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  Issue No 112 Official Organ of LaborNet 21 September 2001  

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Politics

An Agent for Change


Former secretary Michael Easson argues that Costa was instrumental in redefining the factional balance in NSW in the wake of the Cold War.

 
 

Costa, Ducker and Sams

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There's never been a Labor Council Secretary like Michael Costa. Even though his term was the shortest of living memory, his impact is such that Michael is arguably one of the most successful Secretaries ever. Lest this be regarded as farewell hyperbole, let me outline my case.

The result of Michael's business sense and achievements include a very financially healthy Council; he has achieved things I tried and failed to achieve - including the sale of a lease of Currawong and the takeover of the Trades Hall. This doesn't come easy.

Costa is a hard person to know. Even harder to pigeon hole. Provocative and iconoclastic, viscerally indignant about bureaucratic inefficiency and injustice, an intellectual, he is also in many respects conservative and working class through and through. The Labor Council has produced a line of secretaries since King who could mix it on the work floor and in the board room. Few could match, however, his grasp of business and strategic nous as well as his feel for getting a message across plainly, often bluntly.

I thought I had first heard of Costa in the mid 1980s as a dissident Leftie, challenging Bernie Willingale for control of the AFULE (the train drivers' union). Willingale had led a disastrous six week strike against NSW Transport Minister Barrie Unsworth in 1985/86. The union members were ready for a change. The then tough talking Transport Minister created an environment that would lead to the emergence of fresh blood. Costa was elected President of the Union, attended Labor Council meetings and made an impact.

Once after a meeting of State Rail Unions which I chaired in 1986 or 1987, I thought I had to know this person better. I took him to meet John MacBean, the then Labor Council Secretary. I imagined that Costa might have the potential to do damage or to do good. I wasn't sure. I asked if he was an ALP member. He wasn't. I took him to meet John Della Bosca, then the ALP Assistant Secretary. Before going into the ALP office he asked "You remember I was once in the party, don't you?" I wondered why he would ask. To my embarrassment he explained I had expelled him, years ago. I had forgotten. I hadn't met him at the time he was expelled, sight unseen. Later, I looked up my records. Sure enough, in 1979 I had put in an expulsion charge because he wrote for Direct Action, the official journal of the Socialist Workers' Party. It appeared from one article in that publication, that Michael was a Youth Organiser of the SWP. In part, this put his working experience in various blue collar jobs, including a long stint at Garden Island, in a more nuanced perspective.

Ironically, in 1979 it was Peter Costello, then claiming to be an ALP supporter, who called me to complain about this "mad Trot" he had debated at Wollongong University. I had a soft spot for Trotskyists, however odious might be their political perspective. At least most were fiercely anti-Stalinist. Most grew up. Could Michael transform himself into a social democratic, practical union leader? I thought then that it was worth a punt. A decade later, he wasn't the same person I had expelled. To cut a long story short, before I was elected Secretary in 1989, and after my various discussions with Peter Sams who strongly backed him, Michael was on the ticket to be an Organiser.

Every Secretary begins their term, however hard fought, with goodwill capital. Thereafter, they spend it. If they are any good, they'll renew and deepen support. I tried to foster a debate about the future of the union movement. This was unsettling for some erstwhile supporters. In the Labor Council, in the first phase of my leadership as Secretary, Costa and Mark Duffy, who was a Research and Workers' Compensation Officer, were feisty and demanding. We needed to assess a number of challenges. The anti-left, ideological hold which kept the Right intact was unravelling.

The year after the collapse of the Berlin Wall saw the rapid collapse of most of the European communist regimes. The proud, anti-communist tradition would become irrelevant. More significantly, the role of unions and industrial relations strategies were the major priorities.

Some unions saw the Labor Council as too adventurist on enterprise bargaining and defending the case for enterprise unions. Early in my term it almost ended over a leaked private Labor Council Officers' strategy paper. (Later the ideas were published in Costa and Duffy's The Bonsai Economy Australian Labor in the Nineties). A howling crescendo of abuse followed. The Metal Workers called for their sackings. It was madness. Reading the stuff years later it's hard to know what the fuss was about. At the time, I would have resigned if Costa's resignation was forced. Most affiliates privately wondered whether he should go. Both Bill Kelty and Bob Hawke called to ask what was going on. The overwhelming majority of Labor Council delegates supported the principle that dismissal would be a mistake. In the end, despite Duffy's departure, an important, if wounding victory occurred for thinking aloud in private.

Privately, I learnt a lot from Costa. His reading in economics was more extensive than mine. I read the classic economists as well as, von Hayek and the liberal, free trade economists. How to think about a Labor approach to market reform was an urgent priority. The election of the Greiner Government in 1988, required the Labor Council to probe for weaknesses in the Government ? on the legislative and workers' compensation fronts especially ? and strike a sensible balance between reform and opposition. Costa played a key role in that evolving strategy.

Costa helped make happen difficult things. For example, as joint head of Chifley Financial Services, in battling for better management of the Council's businesses, When Barrie Unsworth became Head of Radio Station 2KY and began to turn around the Station's fortunes, I posted Costa to be there for two reasons. I thought his business and financial acumen could be well applied. Second, because I hoped Barrie would mentor him. If they clicked and worked as a team, Costa would be recharged and stay the distance. I gambled on that.

