|
WSWS : News
& Analysis : North
America : Canada
War overshadows Quebec election
By Keith Jones
11 April 2003
Use
this version to print
| Send this
link by email | Email the
author
Quebecers will vote in a provincial election Monday, April
14. But the campaign and the associated debate over Quebecs
constitutional future have provoked little interest. This is not
for want of political discussion. The election campaign has been
overshadowed by public anger and anxiety over the US-British invasion
of Iraq.
Over the past three months, Quebec has witnessed numerous antiwar
protests, including three demonstrations in Montreal which each
mobilized between 150,000 and a quarter-million people. What makes
this all the more striking and significant is that the antiwar
movement developed almost entirely outside the traditional political
establishment, including the trade union officialdom.
Belatedly, the three parties with representatives in the Quebec
National Assemblythe ruling Parti Québécois
(PQ), the Liberals, and the Action démocratique du Québec
(ADQ)have all proclaimed their opposition to the US-led
war. The three party leaders have taken to sporting white peace
ribbons on their jackets.
This a cynical and patently obvious attempt to appeal to Quebecs
antiwar majority. In the run-up to the US invasion, Quebec Premier
Bernard Landry said he would welcome a war against Iraq if endorsed
by the great powers on the UN Security Council. Quebec Liberal
Party leader Jean Charest was a cabinet minister in the federal
Tory government that led Canada into the first Gulf War. As for
Mario Dumont, the free-market ideologue who leads
the ADQ, he has been visibly ill at ease in feigning opposition
to the Bush administrations assault on Iraq.
The opposition to the war has given form to a deep-rooted popular
alienation from official politicsa sentiment born of growing
economic insecurity, mounting social inequality, and ever-increasing
corporate power. If this alienation has not otherwise found positive
political expression, it is because the trade union bureaucracy
in Quebec systematically subordinates the working class to the
big business and pro- indépendantiste PQ.
The erosion in the popular base of the politics of the ruling
elite has, however, found distorted expression over the past year
in wild swings in support for the establishment parties.
Particularly dramatic have been the fluctuating fortunes of
the ADQ, a Quebec nationalist split-off from the Quebec Liberal
Party. In the spring and summer of 2002, the ADQ, which had hitherto
never elected more than its leader, captured four by-elections
and placed first in a spate of opinion polls. But as popular attention
came to focus on the ADQs right-wing platformcharter
schools, a flat tax, and a two-tier health care systemits
support faded and, in recent weeks, has plunged.
If the latest opinion polls are to be believed, only the two
longstanding parties have a legitimate shot at forming Quebecs
government after April 14. A hung parliament, in which the Liberals
and PQ vie for ADQ support, nonetheless remains a distinct possibility.
Three variants of big business rule
Six months ago, the PQ, which has ruled Quebec for the past
nine years, appeared to be facing an electoral rout on the scale
of that suffered by the federal Tories in 1993 or the British
Columbia NDP in 2001. It has since won back some support by attacking
the ADQs ultra-right-wing policy prescriptions and casting
itself as the party of the left.
The PQ used a similar ploy in the 1995 referendum on Quebec
independence. It claimed a yes vote would be a bulwark
against the right-wing wave sweeping North America.
Then immediately following the referendum, it declared that the
key to attaining Quebec sovereignty was to eliminate
the provincial governments $4 billion annual budget deficit
and imposed massive cuts in social and public services. In per
capita terms, these cuts were on a par with those implemented
by the PQs federalist adversaries, the federal Liberal government
of Jean Chrétien and Ontarios avowedly anti-working
class Tory regime. And like the federal Liberals and Ontario Tories,
the PQ government made cutting taxes its first priority once the
deficit fight was won.
When Premier Landry goes before a business audience, he boasts
that the PQ has reduced taxes by $15 billion and that Quebec has
one of the lowest corporate tax rates in North America. But recognizing
that there is widespread anger over the deplorable state of public
health care and education, the PQ is now promising a two-year
pause in further tax cuts to allow for reinvestment
in public services.
Even less convincing are the claims the claims of the PQwhich
has implemented workfare and presided over a sharp reduction in
the real value of welfare benefitsthat it is spearheading
the fight against poverty. With much fanfare, the PQ recently
piloted an anti-poverty law through the National Assembly.
But the budget it tabled just before calling the election provided
a paltry $50 million in additional funding for anti-poverty measures.
One PQ election promise that has attracted some popular attention
is a proposal to force employers to accommodate any worker who
has a child 12 years or younger and wants to work four days per
week instead of five. To underline the PQs new commitment
to help families deal with work-related stress, Landry has proposed
to rename the Labour Commission the Commission of Labor
and Reconciling Work and Family Life. But if the PQs
four day workweek is ever implementedbusiness has condemned
it as unworkableit would only benefit the better-off, since
there is no provision to provide financial support for those who
choose to work reduced hours.
