Forty years ago, on this day, July 1, 1983, in a landmark decision, the High Court on circuit in Brisbane ruled by a vote of 4 to 3 in the federal government’s favour, – i.e. the Tasmanian government could not build a damn dam across the Franklin. “Judges Mason, Murphy, Brennan and Deane were in the majority and justices Wilson and Dawson with Chief Justice Gibbs were in the minority” (source).
The amount of carbon dioxide in the air was roughly 345.6ppm. As of 2023 it is 423ppm, but check here for daily measures.
The context was that there had been a huge campaign by environmentalists and “normal” civil society to save the Franklin river from being dammed. This included not just the usual marches and petitions and meetings, but lots of lobbying of individual politicians, targeting marginal seats and… nonviolent direct action. The ALP, under Bill Hayden, had promised to stop the Franklin and once elected in March 1983, new leader Bob Hawke followed through. The High Court narrowly said that the Federal Government had the power to do that sort of thing.
What I think we can learn from this is that court cases to courts will sometimes solidify a win for civil society that has been fought for, and sometimes overturn it. But even if the government has new powers, as it did in this case, getting them to use those powers is another thing altogether because ministers and prime ministers are usually coming under very effective counter pressures.
What happened next. The dam never got built. The Feds never used those powers (Labor afraid of pissing off powerful miners and developers, and voters in specific seats). Tasmania remained a flashpoint for environmental concerns. And the Franklin campaign of 1983 became a touchstone and talisman and was unfortunately the subject of an attempt of repeat in Queensland in 2019. And you could argue that that gave Scott Morrison another three years as prime minister…
We can sometimes be seduced by our own myths, and the danger is probably greatest 35 years later, when those who were young and now thinking of legacy, and the granular detail has been long forgotten.
What do you think? Does this pass the ‘so what?’ threshold? Have I got facts wrong? Interpretation wrong? Please do comment on this post, unless you are a denialist, obvs.
One reply on “July 1, 1983 – Australian High Court “saves” Franklin River (it woz the activists wot won it)”
I remember doing NVDA training in Sydney, but due to personal circumstances didn’t end up going to the Franklin blockade. Resource manual for a living revolution (1978), which came out of the Society of Friends (Quaker) tradition, was influential in blockade training, small group dynamics, meetings, consensus decision making. The movement had done everything else, it took a non-violent blockade to keep the national attention, and ultimately draw support by Federal Labor.
Where is the national media June 2023 rep[orting on the North Atlantic Marine heatwave? the extraordinary range of record temperatures being set in Siberia, China, Japan, Canada, southern US and Central America, Oceania, Iran? Record low sea ice extent, particularly in Antarctica, a 5 sigma deviation from normal. The main coverage is when Extinction Rebellion obstructs business as usual, and we have seen state Governments ramp up summary offences for obstruction in response. Never mind the major obstructions already occurring are due to extreme weather, and those in the pipeline.