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What Michigan scrapping its right-to-work law means – MSNBC

Michigan repealed its right-to-work law Friday, scrapping the anti-union policy that has hurt worker organizing in the state for over a decade and marking the first time a state had repealed any such law in close to 60 years. Its a big win for the welfare of workers in Michigan and across the nation.

Right-to-work laws have a deceptive name. They sound as if theyre meant to protect someones right to a job, but in reality theyre designed to make it harder for unions to function and organize. Martin Luther King Jr. rightly described right to work as one of the false slogans meant to fool the public, because the laws use the language of rights to weaken workers ability to fight big business.

The immediate effect of these laws is to reduce the flow of money to unions.

A brief bit of background: The National Labor Relations Act of 1935 allowed unions in workplaces to collect union dues from workers covered by their collective bargaining agreements, regardless of whether or not those workers decided to join the unions. The logic was that if workers benefit from what the unions win in collective bargaining agreements, then they should be obligated to pay dues for the institutions securing those benefits for them. But the Taft-Hartley Act of 1947 allowed states to introduce right-to-work laws, which prohibit mandatory collection of union dues for covered workers. That lets workers benefit from union contracts without paying the unions in their workplaces.

Many right-to-work laws passed in Southern states in the mid-20th century, and then a new wave passed after the tea party wave in 2010 a number of them in organized labor strongholds in the Midwest, including Michigan. The immediate effect of these laws is to reduce the flow of money to unions and shrink their resources for organizing and bargaining. As labor scholars have pointed out, the recently passed right-to-work laws in states such as Michigan, Indiana and Wisconsin reduced unionization rates and shrank wages in those states.

Right-to-work laws are underhanded not only in their name but also in terms of the political predicament they create. They put the burden on pro-union advocates to support a policy that imposes new costs on a subset of workers who are already getting benefits. They avoid attacking workers directly but instead undermine the funding mechanism meant to keep their organizing capacity strong. Yet under the first Democratic governing trifecta in close to 40 years, Michigan Democrats have managed to repeal the law.

After having broken a long streak of inactivity, Michigan could help inspire other movements to repeal right-to-work laws, which exist in over two dozen states. And Michigans accomplishment will only add momentum to a surge in pro-union activity and sentiment across the country. Unions are the most popular theyve been since 1965. Last year brought a big uptick in worker strikes and several high-profile union wins that captured national attention, such as Amazon warehouse workers winning their first union election in New York.

Michigan just became a friendlier place again for organized labor. Hopefully other states will follow suit.

Zeeshan Aleem is a writer and editor for MSNBC Daily. Previously, he worked at Vox, HuffPost and Politico, and he has also been published in, among other places, The New York Times, The Atlantic, The Nation, and The Intercept. You can sign up for his free politics newsletter here.

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What Michigan scrapping its right-to-work law means - MSNBC

Kirksville Area Calendar of Events – Kirksville Daily Express and Daily News

Staff Reports

Have you ever thought about becoming a storm spotter? Now is your chance. The Sullivan County Emergency Management Agency and the National Weather Service invite you to attend free Storm Spotter Training. Storm Spotter class will be held at 7 p.m. on Wednesday, March 29 in the Milan Community Center, 205 N. Market Street, Milan. The class will last approximately 1 hours. It will be presented by an experienced meteorologist from the National Weather Service. Various aspects of severe weather, storm spotting and weather safety will be presented. The training is free and available to everyone, regardless of age, where you live or education level. Becoming an active, trained storm spotter is an excellent way to serve our community. While there is no personal commitment from attending this class, if you recognize hazardous weather on the horizon, you will be in a position to help warn your neighbors by calling 911. To reserve your seat for this highly sought after class you must call or text the Sullivan County Emergency Management Agency Director, Dennis Goldsmith, at (660) 265-5619 or email him atmonranch@grm.net.Reserving a seat for the class will not commit you to attending the class, but the class may not be held if fewer than 15 people reserve a seat in advance.

Bellacinos Pizza and Grinders at 516 N. Baltimore Street, will be holding a Giving Night on March 30 from 5-8 p.m. Fifteen percent of of food sales goes to the Food Bank to provide Buddy Packs for kids in need.

