Socialist Alliance launches Sydney, NSW Senate campaign with communities in struggle

March 19, 2025
Issue 
Kurdish community activists presented Socialist Alliance candidates with flowers at the election launch. Photo: Isaac Nellist

Socialist Alliance (SA) launched its federal election campaign for the seat of Sydney and the New South Wales Senate on March 15 with a diverse crowd of community fighters.

鈥淲e live in dangerous times,鈥 said Rachel Evans, who is standing in Sydney. 鈥淲hat we do now in our neighbourhoods, communities and unions will shape the future of our planet and the lives of future generations.鈥

Evans, a well-known LGBTIQ rights and housing activist, said the campaign would 鈥渦npick the lies鈥 to counter racism, transphobia and Islamophobia. These are being used as diversions by the billionaires who are 鈥渁re sucking us dry鈥.

鈥淲e are in an unprecedented housing and cost-of-living crisis 鈥 70% of households are financially stressed and one in six children live in poverty.鈥 She said SA has real solutions to the housing, cost-of-living and climate crises, 鈥渋ncluding a mass expansion of ecologically sustainable public housing funded by taxing the rich鈥.

Andrew Chuter said when it comes to the climate emergency, 鈥渋t is a case of socialism or death鈥. Chuter is number two on SA鈥檚 NSW Senate ticket.

鈥淲e have already surpassed 1.5掳C of warming and are on target to seriously exceed that. Instead of addressing the climate crisis, governments are prioritising destructive wars.鈥

Chuter outlined five key demands: 100% renewables by 2030; no nuclear power; scrap AUKUS; scrap all fossil fuel subsidies; and free and expanded public and active transport.

Peter Boyle, the lead NSW Senate candidate, told the room of activists that everyone is 鈥減art of the hope for building the future鈥.

鈥淲hile the billionaire class is busy promoting hate, division, exploitation, war and ecocide, socialists stand for the exact opposite.

鈥淲e want a society based on solidarity and living together with nature. We want people to work together, stand up for each other, not fight each other and hate each other.鈥

Boyle said socialism is not just a 鈥渘ice idea鈥, but a 鈥減ossible and practical solution鈥 for humanity.

鈥淵our presence today is proof of the record of SA. You are here because we have worked together, and that is the most important skill in this period: the ability to unite with everybody in struggle to defeat this horrible offensive.鈥

Greetings came from a number of communities in struggle.

Chilean activist, unionist and musician Paula Sanchez, on behalf of the Latin American Social Forum and Chile-Australia Solidarity Committee, said: 鈥淲e are here because we believe in socialism and believe in fighting and struggling for a better world.鈥

Sanchez, along with other Latin American musicians and activists, performed a number of songs.

Gazan-Australian activist Shamikh Badra, a member of the International Committee of the Palestinian People鈥檚 Party and founder of the Gaza Nippers program, thanked SA for supporting justice and freedom in Palestine 鈥渘ot just in words, but in action鈥.

鈥淲hile other politicians stay silent or make excuses, SA has been clear: End the genocide, cut ties with apartheid Israel and stand with Palestinian people.鈥

Waterloo public housing tenant and activist Karyn Brown said SA 鈥渨alk the talk鈥 on defending public housing.

Paul Keating, Maritime Union of Australia (MUA) Sydney branch secretary, commented on SA鈥檚 鈥淐hange the System鈥 placards.

鈥淭here is a long history of solidarity between the MUA and SA,鈥 he said. 鈥淲e believe in the same values; that nobody is left behind 鈥 we need courageous candidates ... and we support Rachel, Peter and Andrew because they stand against hatred of division and discrimination and stand up for the working class.鈥

Keating condemned Labor鈥檚 attacks on the Construction Forestry Maritime Employees鈥 Union and its draconian anti-protest laws, saying 鈥渂oth ruling parties鈥 support authoritarian laws.

Kurdish community activist Baran Sogut said the presence of so many communities shows that SA 鈥渓ives the principles of people before profit鈥. Sogut thanked SA for its continued solidarity with the Rojava Revolution, presenting the candidates with flowers.

Josh Lees, Socialist Alternative and an organiser with the Palestine Action Group, said there is an 鈥渦rgent need to build the forces of resistance and working-class struggle鈥.

鈥淲e need to oppose not only the symptoms but also the root cause, the fundamental way that our society is organised for profit.鈥

Osama Youssif, from the Sudanese Communist Party, commended SA鈥檚 solidarity with the people of Sudan for more than 20 years.

鈥淪A is a voice for minorities and working-class communities and that is why we support it and will be spreading the word among our community.鈥

Climate activist Zach Schofield said making change entails 鈥渁ctively building power in the community鈥. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 what Rachel [Evans] does; that鈥檚 what SA does.鈥

Mark Gillespie, LGBTIQ activist and 78er, reflected on the 1978 protest that became Mardi Gras and the need for marginalised communities to unite to fight for a better world. There is 鈥渟pace for a party left of the Greens in federal parliament鈥, he concluded.

[Get involved in Socialist Alliance鈥檚 election campaign聽聽and donate via聽.]

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A diverse group of community campaigners came together to launch the Socialist Alliance election campaign. Photo: Isaac Nellist

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