stable and functioning communities. This is what I’m coming to.

Equality and democracy

My aim thus far has been to cast some serious doubt on the claims of the third wayists, to look past their infectious rhetoric and go, ‘Well, um’. But I also said that I wanted to show the internal contradiction in the third way, of how, even on its own terms, it is dabbling with failure at every step. It should be reasonably obvious now wherein that contradiction lies, namely, in trying to reconcile the promises of social stability, trust and community building with the needs of ‘free markets’. It is with that central aim still in mind that we can examine one final aspect of the third way: its attitude towards equality and democracy. So before we pull together all the threads offered here, let’s look at what they have to say about these two key concepts.

It may surprise you to know that the third way has no interest, as does traditional social democracy, in doing much about inequality. ”Surely the purpose of a good society should be to abolish poverty, not to abolish inequality,” Mr Latham says.

Giddens writes that social democrats must overcome their attachment to equality. Why? Because it doesn’t sit very well with the demands of the market. He endorses what he claims are the views of T.H. Green, Leonard Hobhouse and ”others who thought like them [who] distanced themselves from socialism and took an affirmative attitude towards market mechanisms”. Thus, although some level of redistribution is still going to be desirable, ”social democrats should continue to move away from heavy reliance on taxes that might inhibit effort or enterprise, including income and corporate taxes”. Let’s keep the markets and their corporations happy, then we’ll see what we can do about inequality. (And in one, perverse sense, he’s right: how can you solve inequality until you create it?)

It is almost impossible to separate the third way discussion of equality from its understanding of morality, economics, community, education, duty, stakeholding and ultimately democracy itself. Actually, they don’t want to separate these things and in fact, the third way’s most brilliant achievement has been to marry all of these things together into what appears to be a coherent whole.

As we go through it, however, note how it all revolves around meeting the demands of ‘free markets’ and how it forms – once we make a number of questionable assumptions – a virtuous circle between doing what is morally correct and doing what the market wants anyway. It’s truly clever. Nonetheless, the technique is relatively simple, though undoubtedly bold, and it is this: continue to use the language of social democracy, but give the words neo-liberal meanings. It is what Paul Cammack calls semantic engineering.

First, under the third way the emphasis is on equality of opportunity not of outcome. This is their master-stroke. In one fell swoop, nearly all responsibility for a ‘good life’ or any personal circumstances is shifted from the state – or the community – to the individual. From this flows the whole rhetoric of the end of state provisions, personal responsibility, and moral condemnation that is implicit (and sometimes explicit) in the third way agenda.

But such a conclusion relies on a very important assumption: that everyone starts out on a equal footing. My kid and Bill Gates’s kid. Shane Paxton and George W. Bush. So obvious is this flaw in their reasoning that third wayists set out to address it. They acknowledge that some levelling is necessary for them to be able to claim with at least some plausibility that everyone starts with an ‘equal opportunity’, but once they have that, they’re onto a winner. You see, once you can claim that everybody started from the same point, you are then able to say that any subsequent success or failure by an individual is down to them. Blame and credit accrue to the individual: the state and other citizens are absolved from any further involvement.

So what is the third way’s big plan for levelling the playing field? It’s education.

When fitting all this together, remember you have to put it all into the context of the brave new world that the third way envisages, where highly skilled workers work in flexible, hi-tech workplaces, working with ideas and symbols. This is another unspoken and dubious premise of the third way (like, we’re still not going to need someone to take out the garbage, cook the food, deliver the goods etc. etc.). Anyway, we all have to be highly skilled which means we all need an education, not for its own sake, but for purely instrumental, economic reasons.

The third way says, okay, that’s the obligation of government, to provide you with that education. There, we’ve performed our social democratic duty as a government of the left, we’ve allowed you all to start from the same starting point, it’s now down to you. You don’t need us to worry anymore about equality because we have now deemed you all equal – equal in opportunity. If you’re not equal in outcome, well that’s you’re fault – you didn’t work hard enough, you didn’t avail yourself of our educational opportunities, you made bad decisions – and you only have yourself to blame.

But it gets better. Having provided you with an ‘equal opportunity’ you now have a moral responsibility to repay us, society, the state, the government, by being a productive citizen. Thus all the talk in the third way literature about ‘duty’. As Michael Ehrke puts it: ”The most important duty is gainful employment, the incentive for which is neither attractive material rewards nor job satisfaction – but duty.”

And if you happen to lose you’re job we’ll give you a bit of hand, the dole, but you have a ‘mutual obligation’ to work for that money and re-educate. If you don’t do this, you are being irresponsible and immoral. We can ignore you. You have no intrinsic human worth, just a market value. If you can’t ‘add value’ to our society by being a good producer and a good consumer, that’s you’re a problem. From such a basis Bill Clinton was able to ‘end welfare as we know it’, thus pleasing the markets, the right, the conservatives, the moralists and the third wayists.

And so it all neatly ties together: equality becomes ‘opportunity’, all responsibility is personal, failure also is personal and a sign of weakness, weakness is potentially morally debilitating, so if you aren’t contributing you are obliged to do so by working for the dole or taking re-education courses.

Third wayists even speak of ‘lifetime learning’ which is kind of the contemporary version of ‘no rest for wicked’. And the reason you have to commit yourself to this is because, hey, this is a market economy, and the skills you just picked up with that four year course mightn’t be needed anymore, or the company you worked for has downsized or folded and so you need a whole other new skills’ base, and this is good and this is exciting and, oh by the way, we’d really like it if you could all belong to stable and harmonious communities by committing your free time to civil society.

Democracy and the third way

The ramifications of abandoning equality for the third way’s democratic project are some of the least examined aspects of its agenda. How exactly do you do democracy without equality? No serious thinker since serious thinking began thought you could have democracy without a fair degree of equality. The necessary precondition for a functioning democracy is not just minimal outright poverty, but a reasonable degree of similarity between the life and life prospects of the citizens.

There is always going to be some sort of gap, and to a certain extent, such a gap is necessary and healthy. But if the gap gets too big between top and bottom, then they are literally living in different worlds. And given that your basic working definition of democracy is something like ‘collective self-rule by citizens with a reasonably equal chance of influencing outcomes’ it seems to me that the third way, by abandoning the concept of equality, abandons democracy.

But what am I talking about? The third way literature is filled with flashy phrases and motherhood statements endorsing democracy and calling for more of it: The Third Way is committed to repairing other aspects of the democratic system. Parliamentary politics needs to be modernised to meet the demands of the Information Age.

In an era in which information and know-how are being dispersed and people are demanding a more direct say in decision making, the parliament looks like a horse-and-buggy institution. It concentrates too much power in the executive and not enough in participatory democracy. This is why it is riddled with public distrust and false expectations.

The new politics requires the dispersal of power. The electorate, geared up with educational qualifications and mass information, wants to cut out the middleman. It wants a direct say in the political process, not just a vote every three or four years.

Traditionally, our system of government has relied on three heads of constitutional power – the executive, the parliament and the judiciary. A fourth power is now necessary, concerning those matters best determined by the direct participation of the public.

Dick Morris has pointed to the enormous potential of Internet democracy, especially as Net access becomes universal. This new tool for public participation will force a rethink of the division of power in Western politics.

And then we get this from Latham: ”I do not share Morris’s view that direct democracy will be applied across the board. The Federal Parliament’s delegation of power on economic matters – to bodies such as the Reserve Bank and World Trade Organisation – will remain in place. This is a logical consequence of globalisation.”

Consider again those quotes immediately above: they really are extraordinary. Direct democracy still requires strong federal parliaments, but the people shouldn’t be given control of everything that affects their lives. Not only that, certain matters such as ‘power on economic matters’ will not be handed over to the sovereign people through some form of direct internet democracy. It won’t even be retained by the federal parliament, which, for all its failings, at least has the benefit of having been elected by the people and therefore some claims to democratic legitimacy. No, this ‘power on economic matters’ will be handed over by the federal parliament to the Reserve Bank and the World Trade Organisation. This is ‘logical’.