The South 63 Corridor Community Improvement District will hold a meeting at 11 a.m., on Thursday, March 30, in the Second Floor Conference Room at City Hall, 201 S Franklin Street. Tentative Agenda: Approval of the Minutes of the Dec. 28, 2022 Board of Directors Meeting; Approval of Appointment of Officers; Additional business as may be necessary and appropriate to commence operation of the District.

The city of Kirksville Parks & Recreation Department hosts Paint the Ville on March 30 and April 25, from 5:30-7:30 p.m. at the Kirksville Aquatic Center, 801 E. Mill St. Register your first through eighth grade artist for the monthly Kids Club event. Artists will create a masterpiece under the direction of Paint the Ville instructor, Rachel Messer. All participants must pre-register, and class size is very limited. To register, visit the Kirksville Parks and Recreation Office at the Kirksville Aquatic Center, or online athttps://parks.kirksvillecity.com/. Each class is $20 and all supplies are included. For more information, please contact Luke Callaghan with the Parks and Recreation Department at 660-627-1485.

Hay producers can learn strategies to grow, harvest, and store high quality hay at University of Missouri Extensions upcoming Hay Production School, 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. at the Schuyler County Community Center. MU Extension specialists will teach on how to get more quality and quantity hay production during this one-day workshop, says Darla Campbell, Agri Business and Community Economic Development specialist. Topics include Forages for North Missouri, Quality Issues; Hay Testing; Cattle and Horse Nutrition, Storage and Feed Management; Economics of Stored Forages; and Fertility Management. Registration for the school is due by March 24. A minimum of 15 participants is required to hold the school. Contact Darla Campbell at 660-457-3469 or campbelld@missouri.edu for cost and questions. The Schuyler County Community Center is located at 308 Main Street, Glenwood.

Truman Opera Theatre presents Bastien and Bastienne by Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, March 31 at 7:30 p.m. at the Ophelia Parrish Performance Hall.

Thousand Hills State Park is home to a collection of petroglyphs or rock carvings made by ancestors of todays American Indians. Explore the petroglyphs with park staff to learn more about this unique piece of history. Meet at the petroglyph shelter located next to the beach. Contact the park office at 660-665-6995

The Adair County Family YMCA presents the 2nd Annual Easter Egg Eggstravaganza on April 1 from 2-3 p.m., at the YMCA Soccer Fields. Enjoy a fun time with the entire family and community. Separate egg hunts per age group: 0-3, 4-6, 7-9, and 10-12. Photos with the Easter Bunny. Yard games and activities. Easter-themed tattoos. Prizes courtesy of local businesses. Free event, donations greatly appreciated. 1708 S. Jamison, Kirksville.

A Fairyland Princess Tea Party will be held on April 1 from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. at the Kirksville Masonic Temple, 217 E. Harrison Street, Kirksville. There will be crafts, games, food and drink for $5. Presented by Kirksville Chapter #184 Order of the Eastern Star, assisted by Sigma Kappa Sorority, Truman State University. Questions? Call 660-341-4042.

Foolin Around Downtown will be held on April 1 from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m., in downtown Kirksville. Support your local downtown stores and shops. In-store specials and refreshments provided at participating businesses. Shopping, specials and more.

The biggest trivia night of the year is back. The United Way of Northeast Missouri (UWNEMO) will host the 2nd Annual Charity Trivia Night on Saturday, April 1 from 7-10 p.m. at the Kirksville Moose Lodge. This years event will build upon last years hugely popular Trivia Night that welcomed 18 teams, raising over $5,000 for the 11 local agencies funded by the United Way of Northeast Missouri. Tickets are $150 per 8-person team, or $200 with Mulligans. One Mulligan can be used each round in place of an answer. The first-place team will take home a $500 first place prize and the coveted United Way Trivia Trophy. Only five table remain available so act now. Only four tables left.

