|
WSWS : News
& Analysis : North
America : Canada
Canada's social democrats seek to stave off parliamentary
annihilation
By Keith Jones
11 November 2000
Use
this version to print
For the third federal election in a row, the trade union-based
New Democratic Party (NDP) is in survival mode. Whether Canada's
social democrats can win the 12 seats needed to retain official
party status in the House of Commons is very much in doubt.
And, given the NDP's current level of popular support and the
vicissitudes of the first-past-the-post electoral system, it is
conceivable that the NDP, which held 19 seats at the end of the
last parliament, could be eliminated from the Commons altogether.
A spate of opinion polls have placed popular support for the
NDP at just 8 percent, 3 percentage points less than the 11 percent
of the vote it captured in the 1997 federal election. These same
polls indicate that the majority of the electorate, albeit to
varying degrees, opposes the right-wing, tax-cutting agenda of
the Liberals, Tories and Canadian Alliance and wants increased
funding for health care and other public services.
The social democrats are attempting to appeal to this popular
sentiment by promising to rescind parts of the Liberals' tax-cut
package that benefit only upper-income earners and to allocate
more of the projected federal budgetary surpluses to health care
and other public services.
But the NDP's promises and its claims to represent working
people cut little ice. Nor should they.
The NDP governments that came to power at the beginning of
the last decade in Ontario, British Columbia, and Saskatchewanprovinces
containing half of the Canadian populationpromptly betrayed
their reformist promises and imposed drastic social spending cuts.
Since 1995, the Ontario Tory government has spearheaded the
big business offensive against the working class. But its path
to power was paved by the Rae NDP government. Workers turned to
the NDP in September 1990 to shield them from the impact of a
gathering recession and the wave of corporate restructuring that
accompanied the introduction of the Canada-US Free Trade Agreement.
Instead, Premier Bob Rae junked his own program, declaring that
there was no alternative to the capitalist market economy and
its dictates. The Ontario NDP government slashed public spending,
imposed a wage-cutting social contract on 1 million
public sector workers, and laid the groundwork for the introduction
of workfare. Even the Walkerton poisoned-water tragedy was in
part prepared by the NDP when it partially privatized water testing.
The Saskatchewan and B.C. NDP governments have followed a like
trajectory. In the process of becoming the first provincial government
in Canada to eliminate its annual budget deficit, the Saskatchewan
NDP regime closed more than 50 rural hospitals. Then last year,
when nurses revolted against years of staff shortages and declining
real wages, the NDP replied with draconian strikebreaking legislation.
The B.C. NDP regime has slashed welfare benefits, cut the real
wages of public sector workers and broken strikes.
As in Ontario, big business and the political right have exploited
the confusion and anger amongst working people created by the
Saskatchewan and B.C. NDP governments' policing of capitalist
austerity. The Reform Party/Canadian Alliance has all but eliminated
the NDP as a contender in rural B.C. and Saskatchewan. In B.C.,
where a provincial election must be held by next spring, the opposition
B.C. Liberal Party, running on a radical pro-investor,
anti-union program patterned after that of the Alberta and Ontario
Tories, enjoys a more than 30 percentage lead in the opinion polls.
Political and organizational decay
By any measure the NDP has reached an advanced stage of political
and organizational decomposition.
It has failed to win a single seat in Ontario, the country's
most populous province and industrial heartland, in the last two
federal elections. In last year's Ontario provincial election
it won less than 13 percent of the popular vote (down 9 percentage
points from the party's disastrous showing in 1995) and would
have lost party status had the Tories not decided it was in their
interests to give the Liberal Official Opposition a rival. Only
once in four decades has the NDP won a seat in Quebec, the country's
second largest and only majority French-speaking province. In
this election, the NDP will largely ignore Ontario, Quebec, and
all but a handful of ridings in its traditional Western base,
to concentrate on trying to retain the seven seats it won in the
Maritimes in 1997. Historically, the NDP has had little support
in the three Maritime provinces outside industrial Cape Breton,
but in the last federal election it became the vehicle for many
Maritimers to vent their anger over the Liberals' social spending
cuts, especially the dismantling of unemployment insurance.
