
Workers are again watching the Coalition government use the election to attack unions and commit to further reduce workers鈥 pay.
聽he wanted to tie pay rises for thousands of construction workers to minimum wage increases and lock in high levels of casualisation, labour hire and the use of temporary visa workers.聽聽has promised to double the fines on construction unions and individuals who break the government鈥檚 prohibitively defined industrial laws.
Construction unions are portrayed as thugs, serial offenders and law breakers and all unionised workers, but especially those in the construction industry, are being made scapegoats by a federal government seeking to distract from its聽policies of greater casualisation and inequality.
聽has described the Coalition鈥檚 attacks on workers鈥 pay and conditions as 鈥渁 disgrace鈥. He said the attacks would extend to all workplaces meaning pay cuts for all, especially where penalty rates apply. Labor鈥檚 Industrial Relations spokesperson Tony Bourke聽said Labor鈥檚 policies would deliver secure jobs, better pay and a fairer system.
The commercial construction industry in Australia is one of the most profitable, safe and productive聽in the world. The Construction Forestry Mining Maritime and Energy Union (CFMMEU) is revered by construction workers, and is the most militant union in the country.
For decades, the CFMMEU and its supporters in electrical, plumbing,聽construction and metals聽have been singled out for attack by governments because they are seen as pace-setters for wage rises and safety. Importantly, they have also challenged unfair industrial laws.
This is why former PM John Howard set up the聽Australian Building and Construction Commission in 2005. He used the recommendations from the聽Royal Commission into alleged misconduct in the building and construction industry, headed by Terence Cole,聽to impose special laws on unions in the construction industry.
But when the Kevin Rudd and Julia Gillard Labor governments rode to victory on the back of the Your Rights at Work campaign, rather than disband the ABCC, they maintained it in all but name. It was rebranded as Fair Work Building and Construction, but many of the ABCC's powers were kept in place.
Malcolm Turnbull鈥檚 Coalition government enacted laws in 2016 to 鈥渞aise productivity鈥 鈥 read profits 鈥 in the construction industry which included bringing back the most coercive version of the ABCC.
Led by the CFMMEU, unions have fought long and hard against the ABCC since its inception. They have petitioned Labor since 2003 to abolish the ABCC and were angry when Gillard鈥檚 Labor government in 2009 described construction workers in Victoria as 鈥渧iolent鈥 and that their tactics were intimidatory. Gillard retained the ABCC鈥檚 coercive powers but, under pressure, inserted a sunset clause and reduced the penalties for 鈥渦nlawful conduct鈥.
Tucked away at the end of Labor鈥檚聽聽for this election is a promise to abolish the ABCC.
It states that union officials are being pursued over minor issues, while wage theft, sham contracting, worksite safety and deaths are largely ignored. It also argues that construction workers should have the same rights as other workers.
After nearly two decades of not supporting the abolition of the ABCC, or similar coercive body, this is a welcome change of heart. But given Labor鈥檚 track record, we聽should be more than a little sceptical: if elected, will Labor abide by its promise?
罢丑别听,聽the construction bosses鈥 peak body, is mounting a significant campaign during this election campaign for Labor to retain the ABCC, arguing it will help the economy. It claims to have polled 40 marginal seats where builders and tradies say abolishing the ABCC will risk the recovery.
Given that Labor abandoned an earlier promise to聽review the JobSeeker rate聽if elected, it would not be a surprise if it quietly reviewed its position on the ABCC.
It is important that Labor be held to account.聽National Secretary of the CFMMEU Christy Cain told a recent rally in Melbourne that if Labor does not address attacks on workers and their unions during its term of office, workers would kick it out at the next election.
The only way workers can force Labor to stick to its promise on this and other anti-union laws, is to use its industrial power and mobilise.
聽wants all anti-union laws scrapped, and for聽workers鈥 right to strike and organise to be enshrined in law. We need to kick Morrison and the Coalition out, but that should not mean giving a blank cheque to Labor.
Holding Labor to account has to involve individual unions and the Australian Council of Trade Unions organising聽delegates鈥 meetings and mass rallies to聽pressure Labor to carry out its promises. As Cain said, workers and their unions will need to hold any future Labor government to account.
[Sue Bull is a long-time union member and educator and a member of the Socialist Alliance National Executive. Bull聽is standing in .]