When firebombed houses look like the cost of business, it’s past time for action

1 week ago 4

Imagine waking up to find the car or boat ablaze in the driveway of your family home while your kids sleep inside. Now, imagine that those behind this terrifying attack get away with it.

Incredible as it may seem, that’s the state of affairs a year into the Albanese government’s supposed moves to clean up the construction industry, after the revelations of crime and corruption aired in this masthead’s Building Bad series.

Honest union officials and builders are not only living in fear, but their families are being targeted.

In Victoria, there have been three terrifying attacks at the family homes of building industry figures, and multiple fire-bombings on construction sites.

In NSW, it was only weeks ago that the most recent threats were levelled at a union official’s family. That official has had no choice but to quit the union. His crime? Trying to enforce the laws that protect workers, according to suspicions outlined in an interim report prepared for the union administrator.

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What are the Albanese and state governments doing about it all? Not enough is the simple answer.

As the CFMEU’s administrator, Mark Irving, KC, who has 24/7 protection for himself and his family after police detected a possible threat to his life, said this week: “The problems across the industry are myriad, and the administration and the union has neither the responsibility nor the resources to fix all of them. Governments, employer bodies, regulators and law enforcement all have a role to play.”

One of the reasons the Albanese government’s clean-up is failing is because it has been limited to the CFMEU.

The union was an easy villain. It was right for Irving to be appointed and for the old and corrupted CFMEU leadership regime to be turfed out, replaced with highly respected union organisers like Michael Crosby.

The problem is that the gangsters, bikies and rotten bosses have suffered no real penalty to date, save for the public opprobrium attached to this masthead’s ongoing reporting.

It is a matter of fact, not conjecture, that bikies remain on Victoria’s Big Build projects. There are suspected shonks on major NSW Labor government projects.

It is also clear Queensland Premier David Crisafulli’s commission of inquiry into the CFMEU is as much about politics as it is about union misbehaviour.

In already declaring the CFMEU persona non grata and appointing a union-busting barrister to head his commission – rather than someone apolitical in the vein of the famed Tony Fitzgerald – Crisafulli is repeating the folly of Tony Abbott’s Dyson Heydon commission into trade unions.

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It did some good work exposing corruption, but because it was politicised with Abbott’s anti-union zealotry and Heydon’s political missteps, its findings were too easily dismissed.

And yet, if state and federal Labor don’t do more to combat the organised crime, thuggery and corruption in the building sector, Crisafulli’s commission may be the industry’s last hope.

It’s either that or Geoffrey Watson, SC, the indefatigable chief investigator for the CFMEU administrator.

After a year of inaction, and only after repeated media pressure, did Victoria Police reluctantly direct nine or so detectives (who by all accounts include gun investigators) to probe crime in the sector. That is overdue but very welcome. It still hasn’t led to any substantial criminal charges.

In contrast, the NSW and Queensland police are nowhere to be seen, while the federal police has just three or so veteran detectives on the job.

This trio of federal agents has so far shown up every agency in the country, launching raids and engaging in high-profile industry disruption. But it seems clear they have nowhere near the firepower needed.

It is even clearer that given the intense fear that pervades the industry and stops participants giving police the sworn statements needed for prosecutions, Irving’s call for a more extraordinary intervention must be heeded.

So why don’t state and federal Labor governments do more? In Victoria, Labor fears skeletons on the multi-billion dollar Big Build.

Any proper inquiry would reveal who in power knew what and when about how bikies and other crooks infiltrated major projects.

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As the leader of a newer government, Chris Minns in NSW doesn’t have the quite same problem, but he will have if he chooses inaction over accountability.

Ultimately, given the lawlessness, fear and violence in the construction sector is a national problem, Albanese could take charge. Here is a suggestion: call a national inquiry into organised and financial crime in the building industry.

It should be truly indifferent to whether the crooks are wearing CFMEU hoodies or tailored suits. Its leader must be apolitical.

Watson has already shown he has the guts to do the job and has no problem torching the union or going after bosses.

In acting boldly, Albanese would not only steal Crisafulli’s thunder, but – much more importantly – clean up a sector in desperate need of change.

We should no longer accept that getting your house firebombed is simply the cost of operating in a sector that is one of the biggest drivers of our economy.

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