Come again?

These quotes come from an essay by Mr Latham called The New Economy and the New Politics, from a section subtitled ‘Reinventing Democracy’. Well, it’s certainly that. This is reinventing democracy as not democracy. The sovereign people that the third way is so concerned with are factored out of all economic decisions – this is logical – and that power is handed by their parliament to unelected, supranational bodies.

But all is not lost: even as their economic sovereignty has been handed to unelected, faceless bureaucrats who are almost entirely unanswerable to them or any other body of sovereign citizens anywhere in the world, the third wayers have found a role for us: ”The rise of Internet politics, however, will force the Parliament to develop a new set of delegations. Already it is being called on to give people a greater say on issues with a moral dimension. That is, matters on which we all have an interest and an opinion, especially in how we relate to each other. Invariably, these are policy decisions in which the parliament has no greater knowledge or expertise than the general public.”

Like, we don’t have an interest in or opinion on economic policy?

More compelling than this theoretical outline of how our ‘reinvented’ democracy will work are the examples that Mr Latham gives to support it: ”To give two examples: the question of whether the Australian Government should apologise to the Aboriginal stolen generation; and the current debate within the NSW Parliament to ban smoking in restaurants and cafes.”

Thus, he continues, ”our political system can only be revitalised by opening decision making to public participation. Internet democracy seems a logical change. It has the capacity to re-engage people in the political process by giving them more information and more democratic power.”

So we’ve handed control of our economy to the WTO, but thanks to the marvel of the internet (a business owned by an ever-decreasing number of super, multinational conglomerates) we get to vote on whether people can smoke in restaurants in Sydney. What a trade-off.

And there is a final point worth making about the third way’s democratic credentials: the third way itself is not a prescription arrived at after long, wide-ranging discussion amongst citizens from all levels of society. It is exactly as Mr Latham says it is, ”an international network of policy makers and politicians, sharing ideas about the future of social democracy’ In its formulation, therefore, it violates its very own guiding principles – that power should be dispersed – and it seems reluctant to brook too much criticism. If those who push this sort of approach can’t even abide by their own guiding principles, why should we expect anyone else will be able to, especially those businesses and corporations who are already in the drivers seat of the ‘market economy’?

The central contradiction

A brief recap is in order: the third way is predicated on ‘free markets’, on neo-liberal economics. Neo-liberalism relies on market mechanisms (that is, the use of money) to distribute goods in a society. So does the third way.

But the third way also believes in a bigger role for government, which, of course, its guiding economic philosophy doesn’t. Its central tenet, at least according to some, is that third way policies will disperse economic and political power, but it doesn’t believe in redistribution of income to do this.

It also doesn’t believe in equality but it does believe in competition. Through competition, everyone gets their fair share, therefore everyone is equal, at least in opportunity. If some are left behind, this is their fault and not a problem because we don’t believe in equality anyway. Those who are left behind have an obligation, a duty, to retrain, move or do whatever it takes to find gainful employment.

Workers, therefore, should be flexible, willing to relocate and retrain as needed, and they should also be part of stable, long-term communities. They should work whatever hours are necessary, with minimal regulation governing the hours and conditions of work, and they should commit themselves to participating in civil society.

Finally, they should adapt to the demands of globalisation, even handing over control of their economies to non-elected and therefore unaccountable international organisations, and they should be sovereign, democratic citizens, voting online about things like reconciliation and whether to smoke in restaurants or not.

The inherent contradiction can be found in comments like this: ”The new economy actually demands more government involvement, not less. It is, however, involvement of a radically different kind: fewer government enterprises, fewer pump priming budgets, fewer corporate subsidies and fewer sheltered industries; but with more investment in education, more support for R and D, the more equitable ownership of capital, plus more emphasis on market competition.”

Let’s look at that carefully: we are going to have more government planning and intervention, the very thing the theory of free markets says we can’t have; we are going to have a more equitable ownership of capital, presumably, again, through government intervention, because left to market this just doesn’t happen; but we are also going to have more competition, that is, the free reign of market forces that has absolutely no way of causing a ‘more equitable ownership of capital’. As one set of third way reforms is introduced at the start of the paragraph, it is tacitly withdrawn at the end. Over and over again, explanations of the third way do this. They say it; they say the opposite.

In such statements we see the real weakness of the third way, it’s internal contradiction that renders the whole project moot. We need to get this through our heads. By embedding its entire logic in the primacy and unchallengeability of market economies -largely as defined by G8 governments and the corporations they support – the third way is not an alternative to the market it claims to want to ‘knock the rough edges off’, it is merely window-dressing for it. Democracy is not the ruling criteria here, it is the forces of the market economy.

Being able to buy things in an economy is not the same thing as being able to participate in a democracy. The third wayists seem to have confused consumer confidence with civic trust; our worthiness as citizens with our credit-rating.

This is the point I have speaking around during this entire article. If the third way is predicated on the dynamics of a market economy then it must accept the logic of that dynamic. The question is, therefore, do market economies allow this dispersal of power that Mr Latham cites as the ‘guiding ideology’ of the third way and do they allow the formation of cohesive communities?

They don’t, do they?

”The era of either/or debates has ended”, Mr Latham says. ”To solve poverty we must address both its economic and social dimensions; to manage a risk society we must enable people to provide for an uncertain future, drawing on both private and public resources; to maximise Australia’s economic growth we must invest more in education and research, in both the public and private sectors; to build a more cohesive society we must demand responsibility from both the corporate and welfare sectors.”

But surely the point is, if we are all obeying the logic of market capitalism, as third wayists have made abundantly clear that we should, there is no way to ‘build a more cohesive society’. All these other things about ‘responsibility from the corporate and welfare sectors’ are just rhetorical bunting flapping in the wind.

In a society where people are told to expect ‘lifelong learning’ because they are going to have to change not just jobs but careers maybe ten times in their life; where they are told they have to ‘go where the jobs are’, whether that be interstate or overseas (and where a significant percentage of the US workforce already can look forward to 10 jobs by the time they’re thirty); where they are being asked to work longer hours, and where both parents increasingly have to work the same sorts of long hours; where people are forced to farm out their kids to minders or simply not have children, then exactly where and how are these new ‘cohesive societies’ going to form?

Communities, by bloody definition, are built on the associations formed over long periods of time. So are families. And so, for that matter, is learning. You can’t force thought any more than you can conjure community and family out of snatched moments over rushed dinners or at the door of child care centres, or ungrammatical exchanges on internet discussion lists. You can’t have ‘cohesive communities’ or families or centres of learning if you work twelve hours a day, six or seven days a week and if you have to move every year or two or three or four.

This is not to say that some sort of community life can’t be built, but as Sennet puts it, although such ”communities are not empty of sociability or neighbourliness, no one in them becomes a long-term witness to another person’s life”.

This almost describes my family’s current situation to a tee: we live in the US because that’s where my wife’s work has taken us. We are friendly with our neighbours, with people at work, and with the kids and parents at our son’s school. We have them over, we go to community events, participate in school functions, do all the stuff. But it’s all surface level. In three years, we’ll be gone, and so will lots of others – already two children have left my son’s class as their parents follow work to other parts of the country, and that’s in just three months.

This sort of tentativeness and impermanence, this fugitive quality, is built into the relationships we are currently forming; it underwrites them all, rendering them shallow because who wants to invest the sort of time and effort and expense involved in forming close relationships when we all know that none of us will probably see each other again once our ‘posting’ is up?

You can’t have cohesive communities and free markets: it’s that simple. The values that are embodied in the contemporary workplace of high capitalism, the things the market values – flexibility, transportability, light attachments, independence – are the very things that undermine stable, cohesive communities.

