|
WSWS : News
& Analysis : North
America : Canada
Canadian big business rallies behind the Action démocratique
du Québec
By Guy Charron
7 November 2002
Use
this version to print
| Send this
link by email | Email the
author
Political discussion in Quebecs corporate media has focussed
in recent weeks on the program of the Action démocratique
du Québec or ADQ. The third party in the Quebec National
Assembly, the ADQ poses as anti-establishment party that speaks
for the beleaguered middle class. In reality it advocates policies
tailored to serve the interests of big business and the rich,
including massive tax and social spending cuts and the establishment
of a parallel private health care system for those with the means
to pay for speedier and more comprehensive treatment.
Prior to this year the ADQ had only ever elected its 32-year-old
leader, Mario Dumont, a former head of the youth wing of the Quebec
Liberal Party. The ADQs string of four by-election victories
in the spring and its surge to first place in the opinion polls
came as a shock to Quebecs political and business establishment.
It is widely conceded that most of those who voted for the ADQ
in the by-elections knew little if anything of the partys
right-wing program. They merely wanted to express their discontent
with the two parties that have dominated Quebec politics for the
last three decadesthe Parti Québecois (PQ), the pro-
indépendantiste party which presently forms the
provincial government, and the federalist Liberals.
Whilst taken unawares by the sudden rise in support for the
ADQ, big business in Quebec and English Canada have been quick
to seize on it as a means of pressing for an intensification of
the assault on the working class.
The media splash for the ADQ and the telegenic Dumont is itself
an indication of this shift. But some of Quebecs most prominent
business leaders have also moved to demonstratively take the ADQ
and Dumont under their wing. Marcel Dutil, the head of the Quebec
steelmaker Canam Manac, has taken charge of the partys fundraising.
He is promising to raise $4 million for the partys campaign
in the next provincial election, which must be held before the
end of 2003. The ADQ spent just $147,000 in the 1998 election.
Dutil and two other prominent business leaders, former Banque
Nationale head Léon Courville, and Pierre Michaud of the
supermarket giant Provigo, accompanied Dumont on a recent visit
to Toronto, where they introduced him to key movers and shakers
in Canadas financial capital. Dumont was given repeated
ovations when he addressed Torontos blue chip Canadian Club.
The National Post, the leading daily of Canadas right,
reproduced most of Dumonts speech and gave the ADQ leader
its blessing, proclaiming him to be to the right of [Alberta
Premier Ralph]Klein and [former Ontario Premier Mike] Harris.
The Quebec media, meanwhile, has applauded Dumont for having
the courage to advance a bold and clear alternative.
In fact, the ADQ has done little more than put a fleur de lis
on the policy prescriptions of any number of Canadian and
US free market think tanks.
Although not ready to endorse an ADQ election victory, the
newspaper editorialists view it, at minimum, as a vehicle for
placing on the political agenda right-wing initiatives like two-tier
health care that previously were deemed too socially explosive.
Insofar as they have had advice for Dumont it has been that he
must beware not to bite off more than he can chew. Thus after
the ADQ leader made a series of rabid antiunion statements in
which he suggested the PQ government was beholden to the trade
unions, La Presses André Pratte cautioned
Dumont that he may yet need the services of the labor bureaucracy.
We applaud this firm stand with one important proviso: it
can be dangerous to play at being tough to enhance ones
image. The unions are legitimate and necessary partners. When
necessary the government must not be afraid to confront them.
But one must be certain to be on solid ground and to be pursuing
clear, though-out and limited objectives.... This is something
one learns ... with experience.
A flat tax and the gutting of Medicare
The ADQ program is a veritable wish-list of the most rapacious
sections of big business. Not only is the ADQ demanding massive
tax and spending cuts, it is pledged to introducing a 20 percent
flat tax, under which all tax payers would ostensibly be taxed
at the same rate. The introduction of a flat tax would result
in massive tax savings for the rich and super-rich, who already
benefit from a capital gains tax rate far below that charged on
employment income.
The 20 percent flat tax would blow a hole in Quebecs
fiscal balance sheet. Indeed it is intended to do precisely that.
Dumont has made no secret that he would drastically curtail public
spending, while devoting a considerable portion of government
revenues to paying down Quebecs more than $100 billion accumulated
debt.
