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Prick up your ears, Tony (A response to 'Against Roonism')

By Wayne Swan - posted Tuesday, 15 May 2001


How long before Messrs Howard and Abbott – in Brecht’s words – decide to abolish the people and elect themselves a new one?

Mr Abbott should get out more. If he spent time talking to pensioners or working families on modest incomes he might then understand why people are pessimistic and why they are angry.

Take those on low fixed incomes. People on pensions were deceived about the nature of the government’s GST compensation. The government oversold its compensation in the lead up to the 1998 Election because it would have been voted out if it had told the truth. It baldly promised every older Australian $1000; that pensions would rise by 4%; that there would be no increase in the price of petrol; and that no-one would be worse off as a result of the GST.

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With price rises on essentials like electricity (up 10.9%), gas (up 12.5%), telephone (up 8.1%), and prescription medicines (up 6%) is it any wonder that attention has focused on the promised GST compensation and the fact that, like sugar coating on a bitter pill, it is quickly wearing away. People can see that they been left with a pervasive 10% tax and no financial buffer against rising prices. And they are not happy.

The GST adds a premium to almost everything people buy. And ABS household expenditure surveys show that it is those on low incomes, particularly aged pensioners and families, whose spending patterns mean they are not fully compensated for their expenditure.

Labor has been accused of a scare campaign on the issue of GST compensation for pensioners. This suits the Prime Minister and Mr Abbott because it allows them to avoid dealing with a difficult reality – the GST many people voted for is not the GST they are now stuck with.

John Howard’s battlers have not been used against him. Labor has simply listened to their grievances. Mr Abbott seeks to portray all this as Roonism. If he can convince people that he is the only one in Australia who is allowed to do any ‘knocking,’ good on him. I don’t think he stands a chance.

Australians don’t think ‘things are stuffed’ They have just worked out that the Howard Government has stuffed up.

Instead of defending the battlers as he promised to do, John Howard has been creating more of them.

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Remember Gordon’s Creed Tony, and take a lesson in real Australian culture and the reality of where you sit in Australian history:

"Life is mostly froth and bubble,
Two things stand like stone:
Kindness in another’s trouble,
Courage in your own."

Tony, prick up your ears.

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About the Author

Wayne Swan MP is the Member for Lilley (Qld). He is Federal Labor Shadow Treasurer and author of Postcode.

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