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The Guardian - AU
The Guardian - AU
National
Daniel Hurst

Factcheck: the Coalition says Labor always ‘takes China’s side’, but are the parties’ positions so different?

The flag pole of the Australian Parliament is seen behind the roofs of the Chinese Embassy in Canberra,
Scott Morrison has accused the opposition of being in China’s corner but there have been times when Labor has taken a more hawkish position than the Coalition. Photograph: Lukas Coch/AAP

As the Coalition campaign seeks to revive the talking point that Labor always “takes China’s side”, Scott Morrison implored reporters to “just look at the record”.

So we did just that and found the claims by the prime minister and his senior ministers are either factually inaccurate, misleading, or lack context.

Claim

What I don’t understand is that when something of this significance takes place, why would you take China’s side?

– Scott Morrison in response to Labor criticism over the security agreement between China and Solomon Islands, leaders’ debate, Wednesday

Reality: Australia is a democracy. Questioning how the government has approached a challenging issue of foreign policy, and whether it could have done anything better to pursue Australia’s interests, is not taking China’s side. The Coalition and Labor have the same position on the major points of tensions in Australia’s relationship with China.

Claim

When I called out China for where the pandemic started and said there had to be an independent investigation into the origins of Covid – apparently this was the wrong thing for us to do. Labor said that Australia was at fault in calling for that and our government was at fault for doing that.

– Morrison, Thursday

Reality: This is incorrect. Labor voiced support for such an international inquiry from the outset, with Albanese saying on 29 April 2020 that Australians “have an interest in finding out exactly the details of how this crisis came about, the source of the virus, how it happened … so that we can avoid it ever happening again”.

Labor did criticise the government’s tactics though after the foreign minister, Marise Payne, first called for it in an interview on the ABC’s Insiders program. The shadow foreign minister, Penny Wong, said at the time it “would have been preferable” if the government had done more diplomatic legwork to lock in support from Australia’s close partners and allies before publicly announcing the call for an inquiry. Essentially, this amounted to a “safety in numbers” argument.

Claim

When we shut the borders at the start of the pandemic, they accused me of being racist about that as well. No, I was protecting Australia.”

– Morrison, leaders’ debate, Wednesday

Reality: Albanese said on 14 April 2020: “We did shut down the border with China very early. That was a good decision and that made a big difference, no doubt.”

Asked on 15 April 2020 whether the government had moved quickly enough to secure Australian borders, Albanese said: “Well certainly, the border closure with China was one of the successes.”

Claim

When China were making decisions to apply trade sanctions and tariffs against Australia, Labor seemed to want us to reach a compromise with China rather than to stand up for Australia. When Anthony Albanese spoke at the National Press Club not that long ago, he actually suggested that we should negotiate or settle some of the points with China.

– Finance minister Simon Birmingham, ABC TV, Thursday

Reality: Actually, Albanese told the National Press Club on 25 January 2022 that Australia should “stand up for our values and we should be prepared to not compromise on them at all”.

More likely Birmingham meant to refer to Albanese’s comments two days later, when the Labor leader said: “China should certainly withdraw some of the actions that have been taken to stop Australian products going to China.” The government has seized on the clumsy use of the word “some” to claim Labor is giving China a green light for some of the trade restrictions to remain in place. Albanese has said this misinterprets his comments, because he went on to call on Beijing to remove sanctions on Australian wine, other agricultural products and natural resources.

Claim

Have they backed the Australian government in standing up for Australia, or have they run the talking points, have they run the lines of those who are seeking to criticise Australia for the important decisions that we’ve taken in our national interest?

– Morrison, Thursday

Reality: The truth is both major parties have been recalibrating their China policy over the past decade in response to what they see as a more assertive nation under Xi Jinping. Hence, on some issues there have been times when Labor has had a more hawkish position than the Coalition. Labor was early, for example, in opposing the extradition treaty with China at a time when it was official Coalition government policy (Coalition rebels were also influential in scuttling that deal).

Wong coordinated with Payne’s office before meeting with the new Chinese ambassador earlier this year, in order to ensure Australia was sending a united bipartisan message to Beijing on key priorities. Consequently, Wong’s readout of her meeting was almost identical to the readout from Payne’s meeting from the previous week.

There have been times, though, that Labor has accused Morrison of leaving a leadership void that was filled by outspoken Coalition backbenchers, and of lacking a cohesive strategy for dealing with a more assertive China.

Claim

When they were last in office, [they] let our investment in our defence forces whittle away to the lowest levels as a share of the economy since 1938. And now we’ve restored that significantly, brought it back up to more than 2% of GDP.

– Simon Birmingham, ABC TV, Thursday

Reality: This is probably the government’s strongest line of attack against Labor on national security grounds. It is true, but lacks context.

The Gillard government’s 2012 budget outlined plans to cut about $5.5bn from the defence portfolio, spread over four years. That was a time when Labor remained under significant political pressure to deliver promised budget surpluses, and months before Xi took power in Beijing. (Remember that two years later, Tony Abbott invited Xi to address the Australian parliament and feted him at a state dinner.)

According to an analysis of official data compiled by the Australian Strategic Policy Institute, annual defence spending as a share of the economy hovered between 1.7% and 1.8% of GDP during the life of the Howard government.

Under the Rudd and Gillard Labor governments, it hit a peak of 1.96% in 2009-10 and a low of 1.59% in 2012-13. Under the Abbott, Turnbull and Morrison governments it has steadily risen to be about 2% now – and will continue to increase.

The Gillard government published a new defence white paper in 2013 that recommitted to increasing the defence budget to 2% of GDP as budget circumstances permitted. Albanese backed the Coalition’s 2020 defence strategic update which flagged $270bn of additional spending on defence capability over a decade, and he has pledged that if elected he will also spend at least 2% of GDP on defence.

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