PM Transcripts

Transcripts from the Prime Ministers of Australia

Howard, John

Period of Service: 11/03/1996 - 03/12/2007
Release Date:
20/04/1998
Release Type:
Interview
Transcript ID:
10716
Released by:
  • Howard, John Winston
TRANSCRIPT OF THE PRIME MINISTER THE HON JOHN HOWARD MP RADIO INTERVIEW THE JEREMY CORDEAUX PROGRAMME RADIO 5DN

CORDEAUX:

Day 13 of the wharf dispute and the Prime Minister, John Howard,

says that the future of this country is being decided on the wharves

now. It all goes back to the court today. The Federal Court prepares

to hand down its decision on whether to reinstate the 1400 sacked

Patrick Stevedore workers. The Prime Minister is on the line. Sir,

good morning, thanks for your time.

PRIME MINISTER:

Good morning Jeremy, very nice to be with you again.

CORDEAUX:

Do you have any sense of, I don't know, foreboding? How is

the fight going in your opinion?

PRIME MINISTER:

Well it's a very important issue. It's about whether

Australia will have a competitive waterfront in the future that

will enable us to sell more abroad, employ more Australians at home

and survive in a very difficult world trading environment. Perhaps

one of the economic reports that came out this morning put its finger

on what this is all about and that was a report from Access Economics.

CORDEAUX:

Yes, I saw it.

PRIME MINISTER:

Which said that Australia is now living in one of the most hostile

international trading environments it's ever faced. Now what

that means, in very simple terms is, that in order to survive in

that hostile environment, Australia has to get everything right

at home. Everything right at home. It means low interest rates.

It means low inflation. It means a reformed taxation system, and

it also means, very importantly, having a competitive waterfront.

And there can't be any ifs, buts and maybes. And when you put

all the sound and fury and noise and rhetoric and dust of the last

few days aside, one thing stands absolutely unshaken, and that is

the economic imperative of this country having an efficient waterfront.

If we are to survive in that hostile world trading environment,

if we are to sell what we need to survive, we've got to have

an efficient waterfront. And manifestly we have not had so for the

last 50 years.

CORDEAUX:

You know they are talking about a divided country and they are

calling on you to come in somehow and wave a wand and bring everybody

together. But are you surprised that when you describe that big

picture, I mean to me it is so simple and clear.

PRIME MINISTER:

Well that is what, may I say, the man and woman in the street sees

it as.

CORDEAUX:

Are you sure of that though?

PRIME MINISTER:

Well I am. I don't believe the country is divided. I think

there's, and it suits my critics, and it suits the critics

of the Government and it suits the MUA's cause to say oh, shock,

horror, everybody is at everybody's throats, it's divided,

let's have another meeting. I mean we have been having meetings

for years and years and years about the waterfront. The Hawke Government

had meetings. The Prime Minister brought the pizzas into the Commonwealth

Government centre in Sydney for 48 hours at meetings. What did that

produce? It produced the expenditure of $420 million and no real

improvement in the waterfront. We still have a crane rate of 18

an hour versus that of 30 an hour from our Asian competitors. We

still have rorts, we still have overmanning to the tune of 50 per

cent. We still have a situation where you are dealing with people

who are paid $74,000 to $80,000 a year, which is double the average

wage of the people who are listening to this interview. So unless

that sort of thing is stopped, unless that is changed, unless we

get a productive waterfront. I have no objection to waterfront,

waterside workers earning $50,000, $60,000, $70,000, $80,000 even

more, provided they are productive. Let me make it clear it is not

about salary levels. It is about the level of the salary compared

with the output.

CORDEAUX:

They talked about Australia getting up there to world's best

practice. I can't see for the life of me why we can't

be ahead of world's best practice. Why can't we, in fact,

lead the world. It is only a question of saying well here is the

most important thing for Australia, we must have the most, not just

equal competitive that's on the wharves, but we must be the

best.

PRIME MINISTER:

Well, of course, and what the message that comes out of that Access

Economics report clearly states is that unless we make ourselves

not only equal to the best but ahead of the best operating at the

present time, we are not going to get a reasonable share of markets

in a very hostile trading environment. I mean I can't emphasise

that too strongly. This is about our economic future, it is not

about the right of people to belong to a union, that is not at issue.