You can talk about civil society as much as you like – and Mr Latham does – but civil society lives or dies in the couple of extra hours a day ‘market forces’ demand we all work. If you don’t get home till 8pm, or you’ve got to get up at 6am, or both, or if you have to leave the community in a few weeks or a few years, leading a strong community life is not just a luxury, it’s an impossibility. You’re doing well enough to kiss your kids goodnight and watch a bit of telly, let alone regear yourself for an intelligent conversation at the town hall about the local issue du jour or the pros and cons of some major piece of legislation. And why would you even bother when you probably don’t even know the other people at the meeting?

By carping on about civil society and the joys of participation, third wayists just serve to make us all feel that little bit more guilty about our role in life. I suggest that this is nothing to thank them for.

So the third way is a furphy: it is an attempt to dress the excesses of market capitalism in the clothes of democracy. It is a rhetoric of participation and community to disguise a world of discontinuity and short-termism. Community is not something you empower by treating everyone as a consumer and everything as a commodity. It is something that grows slowly behind walls of trust and respect built up over time, not in the serial encounters in Microsoft chatrooms and other proprietary interfaces. In fact, no-one even says interface in a real community. Until its proponents address the disconnect between the needs of the market and the needs of actual human beings, it will remain nothing but a mirage.

The worst thing about the third way, though, is its phoney promise to reinvigorate the left. In fact, all it does is turn the left into the right. It is not interested in society’s losers, the left-behinds, the inevitable second-stringers. It’s only interested in winners: it is philosophy for the already successful, and it’s your fault if you’re not one of them.

You think I’m exaggerating?

Here is a speech where Mr Latham speaks about reinvigorating the Labor Party: ”We need to find new issues, new constituencies and new ideas on which to campaign.” We need new constituencies: he said it, not me. So where do we look?

”The most powerful trend in Australian politics is the emergence of free agents – the new class of consultants, contractors, knowledge workers and entrepreneurs in the new economy.” And what do we do? ”You don’t need to be Einstein to work out what this means for the ALP. Old constituencies based on blue-collar work and organised labour are fading away. Old ways of thinking might produce a nice sense of nostalgia, but they are insufficient to win national elections and form national Labor governments.”

Just how much clearer do advocates like Mr Latham have to make it? This is a philosophy for winners, not workers.

The real end

I’ve spent a fair bit of time reading through the literature, getting together material for this article. But the fact is, I could’ve written it off the top of my head. Why? Because I’ve lived the third way for at least the last twenty years. I could almost be their pin-up boy.

In that time I’ve owned and run businesses, one with astounding success, others simply failures. I’ve done this in a number of fields, in retail and in advertising. I’ve trained and retrained over the last ten years, getting first a BA, then an MA, then a PhD. A lot of this has meant being a ‘free agent’, working from home (though the a more accurate term would be ‘self unemployed’). During all of this, I’ve done editing work, written articles, reviews and even scripts and managed to make some money in so doing. I’ve taught part-time and full-time to make a buck, and nice work it is too. I’ve also worked odd jobs when necessary and have only received unemployment benefits for a couple months during a particularly tough period.

I know some people thrive under these conditions, but so what? What about those who don’t? All the third wayists have to say is that we are pessimists, nostalgic, immoral. We are told there is no alternative; we are told to get with the program, to adapt ourselves to the needs of global capital. They literally say that. Thus, Greg Lindsay, head of the neo-liberal think tank the Centre for Independent Studies, warned in a newsletter that: ”The atavistic desire for security, the free lunch and for someone else to ease the pain of life’s responsibilities has become an epidemic. This is socialism and it goes way beyond economics. Governments, of all complexions, always ready to exercise more power, respond too readily.A generation of aging, selfish and indulged voters is seemingly incapable of taking responsibility for key decisions that have longer-term implications and turn to the state to keep them pure, rich and out of harm’s way. This is a recipe for the servile state that writers as diverse as Hayek, de Tocqueville, Belloc and Orwell have warned us about. Yes, communism is dead he said, but socialism in all its various forms may always be with us.”

I guess I just must be one of the ‘aging, selfish and indulged voters’ who want the economy to work for us and not the other way around. (Besides, I thought the whole idea was to be selfish, that by looking out for our own interests we provide the conditions for a ‘free’ society? Isn’t this the Smith/Hayek formula? I guess I must be the wrong sort of selfish.)

So I’m not just attacking the theory of it all – I’ve lived the practice. I’ve seen my friends and family live it too, the one’s I’ve been able to stay in contact with. My nephew and niece have lived in five countries in eight years, as their dad, my brother-in-law, goes where the company needs him. I’ve watched my five year old son spend those first five years in the one house, close to both sets of grandparents and an extended family that loves him unconditionally. And I’ve watched him cope with resilience to being dragged away from it all to the other side of the world to start again. We send letters, emails, and even have a website where we put up family photos so his grandparents and cousins and aunts and uncles can see them. It’s better than not having a website, but let’s not kid ourselves, right?

Over the last few months, I’ve watched him start to form close friendships and to, yes, become part of a school and a local community, and I know that he is going to have to leave it all in a couple of years and start it all over again, again, with a new set of people in another country. We might have to do this three or four more times before he leaves school. And then what does he do when he enters the workforce? What lessons has he learned about community cohesion? Or family stability for that matter.

Of course there is an upside to all of this. I’m not claiming to have a miserable life; in some ways it’s simply incredible. But there’s a downside too, and no third wayists wants to admit it. So if I sound more pessimistic than I should or intend to, then it because the third wayists are more optimistic and gung-ho than they should be.

In amongst it all, the third wayists and other neo-liberals have managed to pin onto us other lefties this image of being anti-progress, anti-comfort, anti-material, anti-the modern world. It’s a nonsense, but one that serves their purposes very well. The left, the real left, has always been for material progress, for making life easier, better, more fulfilling and they still are. Hell, they’ve even been in favour of globalisation, if that’s what you want to call it: their theme song isn’t The Internationale for nothing. If you think for a minute that I don’t want a nice house, a decent car, gadgets and remote controls, then you’ve really got the wrong idea. Who in their right mind wouldn’t want all these things?

And only a hypocrite could not recognise the truth in this passage from Raymond Williams, reflecting on the 1930s and 40s: ”At home we were glad of the Industrial Revolution, and of its consequent social and political changes. True, we lived in a very beautiful farming valley, and the valleys beyond the limestone we could all see were ugly. But there was one gift that was overriding, one gift which at any price we would take, the gift of power that is everything to men who have worked with their hands. It was slow in coming to us, in all its effects, but steam power, the petrol engine, electricity, these and their host of products in commodities and services, we took as quickly as we could get them, and were glad. I have seen all these things being used, and I have seen the things they replaced. I will not listen with any patience to any acid listing of them -you know the sneer you can get into plumbing, baby Austins, aspirin, contraceptives, canned food. But I say to these Pharisees: dirty water, an earth bucket, a four, mile walk each way to work, headaches, broken women, hunger and monotony of diet. The working people, in town and country alike, will not listen (and I support them) to any account of our society which supposes that these things are not progress: not just mechanical, external progress either, but a real service of life.”

To Williams’ list I’m happy to add that I’m glad of the advent of the new communications technologies, of the internet, the cordless phone, the DVD, as well as two minute noodles, eftpos and Wet-Ones.

But I’m not happy, or willing, to give all the credit and all the profit and my undying obedience to the great abstraction of market forces and to then organise my whole life around its whims and fancies. I’m especially not willing to listen to the sort of crap that says I can have all the material stuff and have stable families, cohesive communities, participatory democracy as if they appeared like manna from heaven rather than as the consequence of the use of real resources and the application of real labour.