Much of the NDP leadership, including the party's three provincial
premiers, want Canada's social democrats to proudly proclaim themselves
partisans of Tony Blair's Third Way. But others have warned that
such a course, at least outside the three Western provinces in
which the NDP plays the role of the left alternative
in a two-party system, would result in the NDP's rapid elimination,
since it would make the party indistinguishable from the Liberals.
The federal NDP long ago vetted its election propaganda of
all references to nationalization or anything else that smacks
of socialism. By comparison even with US presidential candidate
Ralph Nader, the federal NDP's criticism of corporate power is
tepid. In announcing the party election program, NDP officials
were at pains to show that the proposed spending increases were
all costed and vowed that were the NDP to take office
it would not run a budget deficit.
Nonetheless, the federal party's demands for an immediate $18
billion increase in public spending, the elimination of the capital
gains tax exemption, and the restoration or imposition of new
taxes on banks, corporations and the rich are viewed as something
of an embarrassment by the business-friendly NDP provincial
governments in Manitoba, Saskatchewan and B.C.. However, they
have taken solace in the fact that the federal wing of the party
is so far from power that even the press dismisses its program
as a wish-list and not a true statement of the social democrats'
intentions.
The height of the social democrats' ambition is that the Liberals
will be deprived of a majority in Parliament and compelled to
turn to the NDP to sustain them in office. This is by no means
a new orientation for the NDP. The perennial third party in federal
politics from its founding in 1962 to the watershed election of
1993, the NDP and its backers in the trade union bureaucracy long
promoted a vote for the NDP as a means of keeping the Liberals
honest. Between 1972 and 1974, when the country was rocked
by a wave of trade union and social struggles, the NDP maintained
a Liberal minority government in power. The Liberals then used
the populist credentials supplied them by the NDP to win back
a majority and soon after launched the big business counteroffensive
that continues to this day, by imposing three years of wage controls.
(For their part, the NDP provincial governments of the day enforced
Trudeau's wage controls in areas of provincial jurisdiction.)
The NDP's relations to the Liberals, the Canadian bourgeoisie's
principal governing party over the last century, underscore that
it is not and has never been a vehicle for fightingin any
way, shape or formfor a workers government. Rather the NDP
has served as an instrument of the trade union bureaucracy for
pressuring the Liberals and Tories for reforms and, most importantly,
for heading off any genuine movement for independent working class
political struggle.
Still, it is a measure of the social democrats' own sharp rightward
evolution that today they should aspire to become the fifth wheel
of a Chretien Liberal government, which has carried out the greatest
social spending cuts in history and now with its tax cuts is ensuring
that the rich and super-rich will appropriate a still greater
share of the national income.
Will the NDP collapse?
The NDP's marginalization and the parallel rise of the Reform
Party/Canadian Alliance and the Harris Tories have prompted social
democratic stalwarts to call for a radical rethink of the party's
future, including whether the NDP should continue to exist.
Former Ontario Premier Bob Rae has repeatedly called for an
alliance, if not an institutional realignment with the Liberals
at the provincial level to defeat the Harris Tory government.
The left, claims Rae, must recognize that Thatcher, Reagan and
Mike Harris were right in challenging the welfare state. Both
Bill Clinton and Tony Blair succeeded, wrote Rae recently,
because they were prepared to make welfare reform and tax
cuts happen, because they understood that there were parts of
the law-and-order issue that had to be addressed. They simply
did not sustain the status quo.
In September, Rae was joined in very demonstrative fashion
by longtime Saskatchewan NDP Premier Roy Romanow. It is well-known
that Liberal Prime Minister Jean Chretien tried to entice both
Romanow and Rae to join his cabinet and stand as Liberals in the
federal election. Ultimately, Romanow spurned Chretien's offer,
announcing his retirement from active politics. But Romanow made
clear that he refused to join the Liberals not because of fundamental
political differences, but only because he wants to bring about
a political realignmentan alliance or even a mergerbetween
the Liberals and NDP. Romanow said he feared the realignment of
the right round the Canadian Alliance. Progressive-minded
people on the center, center-left should be thinking about ...
whether there's any common ground for merging and then advancing
alternatives. Such an orientation, he added, would require
that the NDP divest itself of all vestiges of social-democratic/labour
politics. Class politics ... in the North American context
doesn't work.
