Tip:
Highlight text to annotate it
X
Senator Ludlam.
Thank you, President.
Tonight I rise to invite Prime Minister Tony Abbott
to visit the beautiful state of Western Australia.
I do this in good faith,
because we are only a matter of weeks away
from a historic by-election that will determine not just
the final makeup of this chamber after July
but will decide much more of consequence to the people of Western Australia,
whether they are thinking of voting for the Greens or not.
Prime Minister, you are welcome out west,
but this is a respectful invitation to think carefully about what
baggage you pack when you make your next flying campaign stopover.
When you arrive at Perth airport,
you will alight on the traditional country of the Whadjuk Nyoongar people,
who have sung this country now for more than 40,000 years.
This is 200 times the age of the city
that now stands on the banks of the Derbarl Yerrigan, the Swan River.
Understand that you are now closer to Denpasar than to Western Sydney,
in a state where an entire generation
has been priced out of affordable housing.
Recognise that you are standing in a place where the drought never ended,
where climate change from land clearing and fossil fuel combustion
is a lived reality that is already costing jobs, property and lives.
Mr Prime Minister, at your next press conference we invite you
to leave your excruciatingly boring three-word slogans at home.
If your image of Western Australia
is of some caricatured redneck backwater
that is enjoying the murderous horror
unfolding on Manus Island, you are reading us wrong.
Every time you refer to us as the 'mining state',
as though the western third of our ancient continent
is just Gina Rinehart's inheritance to be chopped, benched and blasted,
you are reading us wrong.
Western Australians are a generous and welcoming lot,
but if you arrive and start talking proudly
about your attempts to bankrupt the renewable energy sector,
or cripple the independence of the ABC and privatise SBS,
if you show up waving your homophobia in people's faces
and start boasting about your ever-more insidious attacks
on the trade union movement and all working people,
you can expect a very different kind of welcome.
People are under enough pressure as it is
without three years of this government going out of its way to make it worse.
It looks awkward when you take policy advice
on penalty rates and the minimum wage
from mining billionaires and media oligarchs
on the other side of the world -
awkward, and kind of revolting.
It is good to remember that these things are temporary.
For anyone listening in from outside this almost empty Senate chamber,
the truth is Prime Minister Tony Abbott
and this benighted attempt at a government
are a temporary phenomenon.
This too will pass, and we need to keep our eyes on the bigger picture.
Just as the reign of the dinosaurs was cut short
to their great surprise,
it may be that the Abbott government
will appear as nothing more than a thin, greasy layer
in the core sample of future political scientists
drilling back into the early years of the 21st century.
2014 marks 30 years
since the election of the first representative
of what was to become the Greens -
my dear friend and mentor Senator Jo Vallentine.
She came into this place as a lone Western Australian representative
speaking out against the nuclear weapons that formed the foundations
of the geopolitical suicide pact we dimly remember as the Cold War.
Since the first day of Senator Vallentine's first term,
the Greens have been articulating a vision of Australia as it could be -
an economy running on infinite flows of renewable energy,
a society that never forgets it lives on country
occupied by the planet's oldest continuing civilisation,
and a country that values education, innovation and equality.
These values are still at the heart of our work,
nowhere stronger than on the Walkatjurra Walkabout,
which will set off again later this month
to challenge the poisonous imposition
of the state's first uranium mine on the shoreline of Lake Way.
As the damage done by the nuclear industry is global,
so remains our resistance.
Mr Abbott, your thoughtless cancellation
of half a billion dollars of Commonwealth funding for the Perth light rail project
has been noted.
Your blank cheque for Colin Barnett's bloody and unnecessary shark cull
has been noted.
Your attack on Medicare, on schools funding,
on tertiary education - noted.
The fact that your only proposal for environmental reforms thus far
is to leave Minister Greg Hunt
playing solitaire for the next three years
while you outsource his responsibilities
to the same premier who presides over the shark cull,
that's been noted too.
You may not believe this, Prime Minister,
but your advocacy on behalf of foreign biotechnology corporations
and Hollywood's copyright-industrial complex
to chain Australia into the Trans-Pacific Partnership -
even that has been noted.
People have been keeping a record of every time you have been given
the opportunity to choose between predator capitalism and the public interest,
and it's bitterly obvious whose side you are on.
So to be very blunt, the reason that I extend this invitation to you,
Mr Prime Minister,
to spend as much time as you can spare in Western Australia
is that every time you open your mouth the Green vote goes up.
You and your financial backers
in the gas fracking and uranium industries
have inspired hundreds of people to spend their precious time
doorknocking thousands of homes for the Greens in the last few weeks.
Your decision to back Monsanto's shareholders
instead of Western Australian farmers
has inspired people across the length and breadth of this country
to make thousands of calls and donate to our campaign.
As for the premeditated destruction of the National Broadband Network
and Attorney-General George Brandis's degrading capitulation
to the surveillance state
when confronted with the unlawful actions of the US NSA -
even the internet is turning green 'for the win'.
Geeks and coders, network engineers and gamers
who would never have voted Green in a million years
without the blundering and technically illiterate assistance of your leadership team -
for this I can only thank you.
And, perhaps most profoundly,
your determined campaign to provoke fear in our community -
fear of innocent families fleeing war and violence in our region -
in the hope that it would bring out the worst in Australians
is instead bringing out the best in us.
Prime Minister, you are welcome
to take your heartless, racist exploitation of people's fears
and ram it as far from Western Australia
as your taxpayer-funded travel entitlements can take you.
What is at stake here, in the most immediate sense,
is whether or not Prime Minister Tony Abbott
has total control of this parliament in coming years.
But I have come to realise that it's about much more than that.
We want our country back.
Through chance, misadventure,
and, somewhere, a couple of boxes of misplaced ballot papers,
we have been given the opportunity to take it back -
just one seat next April 5, and a whole lot more in 2016.
Game on, Prime Minister.
See you out west.