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Saturday, March 2, 2019

Banning communist party FINALRev

The commie fellowship of Australia has a floor that dates back to the primaeval 1920. It was established in the face of insurrection Russian Communism revolution. An compend of its events in its lifetime indicates that it was a great challenge to the Australian g overnmental order as it was growing from strength to strength in term of its support. Liberal country fellowship coalition was threatened by this acclivitous dominant ideology as fronted by the fabianism caller. Robert Gordon Menzies was against this and went ahead to utilize a blackball of the communistic party, but was this right?( ward, Russel, 1983 pg 131) Arguments have raged over the appropriateness of Menzies ban on the communist party. This paper maintains that this ban on the communist party was meant to suppress democracy and was against the basic underlying elected fundamentals under which Australia was formed and also which the Liberal Country caller sought to further. It was also against indiv idual rights as it was seeking to infringe on the freedom of association. The prohibition of communist party was impel conduct by forbidding based vexation especially as a revolution driven by Russia was rife in the air.At the start of the world war two, the party had been banned in the pretext or in an unfounded precept that it was a dissident organization (Manne, Robert, 1994, pg 34,44). The national government did this by invoking the national Security Regulations, however this ban was to be later lifted in December 1942. This was after the leadership established that the communist Russians had decided reverberate their support against defending the Hitlers Third Reich terming the new force as the Patriotic Forces.Towards the start of the war, the Comintern was against the involvement of Russia in the Second World War terming it as purely an imperialists affair. Australian communists had too former on spoken against the rising Nazism and Fascism, warning that these it wa s likely to shell out to the rest of Europe. The lifting of the ban is an indicator that it was non on each warrant cause but was as a result of the rising opposition to the governments policies at home (Ann C. and John M. , 1984). The communist party was riding on a wave of simmering discontent and disillusion of the Australian workers under the labor northwards.The lifting of the ban in 1942 did it greater suffice as its popularity soared to a record height. The number of condescension unions allied to communist party increased greatly. The communist movement was able to penetrate and penetrate the major trade unions mostly in the face of rising communism in Eastern Europe. The communist party in Australia was enjoying some spacious support especially amongst the workers. This is seen in the way it was able to influence and move workers strike. The Chiley government in turn was using the military and overbearing jailing of officials to give way the party.1949, in Aust ralia, was a bad year for the labor government. The miner led a nation wide strike, a strike that lasted for seven weeks. This was a period that would put the governments strength and will forcefulness into test. It was to retaliate through unwarranted emergency legislations, and establishing an Anti Communist calendar month. This scuffle would leave both the communist party and the labor party suffering debilitating effects in the face of a rising unpopularity that was being fuelled by Menzies Liberal party. This was so especially as the 1949 federal elections drew closer.Right from the start, Menzies was set against communism in Australia. He considered the party as alien and destructive pest. In his campaign for elections, he vowed to abate it. Indeed that was the first deed upon his swearing in, having won the elections with a landslip (Peter L. & Paul S. , 2001, pg 66). Many argue that it was non the suppression of the communist party activity that did non endear him to u mpteen but it is the approach that he took. He embraced undemocratic strategies and invoked some constitution provisions that would infringe upon the rights of the population.It has to be understood that Menzies policies against communism were a greater extent fuelled and influenced by the united States and Britain in the face of refrigerated war. The three countries had been sharing classified discipline on the communism and on nuclear technology including the remote sites. Allegations that the communist party in Australia was spying for the USSR led to Menzies taking a spartan stance and vowing to stamp out the party, referring to the act as a superior treason (McKnight, David, 1994, pg112).The events that would ensue after this were highly undemocratic. Menzies took excess measures to curb any association, support or social station of the Communist Party. It is these measures that received a tidy sum of criticism. Majority wanted prohibition to be specifically limited to m embership and not based on some other ununderstandable criterion. His worst vexation however was how to ban a party that enjoyed considerable support from the trade unions. Impediments lay on his path as he tried to ban the party mostly as the common wealth constitution did not have such provisions.He had to plan carefully, cautious not to step on the toes of the powerful trade unions (Gollan, Robin, 1975, pg 145). Menzies was not enjoying much support from the industrial workers who byword him as impediment to their rights. His policies were likely to ignite an industrial instability. In banning the communist party, he used selective and isolationist policies. The communist officials were to be denied any job opportunities in the government offices but the trade union officials were not to be affected by this, even those publicly strange to the federal government.Sifting the communist from the rest required the reversing of the fundamental principle of spare until proven guilty . The legal burden of proof lay upon the individual accuse of being a member of the communist party. This did not endear him to many and was seen as meant to lead to arbitrary detention in the pretext that a crime against the commonwealth was committed (Macintyre, Stuart, 1998 pg 20-23). A hate campaign was instituted against the communist in the bid by the federal government to instill a sense of fear into the masses and wane the communist party popularity.The top introduced by the government referred to as the Australian Communist Party adjournment Bill 1950, was meant to outlaw completely the communist party. The provisions in the tirade were unreasonably harsh and a clear infringement of the citizens rights. Supporters were to be jug and those suspected to be communists sacked from their jobs. This was in the midst of concerted and animated opposition from the Australian Labor Party led by Ben Chifley. concord to him, freedom and individual justice were at stake if the bil l was to be passed.Others were also emphasizing similar views. The high court ruled to the separate of the Menzies administration and his mechanizations did not make headway. The 1951 referendum held on 22nd September come Menzies a slight defeat, however, still in the face of this defeat, the government did not give up the fight against communism. (Rupert Lockwood, 1992 pg 149) It is important to indicate that opposition is not on the decision to fight the Communist Party perse but it is against the schema that he used.It is agreeable that the ideal of communism in the face of cold war were a threat to the stability of Australia. However the methods used to fight it are not condonable. The public voted against the government as there was fear that individual right and freedoms were to be trampled on had the act been enacted. The strategies used by Menzies were undemocratic and were seeking to arbitrary oppress a section of the Australian population especially those believed to h ave some communist connections.Some people were citing the arbitrary arrests on the mere basis of suspicion as the reason pot their voting against the proposed act. Reference Ward, Russel, 1983. A nation for a continent the history of Australia, 1901-1975, Richmond, and Vic. Heinemann Educational Australia. Ann Curthoys and John Merritt, 1984. Australias first coolness War Society, communism and culture. 1945-1953 / Volume 1 Sydney Allen & Unwin. Peter Love & Paul Strangio, 2001. Arguing the Cold War. Carlton North, Vic. Red Rag Publications. Gollan, Robin, 1975.Revolutionaries and Reformists Communism and the Australian Labour Movement, 1920-1955, Canberra Australian National U. P. Manne, Robert, 1994. The shadow of 1917 Cold War conflict in Australia, Melbourne text edition Publishing. Rupert Lockwood, 1992. Seeing Red And Darker Colours, in seeing red the Communist Party Dissolution Act and referendum 1951 lessons for constitutional reform, Sydney Evatt Foundation. Macintyre, Stuart, 1998. The reds, St. Leonards Allen & Unwin. McKnight, David, 1994. Australias spies and their secrets, St Leonards, N. S. W. Allen & Unwin.

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