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Race to lead Canadas social democrats limps to finish
By Keith Jones
24 January 2003
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Canadas social democrats will choose a new federal party
leader this weekend after a half-year long campaign that has generated
little public interest or enthusiasm.
Whilst New Democratic Party (NDP) spin-doctors are claiming
that a 40 percent growth in membership points to an NDP revival,
the real numbers only serve to underline the extent of the partys
crisis. Since Alexa McDonough announced her intention to step
down as party leader last June, the NDP has increased its membership
nationwide by 24,000 to just 82,000. Of every thousand Canadians,
less than three belong to the NDP.
Since it came to provincial office in the early 1990s in three
provinces with more than half of Canadas total population,
the NDP has suffered a succession of electoral debacles. Working
people turned to the NDP to shield them from the impact of a severe
recession and the reorganization of Canadian capitalism under
the recently concluded Canada-US Free Trade Agreement. Instead,
the social democrats emerged as the champions of capitalist austerity.
The Ontario NDP government of Bob Rae cut billions from social
and public services, imposed wage- and job-cutting contracts on
a million public sector workers, eliminated grants to post-secondary
students, and pioneered workfare.
In the 2000 federal election the NDP won just 8.5 percent of
the popular vote, less than half the percentage it routinely won
in elections in the 1970s and 1980s. It currently holds 14 of
the 301 House of Commons seats, including just two from Ontario,
two from British Columbia, and none from Quebec. The NDP holds
provincial office only in Manitoba and in Saskatchewan, where
a minority NDP government is propped up by Liberal votes. In the
May 2001 British Columbia election the NDP, after a decade in
office, won just 2 of 77 seats and saw much of its traditional
vote go to the Greens.
None of the six candidates for the federal NDP leadership has
raised, let alone seriously addressed, the question as to why
the NDP and its sister social democratic parties the world over
have joined in the big business assault on the welfare state policies
that they once held up as proof capitalism could by humanized
through incremental reform.
The bulk of the party establishment and the trade union bureaucracy
has lined up behind either Bill Blaikie or Jack Layton.
A long-time MP and a United Church minister, Blaikie has strongly
defended the NDPs current program and orientation. In so
far as he has suggested any modification it would be to lay even
greater emphasis on the NDPs promotion of Canadian nationalism.
Blaikie and the NDP point to the rapacious policies being pursued
by the Bush administration and the transnationals not to advocate
the unity of the international working class against capital,
but to urge Canadian workers to join with big business to defend
a supposedly more benign Canadian capitalism, its state and its
markets.
Blaikie has the support of six fellow MPs, Manitoba Premier
Gary Doer, Ontario NDP leader Howard Hampton and much of the labor
officialdom from Western Canada.
Jack Layton has been active in NDP circles for decades and
is a veteran Toronto City Councilor. Yet he has used his lack
of a House of Commons seat and his connections to various environmental,
gay rights, peace and housing advocacy groups to cast himself
as an outsider who would identify the NDP more closely with the
anti-globalization and other protest movements. While not shunning
the label of left, he has repeatedly emphasized that
he is a doer and a unifier, pointing to
his work on myriad municipal committees and as President of the
Federation of Canadian Municipalities.
He has condemned the NDP Finance critic and fellow candidate
Lorne Nystrom for fiscal irresponsibility for suggesting that
the federal government not devote any additional dollars to paying
off the national debt. Layton has also mused about the prospect
of the NDP holding the balance of power in a minority parliament,
where it would barter its support to the Liberals, Tories and/or
Canadian Alliance.
Asked his opinion of the debate in the NDP over Tony Blairs
unbridled pro-big business policies, Layton declared his aim was
to bridge those differences. ... I believe there is a potential
there for some bridge building and working together.
Layton is supported by the MPs Svend Robinson and Libby Davis,
who have long-fashioned themselves as left-wing critics of the
NDP establishment. Former British Colombia NDP Premier Mike Harcourt,
Canadian Union of Public Employees President Judy Darcy and Ontario
Federation of Labour President Wayne Samuelson, who played a pivotal
role in killing off the mass protests against the Ontario Tory
government of Mike Harris, have also endorsed Laytons candidacy.
Others supporting him include, former United Steelworkers of America
International President Lynn Williams and Ed Broadbent, who headed
the federal NDP from 1979 through 1989 and has now become the
partys elder statesman.
The other candidates
Nystrom, an MP for three decades, has employed a standard-line
of all right-wing politicians to attack his fellow candidates
for their tax and spend policies.
Neither Bev Marlo, the candidate of the so-called Socialist
Caucus and a supporter of the Council of Canadiansa nationalist
organization founded by Edmonton publisher Mel Hurtig and headed
by former Trudeau aide Maude Barlownor associate federal
party president Pierre Ducasse are expected to win more than a
fraction of the vote. Ducasse has advocated the NDP learn from
the Quebec model of state-big business-union collaboration
developed under the Parti Québécois and the Quebec
Liberal Party.
