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Quebec: Mounting opposition to Liberals class war agenda
By a reporting team
16 December 2003
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Hundreds of thousands of Quebecers, from all parts of the provincehospital
workers, civil servants, municipal workers, construction and aluminum
industry workers, teachers, and day care workers, as well as the
parents of thousands of day care childrenparticipated in
demonstrations, study sessions, and information picket lines last
Thursday to protest against the Quebec Liberal governments
assault on public and social services and worker rights.
The national day of disturbance was initially called
by the Confederation of National Trade Unions (CNTU/CSN), but
ultimately was joined by most unions representing workers in Quebecs
public sector and many industrial unions. The 450,000-member Quebec
Federation of Labour (QFL/FTQ), the provinces largest, stayed
largely aloof from the protests. But it did organize mass picketing
at the provinces four principal portsMontreal, Quebec
City, Trois-Rivières and Bécancourshutting
them down for the day.
Seven highways were also fully or partially blockaded, and
traffic on several in outlying industrial regions continued to
be disrupted into Friday. Fifteen workers were arrested and one
hospitalized, early Friday morning when 135 members of the Quebec
Provincial Police riot squad brutally attacked those blockading
Quebecs Highway 175, near Saguenay.
Fifteen-hundred workers at an Alcan aluminum plant in the Saguenay
region walked off the job for four hours, and workers at several
nearby plants reportedly had to be convinced by union officials
to remain on the job.
In Montreal, 40,000 people marched through rain and bitter
cold to the office of Premier Jean Charest. The demonstration
was called by the provinces non-profit daycares. The parent-controlled
boards of directors of more than half of the provinces 1,000
Centres de petite enfance (government-funded, non-profit
daycares) voted to close them for the day to support the anti-Liberal
protests. In flagrant violation of their election commitments,
the Liberals have announced plans to slash the funding for public
daycares, while increasing the amount parents have to pay by $520
per year per child.
Even the corporate media, which was uniformly hostile to the
protests, conceded that the turnout for the day of disruption
was massive.
Claiming business losses of tens of millions, spokesmen for
Quebecs major employer organizations demanded that the Liberal
government use the police and courts to prevent a repetition of
Thursdays protests. There are laws that forbid systematic
obstruction, declared Paul-Arthur Huot, president of the
Manufacturers and Exporters Association of Quebec. When
people block the only road providing access to entire regions,
thats not right.
Gilles Taillon, president of the Conseil du Patronat, the provinces
most important employer group, urged the Charest government to
press ahead with its right-wing agenda. The government must
absolutely hold the line, otherwise well maintain our lag
in job creation in comparison with other provinces,
The police authorities, continued Taillon, must
ensure that all citizens are treated in the same manner and not
allow the unions just because they are powerful and have many
members to flout the law.
Meanwhile, former Newfoundland premier and federal Liberal
cabinet minister Brian Tobin underlined the support of Canadas
political and corporate elite for the Charest governments
drive to re-engineer the state, through privatization,
deregulation and the imposition of user fees. Writing in Thursdays
Globe and Mail, Tobin said, Charest has rightly come
to the conclusion that if Quebec is to live within its means and
remain competitive, it must change the way it delivers services....
Make no mistake: The labour unrest that has dominated
Quebecs public life in recent weeks is the first shot across
the bow Canada-wide, as governments and public-sector unions square
off over risings deficits and what to do about them.
Re-engineering the state
Charest, for his part, has repeatedly baited the unions and
vowed that a half-dozen key government billsincluding legislation
that hikes daycare fees, outlaws unions in publicly funded home
daycares, and reorganizes the management of the health care sector
so as to facilitate speed-up and job cutswill be passed
before Christmas. Of especial importance are amendments to the
labor code that will give both public and private sector employers
a green light to eliminate jobs and slash wages and working conditions
through contracting out.
Speaking Thursday, Charest declared, We cannot continue
with a state that costs much more than anywhere else in North
America. We cannot continue to tax citizens to the limit and at
the same time say, We will deliver day care, health care.
We have to do things differently.
Significant as are the changes now being pushed through by
the Liberal govenrment, they are meant only as a down payment.
Between now and the tabling of the 2004-2005 provincial budget,
the Liberals have pledged to develop mechanisms to radically restructure
the provincial government and the provision of public, social
and municipal services, including education and health care. And
the Liberals anti-worker legislation and assault on public
and social services goes hand-in-hand with their plan to reduce
taxes by an additional C$1 billion per year for the next five
years, or a total of C$15 billion.
Quebecs elite is fully in support of the Charest government.
Yet the scale and scope of the opposition has caused sections
of the press to urge Charest to use more conciliatory language
when speaking of the unions and the union leaders. More so than
elsewhere in North America, government and big business have cultivated
close ties to the union bureaucracydeveloping a network
of corporatist and tripartite agenciesthe better to police
the working class. This has been especially true when the big
business, pro-independence Parti Québécois has been
in power, but Robert Bourassas 1985-1994 Liberal government
also included the union leaders in pivotal decisions.
