GetUp!
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- This article is about an Australian political movement. For the graduate employee union see GET-UP
GetUp! is an Australian lobby group that advocates left-wing causes. It was founded on 1 August 2005 in response to the Coalition victory in the 2004 Federal election. GetUp campaigns are based largely around email and its website, however the organisation also uses broadcast and print media to get its message across.
GetUp describes itself as "a new independent political movement to build a progressive Australia. GetUp brings together like-minded people who want to bring participation back into our democracy." Its agenda is principally driven by opposition to government policy as it is announced. In the words of one of the site's founders, "To an extent it will be driven by the Government's legislative agenda and the issues they are pushing ahead on."[1]
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[edit] History
Founded by Jeremy Heimans and David Madden, the GetUp.org.au website was launched on August 1, 2005 along with a television advertising campaign. Inspired by the American website MoveOn.org, GetUp's initial campaign aimed to help voters to keep Australia's Howard government accountable as it took control of the Australian Senate on August 9, 2005 with an absolute majority of seats. This is the first time an Australian government has controlled both Houses of Parliament since the early 1980s.
The site encouraged visitors to send an email to Coalition senators that read "I’m sending you this message because I want you to know that I’m watching. Now that you have absolute power in the Senate, it is only people like me who can hold you accountable. And we will."
Board member and former Liberal Party of Australia leader John Hewson left the organisation soon after its founding.
[edit] Campaigns
While GetUp’s primary methodology to date has been to encourage its membership to email or call their elected representatives, the organisation has also employed a range of campaigning techniques, such as taking out advertisements in major daily newspapers, holding local events [1], running television commercials [2], and hiring a skywriter to write “Vote No” above Australia’s Parliament House in Canberra [3]. Several GetUp-initiated petitions have been presented in the Australian Senate by representatives of different political parties.
According to the GetUp! website, past campaigns include:
- Now you answer to us, August 2005 - launch
- Sell your lemons, September 2005 - against the sale of the government's remaining stake in Telstra Corporation, a telephone company
- Stop preventative detention, September 2005 - against changes to anti-terrorism legislation
- Put communities first, September 2005 - against voluntary student unionism legislation
- We're counting on you, October 2005 - against the WorkChoices legislation
- The deal is off, October 2005 - against changes to anti-terrorism legislation
- November 15 rally, November 2005 - against the WorkChoices legislation
- Honouring Van's life, November 2005 - in response to the execution of drug smuggler Nguyen Tuong Van by the Singapore government
- Stay strong Steve, December 2005 - against voluntary student unionism legislation
- Something you can do, December 2005 - against racism, in response to the Cronulla riots
- Stop the endless summer, January 2006 - against the Asia-Pacific Partnership on Clean Development and Climate
- Politics out of medicine, January 2006 - in favour of the transfer of the power to approve an abortifacient called Mifepristone from the health minister to the Therapeutic Goods Administration
- Fund our ABC, 2006 - in favour of increased government funding to the Australian Broadcasting Corporation, state-owned broadcaster
- Stop the land grab, 2006 - against changes to the Aboriginal Land Rights (Northern Territory) Act
- No child in detention, 2006 - against proposed changes to migration laws
- We're calling Washington, 2006 - in support of terror accused David Hicks
- No media monopoly, 2006 - against a relaxation in media ownership laws
- Defend Australian rights, 2006 - in support of terror accused David Hicks
- Authorised bribes, 2006 - in favour of expanded terms of reference for the Cole Inquiry into the Australian Wheat Board
- Stop deceiving women, 2006 - in favour of regulation of pregnancy counselling
- Our own plan for Iraq, 2006 - against Australian involvement in the Iraq War
- Climate action now, 2006 - in favour of certain actions in relation to global warming
- Save our heritage, 2006 - in favour of heritage listing for rock art on the Burrup Peninsula in Western Australia
In 2006, GetUp! also campaigned against the sale of electricity company SnowyHydro by the New South Wales and Australian governments.
[edit] Structure
GetUp is a non-profit organisation, registered as GetUp Ltd. In the vein of Moveon.org, much of the organisations funding comes in the form of small contributions made through its website. Under Australia’s taxation regime, donations to GetUp are not considered tax-deductible as the organisation advocates for changes to government policy. GetUp has a small team of staff and volunteers, including Executive Director Brett Solomon. [4]
GetUp's board members are:
- David Madden, a co-founder
- Jeremy Heimans, a co-founder
- Evan Thornley, a Labor MP in Victoria
- Amanda Tattersall, a union activist
- Bill Shorten, a union leader and Federal Labor candidate
- Cate Faehrmann, director of the Nature Conservation Council of New South Wales
- Don Mercer, chairman of the Australian Institute of Company Directors
With the exception of Mercer, all have strong links to the political left. Madden and Heimans ran campaigns in the United States against President George W Bush. Thornley and Shorten are Labor politicians. Tattersall serves as Research Director at Unions New South Wales. These links are not disclosed on the GetUp! website.
[edit] Criticisms
[edit] Spam claims
The GetUp! website allows visitors to send pro forma protest emails to Coalition parliamentarians, leading to charges that GetUp! generates spam. Shortly after the first GetUp! emails began to arrive, member for Wentworth Malcolm Turnbull said that "When you get 1000 emails, all in exactly the same form, it's not exactly as persuasive as a bunch of emails people have written to independently express themselves."
GetUp! dismisses this criticism, referring to, in the Sydney Morning Herald's words, "an age in which people were interested in political issues but no longer had the time to write letters."[2]
[edit] Front claims
GetUp has been criticised for being a partisan site because of its consistent opposition to key government policies. On August 4, 2005, Liberal Party politician Andrew Robb said on the ABC's The 7.30 Report that GetUp is "a front for the Labor Party, it's a political front. They're quite entitled to do it, it's a free country, but it's a political front. That's what it is."[3]
In August, 2005, Australian Special Minister of State Eric Abetz called for two Australian regulatory bodies — the ACCC and the Australian Electoral Commission (AEC) — to investigate GetUp's corporate structure, donations, and affiliation with political parties. The AEC concluded that there were "insufficient grounds on which to undertake a formal investigation." [4]
[edit] See also
[edit] References
- ^ Peatling, Stephanie. "You've seen the future and it (a) works, (b) is just a load of spam", The Sydney Morning Herald, 2005-08-06. Retrieved on 2007-01-26.
- ^ Peatling, Stephanie. "You've seen the future and it (a) works, (b) is just a load of spam", The Sydney Morning Herald, 2005-08-06. Retrieved on 2007-01-26.
- ^ Bannerman, Mark. "Website hopes to spark political interest", The 7.30 Report, 2005-08-04. Retrieved on 2007-01-26.
- ^ Political disclosures: GetUp and Bennelong Institute. Australian Electoral Commission (2006-02-09). Retrieved on 2007-01-26.