SearchRecent comments
Democracy LinksMember's Off-site Blogs |
his master's voice .....from Crikey ..... Hockey stands aside from Islamophobia campaign - and where was Labor? Crikey Canberra correspondent Bernard Keane writes: ASYLUM SEEKERS, CORY BERNARDI, ISLAMOPHOBIA, JOE HOCKEY, KEVIN ANDREWS, LIBERAL PARTY, SCOTT MORRISON It's extraordinarily hard to believe that a number of Liberals aren't engaged in a deliberate campaign of blatant Islamophobia, and have been for some time. Yesterday's effort by Scott Morrison to politicise the funerals of the victims of the Christmas Island boat tragedy was another example of the barrel bottom standards of the Member for Cook since he was moved to the immigration portfolio and tasked with exploiting asylum seekers as much as possible. The irony was Morrison was doing so on the pretext of cost, while we're still waiting for him to tell us how many hundreds of millions of dollars his resuscitated Pacific Solution will cost taxpayers, an issue he ducked in the election campaign and have ducked ever since. A Pure Poison reader received a pro forma response from Morrison's office, which concluded "all Australian residents and citizens should be treated equally in these matters" - a fair summation of the blatant appeal to prejudice indulged in by Morrison. But his dog-whistling was in fact the subtlest we've seen from Liberal MPs lately. The broader context for Morrison's exploitation of the funerals is a steady drumbeat of anti-Muslim commentary that has been coming from sections of the Liberal Party over an extended period. Just this week there was Gary Humphries's extraordinary petition, signed by only three people, calling for a 10-year moratorium on "Muslim immigration". Humphries employed the "just following orders" defence, saying he presented petitions regardless of whether he agreed with them or not. It was a strange thing to say given the petition appears to have sprung from a Baptist church in Earlwood in Sydney, which last time I checked wasn't in the ACT. Last week Kevin Andrews lashed out at "extreme Islam" and warned of "enclaves". Andrews has run this line on "enclaves" before, demanding Muslims "disperse" into the community. Interesting context, of course, for Andrews's disastrous handling of Mohammed Haneef's case. But Cory "ban the burqa" Bernardi is the Coalition's most persistent Islam obsessive, regularly blogging about the threat posed by Islamic fundamentalists. He joined in with Andrews last week, declaring - presumably on the basis of the looming law to force-feed us all halal meat: "I, for one, don't want to eat meat butchered in the name of an ideology that is mired in sixth-century brutality and is anathema to my own values." Bernardi position here is well-informed. He's an ardent Catholic and, courtesy of transubstantiation, every Sunday eats meat butchered in the name of an ideology that is mired in not sixth but first-century brutality. And Bernardi, it should be remembered, is Tony Abbott's parliamentary secretary. Abbott himself last week, in announcing his highly-successful savings measures to replace the government's flood levy, carefully made sure everyone understood he was cutting funding to "Islamic" schools in Indonesia. Abbott backed Morrison yesterday, describing people attending the funerals of their children, fathers and mothers as "rellies ... being flown around the country". In this fetid environment, Joe Hockey's statement of the bleeding obvious, that "we as a compassionate nation have an obligation to ensure that we retain our humanity during what is a very difficult policy debate", came as a breath of fresh air. Twice now in a fortnight, Hockey has clearly stood apart from his leader, implicitly rebuking him, by making statements of simple truth. First he admitted that asinine fundraising email was a mistake, after Abbott had twisted and turned and hemmed and hawed to escape responsibility for it. Now he has cast Morrison and Abbott in a wholly unflattering light by showing some common sense and compassion. A conspiracy theorist might think Hockey is preparing the groundwork for the road to the leadership, and might think he is doing a rather better job than that of Malcolm Turnbull. But it's hard to be sure when all Hockey is doing is talking like a decent, common sense politician. It's not his fault that's such a contrast with many of his colleagues. Hockey's remarks were also a far more effective takedown of Morrison than anything on offer from Labor. Craig Emerson finally emerged this morning to give a serve to Morrison, but Chris Bowen deliberately avoided going on the attack over the issue yesterday, saying he wanted to avoid a slanging match with Morrison on the day of the funerals. That's a fair call, but Labor has never responded strongly to this ongoing campaign to stir up Islamophobic sentiment, not even via a backbench bomb-thrower who can speak outside the careful talking points of the leadership group. The lack of a response yesterday annoyed some backbench MPs, who suggested it was typical of a party that currently struggles to articulate what it believes in. Maybe the tactic was to let the opposition have all the media attention, hoping it would blow up in Morrison's face. Maybe the tactic was not to too obviously show support for asylum seekers, even in their most wretched hour of grief, for fear of upsetting voters in western Sydney. But sometimes a party that claims it's about fairness needs to speak up for it.
|
User login |
from ugly central .....