I’m not willing to listen to it because I know it’s neither true nor possible. Market forces do not create the conditions for good and stable communities because they demand loose attachments and shallow roots. And as they can only distribute goods on the basis of user-pays then they cannot even provide a just distribution of the material conditions of an adequate, let alone a good, life.

And it is that simple contradiction that kills the third way dead.

Stripped of the flab of its catch-phrases and buzz words, the third way is really pretty much what we have at the moment – John Howard’s government. One can reasonably assume that if the Labor Party follows the lead of the third way then people will perceive no difference between the parties (because there isn’t any) and will opt for the original rather than the imitator, just as they did in the 2001 election.

Labor can then look forward to another term on the opposition benches, waiting, no doubt, for the next big idea.

And the left can look forward to being lumbered with another boring process of self-examination and reinvention until someone eventually plucks up the nerve to say, ‘It really is the economy, stupid. We need to control it, not worship at its altar.”

Please, just don’t call it the Fourth Way.

****

Ivana Bottini

You gotta love the Labor Party, completely lost and they don’t even know it. Guess it’s what you come to expect from a bunch of career politicians. (If that isn’t an oxymoron then it should be.)

What Labor do best is economic policy. Though you have to admit that the Liberal Party does a pretty good imitation when it comes to complete incompetence.

Way back when someone noticed that Australia had a low savings rate. So what did Labor do? Well they made savings mandatory. Call it savings for fascists. No, just call it the Superannuation levy. Why didn’t these guys just take all our earnings and give us back coupons?

Anyway Superannuation worked. Well not exactly. Australia still has a low savings rate, still runs a large current account deficit and Net Foreign Debt has spiralled out of control. In the meantime a huge new industry, complete with huge new bureaucracy, was created from nothing at the expense of the gullible voting public.

After that hugely successful and widely popular policy initiative Labor is modernising. The great big new idea is that everyone wants to get rich. The even bigger new idea is that the way to do that is to own shares. Sounds good, Margaret Thatcher would be very proud. I can’t wait to see the details.

I guess this could not have come at a better time, for the Liberal Party that is. More than two-thirds of Australian chief executives surveyed by accounting firm Ernst & Young believed the Federal Government’s tax reform agenda has failed. Failure strikes me as a pretty big word. You wouldn’t want that sort of stuff to get too much press. Thanks to the Labor Party’s wunderkind Mark Latham (wunderkind really?) and this new dog of a policy, it probably won’t.

Am I the only one who is incredulous?

Edging towards the desk where the buck stops

Let’s consider the implications of yesterday’s explosive evidence at the children overboard cover up inquiry. This is Commander Stefan King’s opening statement:

I was the Australian Defence Force Liaison Officer in the International Division of the Department of the Prime Minister and Cabinet from 13 July 2001 to 21 January 2002. I have structured my submission on the premise that the Senate select committee wants to know what information was passed to me with respect to the photographs relating to the SIEV4 incident, what I did with that information and the context in which this occurred. I hope to save the members of this committee their valuable time by taking this approach.

The Director of Operations, Navy Commander Piers Chatterton, has said before this committee that he advised me on 11 October 2001 that the pictures that had appeared in the media showing people in the water were not related to the claims that unauthorised arrivals had thrown their children in the water on 7 October but were in fact related to the rescue of unauthorised arrivals from their sinking boat which occurred on the following day, that is, 8 October.

I confirm that his statement in this regard is true. Commander Chatterton gave me this information face to face prior to us attending the daily strategic command briefing into the progress of Operation Slipper on 11 October.

I am very familiar with Commander Chatterton’s role in briefing the Chief of Navy daily on matters of operational significance. I was therefore prepared to afford a high degree of credibility to this information having regard to his close access to both the source of operational information, his immediate access to the Chief of Navy and the fact that this was obviously an extremely topical, sensitive, national issue.

By my standards, this was in no way gossip. It was a briefing by a relevant person for a relevant purpose. Commander Chatterton also made a comment to the effect that it was evident that somewhere along the way some clarifying captions accompanying the pictures had become removed. I treated that information as plausible conjecture and afforded it credibility as such. I briefly acknowledged the information he had given me and we never discussed it again, as was appropriate. In the time I had to reflect on this information before returning to my office that morning, I gave consideration as to how I should treat it.

Before discussing that, I would firstly like to give an outline to the committee of the way in which I conducted myself within the Department of the Prime Minister and Cabinet. My job was clearly to provide a service of liaison, advice and military experience into the Defence section of the International Division.

There was a clear, spoken agreement that the liaison officer worked for PM&C and abided by their professional guidelines. These expectations included an absolute discretion about the things read, said and heard in doing business in that department, and about the general one-way flow of information; that is, into the department, not outwards. I wholeheartedly abided by those rules and hence I never gave Commander Chatterton any feedback as to what I had done with that information he had given me.

In considering the information I had received, it was very clear to me that my function was to provide this advice to my two senior officers in International Division, such that they could advise their seniors as appropriate. My logic for this was that, in my three months experience in that department, it was obvious that great care was taken to ensure that any public announcements by the Prime Minister and other ministers were consistent. As this issue was only a day or so old, I thought it could be corrected quickly.

Following the daily Strategic Command briefings, it was my practice to brief my supervisor, Senior Adviser, Defence Branch, Ms Harinder Sidhu, on anything noteworthy arising from the brief and, if warranted, to also brief the Assistant Secretary, Defence Branch, Dr Hammer, noting that he was an exceptionally busy man.

On this occasion, namely 11 October, I was able to brief the Senior Defence Adviser immediately on a few minor issues arising from the morning brief, and to pass to her the information that Commander Chatterton had given to me in respect to the pictures being erroneously reported in the media. The Senior Defence Adviser instantly agreed that this information warranted being passed to our Assistant Secretary and that she should join me in briefing him.

The Assistant Secretary was too busy to see us in the forenoon, but we made an agreement to come back later in the afternoon. Often, in such situations, information would lose value as time passed and the Senior Defence Adviser would make a decision as to whether there remained an imperative to brief the Assistant Secretary, Defence Branch, in the light of rapidly changing order of priorities and his extraordinarily large workload. On this occasion, we conferred and agreed it was still very relevant to brief Dr Hammer.

When the occasion presented that afternoon, the Senior Defence Adviser and I attended the Assistant Secretary’s office and I advised him that a fellow Navy officer, attending the Strategic Command brief that morning, had told me that the pictures in the media showing people in the water did not relate to the claims made by the Minister for Defence that unauthorised arrivals were throwing their children overboard but, in fact, related to an event the following day when those same people were being rescued by the Navy from their sinking vessel. I also said that it seemed that the captions accompanying the pictures appeared to have been removed, however I did not do so with the same gravity, noting the degree of conjecture I attributed to that information at that time.

I assessed that the Assistant Secretary acknowledged that the information was sensitive but he did not give any indication to me about what action he would take in response, or what he might want me to do. In any event, I was given no instructions to pursue confirmation of the matter.

As it was the nature of both Dr Hammer, and from my observations, the department, dealings on sensitive issue would often happen quickly at higher levels without the knowledge of the desk officers, therefore I could not conclude that nothing was being done about the issue. Indeed, as the matter was very sensitive, it did not surprise me at all that I was given no further instructions, as I believed that if the Assistant Secretary wanted to act on this advice, he would have done so at his own level in the first instance.

The subject was not raised in my presence again until, I believe, 8 November. On that date, the Senior Defence Adviser advised me that during the previous evening she had relayed to an officer of Social Policy Division the information that I had passed to her on 11 October. The Senior Defence Adviser had elected not to disclose the source of her information without the courtesy of discussing it with me first. The result of her discretion has been subsequent references to gossip being heard in a tea break. I maintain, however, that there has never been gossip at any level on my part associated with this issue. I was briefed and I briefed upwards appropriately. Thank you.