As in most recent provincial elections, the PQ is not emphasizing
its call for Quebec to become an independent state. Landry is
himself a fervent supporter of independence. Moreover, he recognizes
that the PQs opposition to the existing federal order plays
an important role in mobilizing the partys petty bourgeois
cadre and in giving the PQ an anti-establishment gloss. But he
also knows that the most powerful sections of Quebec capital,
to say nothing of Canadas financial elite, remain adamantly
opposed to separation.
At the beginning of the campaign, Landry boasted that his soft-peddling
of independence had the support of former PQ leader Jacques Parizeau,
the elder statesman of the partys hardline indépendantiste
faction and a notorious Québécois chauvinist.
But when Parizeau once again blamed immigrants for the PQs
1995 referendum loss, Landry all but ordered him to drop his parallel
campaign of pro-PQ rallies.
Apart from its advocacy of independence, the PQ differs from
the Liberals and the ADQ in its readiness to provide grants and
tax concessions to Quebec-based business and its support for corporatist
arrangements in which the union bureaucracy is a given a measure
of power and influence in return for its services in policing
the working class.
The ADQ and big businesss push for a
renewed offensive against the working class
Like the PQ, the Liberals are appealing, albeit timidly, to
popular dissatisfaction over the state of the public services,
while in fact preparing to intensify the assault on the working
class.
Liberal leader Jean Charest has declared health care and specifically
eliminating emergency room overcrowding and lengthy waiting lists
for potentially living saving medical treatments his partys
first priority. But the Liberals are coupling the promise of significant
increases in spending on health care and public education, with
plans to give the private sector a greater say in the managing
of health care and the provision of nonessential health
services and a pledge to freeze government spending in all other
areas for the next five years. The latter measure would mean escalating
spending cuts throughout the Liberals first term in office.
Just as importantly, the Liberals have pledged to reduce personal
income taxes by an additional $1 billion per year, for a total
of $15 billion over the next five years. The vast majority of
the tax savings will go to the better-off sections of the middle
class, the rich and super-rich.
Both the PQ and ADQ have accused the Liberals of fiscal responsibility,
arguing that the Liberals promises to slash taxes while
increasing spending on heath care and education will lead to a
fiscal crisis. While Charest has dismissed these concerns, claiming
economic growth will swell government revenues, he has guaranteed
that a Liberal government would never allow a budget deficit.
The Liberals have also pledged that they will eliminate labor
code restrictions on small and medium-sized businesses using contracting-out
to circumvent union contracts.
Charest, like the PQ, has used the far-right campaign of the
ADQ as a foil, contrasting Dumonts tirades against the unions
and union bosses, with his own offer to the union bureaucracy
to work with the Liberals to re-invent government
and downsize public services.
Quebec big business, which last year rushed to embrace the
ADQ, has concluded that at present it does not have the popular
support or political experience to implement its ultra-right-wing
program. But through the ADQ, the ruling class has prodded the
PQ and Liberals further right. Boasted the National Post,
In attracting mainstream interest to legitimately conservative
ideas, [ADQ leader Mario] Dumont gave the Liberals room to adopt
similarif more moderatepolicies without being vilified.
For their part, the union bureaucrats have used the rise of
the ADQ to justify their continued support for PQ and an offer
of collaboration to the Liberals. Among workers, however, support
for the PQ and its indépendantiste option has largely
eroded.
Fearing that the unions support for the big business PQ has
dangerously compromised them in the eyes of the rank and file,
a small group of dissident union bureaucrats have joined various
social-democratic and middle class groups in an electoral alliance,
the Union des forces progressistes (UFP). In no way does the UFP
represent a socialist alternative to the capitalist parties. It
is oriented toward pressuring the big business PQ to the left
and channeling the growing opposition to imperialist war and the
assault on the social position of the working class into the blind
alley of Quebec nationalism. Only a few weeks before the election
was called, top officials of the UFP and PQ discussed the possibility
of an electoral alliance.
The shrinking base of official politics and the rise of the
antiwar movement indicate that whatever the results of the April
14 electionselections in which the working class is effectively
disenfranchisedwe stand on the threshold of a new period
of working class politicization and radicalization. The challenge
facing socialists is to arm this movement with a socialist and
internationalist program.
See Also:
Quebecs indépendantiste
government seeking to hijack antiwar movement
[1 March 2003]
Canadian big business
rallies behind the Action démocratique du Québec
[7 November 2002]
Quebec elites
new consensus: public and social services must be gutted
[27 September 2002]
Crisis of Parti Québécois
regime heralds coming political upheavals
[15 August 2002]
Top of page
The WSWS invites your comments.
Copyright 1998-2008
World Socialist Web Site
All rights reserved |