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SA Premier urges referendum on unpopular nuclear waste

Citizens' jurors listen to Premier Jay Weatherill and Nuclear Fuel Royal Commissioner Kevin Scarce.

Usually, when people mention dying in a ditch, they are discussing something they would much rather avoid. But for the South Australian state Labor government of Premier Jay Weatherill, dying in a ditch seems a positive ambition.

For Weatherill and his cabinet, the 鈥渄itch鈥 is the government鈥檚 plan to host up to a third of the world鈥檚 high-level nuclear waste in a giant dump in the state鈥檚 remote north. The dump scheme was rejected decisively on November 6 by a government-organised 鈥淐itizens鈥 Jury鈥.

Two-thirds of the jury members, selected as a representative cross-section of South Australians, recommended that the dump not go ahead 鈥渦nder any circumstances鈥.

Indigenous traditional landowners have always strongly opposed the dump scheme. Since the 鈥渃itizen鈥檚 jury鈥 delivered its verdict, the plan has also been rejected by an apparent majority of state parliamentarians and, clearly, by mass public opinion.

Even the Liberal opposition, if we are to believe their statements, are now off-side. In a bizarre act of political cross-dressing, the Liberals 鈥 for many years zealous backers of the nuclear industry 鈥 have pronounced the dump plan dead and called for it to be abandoned.

Liberal parliamentarians were solid in their support for the Royal Commission on the Nuclear Fuel Cycle, which put its stamp of approval on the dump scheme in May. The Liberals鈥 change of heart only came in the days after the Citizens鈥 Jury delivered its verdict, and the trend of public opinion became clear. The Liberals, it seems, can small a winning election issue.

Referendum call

Still, the Labor government is pressing ahead in a last-ditch defence of its radioactive love-child. Weatherill has now issued a call for the dump to be the subject of a referendum at some unspecified point in the future.

Before the Citizens鈥 Jury verdict, the Premier had dismissed suggestions that a referendum would be useful. But a November 14 press release said: 鈥 the only path forward is the resolution of bipartisanship and broad social consent through a state-wide referendum.鈥

Treasurer Tom Koutsantonis argued that citizens wanted discussion on the dump plan to continue. 鈥淭here鈥檚 a silent majority that want to talk about this a bit further,鈥 Koutsantonis told the ABC.

鈥淚 think a referendum is a great way of having South Australians actually talk about this.鈥

on November 18 saying: 鈥淚 believe we have started an important debate 鈥 Our judgment is that the only path to achieve social support is through a referendum, which will provide the broader community with the opportunity to provide consent or otherwise.鈥

The trouble for the government however, is that South Australians are in no mood to agree to the dump scheme and keeping the issue alive is merely irritating them further.

Most people in the state appear satisfied that the Citizens鈥 Jury did its job well, hearing testimony for and against the scheme over a series of weekends before delivering a thoughtful, informed verdict.

And there, a indicated strongly, is where the public wants the issue to end. 鈥淪hould the state government now abandon its nuclear storage plans?鈥 the poll asked. Yes, said 86% of respondents.

On the dump question, other political forces in the state have proved much less tin-eared than the ALP leadership. Whether from opportunism or conviction, these forces have now come out against the referendum proposal.

For a referendum to be held, a bill would need to pass through parliament 鈥 the chances of this are effectively zero. Between the Liberals, the Xenophon group and the Greens, the legislation is certain to be voted down.

South Australian Senator as 鈥渁 stinker of an idea鈥 and said on November 14: 鈥淚 supported a referendum when it looked as if both sides of politics supported the dump, but now that they don鈥檛 there is no point. The next state election will be in if Labor continues to support the idea.鈥

South Australians when he observed: 鈥淎 statewide referendum would be throwing good money after bad. The government has already wasted more than $10 million on this project and a referendum would cost tens of millions more.鈥

Weatherill accepts that a referendum on the dump scheme cannot be a short-term prospect. 鈥淲e won鈥檛 be pushing ahead with a referendum until there鈥檚 bipartisan support,鈥 he said on November 14. 鈥淏ut if the mood in the community shifts and bipartisanship is re-established, we will remain open to this question.鈥

Marginalising the jury

For the present, Weatherill is trying to marginalise the Citizens鈥 Jury decision in the minds of South Australians, by suggesting the outcomes of the government鈥檚 鈥渃onsultation鈥 program should have more weight. Carried out between July and October, this 鈥渃onsultation鈥 centred on government-organised teams travelling about the state spruiking the pro-dump findings of the royal commission.  