The Crossing Church will hold Car Care on April 2. This event will serve single parents, foster parents, widows, active military personnel and veterans. The church is inviting anyone who falls in one or more of those categories to sign up to have their vehicle detailed and inspected. All community and church members are invited to help serve this deserving group of people on April 2. Volunteer opportunities range from greeting participants to inspecting vehicles. Theres a place for everyone to serve, ages high school and up. If youre not available on the day of the event, there will be opportunities to serve prior. For more information visit http://www.thecrossing.net/carcare or contact The Crossings local Campus Pastor.

Otto McFarland Senior Voice Recital will be held on April 2, at 2 p.m., at the Ophelia Parrish Performance Hall, 100 E. Normal Avenue.

Emma Bushery & Bridget Boyle in a Senior Recital! At the Ophelia Parrish Performance Hall, April 2 beginning at noon. 100 E. Normal Avenue.

Double Reed Studio Recital at the Ophelia Parrish Performance Hall beginning at 6 p.m. on April 4,100 E. Normal Avenue.

A ribbon cutting will be held for Factory Connection on Wednesday, April 5, at 4 p.m. Join the Kirksville Area Chamber of Commerce at the open house event for chamber member Factory Connection in celebration of their new management team. The ribbon cutting ceremony will take place at their retail location at 2402 N. BaltimoreStreet in Kirksville.

Join Thousand Hills State Park staff in a presentation to learn about spiders and discover just how important they are to our ecosystem. If interested, join park staff to go looking to see if any spiders are nearby. Please bring a flashlight or headlamp. Meet at the Campground 1 Amphitheater. Contact the park office at 660-665-6995.

Mark your calendars and hop on over to the 45th annual Kraft Heinz Easter Egg Hunt on Saturday, April 8, at 10 a.m., at the Truman State University Quad. Kraft Heinz, the city of Kirksville's Parks and Recreation Department, and Truman State University's Cardinal Key are partnering to host this event free of charge. All children ages 2 to 12 are invited to join and find as many eggs as possible. Remember to bring a basket for all the eggs and your camera for a picture with our special guest, the Easter Bunny. For more information, contact the Parks and Recreation Department at 660-627-1485.

Join Thousand Hills State Parkstaff to learn some birding basics! Binoculars, field guides, and cameras are welcome. Limited binoculars and field guides will be available to borrow during the program. Please wear closed-toed shoes and bring water. Meet at the beach parking lot to walk the paved trail.

Something about a snake make them sssuper important. JoinThousand Hills State Park staff to learn what that reason is and why snakes are unique. There may be a chance to meet a live animal. Meet at the Campground 1 amphitheater. Contact the park office at 660-665-6995

NEMO Job Fair Spring 2023 will be held on Friday, April 21 from 11 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. at Moberly Area Community College, 2105 E. Normal Avenue. Pre-registration is required.

Friends of (Scout) Troop 404 will be holding a Bottomless BBQ Feed Fundraiser at theNEMO Fairgrounds on Friday, April 14 from 5:30- 8 p.m. Cost is $25 per person with sides and drinks. Soda for sale separately. Food by TNT BBQ. Silent Auction. Raffle for a mini-bike and smoker grill. Tickets available at the Troop 404 Facebook page or Nolan Law Firm, 210 S. Elson Street.

The Student Activities Board has announced the lineup for its spring concert series. Indie rock band DEHD will headline the second concert at 5 p.m. April 14 on the quad. The rain site for these concerts will be the Student Union Building Georgian Room. Admission to all concerts is free and tickets are not required.

The Northeast Missouri United Way Texas Hold'em Tournament will be on April 19 at the Dukum Inn.Signups start at 5:30 p.m. and the tournamentstarts at 6:30 p.m. 1st Prize is $500, 2nd Prize is $250 and Third Prize is $100. Sponsors of the event are as follows: Gold SponsorshipATSU and Heritage House Realty. Silver Sponsorships are Lovegreen Motors and Pagliais. Bronze Sponsorships are Kirksville Brake and Muffler and Hampton Inn.,

Come out for a celebration of International Dark Sky week at Stars Up, Lights Down at Thousand Hills State Park. Join others in learning about light pollution and exploring the sky above. There will be telescopes but everybody is welcome to bring their own telescopes, chairs, and binoculars. Meet at the Point Shelter. Contact the park office at 660-665-6995.

