LABOR BRINGS BACK COMPULSORY STUDENT UNIONISM
Dr JENSEN» (Tangney) (10:01 AM) —I rise to speak on the Higher
Education Legislation Amendment (Student Services and Amenities, and
Other Measures) Bill 2009, which could possibly be referred to as the
repeal of voluntary student unionism bill. Here we are talking about
heartland Labor dogma. Here we see a Prime Minister doing his best
imitation of Marty McFly, leaping into his ideological DeLorean and
taking us screaming back to the days of compulsory funding for all
sorts of non-core activities, many of which were merely fronts for
pro-Labor activism. If Labor really cared about our university students
they would concentrate on ensuring that taxpayer dollars spent on
tertiary education went to the highest quality of core university
responsibility—that is, providing a first-class education. However,
instead of education, Labor is revisiting the old chestnut of non-core
services, many of which are provided in the general community anyway,
such as dentists, child care and sporting and other clubs. Why should
university students be able to pay less for playing sport than other
members of society?
The member for Wills mentioned a
second-hand bookshop. In a captive market for these items, such as on a
university campus, surely there could be some enterprising students who
could run the bookshop. Maybe they could even—shock, horror!—make a
profit. If not, perhaps some students who proclaim so loudly their
desire to serve their fellow students could actually organise
volunteers to man such a facility for just a few weeks at the beginning
of each semester instead of demanding more money to do so. As for
campus magazines, once again, where is the spirit of volunteering?
Where are the groups of committed student activists who claim to care
so much about the various causes they espouse? Can they not use their
own time to write student papers, perhaps even getting advertising and
then charging for these magazines so that people who are interested can
buy the magazines and those who are not interested are not forced to
pay for something they do not want? Oh, dear, we are back to that
troublesome word again—choice.
Using Labor’s logic, female
taxpayers should have to support Woman’s Day and the Australian Women’s
Weekly. The member for Wills also seems to have difficulty with the
definition of ‘compulsory’. Referring to the Howard government’s
legislation, he makes the logically incomprehensible statement that it
was compulsory to be voluntary. That just shows what a bind Labor is in
with the concept of choice: ‘voluntary’ is the antonym of ‘compulsory’.
Our argument is that students should have a choice as to whether they
pay for these services, many of which they do not want and will never
use. The excuse often floated is that many taxpayers pay for things
they will not use or benefit from—people with no children helping to
fund child care, for example. That is precisely the reason why many
students also work, plus all students who contribute to the federal
government coffers by way of GST should not have to pay twice for
services, many of which they do not want and will not use.
The member for Wills also sententiously states that the Labor Party
supports student organisations and their criticism of government,
saying that student unions have been critical of HECS. It would be
interesting to see how many issues of the Left were supported by
student unions and how many of the Right, like voluntary student
unionism, for example. I suggest that any research would illustrate
that Labor’s policy comes, as usual, from self-interest rather than
some phoney concern about the rights of students to self-expression.
The member for Wills then digs himself even further into an ideological
hole of his party’s making by accusing the Liberal Party of
paternalism. He claims that we are saying: ‘We know what’s best for
you. You cannot manage your own affairs.’ That is like Courtney Love
accusing Olivia Newton-John of being a bit trashy. It is of course the
Labor Party which is telling students that they must contribute. It is
Labor which is denying the right of students who want the choice of
whether or not to contribute. On the other hand, it is the coalition
which is saying to students, ‘You should have the choice.’ The justice
and appropriateness of that policy was borne out by those darn pesky
students who, when given choice, actually exercised it, and they left
student guilds in droves.
In the face of this mass exodus,
it would have been intelligent for those organisations to take a good
hard look at themselves, to wonder, ‘If so many students leave or
refuse to join, maybe, just maybe, we’re not giving them what they
want.’ But, no, such introspection is not in the nature of these
people. Clearly these organisations are just as paternalistic—or
perhaps I should say dictatorial—as their parent body, the ALP. Instead
of serving their clientele like any organisation worth its salt, they
demand that the clientele pay them for services they clearly do not
want. That is another classic characteristic of the Labor Party. Not
only is the concept of choice beyond them; so is the concept of supply
and demand.
The other big mistake the member for Wills
makes is confusing paternalism, which is at least well intentioned,
with coercion and dictatorship. When it involves money, it is verging
on extortion. If the member for Wills and his colleagues had the
slightest intention of even giving honesty a passing nod, they would
admit that, as so many on this side of the House have stated, the Labor
Party want to force all university students to pay for cosy little
greenhouses where the next generation of Labor MPs will be nurtured and
trained.
This legislation bears all the hallmarks of
discredited and toxic socialist dogma, now resurfacing, masquerading as
economically conservative Labor. We have already seen what a total
fraud that claim was, and this was yet another wolf-in-sheep’s-clothing
exercise by the Fabians opposite. The attack on students comes after
the initial classic class-envy spite of banning Australian
full-fee-paying students from Australian universities while still
permitting overseas full-fee-paying students—once again, an example of
this coercive, dictatorial, antichoice government actively attacking
just one section of our society, those who wish to get an education and
are prepared to pay for it.
