calendar >>>
> CLIMATE EMERGENCY RA…
> yj4tvy3izo
> yj4tvy3izo
> yj4tvy3izo
> yj4tvy3izo
add an event >>>
features
   anti-war
   migration
   climate change
   ecology
   students
   work
   health
   gender
   culture
   indymedia
   global news
   anti-nuclear
   anti-racism
   civil liberties
   anti-corporate
   miscellaneous
   social movements

 

announcements list
contributors list

about us
   contact
   get involved
   support us
   editorial policy

resources
   activist groups
   syndication
   links

radio
podcast

engagemedia

search


themes
   white theme black theme




 

 

 


printable version - email this article

8th Defend and Extend Medicare rally
by pc Monday October 04, 2004 at 04:35 PM

At lunchtime today (Monday 4 Oct) supports of Defend and Extend Medicare met at the State Library for the 8th rally in 18 months. Tony Abbot sent his apologies for the 6th time (in was suggested he might be heading for Rome ...), but the shadow – and hopefully soon-to-be actual minister for health, Julia Gillard was there, along with her counterparts form the Democrats, Senator Lyn Allison, and Greens, Senator Kerry Nettle, as well as Rod Wilson, Convenor of the Medicare Action Group, who provided the figures just quoted, Tim Woodruff of the Doctors' Reform Society, Leigh Hubbard from Trades Hall, and last but by no means least, Joe Toscano from the group Defend and Extend Medicare.

8th Defend and Exten...
click to enlarge

crowd.jpgvknzjy.jpg, image/jpeg, 600x450

After the big gatherings of the last few days the attendance may have seemed small, but there were not far short of a hundred people spread out over the steps and lawn, including small contingents of CPSU and ANF members.


Lyn Allison regretted that keeping John Howard honest was one area in which the Democtarats had failed in their historic role... She called for better health care i rurla areas, and the setting up of 'Denticare' to complement Medicare. Like Rod Wilson, she stressed how the safety net benefits doctor, but pushes up costs to patients... She called for more emphasis on prevention, contrasting the paltry amount spent on countering smoking with the billions transferred to the private health industry via the rebate.

Introduced as '[hopefully] the next health minister', Julia Gillard pointed out how Labor in office builds Medicare, only to see the Coalition tear it down again... This election should be seen as a referendum on Medicare, and called Labor's proposed Medicare Gold the biggest single extension to the system since Labor invented it in the 80s.

add your comments


union banners
by pc Monday October 04, 2004 at 04:35 PM

union banners...
click to enlarge

unions.jpg, image/jpeg, 600x450

add your comments


Kerry Nettle
by pc Monday October 04, 2004 at 04:35 PM

Kerry Nettle...
click to enlarge

kerry.jpg, image/jpeg, 600x450

Kerry Nettle spoke for the Greens, calling for a 'big picture' reform if the system to get away from the current buck-passing between the two levels of government. She backed the demand for a redirection of the funds currently spent subsidising private health insurance – the private health industry was the only industry favoured with such a redirection of public money.

Tim Woodruff was scathing in reference to Tony Abbot's comments on health as a market place, where doctors should be free tp charge what they like, and the patient must expect to have to pay. He regretted that John Howard could not bring himself to be as honest as his deputy, John Anderson, who let it slip recent;y that' what we really want is a 2-tiered health system'. He told of a recent case of a pensioner whose doctor had finally, but reluctantly, introduced a co-payment – when she ended up in hospital it turned out she had been to the docto again, 'because she thought she would get better, and her budget was tight at the time, and she couldn't afford the extra $10.' At present there are practices in the Bendigo area where dotors simply refuse to see patients who can't pay, even if they are referred by social workers; relying on doctors' charity would not be a wise move...

add your comments


Leigh Hubbard
by pc Monday October 04, 2004 at 04:35 PM

Leigh Hubbard...
click to enlarge

leigh.jpg, image/jpeg, 600x450

According to Leigh Hubbard, 70% of unionists surveyed in marginal seats regarded health as the main issue in this election. In 1987, Howard declared he was determined to get rid of bulk billing, and he hadn't changed his mind since... he was 'the butcher of bulk billing' The safety net was a shift of health care towards the values of the Coalition, the market place. He warnd that it would be revamped after the elction if the coalition was returned – there had been a $600 million blow-out, and this money would have to be recovered somehow. Pointing to the banners of the ANF he noted a recent analysis by the nurses' union which had highlighted the failures of Coalition policy in such areas as funding for training, and ended by recalling that it had been unions and Labor who had built Medicare in the first place, saved it already once before, and now had to do it again next Saturday.

add your comments


Joe Toscano
by pc Monday October 04, 2004 at 04:35 PM

Joe Toscano...
click to enlarge

joe-t.jpg, image/jpeg, 600x552

The final speaker before the mike was dclared open was Jospeh Toscano of the Defend and Extend Medicare group http://www.defendand extendmedicare.org, who warned that establishing health care as a right not a luxury was not something that was going to be achieved simply by voting next Saturday, but would neeed an ongoing struggle involving individuals. The Parliamentary process was a 'leap of faith', where you hope that promises will be carried out. “...what happens is that every three years you have an option. Somebody wins, somebody loses. And at the end of the day the community itself usually loses out ...' So this would not be the end, even if there was a change of government next weekend.

add your comments


LATEST COMMENTS ABOUT THIS ARTICLE
Listed below are the 10 latest comments of 3 posted about this article.
These comments are anonymously submitted by the website visitors.
TITLE AUTHOR DATE
Even Dwarves started small pr Monday October 04, 2004 at 08:05 PM
Informative for workers at lunchtime Susan Rowe Monday October 04, 2004 at 07:39 PM
lonely people bystander Monday October 04, 2004 at 07:06 PM
Melbourne Indymedia is a website produced by grassroots media makers offering non-corporate coverage of struggles, actions and celebrations. Everyone is a witness. Everyone is a journalist.
N© Melbourne Independent Media Center. Unless otherwise stated by the author, all content is free for non-commercial reuse, reprint, and rebroadcast, on the net and elsewhere. Opinions are those of the contributors and are not necessarily endorsed by the Melbourne Independent Media Center.