We guarantee the right of people to belong to a union if they want

to, we are the first Government at a Federal level to bring in legislation

totally outlawing discrimination as to whether or not a person is

a member or not of a trade union. This is about whether we are to

have a world class, world efficient waterfront that will underpin

the behaviour of our exporters. Now we have at the moment a threat

to our farmers, we have an American union outfit threatening retaliation

against the farm produce of Australia's hardworking farmers,

most of whom haven't seen in their lifetime $70,000 or $80,000

a year income and are now facing, they are now facing the indignity

and the humiliation and the further frustration of an international

union of conspiracy to hit them and I think that is the ultimate

in betrayal of the national interest. I mean if ever there is a

group of people in Australia who deserve our understanding and our

sympathy, it is the farmers of Australia and now as a spin-off from

this dispute, you're having unions overseas, and we are invited

to believe that they have had no encouragement at all from John

Coombs and his friends, and I think most Australians will find that

unbelievable, that these unions are now collaborating and conspiring

to damage the economic interest of Australia.

CORDEAUX:

Well the ACCC say that they are going to come down heavily on the....

PRIME MINISTER:

Well I hope the full rigour of the law is used to support Australia's

farmers and I want to make the point that the law here is being

defied in a number of respects. The law is being defied at the moment

in ports in Melbourne and in Sydney where you've got Supreme

Court orders and those orders are being defied by the MUA and their

friends, and they are being encouraged to defy those orders by Mr

Beazley and by the Premier of New South Wales. I mean our view is

that no matter who's involved, they have to obey the law and

that applies to Patrick's, it applies to the unions, it applies

to me, it applies to you. But at the moment as we speak you have

a situation where the unions are defying the law and they are being

encouraged in that defiance by the Leader of the Opposition and

by the Premier of New South Wales.

CORDEAUX:

Do you have any power to make sure that the police do, in fact,

do their job in New South Wales. Can you?

PRIME MINISTER:

In our kind of democracy the responsibility of enforcing the domestic

law of Australia is in the hands of the police. That's the

way our system operates. Everyone knows that.

CORDEAUX:

Clearly in New South Wales, they've taken a very, very lenient

line?

PRIME MINISTER:

Well there is no doubt that the New South Wales Government is encouraging

defiance of the law in that State.

CORDEAUX:

Are you doing something about that Prime Minister?

PRIME MINISTER:

Well I'm pointing it out, but bear in mind that the way our

country is structured, it is the responsibility of the police to

ensure that the law is not continuously defied and it is therefore

very much the responsibility of State Government. Now what is being

defied in Victoria, for example, is an order of the Supreme Court

of Victoria, obtained, as I understand it, by the Victorian Port

Authority and that is an agency of the Victorian Government. So

you have a situation where there you have a State law being defied,

you have an injunction of the Supreme Court of New South Wales being

defied in New South Wales and you have this sort of fiction that

in some way, well of course, it was directed against the MUA and

because other people are involved they don't have to comply

with it. I mean it beggars belief to us, the Australian public,

to accept that the MUA is not right in the heart of the defiance

that is now taking place in New South Wales, but they obviously

don't feel that any kind of risk in that State because the

Premier of New South Wales has gone down to the wharves in New South

Wales and has cheered them on and has encouraged them in that defiance.

Now whatever your views are, it is absolutely irresponsible of any

political leader, in or out of Government, to encourage defiance

of the law. I mean Patricks boss said on television last night that

he would, subject to his right of appeal, of which any person has,

he would abide by any orders of the courts. John Coombs didn't

say that, Jennie George didn't say that, Kim Beazley hasn't

said that, and Bob Carr hasn't said that.

CORDEAUX:

But what in the end do you do if you can't get the things

on and off the wharf and they obey the law selectively. As I said,

I think when this whole thing was just beginning on the horizon,

when you were in the studio the last time we spoke, I said well,

why not do a Bob Hawke? Why not send in the army?

PRIME MINISTER:

It is not the job of the Australian army to enforce the civil law

of Australia. That is the job of the police. The job of the army

is not to enforce the civil law.

CORDEAUX:

But at what point would you say, I, in the interests of this country

must do something to open the wharves and keep them open. There

must be a point.

PRIME MINISTER:

It goes without saying that issue is under constant surveillance

and it is the responsibility of the State governments and of the

State police to prevent unlawful obstructions of people going about

their lawful business. I mean, nobody is disputing the right of

members of trade unions to engage in peaceful demonstrations, to

engage in lawful, peaceful pickets. Nobody is disputing their right

to do that but I do dispute their right to stop people going about

their business and if a company has cargo which has been landed

at a wharf and the customers of that company are crying out for

that cargo and in some cases, when the cargo is medical supplies,

the customers are patients who desperately need those medical supplies,

perhaps for pain relief, it is plainly unlawful, wrong and against

everything that this country believes in for the free flow of that

cargo and the passage of those goods out of the wharves to be impeded.