The 23rd Annual Daddy Daughter Dance will be held on Friday, April 21, at the NEMO Fair Building/NEMO Fair Grounds. Doors open from 6:30-9:30 p.m. Picture Booth open from 6:30-8 p.m. Cost is $8/couple, $2/each additional child (family cap at $10). Free concessions, photo booth, giveaways, and crafts. All girls pre-school through 6th-grade along with their dad or significant male role model are invited no RSVP needed. Proceeds of this event will go toward supporting Heartland Task Force programming and activities.

The annual Novinger Area Yard Sales & Flea Market event will be held on Saturday, April 22, beginning at 8 a.m.Residents of Novinger and surrounding area (west of Kirksville, east of Green Castle, and along Highway 157) are encouraged to participate in selling yard sale items, funky junk, 2ndchance goods, antiques and collectibles, flea market items, crafts and commercial products. Booth spaces and tables can be rented inside the Community Center or Firehouse andfree spaces can be reserved on the fairgrounds.Maps featuring the reported locations of sales will be available on Renewals Facebook page as well as in the Community Center, along with food sales.Donations of items are sought to allow proceeds to benefit Novinger Renewal.Items can be dropped off at the Community Center after 2 p.m. on Friday, April 21.Those interested in reserving an indoor or outdoor space or wanting their sale listed on the map should contact Glenna Young at 660-342-6455. The event is coordinated by Novinger Renewal, a non-profit corporation, established for community betterment and historic preservation.

Come on out to Thousand Hills State Park on Saturday April 22 from 10 a.m.-2 p.m. to celebrate Earth Day. Local organizations will have stations and activities set up around the beach parking lot and the paved trail. Come connect with the earth and nature through unique opportunities facilitated by community members. There will be activities and educational booths for all ages at this free event. SB40, a local nonprofit, will be selling snacks and drinks as a fundraiser during the event. The Missouri Department of Conservation will be providing fishing opportunities along the shore just past the beach showerhouse and at the ADA accessible fishing dock. (Signs will direct visitors to these locations.) This event was created in partnership between Thousand Hills State Park, the Adair County Public Library, the Missouri Department of Natural Resources, and the city of Kirksville. Other organizations are joining to provide educational opportunities for all attendees. In the event of inclement weather, activities will be moved to the Rieger Armory, located at 500 S. Elson St.

Mark your calendars for Curtain Call's 2023Annual Meeting. They will be meeting at the theatre on Monday, April 24 at 5:30 p.m. in order to nominate board members for the upcoming year and give everyone updates on their upcoming season.

The Student Activities Board has announced the lineup for its spring concert series. The last concert will feature country artist Chase Bryant at 5 p.m. April 28 on the quad. The rain site for these concerts will be the Student Union Building Georgian Room. Admission to all concerts is free and tickets are not required.

Elementary and middle school students interested in math and science can spend a day on the Truman State University campus participating in fun activities. Trumans chapter of Beta Beta Beta, a co-ed biology honors fraternity, will sponsor Science on Saturday, April 29. The first session, for students in first through fifth grade, will take place from 9-11 a.m. A second session, for students in sixth through eighth grade, will take place from 12:30-3 p.m. Area students will attend classes in Magruder Hall, each lasting about 20 minutes. Session one classes this spring include:acids and bases volcano, reptiles and amphibians, and secret message writing. Among the classes in session two are: strawberry DNA extraction, lava lamps, and reptiles and amphibians. Science on Saturday is free of charge. Registration will begin March 31 onsos.truman.eduand remain open until April 14 or until both sessions are full. Spaces are limited and registration is completed on a first-come, first-served basis.

Come out to Thousand Hills State Park to celebrate Kids to Parks Day Saturday May 20.

10 a.m.-2 p.m.: Kids Fishing Join the Missouri Department of Conservation for a day of fishing at the Point. From 10 a.m.-2 p.m., staff will be available with gear to help you fish or fish with you. Fishing is open to all ages. All children must be accompanied by an adult.

11 a.m. Nature Detective Hike Animals leave behind clues to tell us they have been in the area. Join park staff to explore the many different clues animals leave behind and learn what animals share the park with us. This hike will take place on the Oak Trail located next to the playground on Big Loop Road.