Joe Comartin, a longtime lawyer for the Canadian Auto Workers
(CAW) union and Windsor, Ontario, MP, is serving as a front man
for the maneuvers of CAW President Buzz Hargrove. Hargrove considered
contesting the NDP leadership himself, but conceded that there
was little support for his candidacy either among the social-democratic
or union officialdom.
Hargrove has frequently criticized the NDP for moving so far
to the right as to render it indistinguishable from the Liberals.
He believes an NDP with more traditional social-democratic policies
would be a more effective instrument for the trade union bureaucracy
to engage in political horse-trading with the government of the
day and, more importantly, better serve to prevent the growth
of a genuine movement for independent working class political
struggle.
Hargroves critics within the NDP and Canadian Labour
Congress bitterly resent his verbal tirades against their right-wing
policies. They note that when it comes to CAW affairs Hargrove
is a strong advocate of corporatist collaboration with the auto
bosses and in the last Ontario election was the keenest advocate
of strategic voting for the right-wing Liberals.
Of the leadership candidates Comartin has most identified himself
with the anti-war movement, visiting Iraq last fall and centering
his membership drive among Arab and other Muslim immigrants to
Canada.
While Comartin has said he would oppose any US invasion of
Iraq, with or without United Nations Security Council approval,
the position of the NDP as a whole is fraught with ambiguity.
In keeping with its promotion of the myth of a pacific Canadian
capitalism that can be a force for social progress in world affairs,
the NDP has long been a strong supporter of United Nations intervention
in inter-state conflicts and civil wars. It initially supported
the 1999 NATO assault on Yugoslavia and has joined with the other
parties in the House of Commons in calling for a multi-billion
increase in military spending. Speaking at an anti-war rally last
weekend, outgoing party leader Alexa McDonough said the UN inspectors
should be left to do their work.
Blairs Third Way and the NDP
In a Globe and Mail op-ed piece published this week,
academic and prominent left social-democratic theorist Leo Panitch
touted the fact that none of the NDP leadership candidates is
advocating British Prime Minister Tony Blairs Third
Way.
This is truly clutching at straws. The NDP provincial governments
in Ontario and British Columbia played a pivotal role in the big
business offensive against the working class. Not only did they
impose capitalist austerity. They paved the way for the coming
to power of two of the three most right-wing governments in Canada,
as well as for the Chrétien Liberal governments spending
cuts and tax breaks for the rich and super-rich. As for the Saskatchewan
and Manitoba NDP regimes, at least until recently, they had no
qualms about endorsing Blairs Third Way.
In 1999, McDonough and the federal NDP establishment launched
a formal push to have the NDP explicitly rewrite its program and
rethink its institutional ties with the trade unions in the light
of the experience of Blairs New Labour.
If ultimately this was abandoned it was because the majority
of the social democrats recognized that such a change would, as
CAW President Hargrove insisted, be a ticket to political irrelevance
and electoral oblivion since the Chrétien Liberals have
already staked out their own claim to be the advocates of the
Third Way.
The shattering of the stock market bubble, the wave of corporate
scandals, the Walkerton tragedy, the deterioration of public services
and increasing poverty and economic insecurity have dramatically
eroded support for the big business program of privatization,
deregulation and unfettered market even among broad sections of
the middle class. Now the outbreak of imperialist war threatens
to give a new and explosive edge to the class struggle. The more
astute in the NDP and union leaderships are increasingly apprehensive
about this class polarization. Moreover, they are painfully aware
that their own influence over the working class has been greatly
reduced.
Former NDP leader Ed Broadbent, in explaining why he had not
endorsed his former colleague and personal friend Blaikie for
the NDP leadership, warned that the next NDP leader cannot
rest on the illusion that all those many Canadians who are fed
up with the policies derived from the cutback mania ... will inevitably
swing to the NDP. ... They can swing right past us to any number
of other options.
Subsequently, in a letter to the Toronto Star, Broadbent
distanced himself from his previous praise of Blair, noting that
under Blair Britain had actually spent less as a percentage of
GDP on health and education than under Thatcher. As a social
democrat, I do indeed want a vigorous and innovative private sector
in Canada. I want it, however, in conjunction with strong, equalizing
social programs.
If many in the federal NDP leadership are now anxious to disassociate
themselves from Blair, it is not because they are any less committed
than he is to the defence of capitalism. They recognize that the
British prime minister has become so closely identified with the
free market policies of Thatcher and her acolytes and with Bushs
war agenda as to make him a liability. Their aim is to salvage
the NDP so it can better serve as a means of defending a vigorous
private sector and blocking the development of a genuine independent
working class political movement based on socialist and internationalist
principles.
See Also:
Canadas social
democrats debate winding up NDP
[24 November 2001]
British Columbia elections:
social democrats pave reactions road to power
[18 May 2001]
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