Three days after the election Howard, as promised under pressure during the campaign, asked his department head Max Moore-Wilton to “conduct a full examination of issues relating to the vessel known as SIEV 4.’ Moore-Wilton delegated the job to senior PM&C officer Jennifer Bryant. (Defence did a separate inquiry into their role in the matter.)

In her January 2002 report, she said key issues included “what efforts were made to correct any misinformation”. Since King was in PM&C to relay information from defence, he’d be the obvious person to interview. As would, of course, Dr Brendon Hammer, the head of the PM&C defence branch, and his senior defence adviser Harinder Sidhu. She did not interview King. She rang Sidhu in December to find out the date Sidhu had her chat with the social policy division officer, got no joy and left it at that. We don’t know if she contacted Hammer.

Bryant’s report said nothing about PM&C having any information about the fake overboard claim or the fake photos. She wrote only of attempts Defence made to get the then defence minister Peter Reith to correct the record.

Thus Moore-Wilton, for whatever reason, has presided over a grotesquely incomplete report which kept his department out of the frame.

On February 18, before the child overboard inquiry began, Moore-Wilton gave evidence to a Senate committee investigating the Department’s spending program. Under questioning from Labor Senator John Faulkner, he said:

Max Moore-Wilton: Senator, can I say to you again – and let me say it to you again categorically, which is why I take offence at the conclusion you have reached at this stage – that none of the information available within the Department of Defence which casts doubt on the photographs or the basic report was released outside the Department of Defence. It was not released to the Department of the Prime Minister and Cabinet. When Mr Jordana (John Howard’s personal foreign policy adviser) asked for (situation reports) the department officials were entitled to give him the task force situation reports which were relevant. They could not give him information they had no knowledge about. And this constant effort to consistently say that the department was aware that the photographs were not of 7 October is not true.

We now know that evidence was false. There three possible reasons:

(1) Moore-Wilton did not ask his officers what they knew, in which case he is either incompetent or did not want to know the answer,

(2) He did ask and his officers lied. In that case, his stewardship of PM&C, for whatever reason, is in tatters and he should resign, or

(3) A possibility one would be loathe to contemplate.

Moore-Wilton now has many questions to answer at the cover-up inquiry. (One relates to evidence Sidhu gave yesterday. In preparation for the Department’s evidence to the February spending inquiry – where Moore-Wilton gave his cast iron guarantee PM&C knew nothing about the fake photos before the election – Jennifer Bryant, the author of the PM&C report – asked Sidhu about King briefing. Max wasn’t told, perhaps?)

We also learnt yesterday (for transcripts of the evidence go to transcript) that in March, Dr Hammer asked Sidhu and King to come to his home on the weekend for a meeting on the October briefing. But King was in Sydney, and the trio met instead at the Kurrajong Hotel on March 11. At that time, King thought he’d be contributing to a PM&C submission to the Senate inquiry (Later that very day, Cabinet decided that no department would make a submission.)

In crucial evidence yesterday afternoon, Sidhu said that when Hammer suggested the meeting, “I gained the impression, and I cannot be sure, that this had been suggested to Dr Hammer by someone else. I just gained the impression that it was not actually his idea…It was almost as if: ‘It has been suggested to me that it would be a good idea if we got together to refresh our memories’; it was in that vein.”

If Sidhu’s impression is correct, it would have to have been suggested by someone more senior, and there aren’t many people in PM&C more senior than Hammer, who will give evidence when the inquiry resumes on May 22.

Here’s extracts from King’s evidence of what happened at the Kurrajong:

Senator Cook: How was the discussion led? Who went first? Did you offer up your views or did someone take charge of the discussion? Did Dr Hammer say, for example, ‘Let’s just go through this?’

King: Dr Hammer always takes charge of the discussion…

Cook: So, how was it put to you – the purpose for being there?

King: It is a reconstruction that I make along the lines that: ‘It is a good opportunity for us to get together. It has been a while since we have seen each other, and this is just for us to put forward our recollections of the briefing and associated events such that we all understand where each other’s recollections lie.’ And, from there, the invitation was, ‘I will ask you a question as if I were the committee, and then you could answer it’ …

Cook: You were having put to you by Dr Hammer questions that it was anticipated may be questions this committee would ask you?

King: We got to one question, yes.

Cook: You got to one question? What was that question?

King: I truly do not recollect; I dismissed it…

Cook: So why was there only one question? If this was a ‘practice session’, why was there only one question? What caused it to stop at that point?

King: Because I said that I did not want to provide a detailed answer in that way and would speak in general terms…

King: Was there any further effort to encourage you to say what, broadly, you thought?

King: Yes, there were further broad questions … It was expressed to me that it was an opportunity for me to gain some experience in receiving a question and answering it … I would describe it as an opportunity for some gathering of information that perhaps was of interest to Dr Hammer just to see how we collectively review those collections. It was not for my benefit, I do not believe, but I am not saying that as a criticism.

King said he was concerned by the request for a meeting. “The concerns were, firstly, that it was slightly unusual to have a meeting about a sensitive issue in an area outside a public office, largely for the reason that other people may construe that in a particular way. The second concern was just a sense that you often felt overwhelmed by Dr Hammer’s own version of events because he is a very influential man and in an influential position and he is paid to be right and sometimes it is hard to be heard … Dr Hammer did not contribute too much of his recollections. He made some broad comments about, ‘That is not the form of words that I recall’ …

Cook: He did not put to you an alternative version?

King: There was a single instance when he said, and I can remember the words fairly clearly, ‘Another or a better way to describe that might be,’ and I think that was for the purposes of definition.

There the matter rested as between PM&C and King. In January, King went back to Defence. Then, as the Senate committee got rolling, he wrote his statement and told the Defence task force on the scandal about the Kurrajong meeting. “My preliminary discussions with the task force were that there was a sequence of events that included that contacts with me to meet at certain areas may be construed by others as unusual behaviour. I equally said that I never felt that it was Dr Hammer’s intention to influence me but that, as a naval officer appearing before this committee, there may be an outcome either in media reporting or in any other reporting where that perception may be given to that sequence of events.”

Last Sunday the cover-up’s intricate spider’s web began to unravel very quickly. After Defence’s caning, the focus was moving squarely to PM&C and some of those who have skulked in the dark as Defence burned. We are now at the pinnacle of the public service, the Department of Prime Minister and Cabinet. After the defence department’s disgrace, it is now crystal clear that traditional public service culture – we are servants of the people not the government, we are apolitical, we give honest advice, we tell politicians the facts – has virtually collapsed under pressure from government and hand-picked department heads on short-term contracts and performance pay.

Last Sunday the Defence Department told defence minister Robert Hill, in writing (they’re learning) that an allegation of attempted witness tampering could emerge at the inquiry. Suggestions had been made that a defence officer “omit relevant facts from his evidence”. The allegation was “very sensitive”.

On May 1, after the PM&C heirarchy passed on the warning, Hammer sent a hand-delivered letter to King. The ultimate irony for Hammer,and perhaps for others as yet unknown, is that King had not intended to raise the Kurrajong meeting in his evidence. That was why he did not include it in his statement. Kurrajong “basically was not an issue until it turned up in that letter,” he said.

King agreed the letter was “pretty heavy”. As a man with due respect for his superiors, he noted that Hammer had copied the latter to Moore-Wilton, Australia’s most senior public servant. He noted the belaboured exhortations to tell the truth about the November briefing, and that Hammer “never in any way” tried to influence his evidence. That, thought, King, was “unnecessary’ – of course he’d tell the truth. Only now, he’d also tell about Kurrajong.

Senator Faulkner: You receive this very heavy letter the day before you give evidence to this inquiry. Isn’t that in itself an attempt to influence?

King: That is possibly for others to determine.

Faulkner: What do you think?