On November 11, the government released a 鈥溾 based on various types of opinion sampling during the months of 鈥渃onsultation鈥. This report notes a modest plurality for the view that discussion on the dump plan should continue. In randomly-selected telephone surveys and focus groups, 43% of respondents supported further exploration of the proposal, while 37% were against.

Weatherill has seized on these figures and used them in his arguments for a referendum. But the Premier can justly be accused of 鈥渃herry-picking鈥 data to suit his case. On the whole, the 鈥渃ommunity views鈥 held little comfort for supporters of the dump scheme.

Most survey respondents (53% to 31%, with 16% unsure) rejected the importing of nuclear waste. On the question of whether government-sponsored discussion of the issue should continue, various types of 鈥渟elf-selected feedback鈥 recorded a massive thumbs-down, by 64% to 29%.

A reasonable conclusion is that among South Australians who had formed views on the dumps issue and felt motivated to express them, solid majorities wanted both the dump plan and further 鈥渃onsultation鈥 on it buried.

The Community Views Report also found that participants 鈥渟howed low levels of trust in government鈥 and 鈥渨anted to hear all sides of the topic, not just the side the government wanted to share鈥. The report鈥檚 findings were recorded amid a barrage of pro-dump views from the Murdoch-owned Advertiser and the government鈥檚 鈥渘uclear roadshow鈥, while most South Australians had little access to opposing views.

Now, the verdict by the Citizens鈥 Jury has itself become a major factor hardening public opinion against the dump. For Weatherill to claim a mandate for pressing ahead in these circumstances is pure political fraud. It also carries extraordinary electoral dangers.

Unions SA Secretary Joe Szakacs accused a 鈥渢one deaf鈥 Weatherill on November 14 of sticking with a 鈥減et project鈥 that threatened to hurt Labor at the ballot box in 2018. 鈥淭he Premier is opposing his own party鈥檚 policy, the decision of the citizens鈥 jury, the union movement, the conservation movement [and] Aboriginal people.鈥

Nuclear vision

Weatherill鈥檚 crazy-brave behaviour does, however, have a certain perverse intellectual basis. He is gripped by a naive vision of saving the economy of his rust-belt state through promoting broad investment in the nuclear industry.  

His referendum proposal was linked to the long-awaited unveiling, on November 15, of the state government鈥檚 responses to the recommendations of its royal commission.

that in the long term, building nuclear power plants is very much among the premier鈥檚 objectives: 鈥9. Promote and collaborate on the development of a comprehensive national energy policy that enables all technologies, including nuclear, to contribute to a reliable, low-carbon electricity network at the lowest possible system cost. SUPPORT.

鈥10. Collaborate with the Australian Government to commission expert monitoring and reporting on the commercialisation of new nuclear reactor designs that may offer economic value for nuclear power generation. SUPPORT.鈥

his government to 鈥渁 new statewide mineral exploration drilling initiative to support the discovery of new mineral deposits 鈥 with a particular focus on uranium鈥.

As the Labor government has thrown in its lot with the nuclear industry and large numbers of South Australians have reacted with repugnance, the state Liberals have been almost incontinent with delight. 鈥淭he Liberal Party is 100% behind me,鈥 opposition leader Steven Marshall exulted on November 14.

鈥 鈥 If Jay Weatherill is so wedded to this, he can take it to the next election.鈥

No-one, however, should believe that the Liberals have switched to the anti-nuclear camp 鈥 or even that their opposition to the dump is ironclad.

As if to signal their real attitudes, the state , a 20-year veteran of the nuclear industry, as their policy director. A former corporate affairs manager with BHP Billiton and Western Mining Corporation, Yeeles last year backed the dump scheme in a 270-page submission to the royal commission inquiry.

In the Festival State, nuclear issues are at the centre of a new festival 鈥 of political subterfuge, hypocrisy and power-lust. The survey respondents who showed 鈥渓ow levels of trust鈥 in the state鈥檚 major-party politicians clearly had a point.

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