Mr. Tony Abbott,
Leader of the Opposition
Dear Mr. Abbott,
We refer to the reports below for your information.
Would you like to comment, please?
Yours truly,
Eddie Hwang
President
Unity Party WA
Phone/Fax: 61893681884
Date: 20-Apr-2012.
Environmental Friendly - Save the
Trees/use email.
UPWA is the only political
party that calls a spade a spade.
Analysis: Are Australians
anti-Asian? Or is it just politics?
·
Two months
ago, the Australian Minister of Immigration Chris Bowen made an address to the Sydney Institute describing what he called the ‘genius
of multiculturalism’ within Australian society. In his speech, he outlined
three aspects of this so-called ‘genius’: respect for Australian values;
citizenship-centred multiculturalism; and political bipartisanship.
An email from a NSW Liberal Party insider says Tony Abbot's
right-wing Liberal Party are anti-Asian. Picture: AP
Minister Bowen, like many
Australians prides our country’s long and rich history of multiculturalism.
What’s interesting is that he emphasises that after 1970, when government
immigration policies changed from the infamous White Australia Policy to
Multiculturalism, the integration of other communities and cultures were
encouraged for mostly socially – not economically or politically – beneficial
reasons.
And it’s true: Australian society
has benefited immensely from multiculturalism. I often tell people overseas,
what Australians lack in national history, compared to most other nations, we
make up for it in our varied diets.
But while a superficial glance
suggests Australian society has benefited from various waves of immigration,
how much have these immigrants been able to contribute to their communities,
politically speaking.
How bipartisan is Minister Bowen’s
‘political bipartisanship’ on which his ‘genius of multiculturalism’ rests?
Recently an email, claiming to be written by a NSW Liberal Party
insider, has been sent to several mastheads, suggesting there is a strong
anti-Asian sentiment within the party. The sender claims that an unusual,
American-style “primary”, or pre-selection vote, in the Western Suburbs seat of
Greenway is an attempt to de-seat the previous candidate, Jayme Diaz from
running again.
“Asians/ethnics are used to contest
safe labor seats but once the seat becomes winnable, The [sic] liberal [sic]
party elders install candidates that are Caucasians,” it reads.
Tony Abbot has reportedly blamed
Greenway, amongst other seats, for his loss to Labor in the last federal
election. Greenway was lost to Labor’s Michelle Rowland by just 702 votes.
Although the
official Liberal Party line is that the primary is simply an “experiment” to
give the electorate a say in the party’s candidate to contest the next federal
election, another Liberal source has told the Sun Herald otherwise.
”The entire motivation for the
discussion in the party around primaries was how do you fix the seat of
Greenway because it’s a mess.”
Diaz, a prominent member of the
electorate’s Filipino community has signed many new members and would be
re-endorsed should a regular preselection process be held.
Adding
further fuel to the fire that the experimental primary is designed to de-seat
Diaz are reports that the migration lawyer has “gone into hiding”.
The email goes on to mention other
popular politicians with Asian heritage like the Dai Le in Cabramatta and Chang
Lim in Parramatta, all of whom have been “drubbed” by the party based on their
ethnicity.
But the real thrust of the letter is
that the Liberal Party is anti-Asian.
“The faces of Liberal
representatives in canberra [sic] would lead you to believe there are no Asians
living in Australia or Asians arent [sic] citizens who vote and hence should
not be represented.”
And our insider has a point: there
are no federal government shadow ministers of Asian ethnicity, even though
Australians with Chinese heritage are the fifth largest ethnic group in
Australia and almost 4 per cent of the total population.
Hong Lim, the sole Asian member of
Victorian state parliament made a similar comment at the beginning of the year.
He told The Age that
while Asian Australians do disproportionately well in the corporate sector,
compared to other ethnic groups, they are still under represented and have no
say in national debates.
”This is not right. Because of the
sheer numbers, the sheer wealth, the sheer brain power they have, they should
have something more.”
Both Lim and our insider want to
know: “Where is the liberal equivalent of Senator Penny Wong?”
But Lim looks further and asks why Asian
Australians are so underrepresented across other sectors of society.
”They are not on TV, not public
intellectuals, or human rights or social justice activists. There are none in
the judiciary,” he told The Age.
But Benjamin
Herscovitch of The Centre of Independent
Studies sees things
differently. The policy analyst told Asian Correspondent that, from a social mobility point of
view, Asian Australians do very well.
“The desires of those among the
Asian Australian population to pursue other career paths rather than being
involved in the political process, should be noted. The representation of
Asians are high amongst other career groups,” he said.
So could it be possible that Asian
Australians are just less interested in moving into politics?
Unfortunately, the Liberal Party
didn’t return any calls or emails so it’s difficult to say for sure. But what
we can say is that our media and news continue to be saturated by ‘White’
Australians, despite our ethnic makeup.
But wait, there’s more.
Research
from the Lowy Institute suggests yet another reason why we
have so few Asian political figures: compared to other countries, Australians
just don’t like Asians as much as other nationalities.
Measuring how they felt towards
other countries in terms of ‘warm’ or ‘cold’ on a thermometer (0 degrees being
very cold, 50 degrees being neither and 100 degrees being very warm), the 1002
adults surveyed in the 2011 Lowy Poll rated our Asian neighbours between 67 and
51 degrees. Japan was the country people felt most warmly towards at 67 degrees
while China rated 53 degrees, just above Indonesia at 51 degrees.
How Australians feel towards other countries. Picture: The Lowy
Institute, 2011 Poll
In comparison, New Zealand scored 88
degrees while Great Britain and the US were given 79 and 70 degrees,
respectively.
While these results may seem
unsurprising, compared to New Zealand, Australians seem to feel less warmly
towards Asian countries.
The Asia New Zealand Foundation mirrored questions asked by the Lowy
Institute and returned some surprising results. The order in which the
countries are ranked are roughly the same, however New Zealanders feel almost
10 degrees warmer on average towards Asian countries, rating China at 70
degrees and Indonesia at 65.
If such results are anything to go
by, perhaps it is not the Liberal Party who should be blamed for anti-Asian
sentiments, but Australian society as a whole. If these primary selection
processes truly are about de-seating Asian candidates based on ethnicity, could
it be a pre-emptive move to make sure a safe candidate is ready to be elected?
It’s unfortunate to think that a country that has built itself up
on multiculturalism could have such deep-seated racial issues, especially at a
time when our relations with Asian nations are becoming more important. So
perhaps before Minister Bowen makes any more speeches on the ‘genius’ of
multiculturalism in Australia.
Survey shows racism
January 23, 2012
Thirty per cent of people in the IT and finance sectors have
firsthand experience of racism, a new survey shows. Photo:
Jason South
ALMOST
three-quarters of finance and information technology workers say racism exists
in Australian hiring practices, a survey shows.
The survey of
895 workers, conducted by Balance Recruitment last month, also found that 30
per cent of people in the IT and finance sectors had firsthand experiences of
racism. It found that people from India, Sri Lanka, Bangladesh, Pakistan and
China were more likely to be victims of racist hiring practices.
Those who
felt racism was a major issue came from a variety of backgrounds including
Anglo-Saxon, African, subcontinental and south-east Asian origins. Eight per
cent of respondents said they believed ethnic stereotyping was warranted.
Read more: http://www.theage.com.au/national/survey-shows-racism-20120122-1qc6v.html#ixzz1kFEB11Fp
Read more: http://www.theage.com.au/national/survey-shows-racism-20120122-1qc6v.html#ixzz1kFEB11Fp
Australia,
he should take a look at his colleagues in Canberra and question why so little
of this ‘genius’ has managed to find a seat on either side of government.
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