Get all your news in one place.
100’s of premium titles.
One app.
Start reading
Crikey
Crikey
Comment
Bernard Keane

Dave Sharma, Timor-Leste and the importance of speaking power to truth

The great majority of candidates in this election will be non-politicians, but of course the handful with a serious chance of winning will be professional politicians.

The ranks of our politicians are — in spite of the increasing number of women and Indigenous MPs — becoming less and less diverse in terms of their backgrounds. Our Parliament is now dominated by people who are either former political staffers or party operatives, or former union officials. And the range of occupations of those who are not former political operatives is narrowing — increasingly it is law or finance.

An important feature of this election is the effort by a large number of non-politicians to challenge professional Liberal politicians in urban seats — perhaps the biggest challenge the political class has faced since One Nation in the 1990s.

One such contest is in the seat of Wentworth, NSW, where independent Allegra Spender, among others, is challenging Liberal MP Dave Sharma.

On the face of it, Sharma is not cut from the same cloth as standard-issue political professionals. He’s an actual person who had a job outside politics, albeit not significantly removed from it — he was a successful diplomat.

Sharma is less easy to fit into the “outsiders versus professionals” narrative because he’s smart (we know this because he insists on telling everyone his high school results), accomplished in a previous career and a self-described moderate.

But do a little digging into Sharma’s career and that appearance changes radically. His personal slogan is “Experienced. Delivering” but doesn’t spell out in much detail the kinds of things Sharma is “experienced” in.

The people of Timor-Leste, however, have a good idea.

In 2004, Sharma was legal adviser to then-foreign minister Alexander Downer, playing that role until January 2006, when he was shifted to Washington. Sharma was thus Downer’s legal adviser when the Australian Secret Intelligence Service (ASIS), at Downer’s request, bugged the Timor-Leste cabinet to help Australia obtain an advantage over the fledgling state in relation to hydrocarbon resources under the Timor Sea. It led to the iniquitous, and now abandoned, Certain Maritime Arrangements in the Timor Sea (CMATS) treaty between the two countries, signed in January 2006.

Sharma’s time in Downer’s office was thus bookended by the actions of the Howard government to rip off Timor-Leste — and he was in the thick of it. And all for the advantage of politically influential fossil fuel giant Woodside.

Downer famously went on to take a position at Woodside after leaving politics. Sharma’s departmental secretary, the late Ashton Calvert, also took a position with Woodside.

We only know about the bugging due to the courage of Witness K, and that of his lawyer Bernard Collaery, two heroes punished for revealing Australia’s crimes. Collaery’s Sisyphean ordeal in the courts, instigated by the now fortunately ex-politician Christian Porter, continues to this day.

Sharma has never explained his role in what was done to Timor-Leste, and what advice he gave to Downer about it. Did he advise Downer that, under ACT law, there was a chance that ASIS’s actions were illegal, in spite of the remit of ASIS’s enabling legislation? Did he advise Downer that, should Timor-Leste ever discover it was the victim of a bugging operation, it would have a strong case in international courts to pursue a fairer treaty? Did he express any concern about the damage to Australia’s reputation if what we had done was exposed?

Woodside is a recurring theme in Sharma’s career. When he was ambassador to Israel — in which position he became an enthusiastic supporter of then-prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu (now exposed as corrupt) and backed his government’s apartheid policies — the moment Sharma arrived, he welcomed a delegation from Woodside.

And as a member of the Morrison government since 2019, Sharma has backed its climate inaction, expanding support for the fossil fuel companies that are such massive donors to his party — Woodside, Santos, Origin, Chevron — and Scott Morrison’s “gas-led recovery”.

Sharma likes to tell his voters that he’s a moderating, pro-climate voice in Canberra, but he has never once voted against, or spoken out against, Morrison’s climate inaction. His record is as a collaborator with fossil fuel interests.

Let’s return to where we started with the kind of people we want in politics. At first blush, Sharma looks like the kind of person who would be better than the cookie-cutter professional politicians we see so much of. But what’s his record? Helping the Howard government exploit and cheat Timor-Leste. Backing the Israeli government in its crimes against Palestinians. Supporting climate inaction and the interests of fossil fuel companies.

Sharma’s record is of taking the side of the powerful against the powerless, against the dispossessed, against the exploited and abused. Sharma uses that shining intellect to speak power to truth. He’s literally the last kind of politician we need more of.

Sign up to read this article
Read news from 100’s of titles, curated specifically for you.
Already a member? Sign in here
Related Stories
Top stories on inkl right now
One subscription that gives you access to news from hundreds of sites
Already a member? Sign in here
Our Picks
Fourteen days free
Download the app
One app. One membership.
100+ trusted global sources.