King: I was uncomfortable receiving the letter. It surprised me; it caught me off guard.

And then, only then – after King made Kurrajong public, NOT when PM&C found out about the problem – did Moore-Wilton announce that he’d conduct an urgent inquiry to be completed Monday. He had to – an attempt to influence a witness’s evidence is a contempt of the Senate, which the Senate can punish with 6 months jail or a $5,000 fine. Worse, it is a criminal offence carrying the same penalty.

It is nonsensical that Moore-Wilton conduct the inquiry. There are thunder clouds of suspicion over his department and his leadership of it. He will have to take the stand himself to explain his false evidence. The inquiry must be undertaken by someone independent or it is, quite simply, farce.

By the way, after that meeting on March 11, indeed “very recently”, Dr Hammer was transferred out of PM&C. We don’t know exactly when, but as of yesterday at the latest, he is head of the America’s branch of Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade. It’s a much sought after post, as it can lead to a posting in Washington.

Who did Hammer tell about King’s shock revelation on October 11? What inquiries did he make? Did he inform his superiors, and if so, did they inform the Prime Minister?

If he did nothing, he will have to resign or be sacked. A much more junior PM&C officer resigned when she forgot to tell the Prime Minister’s office about a relevant (although not as explosive) piece of information during the travel rorts affair in Howard’s first term.

When did Moore-Wilton find out about the October 11 briefing and the cup of coffee at the Kurrajong. Did he know before Hammer’s transfer?

Thus far in the children overboard inquiry, despite the stench and the lies and the coverups, not one head has rolled. People have been looking after each other, locked in mutual embraces of self-interest and self-protection. But that embrace is loosening, and someone’s head will have to be chopped off soon. Will someone take the fall to stop the whole truth coming out?

The Senate committee is still yet to decide whether to subpoena Peter Reith. It is now certain that he will be called, unless the truth, all of it, comes out before that decision has to be made.

***

POSTSCRIPT: Today, the PM said something about the children overboard affair on Melbourne radio 3AW. Neil Mitchell asked: “The Chair of your Immigration Advisory Group, John Hodges, I noticed went to Papua New Guinea to apologise to the boat people accused of dumping their children overboard. Would you apologise as well?”

Howard: Well I apologise for misstatements that I have made about people, I apologise for mistakes I have personally made. As you know Neil the statements I originally made about SIEV 4 were based on advice I had at the time. That’s why I made them. I didn’t make them maliciously or carelessly and that remains my position.”

Take em on, Beazley

I hope Labor has the courage to tell the government to get stuffed on its utterly sinister laws and to nut out an effective, decent solution with other Australians of goodwill

Crazy. I was inside NSW Parliament House today at the hearings into the bill which would allow ASIO to “disappear” people like they used to do in Argentina. Outside, some Australians marked Labor day with a polite protest against le Pen, across the road others did a rough and ready rally for asylum seekers and out the back police rode horses into blockaders. Over the loudspeakers, security announced that the door had been locked.

Inside, two Coalition and three Labor men questioned concerned Australians on a terrorism package that would label most of those outside terrorists who ASIO could cart away and keep somewhere, anywhere, for as long as the government liked. And not only them – their perfectly innocent spouses, children and friends too.

I wrote a story for the Herald online, reproduced below, but the highlight of this compelling day couldn’t be put in a news story. I watched what I could only call a heartfelt plea by Labor heavyweights to the lawyer witnesses – with the tacit support of the two Coalition backbenchers – to help find a way to prevent a terrorist’s plans for mass destruction without wrecking our democracy. (Beazley’s election policy was to pass a law modelled on the United Kingdsom one – much less draconian and much more precise than this one.)

It’s clear that the ASIO bill is an ill-conceived crock. It relies on the passage of another bill (see Come in, Big Brother) which makes ordinary Australians terrorists and members of ordinary political groups threats to national security. All these people and their family and friends are then subject to extraordinary new ASIO powers. It appears that the government locked out anyone with human rights experience or any understanding about the rule of law, human rights or democratic foundation stones, and let itself rip.

It also locked out constitutional lawyers: The ASIO bill is probably unconstitutional yet the government admitted today it hadn’t even sought advice on the matter.

Stupidly, the ASIO bill also subverts its own aims (if you believe ASIO). ASIO told yesterday’s Canberra hearing that it wanted to be able to act on information of an imminent terrorist attack somewhere in the world by interrogating family or friends of a suspect. Yet under the bill, anything said would be used against the detainee in Court. As former Labor speaker Leo McLeay noted, incredulous, “If this is about getting information, you’re more likely to get it if (the detainee) is PROTECTED from self-incrimination”.

Most grievously, Kim Beazley, who as former Defence Minister is a veteran of security issues and a noted defender of ASIO, said the bill was utterly misconceived, and that ASIO had effectively admitted it. The legislation was drafted as a way to interrogate alleged terrorists as a prelude to charging them, yet “ASIO is seeing it as another way of gathering intelligence” to PREVENT a terrorist attack, not to “get somebody and nail them”.

“It’s fallen between two stools,” Beazley said. The concept is this. Since September 11, the USA and its allies saw terrorism as a trans-national problem. There could be a cell in Sydney planning a terriers act in Italy. Intelligence agencies were sharing information like never before. Say a foreign intelligence service picked up a phone call in Canada to Bessie Smith in Perth, in which her husband claimed something bigger than September was imminent. What could ASIO do with that? They’d want to question Bessie, but she could tell them to get lost.

Leo McLeay put the big political picture. Governments around the world did not want to be ‘fingered’ for the next catastrophe. It was clear there were pre-September 11 trails which weren’t followed. Politicians would have no excuse next time. Their butts would be on the line.

So Beazley and McLeay and Ray asked lawyer after lawyer, “What can we do?” What IS acceptable?

This highly unusual plea for help from the public arises because the government put out its crock without prior consultation and threw it to the joint parliamentary committee on ASIO for a quickie. The hope: to ram the package through parliament courtesy of a cowed Labor Party frightened into silence by the public mood.

Still, it’s a good question.

Late in the afternoon, McLeay started pressing the point. He told International Commission of Jurists witnesses: “If this legislation is about gathering timely information that may prevent catastrophe, can’t we organise a set of arrangements which protect people’s civil liberties?”

Commission council member Rodney Lewis had already pointed out that during the Cold War people lived with the threat of imminent war for years without resorting to government detention without charge. And why not ask the same question after Port Arthur – detention powers to prevent non-terrorist massacres?

And really, the threat of detention was no threat to terrorists and their associates, but to their spouses, children, grandchildren and grandparents who were NOT terrorism. “If the outcome is not in ASIO’s interests, there will be blame sharing and blame shifting by the little people pushed around by the law, ” he said.

The Council – which travels the region observing corrupted legal systems and corrupt show trials – said it could not move for its fundamental position: history had shown that government abuse of detention powers was usually worse than the threat the powers were supposed to counter. Like law professor George Williams after him, Lewis saw no need to stretch the current Crimes Act, where police can hold actual suspects for a maximum of four hours without charging them.

If ASIO really needed to keep them longer, for example to stop them tipping off a terrorist, then they should convince a JUDGE of that, and HE could allow an extension.

Commission chair Steve Mark said the Commission would be happy to come up with possible solutions to the problem now they’d been asked, on the basis that their total opposition to any detention without a judges say-so was crystal clear.

A breakthrough. Because, as Beazley said, we are all in this together. It’s a problem for all of us. Some compromise, perhaps subject to a sunset clause, of core democratic principles might be necessary in rare cases. If our best minds work together, we might come out with a scheme with as little impact of civil rights as possible and as much accountability as possible which is well suited to ASIO’s declared aims.