All programs are weather permitting. Check out Thousand Hills State Park on Facebook for cancellations, location changes, and other park information.

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Kirksville Area Calendar of Events - Kirksville Daily Express and Daily News

Globe editorial: Budget 2023: The Liberals’ reckless deficit of choice – The Globe and Mail

Up is down. War is peace. And not spending billions of dollars you dont have is reckless, according to Finance Minister Chrystia Freeland.

Investments in our economic capacity are fiscally responsible. And failure to make the necessary investments in our economic capacity and our economic future, that is irresponsible, and that is reckless, Ms. Freeland told an Oshawa, Ont., audience this week.

That should certainly put to rest any worry that the Liberals might match their rhetoric of fiscal prudence with any real spending restraint in next Tuesdays budget. Last falls halfhearted projection of a surplus in fiscal 2027-28 is likely to be a distant memory. As the accompanying chart shows, the spurt of Liberal spending since last spring means Canada is more likely headed for wall-to-wall deficits over the next half-decade, despite an inflation-fuelled surge in revenues.

The governments fall economic statement forecast cumulative deficits of $69.4-billion from the coming fiscal year through to fiscal 2028. According to the most recent projections from the Parliamentary Budget Officer, those cumulative deficits have nearly doubled, to $112.7-billion. And that is before Ms. Freeland tacks on extra billions of dollars of definitely-not-reckless spending in Tuesdays budget.

The Finance Ministers view on what is, or is not, reckless fiscal policy seems anchored in the world of two years past, when the prospect of a long stretch of low interest rates emboldened progressive governments to splash billions of dollars on pet projects, and to shrug at the arithmetic of higher deficits and debt.

According to the PBO, debt servicing costs are on course to nearly double between fiscal 2022 and fiscal 2028, rising to a projected $46-billion from $24.5-billion. Debt costs are, by far, the fastest growing expense line for Ottawa.

None of that seems to be discouraging new spending initiatives. In her prebudget stumping, Ms. Freeland hinted that she will focus new spending on limited cost-of-living assistance for poorer Canadians, higher health transfers and aggressively subsidizing sorry, investing in the green economy. And there is sure to be additional spending on the newly launched federal dental benefits.

Those outlays will come on top of last years omnidirectional spending, also aimed at retooling Canadas economy. Now, we do agree that much more needs to be done to reinvigorate this countrys economic performance. In the last budget, Ms. Freeland rightly flagged the persistent problem of poor productivity growth. That was a long overdue recognition that our future prosperity is imperilled.

But the governments response to an increasingly sclerotic economy has been more intervention, more bureaucracy, more spending and more debt. Theres little to indicate that next week will mark any break from the Liberals enthusiasm for 1970s-style economic interventionism that pushes investment decisions into the hands of government.

Budgets are about making choices. In our prebudget coverage, weve laid out some of those choices: pruning benefits for wealthy, elderly Canadians; boosting child-care transfers to keep pace with inflation; avoiding a ruinous increase in health care transfers; boosting defence spending; and rolling back the size of government.

Budgets are about deciding where to spend, and just as important, where not to spend. The biggest fiscal failure of the Trudeau Liberals has been their insistence on ignoring this basic tenet of sound finance, and instead each year layering new spending on old, while blithely ignoring the mounting pressure of the national debt.

That deliberate, persistent failure can be summed up in just one word reckless.

Link:
Globe editorial: Budget 2023: The Liberals' reckless deficit of choice - The Globe and Mail

The Liberal brand is tarnished. Some hard truths must be faced in the wake of another election loss – The Guardian

Opinion

As Labor governments blanket the mainland, the Liberal party is left divided over the cause of its failures and a path back to government

Sun 26 Mar 2023 23.37 EDT

The Coalition loss in NSW has left Tasmanian premier Jeremy Rockliff the most senior elected Liberal in the nation. Mainland Australia is now governed coast-to-coast by Labor governments at both the state and federal level a political map not seen since 2007.