Romanow's comments were quickly rejected by the federal NDP
leadership, but only because they contend that the social democrats
will have greater leverage over the Liberals if they remain in
a separate organization. Signaling that the NDP intends to align
with the Chretien Liberals in the event of a hung Parliament,
federal party leader Alexa McDonough declared in replying to Romanow
that discussion of the NDP allying with the Liberals to keep the
Alliance from office is premature. It is post-election talk.
One can't rule anything in, or anything out, until Canadians have
spoken.
The truth is that recent years have seen not only a blurring
of policy differences between the Liberals and NDP but also of
organizational distinctions.
The Saskatchewan NDP government has retained power since the
September 1999 provincial election only because it is in a formal
coalition with the Liberals, who hold the balance of power between
the NDP and the Alliance-inspired Saskatchewan Party.
In January 1999, the B.C. NDP welcomed a former provincial
Liberal Party leader, Gord Wilson, into its cabinet. Subsequently
Wilson became the candidate of the International Woodworkers of
America for the party leadership and premiership.
In the current federal campaign, the B.C. NDP government is
openly backing the federal Liberals, except in the three B.C.
seats where there are NDP incumbents. Premier Uijal Dosanjh is
brazen in working to secure support from the Chretien Liberals,
no matter that they have formed the most right-wing federal government
in more than a half century. Provincially, for us to win
the next electionfor us to win any electionit's important
for federal Liberal support to come our way in significant terms.
The 14 month-old Manitoba NDP government is not under the same
compulsions to support the federal Liberals. But it has moved
to weaken the NDP's organizational ties to the unions, by passing
legislation that bans all union financing of political parties.
Canadian Auto Workers President Buzz Hargrove, meanwhile, has
said his union is so perturbed by the NDP's shift to the right
that it is being forced to consider creating a new labor
party that would revive the NDP's purportedly progressive
traditions. Whether Hargrove, who is locked in a bitter jurisdictional
dispute with the Canadian Labor Congress, actually intends to
act on this threat remains to be seen. He made similar comments
in 1994-95, after the Ontario NDP had suspended public sector
workers' collective bargaining rights and rolled back their wages.
Then in the last Ontario election he advocated in many ridings
that workers cast a strategic vote for the Liberals, in a failed
attempt to unseat the Harris government.
If the NDP has not yet come apart, it is largely because its
warring factions fear that were they to go their separate ways
they would condemn themselves to electoral oblivion. But the national-reformist
perspective of the NDP, the claim that working people could be
insulated from the inequities of capitalism through parliamentary
reforms and collective bargaining, has been irrevocably shattered.
Over the course of the past two decades the NDP and trade unions
have been complicit in the big business assault on jobs, wages
and public services.
This does not preclude that in this or a future election the
NDP may suddenly become a lightening rod for working class opposition
to big business. What above all characterizes contemporary electoral
politics is extreme volatility and inchoate discontent.
The task of socialists, however, is clear: a new mass workers
party must be built in opposition to the NDP and on an entirely
differentsocialist and internationalistpolitical perspective.
Significantly, the most conscious ruling class thinkers are
nervous at the potential disappearance of the NDP. On October
28, Canada's most politically-influential daily, the Globe
and Mail, carried an editorial that warned critiques
of capitalism are alive and thriving and voiced the fear
that such critiques may find a mass base of support. Mass
production, declared the Thomson-owned Globe,
produced extraordinary profits, but created the conditions for
resistance by bringing workers together under one roof. And what
are the Internet and e-mail if not the shop floor of the 21st
century? A few days later, a second Globe editorial
applauded the NDP's resolutely socialist alternative
budget: [T]he otherness' of the NDP vision reinvigorates
public discussion ... hurrah to the NDP for being issue-different.
See Also:
Canadian
election campaign kicks off:
Liberals offer tax cuts to the rich and populist demagogy to working
people
[27 October 2000]
Ontario:
the fight against the Harris Government
[WSWS Full Coverage]
Top of page
The WSWS invites your comments.
Copyright 1998-2008
World Socialist Web Site
All rights reserved |