The gov­ern­ment’s ongo­ing attempts to sab­ot­age indus­trial rela­tions in this coun­try are making me very, very angry. I was at a meet­ing today where the Uni­ver­sity of Mel­bourne explained why they are offer­ing Aus­tralian Work­place Agree­ments to all staff. They have been bribed to. 

The deal is this: unless the Uni­ver­sity “com­plies” with the Higher Edu­ca­tion Work­place Rela­tions Require­ments, it won’t get the $12 mil­lion in Com­mon­wealth research fund­ing that is tied to com­pli­ance. To me, that is utterly abhorrent.

Of course, the Uni­ver­sity does not feel it can just turn its back on $12 mil­lion, so it plans to comply.

It says the dif­fer­ence between the AWAs and the cur­rent Enter­prise Bar­gain­ing Agree­ment will be neg­li­gible: there will be a require­ment to submit invoices within a fort­night, but oth­er­wise the only dif­fer­ence is that an AWA is made with an indi­vidual and an EBA is made with a collective.

And here’s the crux. As an anarcho-syn­dic­al­ist, and there­fore out­side of this tra­di­tional left/right polit­ical rhet­oric, do I believe more in the rights of the indi­vidual (do as thou wilt shall be the whole of the law) or do I believe more in the rights of the com­munity (‘an it harm none)? And yes, that invoc­a­tion, so to speak, of a pagan dis­course was deliberate.

Cos­tello speaks of the indi­vidu­al’s right to nego­ti­ate. But his world ends up with some indi­vidu­als having a great deal because they have more bar­gain­ing power while other indi­vidu­als suffer. I want every indi­vidual to have equal rights. Equal wealth, equal oppor­tun­it­ies. I sus­pect that the only way to pro­tect those too weak to bar­gain is if we bar­gain col­lect­ively for the rights of all.

Sure, the AWA system allows an indi­vidual to appoint a ‘bar­gain­ing agent’ and that bar­gain­ing agent can be a union. But the sheer amount of time it will take the unions to bar­gain so many indi­vidual AWAs instead of one EBA is surely going to cripple the pro­cess. And I sus­pect that’s what the gov­ern­ment wants. 

I’m also, sep­ar­ately, very con­cerned at this ongo­ing dis­cus­sion of ‘cash­ing out’ annual leave and now lunch breaks! I worry that the cul­ture that leads to over­time pres­sure will lead to pres­sure not to have lunch or take annual leave. We’ve already seen pres­sure not to take sick leave when genu­inely sick and that’s *before* the legis­la­tion passes. This is not cur­rently a worker-friendly society. 

It’s so hard. I think about the ‘lib­eral ideo­logy’ that gave our Lib­eral party its name: Mills and Bentham, social ideal­ists trying to fight slavery and dream­ing of a world with max­imal hap­pi­ness through legis­lat­ive change, where the indi­vidual had rights… but they, on the whole, ignored notions of col­lect­ive duties… and I don’t think they would have been proud of you today, Howard and Cos­tello. I think they would have been ashamed.