The election result will provoke some deep soul-searching in Liberal ranks. One of the debates already under way is whether this new national picture reflects a common theme or if there are factors unique to each state that makes a national narrative more difficult to ascertain. Its an important question and will determine some of the learnings for the Liberal party.

Former prime minister John Howard has, for example, argued that we are not seeing a coherent nationwide policy movement against the Liberal party. But I suspect the answer lies somewhere in the middle.

The NSW election was largely lost by factors not directly comparable to say the landslide loss faced by Liberals on the other side of the continent at the 2021 Western Australian state election. Yet it would be a mistake for Liberals not to recognise underlying trends that are impacting support for the Liberal brand.

In NSW, the biggest factor at play seemed to be an its time feeling for a Coalition government seeking a record fourth election win. Issues like cost-of-living pressures undoubtedly had an impact, even if many of these are beyond the capacity of a state government to influence. And for the NSW Liberal party there are clearly ongoing lessons in relation to some candidate selections and their timing and some of the internal issues that hindered the campaign.

Having spent hours on pre-poll and at a polling booth on Saturday in my own local electorate of North Shore, what was exceptionally notable was the difference between the state and federal election. Not one voter said to me they were voting against the Liberal party because of antipathy towards Premier Perrottet. I cant say the same about my experience during the federal election.

Some conservative commentators, particularly those who emerge after dark, tried to argue in the lead-up to the election (and, ridiculously, have not stopped in the days since) that the NSW Liberals were facing a massive backlash because of the governments support for strong measures to address climate change. Energy minister and treasurer, Matt Kean, bore the brunt of those attacks. Their hypothesis was that the progressive policies of the Berejiklian and Perrottet governments in areas like climate and gambling reform would lead to an electoral bonanza for parties like One Nation. Latham and One Nation were happy to fuel this narrative and, in addition to their campaigns in western Sydney, even took their fight to Keans own northern Sydney electorate.

Yet One Nations vote barely moved. In the Upper House, it looks like its representation will actually fall. In Keans own seat the swing against him went to Labor and the Greens, which would hardly point to concerns about him being too progressive.

The reality is the climate policies Kean, with the support of Perrottet, pursued reflected the type of centrist approach voters want from our party. Its the reason Climate 200-backed teal candidates did not succeed in replicating the teal wave of last years federal election. WWF independently rated NSW as the Australian leader for supporting renewable energy and this was recognised by voters. Without the approach Kean and others pursued we would have seen a very different outcome in what are traditionally considered heartland Liberal seats.

This goes to the national learnings for Liberals from our recent losses. Despite the differences between the elections at state and federal level, there is an undercurrent of trends we must be prepared to face. We have to also recognise support for the Liberal brand is overwhelmingly influenced by what happens in Canberra, not state capitals, such is the centrality of federal politics in the media and the minds of voters.

Across the country the party has seen a decline in support from various demographics: younger voters, women and some sections of our multicultural communities, particularly Chinese Australians.

The NSW Liberal government brought an approach which responded to many of the concerns driving voters away from the Liberal party on issues like climate change and support for working women. To be effective, federal Liberals must be prepared to travel a similar path and the approach they take will shape perceptions of the party in all jurisdictions for years to come.

Finally, a word on grace in politics. The strength of any democracy is dependent on the willingness of those who lose to accept the verdict of their fellow citizens. In the United States we have seen the corrosive impact of failed candidates like Trump who seek to undermine election outcomes by questioning the electoral process and the verdict of voters. The type of grace we saw from Dominic Perrottet on Saturday night in his concession speech and the way in which both leaders conducted themselves during the campaign should be the source of pride for those of us living in our largest state. Lets hope thats a trend we see sustained beyond 2023.

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The Liberal brand is tarnished. Some hard truths must be faced in the wake of another election loss - The Guardian

Australia: NSW election sees further crisis of Liberals, but no landslide to Labor – WSWS

Saturdays election in New South Wales (NSW), Australias most populous state, represents a further deepening of a nationwide crisis of the two-party system. The Liberal-National Coalition, having governed for the past 12 years, has been thrown out of office, but there was no landslide to the Labor Party.

