How can we combat far-right pandemic populism?

January 17, 2022
Issue 
Craig Kelly, a former Liberal MP now a leader of the United Australia Party, speaks to a Melbourne anti-vaccination protest on November 13.

If we needed another demonstration that the world is run by irrational corporate profiteers, the COVID-19 pandemic is it. A shit show the world over, the crisis continues to expose neoliberalism for its glaring inadequacies and cruelty.

Despite the two years of bungling by Australian governments, working people vigorously supported measures to contain the virus and keep society safe. Collectively, we bought valuable time by isolating as much as possible while vaccines were developed and distributed.

But after so much sacrifice, the ruling class鈥檚 has unleashed a new 鈥渓et it rip鈥 strategy to cover for its failures to put adequate health and employment protections in place as new variants of the virus appear.

Of course, the public health system has been in trouble for a lot longer than the pandemic.

Since the 1980s, the health system has been stripped down via privatisations under the guise of 鈥渃ost-cutting鈥. It is not a surprise that one of the worst death tolls from the virus in Melbourne鈥檚 second wave stemmed from the chronically-underfunded, profit-driven aged-care system. No quick-fixes could make up for the damage already done.

Governments could have聽 built聽up the public health system, banked resources and reconfigured workplaces to help cope for when, and if, the virus got out of control. That didn鈥檛 happen. Given our efforts to keep society safe (including through lockdowns) over the past two years, their decision to open up before Christmas, with no plan to deal with the Omicron infection spike, was reckless.

Both PCR testing and the availability of the Rapid Antigen Tests (RATs) were overwhelmed within a few weeks. Not only does the under-preparedness and under resourcing impact healthcare workers, it reaches well beyond. So many people now cannot work because they have to isolate without access to paid pandemic leave or income support.

Who鈥檚 responsible?

鈥淵ou can鈥檛 just make everything free,鈥 Prime Minister Scott Morrison declared recently. It鈥檚 not his money to decide. His shift in rhetoric is to thrust the onus to stay safe back on to the individual. Rather than provide free PCR tests, we are told to buy our own RAT (the cost of which will quickly mount up).

JobKeeper, the higher JobSeeker rate and lockdown payments have been removed 鈥 one by one 鈥 over the past year. Now, we have 鈥減rivate鈥 lockdowns, where individuals have to isolate, but without a financial safety net.

This shows how useless capitalism is. Ultimately, it鈥檚 down to us to figure out how to keep food on the shelves, teach our kids and look after the sick.

Mirroring the disaster of climate change, the virus surge had been predicted. Given the inept government response, it鈥檚 no wonder the far right is trying to capitalise on聽the discontent.

The so-called 鈥淔reedom protests鈥 in Melbourne last September attracted tens of thousands of people into the streets for several weeks. They began after the Construction, Forestry, Mining and Energy Union refused to campaign聽against vaccine mandates and were given a boost by the聽perceived overreach of the Victorian government鈥檚 pandemic law.

The Freedom group tapped into a current with ties to groups connected to the former United States鈥 President Donald Trump. Primed with conspiracy theories about the virus, it tried to gain sympathy with the organised labour movement.

While the protests involved some neo-Nazis, they were primarily tapping the anger of disillusioned people from all walks of life.

While some anti-vax protesters use democratic slogans (such as 鈥淢y body my right鈥) to try and get their point across, others, such as those who tried to infiltrate the Aboriginal Tent Embassy in Canberra, have declared they are a part of the Trumpian 鈥淪overeign Citizen Movement鈥.

Some on the left have written the anti-vax crowd off as far-right and organised counter-protests to shame them. There is a tactical question of how effective it is to call for them to be shut down. It also has to factor in how to calibrate workplace health and safety with individual rights.

A lot of this movement鈥檚 funding has come from the deep-pocketed Craig Kelly and the United Australia Party (UAP). The involvement of the evangelical Christian right helps explain some of its migrant working-class composition.

We all know people who have been, or are, suckered in to believing that by not taking a life-saving vaccine they are fighting an oppressive system. This is misguided, but it is also true that they are not all fascists.

The organised far right, including its UAP parliamentary wing, wants to expand its influence by tapping into legitimate grievances for which the left needs to be offering solutions.

Working people and their unions need to mobilise to reject the populist anti-vaccine movement鈥檚 non-solutions and demand the necessary public health funding and financial safety nets.

We also need to demand the federal government helps聽poorer countries with vaccinations. Apart from global solidarity reasons, we know that new variants of the virus will develop in those parts of the globe that are not fully vaccinated.

The pandemic is a global problem, but the neoliberals in charge are prepared to ignore this. Meanwhile, Cuba鈥檚 record on public health stands out. It has achieved an astonishing 90% vaccination rate 鈥 without mandates 鈥 and in the face of the punishing decades-long US blockade.

Mounting campaigns to undercut the right鈥檚 simplistic and populist 鈥渟olutions鈥 would re-engage a lot of people. Our demands need to include: free, locally manufactured RAT; sick leave for all positive cases no matter people鈥檚 work status or industry; restore the full Coronavirus supplement to JobSeeker and provide income support to all who have to isolate; and manufacture vaccines here and provide them free to the region.

[Felix Dance is standing for the聽. This article is based on a presentation he gave to the 16th National Conference of the Socialist Alliance.]

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