*THE
WORKER*
Brisbane
November 24, 1894.
THE UPPER
HOUSE.
Mend or
End It.
The
same old farce still goes on, which has been enacted and re-enacted
countless times ever since the brilliant idea having a second
chamber, likened to the House of Peers, to control the over hastiness
of the people's representatives was conceived by the founders of our
Constitution. Ripening in years this chamber's deeds multiply in
heinousness. The memory of past victories lend it courage, and urge
it on to further tamperings of the people's will. And so an Upper
House daily becomes more distasteful to all true democrats. In
N.S.W., at the present time, the evils attendant on this dual system
of irresponsibility are making themselves clearly apparent.
Professedly the present Ministry is one of the most democratic that
the mother colony has ever had. But it is already beginning to
display a want of thoroughness in striking at the root of the evil,
with which it is beset, which leaves a suspicion that its advocacy of
advanced legislation arises more from personal ends than from any
desire to really benefit the condition of the masses. But even if it
desired advanced legislation to become law it is labouring under
peculiarly discouraging circumstances. With an Upper House absolutely
defiant and ready to crush out of existence the life of any of its
measures; or, at any rate those supported by the democratic side of
the House, the task of the Premier in endeavouring to improve the
social condition of the people is a difficult one indeed. He has
shown a manifest desire to bring into law an amended Land bill, which
was demanded in no measured terms by the voice of the people as
expressed in the last general elections. On this plank perhaps more
than on all others he owed his accession to power.
With
his colleagues he has laboured strenuously to accomplish this task;
to what end? Have we not already seen the little navigation Act which
trampled on but insignificant privileges ignominiously slaughted by a
truculent Upper House? And if that is so what must be expected to be
the fate of the Land Bill when it comes to be considered by that
august body, the stronghold of monopoly and class privilege? It is
likely that this measure will be shelved for an indefinite period, as
has been the fate of so many of its predecessors, for at present the
rights of tenure of the great financial institutions are not
sufficiently durable to please the sleek usurer's mind. But shorn of
everything democratic, butchered, boiled down, disguised and
mutilated into unrecognisibility it will be, or the chamber will not
act in its usual high traditional manner. While apparently
recognising the uselessness of their present task the Government has
done nothing. The Premier has certainly talked a lot about the
uncompromising attitude of the Upper House towards the Government. It
no doubt has been very annoying to him to have to submit to the
dictation of that antiquated body. That he is feeling sore is plain
from his utterances at several functions that he has recently
attended when no call arose for his bringing up this matter at all.
Letters from members of the Legislative Council in the press also
clearly prove that no love is lost between them and the present
Ministry. Sir Geo, Dibbs – the tyrant – suited them better, his
political backbone bending easier towards their money grasping ways.
But whatever Mr. Reid may have said it does not bring him one whit
nearer the desired end. He still goes on wasting the people's time
endeavouring to get the Land Bill through without in any way
providing for its ultimately becoming law in other than an
emasculated form. He does not seem to realise, or at any rate will
not admit, that the only chance he has is in devoting the whole of
his energies towards the reconstruction of the House which has stood
for so long now as a barrier to progress, which has assisted in
arousing so many bitter disputes between employer and employed, and
which has in every way outlived its period of usefulness – if such
a period, indeed, ever existed.
But
there is another evil which it has brought into existence, one which
is of very serious import to the Democratic mind. That is the fact
that it enables any Government, tottering in its fall and clutching
to the reins of office with a feeble and relaxing grasp to remain in
power long after its doom has been politically sealed, by a
systematic pandering to the Labour Party, which holds, it may be, the
balance of power. Thus, while in appearance, doing all it can to
forward Democratic legislation, in reality the Government is praying
to God that bills of its own fathering may be thrown out by the
higher tribunal which the constitution so wisely provides to check
hasty legislation and to keep for them for a few months longer the
sweets and and emoluments of office. In this way Labour knows not who
are its enemies and who its friends. Blinded by these professions of
support it is forced to content itself with awarding its votes to the
side that promises most. But with the Upper House either abolished
altogether or else made directly responsible to the people, placing
Labour on the same footing as Capital by doing away with all property
qualifications, then and then only will the reform party have a
chance of doing effective work.
In
New South Wales, in Queensland, and in each of the other colonies
which has any pretensions to a Labour party in politics the support
that is granted for concessions must see that the first concession is
a genuine desire on the part of the party promising to have a slant
at the Upper House.
VERA.
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