Nick G.
The
Master Builders Australia (MBA) today launched a campaign of intimidation and
bullying against independent Senators.
The MBA has taken out ads in the mass media bluntly directing the
Senators to support a revived Australian Building and Construction Commission
(ABCC) with stronger draconian powers.
The MBA
makes ridiculous assertions that a vote against the ABCC threatens the
community, schools and hospitals, and lawlessness.
Not one of the four dot points used by the MBA has
any credibility. Instead they are
emotive, dishonest and unsubstantiated and constitute public intimidation and
bullying of independent senators - the very thing the MBA claims to be against.
It is an attempt to revive and strengthen the sorts
of bullying and coercion that led to charges against CFMEU member Ark Tribe. Mr
Tribe was persecuted for standing up over an onsite safety issue. If found guilty, he faced a mandatory 6-month
jail sentence. Workers absolutely reject
the un-Australian application of one set of rules for workers in construction,
and another for every other worker.
The proposal to revive the ABCC includes an increase
in penalties against individual construction workers from $10,200 to $34,000 for
breaches of the FairWork Act, and from $51,000 to $170,000 for unions.
Australian workers live under some of the most
restrictive and unjust definitions of “protected industrial action” in the
developed world. To increase the
penalties applicable under this system simply shows the slave-driver mentality
of the ruling class.
The federal government’s determination to throw the
book at construction workers stands in marked contrast to their refusal to make
giant corporations and high wealth individuals open their books to the scrutiny
of the ATO.
In contrast to the massive penalties for even minor
unprotected interruption to work, companies with liability for the deaths of
construction workers are let off by the courts with only minimal penalty. In February of this year, a Queensland
company which pleaded guilty to breaches of Section 24&30 of the former WHS
Act 1995 (failing to ensure the health and safety of workers) was fined a
paltry $25,000 for the death of two workers.
The attacks being lined up against
construction workers are a test run for widespread attacks against the working
class as a whole.
The MBA and Coalition government plan to
revive and strengthen the ABCC must be defeated.
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