|
WSWS : News
& Analysis : North
America : Canada
Sacking of Finance Minister splits government
Will Canadas Prime Minister survive?
By Jacques Richard
6 June 2002
Use
this version to print
| Send this
link by email | Email the
author
Canadian Prime Minister Jean Chrétien is in a fight
for his political life. Last Sunday, he fired long-time Finance
Minster Paul Martin, in the second emergency cabinet shuffle in
a week. Martin, whose massive public spending and tax cuts have
made him a darling of the financial markets, has indicated he
will mount a campaign to force Chrétien to step down as
prime minister.
The press is rife with speculation that the Chrétien-Martin
leadership struggle will split the Liberal Party and paralyze
the government at least till next February. That is when a complex
leadership review process will culminate at a national
Liberal Party convention.
What the corporate media will not explore is the relationship
between the Liberals leadership rift, Canadian capitals
mounting anxiety over its deteriorating international position,
and the attempt of big business to lay the political groundwork
for an intensified offensive against the working class.
Allegations of government corruption leveled by the opposition
parties and fanned by the media apparently played a major role
in bringing the long-simmering rivalry between Chrétien
and Martin to the boil. Chrétiens and Martins
supporters have blamed each other for leaking information damaging
to the government.
Chrétien clearly concluded that the best way to quiet
media calls for him to quit would be by forcing a showdown with
Martin. At a cabinet meeting May 30, Chrétien announced
that he is resolved to remain the prime minister till at least
2004. Although previously he had said ministers could establish
leadership campaign organizations in anticipation of his eventual
retirement, Chrétien ordered them disbanded and said that
ministers who had established such organizations must provide
a retroactive list of all donations in money or kind. Martin,
who has built up a massive campaign treasure chest with donations
from a veritable whos who of Canadian business, reportedly
perceived this as an attempt to embarrass him, if not provide
ammunition for the oppositions anti-corruption crusade.
Civil war in the Liberal Party?
The rest of the Liberal cabinet have fallen in behind Chrétien.
The party apparatus and parliamentary caucus are another story.
In scenes not seen since the Diefenbaker Tory government of the
early 1960s imploded over the prime ministers refusal to
accept US nuclear weapons on Canadian soil, Liberals MPs have
lined up to publicly criticize Chrétien for firing Martin
and to suggest it is time for the Prime Minster to resign. Frankly,
I think the Prime Minister did something terrible, declared
the Liberal MP for Guelph, Brenda Chamberlain. The Prime
Minister has to explain to the caucus and the country, contended
Ottawa-area MP David Pratt, how we ended up losing one of
the most popular politicians in Canada ... someone who is very,
very well respected internationally. The most direct was
Toronto MP Joe Volpe, All those who have made it known that
they would really like to see Paul Martin at the head of the party,
at the head of the country, will now have the chance to act on
that.
The Globe and Mail, the traditional voice of Canadas
financial establishment, delivered the same blunt message in its
lead editorial Monday: Mr. Martin would make an excellent
prime minister. Certainly he is far preferable to the current
one. The sole bright spot in the [cabinet] shuffle, Mr. Chrétiens
third in six months, is that Mr. Martin will now have more leeway
to compete for the top job.
In a rebuttal of the claims of Chrétien loyalists
that the Liberals three consecutive majority governments
are attributable to his leadership, the Globe argued that
the Liberals successes are due to the collapse of the Conservatives
in 1993, the lack of a viable right-wing alternative ever since,
and public respect for Mr. Martins fiscal
policies.
Chrétien, for his part, has been at pains to demonstrate
his continuing commitment to the big business economic program
implemented by Martin. To reassure Bay Street and foreign financial
markets, he has given the finance ministry to John Manley, the
only Liberal frontbencher considered to be on Martins political
right. Speaking at an International Monetary Fund conference less
than 18 hours after inheriting the finance portfolio, Manley declared,
our priorities and objectives have not and will not change.
That means balanced budgets, reduced debt, low and stable inflation,
tax cuts and key investments ... Make no mistake, we will continue
to cut taxes as resources permit.
The policy differences between Chrétien and Martin,
such as there are, have not been articulated. But Martin and his
advisors are claiming that the ex-finance minister came into increasingly
conflict with the prime minister over policy. The Prime
Minister, an anonymous Martin spokesman told the Globe
and Mail, is an avowed incrementalist. His view is:
Lets take things issues by issue, day by day.
Pauls view is that increasingly that is an inadequate approach.
Theres a set of choices, a set of challenges before usnot
least of which is Canadas place in the worldthat require
an overarching view as to where we want to go and how we want
to get there.
Martin is said to be planning to give a series of policy speeches
this summer and fall to sharpen the contrast between himself and
Chrétien. Thus the ex-Finance Minister has given every
indication he intends to campaign for the Liberal leadership by
outlining an alternate government agenda that will seek to address
the concerns of big business about the erosion of Canadas
competitive position and the evolution of Canadas economic
and strategic partnership with the US.
