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WSWS : News
& Analysis : North
America : Canada
Canadian "unite the right" conference adopts revealing
resolutions
By a reporter
3 March 1999
Media reports of the Reform Party-sponsored United Alternative
to the Liberals Conference have said little, if anything, about
the policy debates at the conference. Certainly, Reform Party
leader Preston Manning and other UA conference organizers were
determined to tightly control all policy discussions. A clash
between so-called fiscal and social conservatives over abortion
or capital punishment would have called into question the conference's
professed objective of uniting the right and undermined Manning's
efforts to counter the public perception of Reform as the political
voice of intolerant Christian fundamentalism.
Nonetheless, the five resolutions that the conference did adopt
and the debates surrounding them were revealing. Although seemingly
couched in innocuous language, the resolutions on closer inspection
prove to be chock-full of the code words of big business, the
right and extreme right.
Resolution Two affirmed the conference's support for the Reform
Party's right-wing economic agenda, which aims to redistribute
wealth from the working and middle classes to the rich, by slashing
taxes and the social and public spending that they finance. Specifically,
the resolution called for lower personal and business taxes and
for the paying down of the national debt to be made a government
priority. These policies are designed to ensure that the federal
government is fiscally compelled to further slash social spending.
A call for the government to support "effective job-training
and retraining" was deleted from the resolution by what one
news report described as "a massive show of hands."
Also deleted from Resolution Two was any reference to environmental
protection, the delegates apparently believing that even the business
buzzword of "sustainable development" represented an
impermissible pandering to left-wing sentiments and an undue restraint
on "a thriving entrepreneurial sector."
The opening passage of Resolution Three was a clear nod to
the anti-abortion lobby and a fulsome embrace of the prerogatives
of capital. It affirmed that the delegates "recognize that
all human beings possess the fundamental rights of life, freedom
and the right to own and enjoy property." According to right-wing
National Post columnist Terence Corcoran, "given a
chance, the delegates would have inserted" property rights
into every resolution, "as an economic measure, a social
measure and as an overarching principle."
In Resolution Three, UA conference delegates also called for
social policies based on "individual responsibility"--a
euphemism for allowing the unemployed to fend for themselves--and
for the criminal justice system to reflect greater "respect
and support for law and order."
On a motion from a past president of the anti-feminist group
REAL Women, Resolution Three was amended to state that the family
is " the"--not just "an"--"essential
building block for a healthy society." A second motion from
the floor to delete the word "genuine" from a commitment
to support "genuine refugees and immigration" but only
when they contribute to "economic growth," was overwhelmingly
rejected.
See Also:
Canada's Official Opposition to found
new right-wing party
[3 March 1999]
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