This, as in many really tough political issues, is a question of balance. I hope Labor has the courage to tell the government to get stuffed on its utterly sinister laws – designed to ride public fear to give itself police-state control over normal Australian political life – and to nut out an effective, decent solution with other Australians of goodwill.

Luckily for Beazley this time there’s no election imminent, so this time the government can’t abuse public fear as it did when it wiped out judicial review of its refugee policy and practice and blamed Labor for trying to stop it. This is a chance for Labor to find itself and what it stands for – to come up with a decent alternative, argue its case to the Australian people loud and clear, and ask them to make a judgement after hearing all the evidence.

Labor might remember that when it last took on the Coalition on a matter like this – when Menzies asked the Australian people to approve legislation to ban the Communist Party at the height of the Cold War – after a bruising contest of ideas and ideals the people said no. Twice.

***

Today, after my news story, reactions to the terror within from Brian Bahnisch, Mike Kelly, Roland Killick and Mark Murphy.

***

Labor signals changes to ASIO plan

By Margo Kingston

Former Labor leader Kim Beazley today foreshadowed sweeping changes to proposed laws allowing ASIO to detain citizens incommunicado without charge for at least 48 hours, saying they were misconceived.

Mr Beazley and former Labor minister Robert Ray broke Labor’s silence on its Senate stance during a parliamentary inquiry hearing in Sydney today. They foreshadowed amendments to allow legal representation from an approved panel of lawyers, reinstatement of the right not incriminate oneself, a maximum detention time, some judicial review, written guidelines on how interrogation would proceed and public reporting of the numbers of detainees and the length of their detention.

And former Labor speaker Leo McLeay said it was unacceptable that, if the Attorney-General agreed, “the 48 hours becomes a revolving door (where) you could hold someone indefinitely under this legislation. It seems to me that you’ve got to give someone a right of appeal system to get out of that circumstance. (Otherwise) the person (is) locked in a room and someone’s got the key and no one knows you’re there.”

In a day of passionate criticism from leading Australian lawyers, Professor George Williams of the University of NSW said that “initially I thought it was some sort of hoax” because “this legislation contains the essential apparatus of a police state”.

Senator Ray said the legislation said nothing about what ASIO could or couldn’t do during the first 48 hours, including where the person would be held and whether he or she would be allowed to sleep. He said this “total vacuum” would have to be filled by a protocol on treatment.

The Government claims its package of anti-terrorism laws is necessary after September 11, but it sweeps protesters, picketers and many existing political groups into its net. A “terrorist act” is defined as serious damage to person or property to advance “a political, religious or ideological cause” ASIO could detain innocent friends, spouses and children of a suspect, or anyone else, incommunicado, without access to a lawyer and leaving their families ignorant of why he had disappeared. There would be no compensation for torture, mistaken identity or when ASIO’s suspicions were baseless.

International Commission of Jurists council member Rodney Lewis told the inquiry the legislation overthrew a core democratic principle in existence since 1629, when the King lost his power “to detain at his pleasure”. “Let us not surrender to Osama bin laden and his associates by subverting the very things they work to subvert,” he said.

Council chairman Steve Mark said the legislation “obliterates the building blocks of the very basis on which we live.”

Professor Williams said the High Court was likely to strike down the law, as it had already decided that the power to detain without charge was “an exclusive judicial function” except in cases of infectious diseases and mental illness. Government plans to force federal magistrates to witness and supervise ASIO’s detention and interrogation were also likely to be struck down because judicial officers would be dragged into a non-judicial role, breaching the constitutional rule that the government and the judiciary not mix their roles.

The Attorney-General’s department then admitted it had not taken legal advice on whether the legislation could be struck down as a breach of the separation of powers between the government and the judiciary.

The ASIO committee was to have reported on Friday, but has asked for an extension to June 15 due to a flood of submissions, and admissions from ASIO that there were “gaps” in the legislation.

Mr Beazley said the ASIO legislation had “fallen between two stools”: It appeared to be directed to questioning people before charging them with terrorism, but in fact ASIO wanted to gather information to prevent a terrorist attack.

He asked Tasmanian University law lecturer Dr Greg Carne: “Do you believe that this is capable of being reconstructed as a bill that goes to effectively gathering that information without massively offending the rights of the people who are picked up for discussion?”

Dr Carne said the United Kingdom anti-terrorism bill was far less draconian and could be used as a model.

And Professor Williams said detention should be permitted only by a judge, sitting behind closed doors if necessary.

***

Brian Bahnisch in Brisbane

Concerning laws on terrorism, your last week’s effort was a bit hard to follow. I had several reactions to it. First, I had the impression that the law as it relates to individual rights and liberties was being dragged back about 1000 years.

Just about any-one who was not entirely docile and subservient to the ruling ethos could be locked up for life. We are asked to trust the good sense of the Federal Police. Police often KNOW who is guilty, but find it hard to get enough evidence for a conviction. These laws would make policing ridiculously easy.

Then I realised that I may already be in jeopardy. Recently I helped my daughter in Japan get some money that had been contributed by a group of Japanese women to a friend of hers in Adelaide. The idea was to hire a bus to take protesters up to Woomera at Easter time. I had no idea who the group was, but they must be gentle folk if they are my daughter’s friends. I deposited the money in their account and my daughter reimbursed me later as time was short. I understand their effort was non-violent but effective enough to be noticed by the authorities.

I still don’t know what they call themselves, but I do know now that they have a traceable link with a group that goes under the name of “S11” (so-named before S11 if you understand me!) It is conceivable that this identifier alone could alarm the Attorney General enough to proscribe the organisation. As a consequence I could be locked up for 25 years. My intent (helping my daughter) is irrelevant. My signature is on the deposit slip, so I incur an “absolute liability”. (MARGO: There’s already an off-the-wall case of federal police misidentity of a regular business as a terrorist front which I’ll write about soon.)

The Federal Police would say that they could not be bothered with small fry like me. But I have been known to become passionate about causes and it is possible I may annoy someone in the future. My past act could then be used as a threat.

Margo, there has been a bit in the media. Brian Toohey did a neat article in Saturday’s Australian Financial Review and Terry Lane had a segment on the ABC on Sunday (“In the National Interest”). But these are the usual suspects and hardly mainstream.

I think that the only possibility of heading off this ridiculous legislation is to work on the Labor party. They can kill this in the Senate. After their performance on the border control legislation last year we have every cause to worry, but if they pass these laws in the first year of a new term they are beyond redemption.

So I’m off to crank my email campaign to Labor pollies.

***

Mike Kelly in Canberra

I believe that if these laws come into being they will be used by the Government of the day to remain in power, not just save us from “terrorism”. Governments already use the purse strings and other perks of office to maintain their position. To be able to stifle dissent of Government activities would be hard to resist.

I wonder if the Save Our Sons mothers from the Vietnam protests would have been judged a danger to the security of the Australian Nation and detained indefinitely.

***

Roland Killick in Sydney

I’ve been lucky to live in 14 countries (so far). During the last sixty years, only three have not been invaded, annexed or suffered an armed revolution. In each case, the machinery of government was used against the citizens to consolidate power and neutralise opposition.

Arrest without trial, detention without notification, criminalising ideas and such like were steps facilitating population control after revolution or invasion. Politicising the Armed Forces and the Police, interfering with the independence of the Judiciary and running down the Public Service were also pretty useful to subjugating those Nations.

Of course, it is inconceivable that these things should ever happen here in Oz, God’s own country. Just because we have a few similarities – well actually all the ones above – happening or proposed doesn’t mean the Indonesians are about to invade or the Legions of One Nation are grouping for an assault on Canberra – does it?

And we do have to protect ourselves from terrorists blowing up, or from people thinking that it might at least improve the skyline if terrorists blew up, the MLC building – don’t we? And history shows us that governments which crack down ruthlessly on terrorism, making life unpleasant for many and shorter for quite a few, are the ones which last longest – aren’t they?