Obstacles
Martin, however, faces serious obstacles. There is no quick
and easy mechanism through which a party rival can unseat a Canadian
prime minister. In other parliamentary democracies, such as Britain
and Australia, a sitting prime minister can be ousted by a simple
majority vote of the governing partys MPs. Parties in Canada,
by contrast, have adopted a system that ostensibly places the
leaders fate in the hands of the party rank and file. To
force a leadership race, the anti-Chrétien forces must
first win a months long leadership review. This involves
signing up and mobilizing Liberal members for separate meetings
in the more 300 parliamentary constituencies. It is virtually
unthinkable that such a protracted struggle could be won without
tearing the Liberal Party apart and destabilizing the government.
Aware that Martin faces the dilemma of how to wrest the leadership
without fatally damaging the government, Chrétien goaded
his rivals supporters in the Liberal caucus Tuesday by publicly
challenging them to vote with the opposition and defeat the government
if they want to be rid of him. Martin, meanwhile, has reiterated
his support for the sitting Liberal government and, though no
one believes him, continues to deny that he is plotting against
the Prime Minister.
The realization of how difficult it will be to force Chrétien
from office has caused sections of the corporate media to question
the wisdom of potentially crippling Canadas traditional
governing party and the only party that can still claim to having
a significant following in all regions of the country.
At this point it cannot be said just how far the Canadian elite
is prepared to go in supporting Martins leadership challenge.
Will it simply use Chrétiens Liberal Party rival
as it has the Reform Party/Canadian Alliance to pressure the prime
minister further right or is it determined to compel Chrétiens
early departure, in the hopes that a change in leader will facilitate
the implementation of a more aggressive anti-working class agenda?
Till now Chrétien has proven adept at adapting to the
demands of big business. On a whole series of fundamental questions,
from NAFTA and the need to drastically curtail public spending
to tax cuts and Canadian participation in the war on Afghanistan,
Chrétien, after initial hesitations and reservations, has
faithfully implemented the policy demands of big business.
Whatever the outcome of the current battle over the Liberal
leadership, one thing is certain. The profound dissatisfaction
of big business with Chrétien who has headed the most right-wing
Canadian government since the 1930s, Liberal or Conservative,
is an advance warning that capital is preparing a dramatic intensification
of the assault on workers rights and living standards.
A strategic crisis for Canadian capital
The fixation in ruling class circles with Chrétien is
itself a sign of a profound crisis of ruling class strategy, even
disorientation. An MP for the past 39 years, Chrétien is
perceived by the dominant faction of the bourgeoisie to be too
associated with the social welfare and Canadian nationalist policies
of 1960s and 1970s. But the ruling class consensus that Chrétien
has outlived his political usefulness masks deep divisions and
uncertainties.
Take the question of Medicare, Canadas universal public
health system. All sections of the political establishment are
agreed that the current system is unsustainable. But
there is no consensus on what should replace it. While some sections
of big business favor outright privatization of medical services,
others argue that a state-managed health insurance system paid
out of general tax revenues actually provides Canadian companies
with a competitive advantage over their US rivals. Moreover, the
political establishment is acutely aware that there is strong
popular opposition to the gutting of Medicare and that it has
yet to develop the political and ideological means to circumvent
that opposition.
Similarly, there is profound disquiet within the ruling class
over Canadas shrinking stature within global capitalism.
The emergence of Mexico as a rival within NAFTA, the weakness
of the Canadian dollar and mounting calls for Canada to adopt
the US dollar, Washingtons apparent indifference to Canadian
concerns over its trade policy, the vulnerability of Canada to
US pressure as revealed by the threats to restrict border traffic
in aftermath of September 11all point to the need for Canadian
capital to elaborate a new strategy.
Its only real option is to enter into an even closer economic
and geo-political partnership with the US. Such a course, however,
is fraught with risks. Further integration with the US will mean
a reduction in the Canadian bourgeoisies ability to pursue
its own independent interests and exacerbate the already deep
regional antagonisms within the Canadian federal state.
Secondly, and more fundamentally such an orientation can only
mean a dramatic intensification of the class struggle, as Canada
more and more directly participates in Washingtons and Wall
Streets military adventure abroad and as big business insists
that if it is to have a level playing field Canadas
social policy and regulatory regime must match that of the US.
The extraordinary events of the past week are an indication
of a profound social and political crisis rooted in the dramatic
changes over the past two decades in world economic and geo-political
relations. This crisis cannot and will not be contained within
the old political framework. Workers in Canada must prepare for
a major intensification of the class struggle by recognizing that
the only progressive answer to the Fortress North America
policy of the bourgeoisie, to class war at home and imperialist
adventures abroad, is the struggle to unite the North American
working class with its brothers and sisters overseas in a common
struggle against international capital.
See Also:
Canadas elite
ponders implications of Fortress America [6 November
2001]
Whats behind
the scandal of Canadian PM Chrétiens business dealings?
[10 April 2001]
Canadian Alliance in
disarray
Frustrated right rails against electorate
[6 January 2001]
Canadas Liberals
retain power by exploiting popular opposition to right
Major class conflicts loom
[29 November 2000]
Top of page
The WSWS invites your comments.
Copyright 1998-2008
World Socialist Web Site
All rights reserved |