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Issue No. 249 03 December 2004  
E D I T O R I A L

Moral Majority
Unions NSW is currently hosting one of the world�s great thinkers in Robert Reich; academic, commentator and Clinton labour secretary; a man with a mind as big as the dilemmas progressive politics face right now.

F E A T U R E S

Interview: Minority Report
New federal ALP industrial relations spokesman Stephen Smith on the hostilities in store for the labour movement.

Industrial: Girl Power
Tim Brunero looks at how women are making their mark in a once-male dominated trade.

Unions: Made in NZ
Jim Marr looks behind the rhetoric to uncover what the Howard Government has in store for Australian workers.

History: Spirit for a Fair Go
Paddy Gorman looks at the importance of Eureka on the Australian political psyche.

Economics: Fool's Gold
Tom Bramble identifies some contradictions in Howard's economic miracle.

Politics: Worth Fighting For
One of the Left's most influential figures of the last 40 years gives his theory of power ...

Health: The Force Behind Medibank
Public health has always been a core activity for the union movement, writes Neale Towart

Legal: Robust Justice
Former ACTU executive member and textile union leader Anna Booth argues that Alternate Dispute Resolution is one way around the looming assault on union rights.

International: After the Revolution
Has China entered a post-revolutionary phase - and where will it take the world, asks James Goodman

Poetry: The Sound of Unions
Ah, the hills are alive, with The Sound of Unions, muses resident bard, David Peetz

Review: Bad Santa
Billy Bob Thornton's newest role puts the 'nick' in Saint Nicholas and reveals the Satan in Santa, writes Tara de Boehmler.

N E W S

 Moral Crusade to Save Family

 20 Dead � Stockmarket Applauds

 Karen Gives Howard a Paint Job

 Buckeridge Bill Blocks Entry

 Casual Beach Closures

 Railworkers Scull Costa

 Racism in the Dock

 Go Home Alone � And Other Survival Tips

 Vet Beats Bullet

 Cleaners Clean Up

 Weekend Work Wiped

 Miners Go to the Movies

 Feds Attack Low Paid

 Activists What's On!

C O L U M N S

New Matilda
How Labor Lost the Plot
In his contribution to Australia's new political zine 'New Matilda' , Father Michael kelly argues the ALP is in search of a soul.

The Soapbox
Outside the Tent
Labor exile Lindsay Tanner is warning the ALP to be careful who it gets into bed with.

The Locker Room
Sons Of Beaches
Phil Doyle gets the perfect wave, and waves back

Politics
The Westie Wing
150 years since the struggle at Eureka, the fight to achieve social justice, equality and responsible government is just as vital as ever in the neo-conservative Australia, writes Ian West.

Postcard
Postcard from Harare
Ken Davis, from Union Aid Abroad, on how unions are at the forefront in the battle for democracy in Zimbabwe

L E T T E R S
 Leadership Skills
 Not A Casey Fan
WHAT YOU CAN DO
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Editorial

Moral Majority


Unions NSW is currently hosting one of the world�s great thinkers in Robert Reich; academic, commentator and Clinton labour secretary; a man with a mind as big as the dilemmas progressive politics face right now.

He comes at a moment in history when we are licking our collective wounds; an ascendant Howard government, a dazed and confused opposition and a looming legislative assault on unions.

Like many in America, where the conservative ascendency is even more pronounced, we risk entering a siege mentality - a period where we will be compelled to fight to defend hard-won rights for working people in the face of a concerted attack.

Reich's simple message - that of the imperative for nations in the global economy to build and nurture a smart, creative workforce - is a tonic right now

Listening to Reich speak in his softly spoken way about our need to build a positive agenda is a pleasure because you get a thinker, a leader and a teacher rolled into one.

But the real pleasure is where his ideas take your own thinking.

Having sat through a number of speeches, roundtables and interviews this week, what struck me was how so much of what we pass as our political discourse, is really about tactics.

Organising workers is a tactic; developing policies to target certain demographic groups is a tactic; even the choice of leader is, ultimately, a tactic.

But to what ends? Unionising workplaces and winning elections are themselves only tactics to ... and here our thinking often stalls. We talk of social justice, equity and fairness, but their manifestations have become blurred. We have lost our moral language.

To Reich, we have lost our sense of narrative of where our political activity will take us and in losing hold of this narrative we are dooming ourselves to failure.

From the high point of the civil rights movement, the Left has lost control of the moral high ground; in the face of the certainty of the Religious Right's fundamentalist views on private morality hot housed in a climate of fear and uncertainty.

At a time when the family is under siege by labour market deregulation, creating a world of loneliness, dislocation and family breakdown, the hot moral topics are gay marriages and abortion.

The challenge is to build a picture of our economic future: the industries that will sustain us and the growth that will be generated; the jobs we will do and the way that we will work; and then write a moral story around these choices.

It is in doing this intellectual heavy-lifting that we can reframe our political activity and hold governments to account for the moral cost of allowing unregulated markets to run rampant.

Reich's narrative that was so influential during the Clinton years is a good starting point: a partnership between workers and employers building a skilled and creative workforce, to build the corporations, to build industries to build prosperity.

From this vantage point, different economic arguments can be mounted.

Families need a strong economy; but economies also need strong families - to produce a labour market that can take the high growth path, workers who have a stable home life, a loving platform, and a sound education.

A high growth economy is not served by cutting labour costs or by forcing workers to live insecure existences. These sorts of policies actually undermine a nation's competitiveness.

Through this prism, any industrial relations policy based on breaking workers down into single bargaining units so they can be paid less is not only bad for workers, it is bad for companies, and bad for the nation too.

All of a sudden our negative campaign against deregulation has become a positive campaign - not for a system of industrial relations, but for a vision for building a higher value labour market based on stronger family units. Who would argue with that?

The issues facing the labour movement are bigger than any one mind, but the conversations that Robert Reich sparks could well set us in a direction where we can build a positive agenda for the coming year.

If you get the chance, don't miss the opportunity to be stimulated by this remarkable man.

Speaking engagements:

Sydney: Seymour Centre, Tuesday December 7; 7.30 pm

Canberra: National Press Club, Wednesday December 8,

Melbourne: Thursday, December 9

Finally, this is our last regular Workers Online for the year. We will have our traditional year ender in a couple of weeks.

Peter Lewis

Editor


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