After my failed attempt to go to the Senate, Costa urged me to stay and fight. His judgement was sounder than mine when I suddenly decided to run for the Senate in 1994. He told me to pull out early. I didn't. I wanted to leave. I hadn't prepared the ground with affiliates. The AWU, a traditional ally, was offside supporting another candidate. With the Prime Minister and the triumvirate of Della Bosca, McLeay and Hutchins opposed to me, with numerous leaks to the press, I was a gonner. No - one in my position should lose so badly. I misread the political landscape. Michael's loyalty was intense, dedicated and appreciated. I feared, however, that unless I bade a rapid departure, that the Labor Council officers' power base would be eroded. That would mean that Costa could fail to be elected. He wasn't then, in 1994, everyone's favourite to become Assistant Secretary. He succeeded because of Peter Sams insistence that the Secretary choose his Deputy and that Michael was the best person for the job. That long simmering battle between principally many of the same people played itself out, one more time, with the election of John Robertson as Secretary upon Michael's departure.

The transformation of the Council's base was the hardest part of Michael's achievement, with some parts of the traditional base dismayed at bringing into the office Lefties and centre leaning union leaders. To do otherwise, however, was death. Michael continued what Peter Sams and I began, but would have found very hard to further implement. The Right could not have survived a continuation of factional divisions and ways of behaving that were more relevant to the Cold War period. In achieving that transformation, Michael was in a tradition of Labor Council Secretaries adapting to the times; and shaping the coalition that could stand behind them. So, in this respect, he built on a past tradition and ethos which, if meaningful, never stops still.

Let me explain the point.

A lot of people don't know what they mean when they refer to the NSW Right. It's always been a coalition, and has evolved over time. Coalition building is always a dynamic process. In the early 1940s, when the Labor Council leadership decisively beat the communist left, the Labor Council was anti-communist, laborist and focused on working to elect a Labor Government. The laborist tradition consolidated with a sustained period of NSW Labor Governments in the 1950s and 1960s; this coincided with the rise of Grouper influence and sharp distinctions between Left and Right. The Split added a new element of bitterness and competition.

This was contained by the Right leadership of the Council electing to be less active in the party and more neutral on the larger political issues. Absurdly enough, at a weekly Labor Council meeting in 1955 the Labor Council President even ruled that discussing politics was out of order. In the latter 1960s, the New Right gradually emerged and became more aggressive in advancing their interests. That was the period when John Ducker emerged as undisputed leader with his able supporters, Barrie Unsworth and John MacBean. The Labor Council Officers developed a reputation as progressive, imaginative leaders. In the late 1960s and 1970s, they supported Whitlam and Wran and the emergence of a modern ALP.

In Unsworth's time as secretary (1979 to 1984), the Labor Council courted white collar unions; the Bank Employees, the nurses, the insurance union and many others all affiliated. A centrist, a non-Right leader of the Bank Employees, Dawson Petie, later Secretary of the Queensland Trades Hall Council, became a Labor Council Vice President. This was the beginning of building a new coalition that could last.

Lest this note appear too uncritical, I have heard some sharp things said against him. For example, I gather that there was a decline in joke telling at Labor Council meetings, from about say the mid 1990s. He must bear some responsibility for that loss.

For Michael, the past 12 years at the Labor Council have been intense, rewarding, exhausting, lonely. The best years of his life. There's a paradox at the heart of the man. Sometimes there's a keen tension between his conflicting beliefs and outlooks. Many of us have wondered if his abrasive, sometimes extreme couldn't-care-a-less- what-you-think perspective might cause him to go up in flames. Those tensions, the paradox, seem however to be one of this strengths.

The first wog Secretary - his Greek Cypriot background set him apart from the six immediate predecessors, the first four of whom were converts to Catholicism and the following two also adherents to that faith. He wasn't the first Secretary to have once been expelled from the ALP. But he was the first ex-Trot. He broke many traditions, sold 2KY and radically shifted the Council's power base.

Not a bad act. We've not seen anything like it. One day soon, I suspect a similar observation might be passed on his role as a Minister in a NSW Labor Government.


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*   View entire issue - print all of the articles!

*   Issue 112 contents

In this issue
Features
*  Interview: Exit Interview
Michael Costa looks back at his 14 years with the Labor Council to chart the highs, the lows and the bits in between.
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*  Parliament: Opening Salvo
In his Maiden Speech, delivered this week, Costa gave vent to his views on immigration, Marx, globalisation and mental health.
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*  Scandals: My Evil Twin
Co-conspirator and 'intellectual soulmate' Mark Duffy recounts the legendary 'Leaked Paper' Affair and how its predictions soon came to pass.
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*  Politics: An Agent for Change
Former secretary Michael Easson argues that Costa was instrumental in redefining the factional balance in NSW in the wake of the Cold War.
*
*  Review: The Thoughts of Chairman MC
Neale Towart trawls the collected works of Michael Costa and looks at his love-hate affair with Marx.
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*  Factions: Kyoto Sunset
Naomi Steer - the first left-winger to work at Labor Council in decades - recalls how she discovered the real Michael in a Karaoke lounge.
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*  History: A Proud Tradition
Former Premier Barrie Unsworth argues Costa enters Parliament as the best qualified Labor Council leader ever to make the transition.
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*  Psychology: The Man Behind the Mask
Costa's predecessor Peter Sams argues that behind the bluff facade lay a loyal and caring friend.
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*  Seduction: Michael and Me
Chris Christodoulou recounts how Costa convinced him to cross the factional divide and take up residence in Sussex Street.
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*  Satire: Ode to Leon
Long-time sparring partner, Peter Botsman submits this lyrical tribute to Costa's career.
*

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