Now I am not denying the right of the unions to demonstrate their

point of view. They can demonstrate it as vigorously as they like.

That is their democratic right but they have no right, according

to ordinary principles of Australian justice or an ordinary understanding

of a fair go, they had no right to impede other people's business,

nor had they the right to stop other workers going about their lawful

business. That is what is happening right at the moment and it is

conduct which is being condoned by the Leader of the Federal Opposition,

it is being condoned by the leadership of the ACTU and it is being

condoned by the New South Wales Premier. Now the responsibility

for enforcing the law rests with the police and with the State governments.

They are State laws in the main that are being defied and breached

and the civilian authority which has the responsibility to enforce

the law of course are the police forces of the various States.

CORDEAUX:

What happens if Justice Tony North, who is very familiar with this

area of activity, finds in favour of the wharfies and the 1400 sacked

Patrick workers are told to go back. What happens then?

PRIME MINISTER:

Whatever decision is made by the courts, the people have to abide

by it. I can't say to one group in the community, you abide

by the law, and to another group, you don't. I mean, that is

what Mr Beazley is doing.

CORDEAUX:

But you're not going to get another opportunity to .... about

the reform...

PRIME MINISTER:

If I could just finish. I think it is fair to say that as this

dispute, this issue goes on, you are going to have a lot of court

action and you are going to have some wins and losses on both sides.

I would imagine that whatever the outcome of Mr Justice North's

deliberations there would be an appeal and there will be, and I

will hope that appeal were resolved quite speedily. It's a

very important issue but...

CORDEAUX:

Just give me an idea of how firm you are on this?

PRIME MINISTER:

Absolutely. I mean, we are absolutely committed to having a reformed,

revitalised, more efficient Australian waterfront and it's

not because I am trying to destroy the MUA. I don't mind if

the MUA continues and flourishes. I do want to end the MUA's

monopoly and our changes to the Industrial Relations Act with the

help of Cheryl Kernot made that possible. But my objective is to

have a more competitive Australian waterfront because that will

deliver more Australian jobs, attract more investment, and boost

Australian exports in a very hostile, international trading environment.

So we are very strongly committed. Our resolve is firm. We don't

pretend it is easy and I never thought it would be easy but it is

in the long term interests of all Australians to have a more competitive

waterfront and when all the noise and dust and rhetoric dies away,

that issue still remains, and that is unless we can lift ourselves

not only to world's best practice but as you rightly say, beyond

it, we do not have a hope of surviving effectively in a very hostile

world trading environment. It makes me feel literally sick to think

that people, any Australian would be contemplating giving any support

of any kind to some kind of international boycott of Australian

farm produce.

CORDEAUX:

Well if we want more employment, the way to get it is to get an

absolutely super efficient waterfront. The benefits of that flow

on to absolutely every occupation.

PRIME MINISTER:

We are a nation that needs to trade to survive. We have seen this

huge downturn in Asia. Because of the domestic strength of the Australian

economy, we have largely protected ourselves against it but nonetheless,

we are in a much tougher international trading environment than

ever before. That's the point of the Access survey that came

out this morning. What is the response of the trade union movement?

Virtually to applaud the very thought that there is going to be

some kind of international search- and-destroy mission conducted

against Australia's farmers.

CORDEAUX:

Prime Minister, we will move onto other things. Just quickly, one

of the considerations or one of the concerns over the weekend, seems

to be the way in which Patrick's manoeuvred the corporate structure.

Now, does it concern you that some unscrupulous employer may, or

for totally dishonourable and unreasonable reasons, employ the same

sort of practice or manoeuvre?

PRIME MINISTER:

I would never pretend that every employer in Australia is a paragon

of virtue any more than I assert that every employee is. As far

as I am concerned, I am totally opposed to sharp practices by employers

just as I am opposed to militant tactics by trade unionists.

CORDEAUX:

Would you say that the Patrick's manoeuvre was a sharp practice?

PRIME MINISTER:

If people believe it is, I mean, I have not had any evidence presented

to me to suggest that it is, no. But I don't pretend to know

everything about what a company does. I do know this, that for three

years, for three years before these events unfolded, Patrick's had

been endeavouring to get the Maritime Union of Australia to honour

a number of arrangements and agreements that had been approved by

Mr Coombs, the Federal Secretary of the Union, after lengthy negotiation

with Patrick's. They have been trying for three years. I mean, this

idea that somehow or other the answer to the problem is to have

another meeting completely ignores the fact that the union and Patrick's

have been having meetings for years.