In truth, as columnist Paul
Sheehan said recently, this government is merely a pale version of
Labor in the 1970s, ‘Whitlam-lite’. Government members clearly long for
the heady days when student unions, just like trade unions, could force
unwilling and in many cases Liberal-voting students and workers to fund
left-wing campaigns. Those campaigns had nothing to do with freedom of
expression or fair political discourse and everything to do with
getting as many groups as possible, via forced funding, to push Labor
ideology. The government longs for the return of the glory days when
millions of taxpayers’ dollars went via left-wing militant student
unions straight to the Labor cause, the halcyon era of bussing students
to protests against coalition governments, the happier times of student
unions’ hard-Left political campaigns when anti-logging, anti-US,
anti-Liberal, anti-family, anti-Israel, pro-drugs posters and
propaganda adorned every campus.
The member for Werriwa
speaks about supporting various amenities and services essential to
students. He lists many services which have been cut but omits to
mention that many of these services are available elsewhere—health,
employment, child care et cetera. I reiterate: why should students have
to pay twice for services which all Australians, including the Prime
Minister’s frequently evoked working families, should have access to,
paid for via the taxation system? The answer is that these services are
a smokescreen for the real reason for Labor’s bill: the revitalisation
of the militant activism seen in the seventies and eighties. The member
for Werriwa invites members on his side of the House to relate their
own experiences of university.
Mr Hayes —No, your side of the House.
Dr «JENSEN» —I am quite happy to relate my experiences. There were
services that I was quite happy to pay for, such as the gym and the
tennis court. Incidentally, for example, you had to pay for those
services anyway at Melbourne university. You had to pay $4 an hour for
the use of the tennis court—that was nearly 20 years ago. But I was not
happy about paying fees for student newspapers and the various
societies and so on that I had no interest whatsoever in joining. My
wife was a student at Deakin University. However, she was a student at
Deakin University in Perth, and it is an awfully long way to fly from
Perth to Geelong to get access to student services and the various
guild organisations and so on, yet she had to pay for it.
Mr Perrett —Have a look at the legislation.
Dr «JENSEN» —I am just relating what has happened in the past; these
are experiences that we had. I also found it interesting that a member
of parliament would admit that virtually all members in this House are
university educated, thereby acknowledging that the good old days, when
the Labor Party genuinely represented blue-collar workers, are long
gone. The corollary of Labor’s relentless drive for more and more young
people to consider a university education as their right, no matter
what their abilities were, is the implication that blue-collar workers
were somehow failures because they were not good enough or chose not to
attend university. That is a large part of the reason we are seeing a
trade shortage in this country. Young people were brainwashed into
thinking that they should all go on to university no matter whether it
was suitable for their abilities or whether there was a need for those
graduates. The universities were happy to go along with the sentiment
because it meant more students and more funding.
If Labor
really cared about universities, students and the standard of
education, they would be more interested in quality rather than
quantity. Members on this side have no hesitation in supporting extra
funding for universities when it ensures a better quality of
education—better libraries, better staff and better laboratories and
other resources. Despite the member for Werriwa’s assertions,
university sporting activity is not, as he puts it, essential for
university life unless you are doing a sports related degree. Many
universities that are active in sports never join a university sporting
club. That is their choice—and there is that word again: ‘choice’,
which presents so many problems for Labor. Getting a Labor member to
freely and willingly enunciate the word ‘choice’ in this context is as
hard as getting the Fonz from Happy Days to say the word ‘wrong’. The
member for Werriwa also said that food and beverage services were
essential to university life. I would have thought that anyone with the
slightest degree of business acumen having a captive clientele of the
order quoted by the member in his speech, many of whom have spent time
between lectures and tutorials to meet and have something to eat or
drink, ought to be able to make a profit from a business selling food
and drinks. He reaches the apogee of his argument with a startling
claim that money creates diversity. It certainly did not create a
diversity of opinion, because, as I have already said, in the heyday of
forced funding for student organisations, all the political produce of
student union magazines et cetera was of the Left, if not the extreme
Left.
However, if the government genuinely believes in
supporting these services—counselling, employment et cetera—let them
specify funding for these purposes as the Howard government did. That
would prove the government is genuine in its intentions and not just
interested in taxing students to fund left-wing activism. Sadly, I
think anyone holding their breath waiting for that burst of honesty
would expire long before it eventuated.
The member for
Kingston goes even further with the essential services line of
argument, stating that, at some regional and rural campuses, students
have no alternative place to go for basic services such as health
services. If that is truly the case, surely a competent and caring
government would ensure the broader community, not just students, had
all the services they needed.
In summary, this bill is all
about using the mainly peripheral activities adjunct to the
universities core raison d’etre as a backdoor way of re-establishing
the slush funds to fund left-wing organisations. In doing this, Labor
shows that it has no interest in ordinary students, many of whom
struggle to meet the cost of educating themselves, especially in this
economic climate. Labor claims this bill is to help students. It is
funny how help from the Labor Party usually ends up costing everyone so
much more money. That has been the track record of Labor over the past
several decades. The only difference now is the amount of money Labor
policies are costing taxpayers or, in this case, students.