While he has avoided detailing the spending cuts the ADQ would
make for fear of scaring off voters, Dumont has made clear that
despite chronic emergency room overcrowding and lengthy waiting
lists for vital medical procedures, an ADQ government would not
countenance any increase in the provincial heath care budget.
Rather the ADQ would promote the development of a parallel private
health care in which the rich would be able to get the medical
help they wanted, while the rest of the population had to make
do with a chronically under-funded and short-staffed public system.
One way the ADQ would reduce state expenditure would be by
eliminating tens of thousands of public sector jobs through privatization
and the abolition of public sector job security guarantees.
Dumont and the ADQ have also spoken in favor of charter schools,
as well as the privatization of the management of most public
services. Citizens, the ADQ leader told the Canadian Club, should
have the right to choose which institution will provide
them with the services their tax dollars entitle them to.
Like other right-wing politicians, Dumont invokes freedom of choice
when what he really means is the ending of universal access to
quality public services and carte blanche for ever more extreme
social inequality.
A Quebec nationalist split-off from the Liberals
In contradistinction to both the PQ and the Liberals, the ADQ
is calling for a moratorium on the Quebec elites attempts
to modify Quebecs constitutional status, whether within
or without Canada. Formed as the result of a Quebec nationalist
split-off from the Liberals, the ADQ remains programmatically
committed to a vast decentralization of power from Canadas
federal government to the provinces. In the 1995 referendum on
Quebecs secession from Canada, it was aligned with the Parti
Québécois and its sister party in Canadas
federal parliament, the Bloc Québécois.
By calling for a moratorium in the federalist/separatist debate
the ADQ is able to appeal to the mass of votersFrench, English
and immigrantwho are tired of the wrangling over the constitution,
which they view as little connected to the more pressing issues
of increasing poverty and economic insecurity and deteriorating
public services. At the same time, Dumont is hoping to rally big
business, which believes that the constitutional issue has become
an impediment to forging the elite political ruling class consensus
needed to press forward with the gutting of labor and environmental
standards and the dismantling of public services.
Dumont has not discarded all nationalist appeals. He simply
is trying to make them conform more transparently with the current
needs of big business. In his Canadian Club speech, Dumont called
for a new patriotism which would serve both as a smokescreen
for the state shunting aside its responsibilities to those in
need and a means of rallying all Quebecers behind big business
in the struggle for market share and profits. You will find
us a fierce competitor, Dumont told Torontos financial
and political elite, when it comes to attracting investment
with a hospitable regulatory and fiscal environment and world-class
infrastructures. We made it too easy for Ontario for too long.
The labor bureaucracy bears the principal responsibility for
the ADQs emergence as a contender for provincial power.
For decades the unions have split the working class on national-ethnic
lines, subordinating it to the Canadian nationalist New Democratic
Party in English Canada and the Parti Québécois
in Canadas only majority French-language province. In the
1995 referendum, the Quebec unions endorsed the PQ, Bloc Québécois
and ADQ plan for an independent capitalist Quebec, claiming that
secession would constitute a bulwark against the right-wing wave
sweeping North America. No sooner was the referendum over than
the unions joined hands with the PQ government to impose massive
social spending cuts in the name of eliminating the provinces
annual budget deficit. During the past seven years there have
been repeated indications of mass public disaffection with the
corporate agenda being implemented by both Quebecs traditional
partiesmost notably during the 1999 nurses strikebut
the unions have worked systematically to suppress the class struggle.
Predictably the leaders of the Quebec Federation of Labour
(FTQ), Confederation of National Trade Unions (CNTU), and the
Quebec Union Federation (CSQ) have responded to the rise of the
ADQ by clutching still tighter to the apron strings of the PQ
and the Liberals. At the same time they have signalled that in
the event the ADQ comes to power, they are ready to work with
it. We are not going to declare war on the ADQ, affirmed
FTQ President Henri Massé, in response to Dumonts
pledge to abolish public sector workers contractual guarantees
of job security.
See Also:
Quebec elites new consensus:
public and social services must be gutted
[27 September 2002]
Canadas prime minister
to quit in 18 months
Big business urges quicker exit
[29 August 2002]
Crisis of Parti Québécois
regime heralds coming political upheavals
[15 August 2002]
Unions strangle Quebec
nurses strike
[27 July 1999]
Top of page
The WSWS invites your comments.
Copyright 1998-2008
World Socialist Web Site
All rights reserved |