
The federal government鈥檚 war on unions continues. Australian Federal Police (AFP) raided the offices of the Construction Forestry Mining Maritime and Energy Union (CFMEU) in Pyrmont and the home of CFMEU聽NSW assistant secretary Michael Greenfield and other officials places of residence on November 18.
CFMEU聽national construction secretary Dave Noonan said the warrant related to an investigation under the federal Fair Work Act and 鈥渞elated matters鈥. He聽said the union was cooperating 鈥渢o the extent required by law鈥.
鈥淭he AFP have been taking an increasingly active role in industrial relations matters, and have previously聽raided聽CFMEU聽offices in Canberra and Brisbane,鈥 he said.
鈥淣either of those聽raids聽resulted in any charges being laid against any union official.聽In the case of Canberra, the AFP actions were found to be unlawful by the ACT Supreme Court.
鈥淭he AFP does not appear to have a similar level of urgency when investigating alleged malfeasance or corruption of Coalition ministers, as we have seen in the Angus Taylor and Michaelia Cash scandals.鈥
Australian Council of Trade Unions secretary Sally McManus also questioned the police raids, asking on聽November聽19 why they were not targeting 鈥渂anks for money laundering and child exploitation ... politicians鈥 offices for funding rorts and fundraisers with developers ... companies for tax rorts and wage theft.鈥澛
The聽CFMEU聽represents 100,000 construction workers nationally and more than 20,000 mining and energy workers.聽The union is preparing for an election of officials, including its state president. The ballot is due to open in January.
In 2014, the Coalition government established a joint聽police聽task force to target union activity, following the failed Royal Commission into Trade Union Governance and Corruption.聽
The taskforce is coordinated by the AFP, along with state聽police聽teams.
Public pressure from the union movement and a lack of support among the Senate crossbench forced the federal government to withdraw its union-busting Ensuring Integrity Bill in May.
Perhaps the AFP raids are designed, in part, as revenge for the bill鈥檚 defeat and the failure to make serious headway in previous legal cases against the CFMEU.
Whatever the motivations behind this latest attack on union rights, we need to defend the CFMEU and defend the right to organise.
As the raids on ABC journalists involved in reporting whistleblowers show, the AFP is increasingly being deployed politically as part of an assault on democratic rights, which must be resisted.