On Saturday evening, just hours after polling closed, corporate media outlets proclaimed a sweeping Labor victory, but with vote counting continuing today, Labor has still not secured a majority in the Legislative Assembly, the lower house of the state parliament. If, as appears likely, Labor does win a majority, it will be wafer thin, setting the stage for ongoing political instability.

The election took place with the Coalition wracked by intense factional conflicts. Last year, the Liberals were obliterated in the May federal election, registering their worst result in more than 70 years. The same thing occurred in the state of Victoria, where the Liberals were reduced to a rump in last Novembers state election.

The official campaign was characterised by a conspiracy between all major political parties and the media that the burning issues facing ordinary people would not be discussed. The election coincided with the announcement by Labor Prime Minister Anthony Albanese that, as part of the AUKUS alliance, $368 billion would be spent on nuclear-powered submarines for the accelerating war drive against China.

This gargantuan sum will be gouged from government spending both in the states and nationally. Rising inflation, interest rates, job cuts and wage suppression will be the real agenda for the Labor administration in NSW, whether it is a majority or minority government.

Defeated NSW Coalition Premier Dominic Perrottet was a widely reviled figure. A representative of the far-right faction of the Liberal Party, he did not win an election as premier. Instead, he was installed as leader of the government after the previous premier, Gladys Berejiklian, was ousted in a manufactured scandal involving the Independent Commission Against Corruption.

Perrottets signature measure was to end all public health restrictions aimed at containing the pandemic. This program resulted in the deaths of more than 22,000 people across the country last year, the majority of them in NSW and Victoria, where Labor Premier Daniel Andrews collaborated closely with Perrottet in the profit-driven reopening.

Notwithstanding its completely bipartisan character, Perrottet was the face of the end of health measures. Even prior to becoming premier, it is known that he bridled against any restrictions that would impact on business activities. Upon becoming leader, Perrottet proudly proclaimed that he would take his advice from economists and business, not medical experts.

Perrottet also confronted the states nurses, teachers and other public sector workers when they took multiple strike action over staffing, wages and intolerable workloads. The Liberal premier sought to impose major pay cuts on workers who had not long before been hailed as the pandemics heroes. This offensive occurred as the worst cost-of-living crisis in decades began. Workers are increasingly unable to afford the basic essentials as housing costs, electricity and food prices soar.

At the same time, Perrottet rejected any measures to address the breakdown of the public healthcare system, including nurse-to-patient ratios. This provoked the first mass nurses strikes in decades.

Under these conditions, the most striking aspect of the election is that Labor picked up only a fraction of the widespread opposition to the government. Chris Minns, Labors leader and new premier, marched in lockstep with Perrottet on every substantive issue, from the pandemic to the need for budget austerity.

Across the state, the Liberal Party primary vote fell by 4.7 percent. The traditional party of bourgeois rule received just 27.6 percent of the primary vote. The vote for the Nationals, the regional and rural-based coalition partner of the Liberals, fell by 2.2 percent to just 7.3 percent of the total.

Labors primary, however, increased by only 3.7 percent from the historic lows of the previous three elections, which it lost by substantial margins. With Labors primary at around 37 percent, it and the Coalition received only 71.9 percent of first-preference votes. That is a substantial fall on the 74.9 percent in the 2019 NSW election.

Labor was able to win some support in marginal electorates on the basis of intense hostility to the Coalition. An Australian Broadcasting Corporation analysis has shown that several of the seats that swung to Labor had a disproportionate number of public sector workers, underscoring the ongoing determination of that section of the working class to fight against the onslaught on jobs, wages and conditions.

In Penrith and Camden, two western Sydney seats that Labor won from the Liberals, 13 percent of the population is employed in the public sector. In the southern Sydney seat of Heathcote, which Labor also secured, one in six voters are in the public sector.

At the same time however, there were notable swings against Labor in a number of the safe seats that once made up its working-class base.

For instance, in the southwest Sydney electorate of Cabramatta, there was a 7.9 percent swing against Labor. The Liberal primary vote there only increased by 2 percent. In nearby Liverpool, Labors vote was down by 7.4 percent.

Political crisis

Those results point to a growing hostility among workers to Labor, and a nascent recognition that it is not a lesser-evil to the Liberal Party. These sentiments have deepened since the election of a federal Labor government last May.