The opposition immigration spokesman, Scott Morrison, urged the shadow cabinet to capitalise on the electorate's growing concerns about "Muslim immigration", "Muslims in Australia" and the "inability" of Muslim migrants to integrate.
Mr Morrison's suggestion was made at a meeting in December at which shadow ministers were asked to bring three ideas for issues on which the Coalition should concentrate its political attack during this parliamentary term.
The Herald has learnt several colleagues, including the deputy leader, Julie Bishop, and the former immigration minister Philip Ruddock, strongly disagreed with the suggestion, pointing out that the Coalition had long supported a non-discriminatory immigration policy and saying it was not an issue that should be pursued.
But after Mr Morrison's comments this week on the cost of asylum-seeker funerals and his role in the controversial decision to cut a Howard government program to fund schools in Indonesia, colleagues are privately questioning whether he is trying to pursue an anti-Muslim political strategy unilaterally.
Even though the Opposition Leader, Tony Abbott, initially backed his stance on the cost of the funerals, Mr Morrison apologised yesterday for the "timing" of his comments, saying it was inappropriate" and "insensitive" to make the remarks on the day the funerals were taking place.
Sources say Mr Morrison told the shadow cabinet meeting on December 1 at the Ryde Civic Centre that the Coalition should ramp up its questioning of "multiculturalism" and appeal to deep voter concerns about Muslim immigration and "inability" to integrate.
The sources say Mr Ruddock, the shadow cabinet secretary, was particularly "blunt" in his rejection of the suggestion, saying a well-run and non-discriminatory immigration policy was essential for nation building.
Scott Morrison's Anti-Muslim Strategy
and in my orstrayla .....
Malcolm Fraser: multiculturalism hasn't failed, only the Liberal Party
Former Australian prime minister Malcolm Fraser writes:
FEDERAL LABOR GOVERNMENT, FEDERAL LIBERAL PARTY, MULTICULTURALISM, SCOTT MORRISON, TONY ABBOTT
With its new multiculturalism policy, detailed by Immigration Minister Chris Bowen last night, Labor has really gone back to its values. They're values I share. They're talking about fairness for all people, people from different backgrounds, different cultures. They emphasise the primacy of Australian values and laws, everyone always has, but that doesn't prevent people from having an affection for the land of their birth, it doesn't stop them respecting old traditions.
While we were always an immigrant nation it was a somewhat narrower Australia, especially from foundation up to World War II - Ango-Saxon, Keltic Irish, but still with a very sharp sectarian divide. It was not uncommon for people to say that Catholics weren't true Australians because they had their allegiance to the Pope. After many painful years we've grown out of that. In the post-World War II years most parties refused to play politics with race or religion. I think the great wave of migration that has done so much for Australia in so many different ways, improving the quality of life for every Australian, would not have been possible without it.
When the Vietnamese came here if I'd asked Australians before the event if they wanted to have 70,000 refugees from Indo-China that would go into a population of around a quarter of a million, in a public poll people would have said no. But when you say this is what we must do and these are the reasons then people accept it. Melbourne is one of the largest Greek cities outside of Greece -- if you'd have asked Melbourne in 1948 if they wanted that they would have said no. But it happened, and everyone would be enormously proud of the contribution Greek-Australians have made to Australia in so many different ways.
In the early 1990s, Pauline Hanson - who was never condemned by either party - emerged and later the Tampa sailed into our waters. The Labor Party should have stood on its principles and opposed John Howard. I think if they had they very likely would have won the 2001 election - there were so many liberals disenchanted with the Tampa-esque policies, so many Labor people enormously disenchanted. But the Labor Party began a competition for the redneck vote - we saw that in the last election, which was really a race to the bottom of the barrel on refugee policy.