CORDEAUX:

They should remember what Laurie Brereton said about the sale of

ANL, that you couldn't give it away and the result of that

was, I would think, the union ....

PRIME MINISTER:

Of course. Everyone knows that the former Labor Government wanted

to sell ANL and in the end they didn't because Bill Kelty said

they couldn't. Mr Beazley comes along and he says, the Prime

Minister should call a meeting of all of the parties. I mean that

is just singing the song of the MUA. The MUA has been meeting Patrick's

for three years and Patrick's has been saying to them again and

again and again, in those discussions, and ultimately to the whole

workforce, has been saying, look, unless we can lift the productivity

of this outfit, unless you deliver your side of the bargain, unless

in return for the wage increases that we have delivered and the

improvements in conditions, you bring about an end to the work practices,

the company is going to go on losing money. According to Mr Corrigan

it has lost $56 million over a period of years. Now no company can

go on losing that.

I mean, that money ultimately comes from individual Australians.

It doesn't materialise out of thin, corporate air. It comes

ultimately from other Australians. If it is borrowed from a bank,

it comes from the funds of the banks' lenders or depositors.

I mean, you are dealing here with black and white assets and you

are dealing here with a situation that no company can be expected

after years and years of negotiations just to put up with it indefinitely

because they don't have bottomless pits for pockets.

CORDEAUX:

Prime Minister the question that was asked of me, and I think it

is a damn good one, we talk about there being voluntary unionism

in this country, and nobody is allowed to do the no-ticket-no-start

routine, yet it was pointed out to me, you can't go to university.

You have to be a member of the students union if you want to go

to university.

PRIME MINISTER:

Well, we have a policy at a federal level of endeavouring to outlaw

that but because universities are under state law we don't

have direct say in it unless we start using the financial route

in order to bring that about and there are a lot of short comings

about that which don't make it very attractive.

CORDEAUX:

But it's wrong, isn't it?

PRIME MINISTER:

Well it's wrong in principle and there are some State/Coalition

Governments, I think the West Australian Government is a good example,

that has taken action to change it and I applaud the Western Australian

Government for what it has done in that respect but it is quite

wrong in principle, yes.

CORDEAUX:

Prime Minister, later on today I understand you will be making an

announcement about additional funding for Medicare offices. We already

know that Medicare offices, it was announced last week, it's

going to be a sort of one stop shop. You are allocating extra funding,

I understand?

PRIME MINISTER:

Yes, Dr Wooldridge will be announcing a very significant expansion

of the Medicare easyclaim system. Now this is a self-service claiming

procedure which has been installed in hundreds of pharmacies throughout

Australia as an alternative to a Medicare office. It's largely

been installed to date in rural and regional areas but in 1996...

1997 there was some also put into outer metropolitan areas but we've

now decided to invest a further $10 million and then we are going

to open another 200 Medicare Easyclaim self-service facilities in

the local pharmacies and Dr Wooldridge will be announcing details

about locations etc. And that will bring to a total of 600, which

is a very large number, of these facilities throughout Australia

and they are very cheap and effective. They mean that within, although

you can't pick up a cheque at the pharmacy, you can within

a period of days get a cheque in the mail or have a deposit made

to your bank account.

Now you can imagine that with a facility like this, you can have

a lot more of them because they are not very expensive to establish.

We have found it necessary in some of the major population areas

in the city to rationalise the existing Medicare offices. Now these

will become a major substitute but more importantly, in many areas

of Australia, in the regional and rural areas of Australia that

have never seen a Medicare office, this will give them a Medicare

facility which is almost as good as a Medicare office in areas of

Australia that have never, ever seen them. I think it will be a

move that is very welcome. It will bring to 600, and there will

be another 200 within that 600 figure, attributable to the announcement

of another $10 million programme. And when you add that to the announcement

that Dr Wooldridge made last week whereby people can simultaneously

claim at either a Medicare office or the office of a private health

insurance fund for their total claims, in other words both their

doctors bills and also their hospital bills, it will eliminate another

irritant that many people feel is involved in the process of obtaining

refunds and getting value for money out of their private health

insurance.

CORDEAUX:

Prime Minister, great to talk to you. Thank you for your time.

PRIME MINISTER:

Thank you very much.

ENDS

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