In last years election, Labor campaigned on the slogan of a better future. As soon as it scraped into office on the back of a Liberal Party collapse, Albaneses administration proclaimed the need for working people to make sacrifices. It has slashed funding for health and education while pressing ahead with tax cuts for the ultra-wealthy and unprecedented military spending in preparation for war.

In an analysis of the result today, the Australian Financial Reviews John Black stated that some of the biggest increases in Labors vote were among wealthier cohorts. It was solidifying its status as the high-income party of Australian politics, while traditional battlers, were increasingly no longer supporting Labor.

That is part of an historic shift, with the Labor Partys erstwhile base in the working class collapsing. Since the 1980s, Labor governments, in partnership with the trade unions, have spearheaded the deregulation of the economy, the destruction of hundreds of thousands of jobs and a decades-long suppression of wages.

Notably, despite the decline in the two-party vote, other capitalist parties which falsely posture as an alternative did not pick up substantial support. Statewide, the Greens primary vote remained virtually stagnant, increasing by just 0.4 percent, and did not exceed 10 percent of the total.

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Over the past 15 years, the Greens have shifted dramatically to the right, joining Labor in de facto coalitions at the state and federal level that have cut wages and social services, while doing nothing to address climate change. The Greens vote is almost entirely concentrated in the affluent inner-city of Sydney.

The so-called Teal independents, who won several seats in the federal election by raising environmental issues in middle-class areas traditionally held by the Liberals, also gained no substantial support. Nor did the far-right populist parties, such as One Nation. Its primary vote was up just 0.7 percent, to 1.8 percent of the total, despite substantial publicity and media promotion.

The vote for others, that is smaller parties and independents whose campaigns were generally ignored by the corporate press, increased by 3.9 percent to almost 15 percent of the total. That underscores the growing search for a political alternative by broad sections of the population, who are being politicised by the social crisis, the experience of the pandemic and the ever-more evident danger of a major war.

The result underscores the historic crisis of the Liberal Party. Perrottet announced his resignation after the defeat. Deputy leader Matt Kean, considered his presumptive replacement, declared that he will not contest the leadership. It remains unclear who will be Liberal leader.

Labor is now in office in every state and territory, bar Tasmania, and governs federally.

But that is a crisis, not only for the Coalition, but for Labor and the ruling elite. The two-party system, used to confine social and political discontent within safe channels, is blowing apart, raising the spectre of new oppositional political movements emerging to fill the vacuum.

The corporate elite, moreover, is depending almost wholly on Labor and its union backers to impose an agenda of sweeping attacks on social and living conditions, amid a major crisis of the global capitalist system.

Some workers voted for Minns to express their hostility to Perrottets attacks on public sector pay and conditions. But Labor has rejected any pay rises in line with the rate of inflation. It has declared, moreover, that any nominal pay increases, in reality, real wage cuts, will be paid for by increased productivity. That means a stepped-up assault on working conditions.

In his acceptance speech, Minns made clear that the right-wing bipartisanship that marked his time in opposition will continue in government. Minns expressed his admiration for Perrottet. He hailed the election campaign as a model of civility and a battle of great ideas. The unprecedented unanimity between the leaders of the two major parties arises because they have identical programs.

A colourless careerist politician, who has avoided stating his opinions for the past 20 years, Minns is now tasked with escalating major attacks on the working class. That sets the stage for a further growth of the class struggle, directly against Labor and the trade unions.

The situation underscores the importance of the campaign waged by the Socialist Equality Party. The SEP alone told workers the truth: that the election would resolve nothing, and that whichever parties took office would do the bidding of the financial elite.

The SEP raised the critical issues of war, austerity and opposition to let it rip COVID policies. Above all, it sought to use the election campaign to take forward the fight for a new revolutionary leadership in the working class. That is the critical issue that must be taken up by workers, young people and serious layers of the middle class.

Join the SEP campaign against anti-democratic electoral laws!

The working class must have a political voice, which the Australian ruling class is seeking to stifle with this legislation.

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Australia: NSW election sees further crisis of Liberals, but no landslide to Labor - WSWS