
John Howard
New Internationalist magazine,
August 2003

According to the US, the 'Coalition of
the Willing' in the war against Iraq had anything from 26 to 46
members - many of whom 'wish to remain anonymous'. One nation
that has been anything but anonymous is Australia and its Prime
Minister John Howard. One of only three nations prepared to commit
troops to the war against Iraq - Australia committed 2,000 - Prime
Minister Howard characterizes Iraqi leader Saddam Hussein as a
mass murderer, torturer and persecutor of his people who must
be removed so that his people can be freed from tyranny. Yet when
Iraqi people have sought to escape Saddam's Iraq by seeking refuge
in Australia, the Howard Government has locked them up or turned
back the leaking boats that brought them.
Although John Winston Howard heads the
Liberal Party, he is far from liberal in his political outlook.
Born in Sydney's suburbs in 1939, his parents ran a garage until
the death of his father - from the effects of war injuries - in
1954. He grew up in a churchgoing, lower middle-class Anglican
family, then studied Law (finding university a 'chore'). He lived
with his widowed mother until he married - not uncommon during
this period. Less common, however, was his mother's negotiation
of his first salary with his employer: the sort of story that
people have loved to use to portray him as a slightly ridiculous
Mr Magoo figure. His hearing deficiency has added to this effect.
As a consequence, Howard has been consistently underestimated
as a threat by foes outside his party and rivals within.
Howard rose through the Liberal Party
in the 19605 when it was committed to both the welfare state and
a role for trade unions - values he never shared. He was one of
the first Liberals to adopt monetarist economic doctrines and
to develop a conservative position on feminism and the family.
In the 19905 he steered a cultural counter-revolution
in Australian politics. Together with a number of reactionary
intellectuals he began importing the jargon of the US 'culture
wars'- most particularly the phrase 'political correctness', a
term he used exhaustively during 1993-94.
It was a vote-winning move. The then Labor
Prime Minister Paul Keating, who had previously focused on neoliberalizing
Australia's economy, had turned his attention to a new flag, a
republic, reconciliation between indigenous and non-indigenous
Australia, and an engaged rapport with Asia. This alienated sections
of the middle class. More importantly, it also alienated key sections
of Labor's formerly solid working-class constituency. Their relatively
benign attachment to an Anglo-Celtic Australian tradition has
been transformed into a far more fearful and resentful hostility
to foreigners by the devastating effect that neoliberal economic
policies - downsizing, casualization and off-shoring- have | had
on the workforce.
Howard and a network of right-wing intellectuals,
newspaper columnists, publishers and radio shock-jocks shamefully
fanned the flames of this resentment. When former Liberal candidate
Pauline Hanson won a seat in parliament by openly saying that
she 'wouldn't represent aboriginals' in her electorate. Howard
determined that there would be nothing to the Right of him. Without
endorsing the content of Hanson's vile and paranoid maiden speech,
he suggested that he was happy that 'people could talk more freely'.
This reactionary strategy had explosive
results in 2000 and 2001, when the arrival of Middle Eastern refugees
by boat on Australia's northern coast increased. The previous
government had introduced a policy of mandatory detention of such
arrivals in camps in desert areas such as Port Hedland and Woomera.
By the late 19.905 the plight of the detainees was creating a
furore that divided the nation. When a Norwegian tanker - the
Tampa - picked up 438 refugees from a sinking boat in August 2001
and attempted to bring them to port in Australia, the popularity
of the Howard Government was low. The Government refused the Tampa
entry. The 1o-day standoff that followed resulted in the refugees
being shipped to a tent city on the Pacific island of Nauru where
many lived for months while their refugee status was assessed.
In October a grossly overloaded fishing
boat heading for Australia with 397 asylum seekers sank in heavy
seas: 353 (mainly Iraqi) refugees drowned. Doubt has been placed
on Government claims that the boat sank in Indonesian waters,
with some evidence now showing that the Australian Navy knew about
the boat but did nothing to help save those who eventually drowned.
Three weeks later the Liberals won the November 2001 election.
If Howard's policies and strategies are
not racist then, at the very least, a form of white chauvinism
is in play - a disdain towards non-white people. The results are
clear. There is now more prejudice, hostility, reactionary ugliness
and short-sightedness in Australian politics than at any time
since the early 1950s. That, above all, will be John Howard's
lasting achievement.
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