Today, after much suffering, each country I lived in is under some semblance of popular control. (Although in a couple of cases, their external policies are still not very pretty.)

***

Mark Murphy in Blacktown, Sydney

Good to hear you back on Radio National. I consider myself just and ordinary guy from Blacktown and I never write letters to the editor or to politicians. However, tonight you have sparked me into action – thank you. Below is the text of an email to Mr Howard that I have sent tonight.

Dear Mr Howard,

I am writing to you to express my gravest concern over the way your government is eroding my freedom.

I have recently become aware of your anti terrorism bill which proposes life imprisonment for property damage related to any political, religious or ideological protest.

While I am not a person who particularly believes in damaging any property of other people, I do believe in any citizens right to express different opinions to that of yours or indeed any other government.

I believe that this type of sledgehammer approach to address populist fears about terrorism is totally disgusting and bordering on totalitarian. Who would have thought that Australia’ s Prime Minister could be equated to Joseph Stalin, Mao Tee Tug or indeed Mohammed Omar (Taliban) and his cohorts.

Coming from a similar background to yours, growing up in the Canterbury municipality with clear memories of you on your soapbox in Beamish Street, I am just totally gob smacked that this legislation could come from a liberal government that you are responsible for.

Mr Howard, do you really wish to be the Prime Minister who has taken away our democratic rights? Where is your “honest John” mantle now – in the bin I suspect.

Mr Howard I just cannot believe that you are proposing to do this. There is just no excuse, and I mean NO excuse for doing this.

CC: everybody I can think of

In total disregard,

Mark Murphy

Come in, Big Brother

After my two part mega entry on the terrorism legislation last week, several readers complained that they couldn’t understand what I was talking about. I’d made a classic mistake – put my lawyer’s hat on and written in legal discourse, a code impenetrable to non-lawyers.

This problem afflicts many such debates of enormous importance to the character of our democracy and the rights of our citizens against government control, but the debate’s lack of accessibility often means the damage is done before many people realise what they’ve lost and what the government has gained.

Sorry for that. I’ve made another attempt, set out below. After that, responses to Coming soon: Too many terrorists from Michael Murray and David Davis.

Shaking hands with big brother

Pick the difference between the following criminal acts.

(1) Martin Bryant massacres 35 people at Port Arthur. A bloke discovers his girlfriend has slept with a mate and torches his car. Football friends bash supporters of the rival team. Drunken mates end the night throwing rocks at shop windows.

(2) A woman kills her newborn child because “God told me I’d given birth to the devil”. A man thinks all Arabs are terrorists, and kills his neighbour “as my bit to save civilisation”. Aboriginal youths vandalise the new Reconciliation Walk in Canberra because “it’s a symbol of our oppression”. Protesters at the Woomera detention centre pull down a fence to get closer to asylum seekers.

In (1), each offender gets the full protection of the criminal law and maximum penalties vary according to the nature of the crime. In (2), each has committed “a terrorist act” and can be detained incommunicado for up to six days by ASIO before arrest and people who ASIO believes can help them in their inquiries get the same treatment. All offenders face life in jail. If any belong to an organisation, the government can, in many cases, ban it even before a charge is laid or proved.

The extremity of the difference is courtesy of the Security Legislation Amendment (Terrorism) bill to be considered by PArliament soon. For the first time, the “motive” for the crime, rather than the offender’s action, is crucial. If someone causes serious harm to a person or serious damage to property to advance “a political, religious or ideological cause” he is guilty of a “terrorist act”, and the rulebook goes out the window.

Why has terrorism been so broadly defined? In a statement on December 18, Attorney-General Daryl Williams said “a terrorist act” would be “an offence under the UN and other international counter-terrorism instruments, or an act committed for a political, religious or ideological purpose designed to intimidate the public with regard to its security and intended to cause serious damage to persons, property or infrastructure”. In other words, what most of us would agree is terrorism.

But the qualifier has gone. Try as it might, the Senate committee examining the bill cannot get the government to say why, although it admits that many protests, including picketing, are now drawn into the terrorism net. Its response: people should trust the police not to prosecute and the government to be circumspect. Yet the Attorney-General’s department said that, in practice, the police would likely charge an alleged offender as a terrorist or a mere criminal depending on which charge would be easier to prove.

The result is sinister laws giving this and future governments carte blanche to persecute individuals and organisation opposing its political interests. The Attorney-General can ban an organisation if he believes it “has endangered or is likely to endanger the security or integrity” of Australia “or another country”. That means he can ban free Tibet movements (endangering China), free West Papua movements (endangering Indonesia), and could have banned free East Timor groups and the ANC. Anyone who remains a member of or donates to or “assists” a banned organisation is guilty of a crime, penalty 25 years jail.

The potential of all this is summed up by Melbourne QC Julian Burnside, a member of Liberty Victoria. Agreeing with evidence from the Law Council that the assault on Parliament House by renegade protesters during a peaceful demonstration several years ago would now be “a terrorist act”, he said:

“Imagine that same episode at Parliament House: lots of damage and so on. Then imagine that in one scenario all of the people participating are dressed in balaclavas and have CFMEU logos front and back. Next imagine that they are all Aborigines. Next imagine that they are all distinctly Middle Eastern in appearance. Next imagine that they are all calling out in a broad Irish brogue. Add the stereotypes as you like. At that point, ask: will they be treated in any different way? Will people understand this legislation any differently, according to the identity of the people involved?

“I suspect that the honest answer is that, yes, they will. If it were a bunch of middle-aged housewives who had just got a bit carried away after bingo, I think that people would react rather differently.

“Then add to that this question: what is the political complexion of the government of the day? Does that make any difference to your confidence that there will or will not be a prosecution?”

On the power to ban organisations, Burnside said: “Proscribing an organisation is tantamount to proscribing modes of thought – because what makes an organisation, generally speaking, is a community of ideas or beliefs. (This is) nothing more than an assault on freedom of thought.”

Add the fact that in evidence to the committee the government has set out no inadequacy in the present criminal law to deal with terrorist acts except in planning and training, and it is impossible to argue that the government has no ulterior motive for this extraordinary assault on Australia’s democratic traditions and freedoms. I wonder what that might be.

***

Michael A. Murray in Ettalong Beach, NSW

I just read your article on terrorism legislation. Don’t panic. I was glad they are considering dramatic laws; we’ll need them. When the US Embassy in the MLC building is detonated, causing the collapse of a lot of the building, these laws will take on a life of their own.

***

David Davis in Switzerland

I have just read Too many terrorists. It’s all on the public record but it needs to be shown to us as you have because few of us trawl through the records. You’ve shown though that a little trawling can reveal a lot.

There would be only a tiny minority of Australians who would not support tough action being taken against terrorists. Most Australians would support legislation making it easier to prevent and prosecute terrorism. That’s the generalities of it and few would disagree.

But there’s a problem. Australians can be justifiably be proud to live in a society of laws. The rule of law is sacrosanct. The thing about laws though is that they are very specific and there are strict rules on how they are to be interpreted. This is not a general thing, it is based on the principles of statutory interpretation. The problem is that if a bad law is written, it must be followed.

This may sound extremely basic but it is worth remembering how laws are interpreted in the courts. We should stop bad laws from being introduced or seek to overturn them if they are introduced. We should be particularly wary of laws which may impede our freedom to dissent. That is one of the most precious things we have.

Again we face the challenge of complexity. If you protest against draconian anti-terrorist laws you will be immediately portrayed in simplistic terms as being one who is soft on terrorism. It’s not that simple though.

I’m deeply concerned and suspicious. The responses from the government side were inadequate and too general. There needs to be more specific responses regarding specific sections of the legislation. History has taught us that defining groups as being against the state is loaded with risk. If they are going to go down that path, they’d better be very, very careful. Everyone will be watching.