Yesterday, with the comments of Scott Morrison and Tony Abbott, we saw a very narrow and a very mean attitude emerging from the opposition. If you look at the Liberal Party's comments on asylum seekers over time they were always playing upon the fears of Australians: these people won't embrace Australian values, they're drug runners, they're queue jumpers, they're illegals, they're awful people, they'll turn into pr-stitutes, maybe even terrorists. They campaigned on fear. People took note of that. If you had told the stories of what people had put up with, the dangers that'd run into to try and achieve a better future for their kids, Australians would have a different view of it.
I hope Scott Morrison is just a fringe element in the party. But he certainly exhibits a very unsympathetic, a very hard-line harsh view of people trying to seek a better life. He certainly appeals to the fears of Australians.
When John Howard wanted to get rid of the word "multiculturalism", in one sense, in a very real sense, he was trying to go back to a past that was totally impossible. If you walk down any street in Melbourne or Sydney or other major centres you see Australians of so many different backgrounds and cultures. Overwhelmingly they regard Australia as home, they love Australia, they respect Australian laws. But that doesn't mean they can't also show some affinity, some concern for ancient traditions and concern for where they've come from.
Multiculturalism is not a failed idea. I think it's been an enormous success. All sorts of things are said about multiculturalism: people go to an area, they establish a ghetto; that hasn't really happened here. If somebody is coming here from Afghanistan they're going to seek out other Afganis to be near people who can speak their language, etc. But then they get settled, they move out and become part of the wider community. In a very real sense.
Our capital cities have streets with Vietnamese names in the shops as well as English names -- so what? There's no conflict with Australian laws, Australian customs and Australian values, which the previous government made a lot of. If you really look at the values that make for a peaceful world, a prosperous society, one where your kids can have a better future, those values are universal.
I think it's enormously important to hope that we would have enough wisdom on both sides of politics to get back to a bipartisan policy on matters concerning race and religion, on refugees and immigration. It was that bipartisanship that made the modern Australia.
Politicians must rise above the politics. They need to make sure that there is the best possible understanding of why people who have come from other places and what their own history and culture is like. SBS was established not as a service to refugees or migrants but so that all Australians can learn more about other places that other Australians have come from. That was the underlying motive. As it is in the broader debate.
We've got to this state on multiculturalism because the then-Liberal government and the Liberal Party ever since believed they could win votes on the issue, they believed they could create fear in the community. It will remain a divisive issue unless there can be leadership in the Liberal Party that puts these issues beyond politics. In some policy areas we do need a bipartisan policy.
Within that there is room to debate how many people come here, there is room to debate the way you handle boat people and other matters, but there needs to be strict limitations on that debate. It needs to be an informed debate of people who know what they're talking about.
If we believe in a non-discriminatory world, which I think most Australians do, then we certainly need a bipartisan approach.
shit keeps happening .....
Senior Liberals are urging Tony Abbott to find and crack down on the leakers in his ranks, warning he will lose control of the party unless the destabilisation stops.
As the party grappled yesterday with a new furore caused by the revelation by Liberal sources that the immigration spokesman, Scott Morrison, recommended the Coalition exploit community concern about Muslims, frontbenchers said the destructive behaviour threatened to spill into next week's resumption of Parliament.
The Prime Minister, Julia Gillard, called on Mr Abbott either to reject outright a report in the Herald yesterday concerning Mr Morrison, or send him to the backbench.
''Mr Morrison ... appears to want to go down a very grubby path,'' she said. ''Is Mr Abbott going to follow him down that path or stop it now and get Mr Morrison to go to the backbench?
''The Liberal Party cannot maintain its long-standing policy of non-discriminatory immigration and have somebody of a very different view holding the immigration portfolio.''
The Labor MP Ed Husic, the only Muslim in Parliament, was not prepared to give Mr Morrison the benefit of the doubt.
Mr Husic was the victim of a racial smear campaign when he stood in the western Sydney seat of Greenway in 2004. At the time, Mr Morrison was the state director of the NSW party and ''I never heard him say out loud 'this was unacceptable','' Mr Husic said.
Tony Abbott losing control in Liberal split over Muslims