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British Columbia: Mass protest against gutting of public and
social services
By a correspondent
26 February 2002
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More than 30,000 trade unionists, students, welfare recipients,
and other working people marched on the British Columbia legislature
Saturday, February 23, to protest against the class war policies
of the provincial Liberal government.
Elected last spring, the Liberals have set about gutting public
and social services, while dramatically reducing taxes on business
and the well-to-do. Before accounting for inflation, government
spending is to be cut by 8 percent per year. The provincial civil
service is to be slashed by one-third. Welfare benefits are being
reduced and new provisions introduced to restrict access to welfare.
The Liberals have lifted a freeze on post-secondary tuitions.
And they have enacted a battery of antiunion laws, imposing contracts
on teachers and other workers and eliminating the job security
protection for more than 100,000 health care and other public
sector workers.
Saturdays demonstration was one of the largest protests
ever mounted at the BC Legislature, which is located in Victoria,
a ferry-ride from Vancouver and BCs Lower Mainland. The
turnout is indicative of a groundswell of opposition to the Liberals.
But the march organizers, principally the leaders of the BC
Federation of Labour and its affiliates, are determined to smother
the opposition movement. In so far as they offered any plan for
further action, it was that workers should seek to press the Liberals
to reverse course, by writing and lobbying their Liberal Members
of the Legislative Assembly (MLAs), and work to defeat the Liberals
at the next provincial election in 2005! Several also promoted
a recall campaign. (The previous government established
a procedure under which voters can recall individual
MLAs, i.e., force a by-election, by getting a substantial portion
of the ridings electorate to sign a recall petition.)
Speakers at the demonstration included, the presidents of the
BC Federation of Labour, the Hospital Employees Union, the BC
Teachers Federation, and Industrial, Wood and Allied Workers
of Canada (IWA-Canada), and representatives of students, seniors
and native and womens organizations.
Significantly, there was no speaker from the New Democratic
Party (NDP). This is no doubt because the union leaders recognize
that the social-democrats are rightly hated by many workers. (After
a decade in office, the NDP was reduced in last years election
to just two seats in the legislature.) But by keeping the NDP
off the platform, the union bureaucrats were also sending a message
to the Liberals that the protest movement is non-partisan
and that they are eager to work with the government, if only it
gives them a greater role in the restructuring of the public sector.
BC Federation of Labour President Jim Sinclair said all 77
Liberal MLAs had been invited to the demonstration or 13 smaller
rallies in other parts of the province, but all had declined the
invitation.
One of the principal criticisms the union leadership has made
of the Liberals is that their confrontationist politics are threatening
business investment. Said BC Government Employees and Service
Union President George Heyman, If this government doesnt
listen to us, there will be increased confrontation and the conflict
will get deeper. Investment will go down and the economy will
suffer.
Some in the crowd of 30,000 chanted for a general strike. But
the head of the provinces largest industrial union, IWA-Canada
President Dave Haggard, was quick to dismiss a one-day protest
strike, let alone a larger action.
In a post-demonstration interview with the Victoria Times-Colonist,
he declared, I dont support a general strike. I have
over 8,000 or 9,000 people laid off today and were trying
to get them back to work. I dont know why the hell Id
pull them off the job for something that has no end to it. How
do you go on a one-day general strike and change the governments
mind? Thats dreaming in Technicolor.
See Also:
British Columbia to ravage public
and social services
[19 January 2002]
Canada: British Columbia
to slash civil service by one-third
[14 December 2001]
Canadas social
democrats debate winding up NDP
[24 November 2001]
British Columbia government
slashes corporate taxes, breaks strikes
[4 August 2001]
Canada: business flabbergasted
by British Columbia governments tax cut
[14 June 2001]
British Columbia elections:
social democrats pave reactions road to power
[18 May 2001]
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