Despite the militancy of the rank-and-file, the political perspective
animating Thursdays mass actions was that of the union bureaucracythat
the Quebec government should not seek to dispense with these relations
and rather should, as did previous governments, involve the unions
in the rewriting of the provinces labor code and reorganization
of public services, so as to ensure the competitiveness
of Quebec business.
In their public statements Thursday, top union leaders repeatedly
criticized the Liberals attacks from the standpoint that
they would foment labor strife and thereby hurt Quebecs
economy and scare off investment. The union leaders also sought
to emphasize their own role in constraining rank-and-file discontent.
QFL president Henri Massé said he was facing mounting pressure
to organize a general strike. Up till now 125 local unions
have sent us demands that we mount a general strike before the
holidays.
I havent seen QFL members, continued Massé,
so outraged since 1972, [when the jailing of union officials
resulted in a spontaneous, province-wide general strike] and Im
sure its the same elsewhere.... The message is clear, the
opposition is general. For the moment, this is brief, but we will
come back with a program of action in January and February.
Réjean Parent, president of the provinces third-largest
labor federation, the Centrale des syndicats du Québec
(CSQ), also said that he had to hold my people back today.
Some wanted to block the National Assembly next week and stop
the government from adopting the legislation, I told them we were
in Quebec here, not Georgia. The people are just livid.
A socialist alternative
Supporters of the Socialist Equality Party (Canada) and the
World Socialist Web Site intervened in Thursdays protests,
distributing a statement titled A socialist perspective
to defeat Charest governments plans for social demolition.
It read in part: The Socialist Equality Party and the World
Socialist Web Site (WSWS) welcome the growing popular opposition
to the Liberal government, but we make this warning: the Charest
governments class war program will not be defeated through
a series of demonstrations and protests, however vocal and militant,
under the leadership of the Quebec Federation of Labor (QFL/FTQ),
the Confederation of National Trade Unions (CNTU/CSN) and the
Centrale des syndicats du Québec (Quebec Union Federation).
The union apparatuses are fully committed to the defence
of the existing social and political order, and, as such, have
time and again over the past quarter century isolated and sabotaged
militant worker struggles in the name of defending social
peace. Their response to big businesss ever-widening
offensive against public and social services and worker rights
has been to integrate the unions ever more completely into corporate
management, through numerous corporatist and tripartite government-union-management
committees and labor investment funds like the QFLs
Solidarity Fund.
This process reached a new height in 1996-97, when the
QFL, CNTU and CSQ all endorsed the former Parti Québécois
regime making a zero deficit Quebecs principal
priority, thus supporting massive cuts in social spending. Then
in the summer of 1999 when Quebec nurses defied the provinces
anti-labor laws and went on strike for the defence of quality
public healthcare, the principal labor federations came to the
rescue of the PQ government, refusingdespite an enormous
groundswell of popular supportto lift a finger to support
the nurses and working instead behind the scenes to coerce the
nurses back to work on the governments terms and under the
threat of punitive legal sanctions.
The Claudette Carbonneaus, Henri Massés
and Cie. dont consider the current Charest government as
an irreconcilable enemy of working people, but as a negotiating
partner. For them the current wave of protests is not the beginning
of a political counter-offensive of the working class. Rather
it is a means to dissipate the pressure from the rank-and-file
for action and a plea to Charest not to dispense with many of
the tripartite mechanisms developed over the past quarter century,
which have given the union leaders a measure of influenceand
not inconsiderable perksin return for their role in policing
the working class.
Earlier this week CNTU president Carbonneau pleaded with
Charest to play what she called the premiers traditional
role of social arbiter, while making clear she is
vehemently opposed to any challenge to his governments right
to rulethat is to impose the dictates of big business. Of
course, I dont want him [Charest] to renounce legislating.
No one has the right to have such aims. Meanwhile, the QFL
published an analysis in which it specifically warned against
opposing the Liberal governments agenda wholesale, claiming
that to do so would make the public think the unions were engaged
in a political power struggle.
The fundamental character of the attacks launched by
the Charest government on all the social gains of the working
class calls for a political response of an equally profound character.
If workers have suffered defeat after defeat over the past two
decades, it is not because of the intrinsic strength of capital,
or even less any broad popular support for its reactionary program,
but because the struggles of the working class have been animated
by the false perspective that the needs of working people can
be reconciled with the profit system, with the power of the corporate
elite to subordinate all of society to the pursuit of individual
profit.
Quebec workers must turn to a new perspective, that of
a conscious struggle for political power in order to put the wealth
created by their own collective labor to the service of society
as a whole. This requires the building of their own political
party in concert with their class brothers and sisters in the
rest of Canada, the United States and internationally, and dedicated
to the goal of social equality.
See Also:
Quebec: A socialist perspective to defeat
Charest governments plans for social demolition
[11 December 2003]
Mass protest against Quebec governments
demolition of public and social services
[2 December 2003]
Quebec Liberal government
plans sweeping privatization
[1 November 2003]
Quebec Liberal budget initiates
new anti-working class offensive
[28 June 2003]
Mass social disaffection reflected
in rout of Quebec separatists
[18 April 2003]
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