
āIāve never felt so good about an electionā, an upbeat Senator Bob Brown told a packed crowd at Leichhardt Town Hall on July 29. The Greens parliamentary leader urged people to help his party out in the August 21 election in which the Greens hope to win the balance of power in the Senate.
Having been excluded the previous week from the āgreat debateā featuring Labor Prime Minister Julia Gillard and Coalition leader Tony Abbott, Brown used the opportunity to talk up policies that, had he been included, may have made it worth watching.
āThe Greens are prodigious innovators for the distribution of social wealthā, Brown said. He talked up his partyās universal dental care policy, proposed changes to unfair workplace laws, penalties for big polluters, a compassionate asylum seeker policy and parliamentary accountability over any decision to commit to a war.
Brown spoke of the social implications of a universal dental scheme. āIf you fix peopleās teeth, you fix peopleās healthā, Brown said. āNot having good dental care can ruin a personās ability to have a good life.ā
The National Oral Health Alliance says more than 7 million people are unable to get dental care when they need it because of long waiting lists. Australian Bureau of Statistics figures released a day earlier noted the cost of dental services increased by 4% over the last financial year.
The Greensā proposal is that non-cosmetic dental services are incorporated into Medicare under a new universal dental health scheme, Denticare.
āItās an outrage that one of the wealthiest countries in the world cannot deliver dental care to its citizensā, Brown said. He pointed out that Laborās backdown on the super profits tax had cost the budget about $12 billion a year. The Greens have costed Denticare at $4.3 billion per annum.
Brown rounding on the ALPās backdown on the super profits mining tax to rousing applause. āIt was a tax on supper profits, not profits.ā
As for the Greens record on supporting workplace rights, Brown pointed to Greens Senator Rachel Siewertās work in negotiating flexible work hours for carers of disabled children. The Greens would like to extend this flexibility, Brown said, to include all carers.
Brown said the Greens had refused to support the ALPās Carbon Pollution Reduction Scheme because it āwould have compensated pollutersā and it āwas a $22 billion ticket to failureā.
He said the Greens supported what he described as a āpollution taxā ā an interim carbon tax, starting at $23 per tonne. The revenue raised would go to households and to help build renewable energy plants.
The major partiesā dog whistling against asylum seekers was condemned. Brown described the war in Afghanistan as ātragicā.
He condemned the lack of any parliamentary debate over the decision to go to deploy Australian troops in a war.
Greens NSW Senate candidate Lee Rhiannon, Greens candidate for Grayndler Sam Byrne and Greens candidate for Sydney Tony Hickey also spoke.
Rhiannon said the Greens were committed to use the balance of power āresponsiblyā in the Senate. She said they would not only seek to not only negotiate with the other parties, but would urge communities to make their voices heard.
[Pip Hinman is the Socialist Alliance candidate for the seat of Grayndler in NSW.]