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WSWS : News
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Canadas NDP opts for leader promising image makeover
By Keith Jones
30 January 2003
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Toronto City Councillor Jack Layton won a decisive first ballot
victory in last Saturdays vote to determine the leader of
Canadas social-democratic partythe New Democrats or
NDP.
Layton exploited his lack of parliamentary experience and his
connection to various peace, environmental and homeless advocacy
groups to cast himself as an outsider who could revive
the NDPs fortunes by appealing to working people alienated
from traditional party politics. In this he was assisted by early
endorsements from MPs Svend Robinson and Libby Davies, who have
frequently criticized the NDP as too right-wing, and by others
associated with the New Politics Initiative
Yet if Layton was able to secure an easy victory over five
other candidates, including NDP House leader Bill Blakie and two
other sitting MPs, it was because the party establishment and
trade union bureaucracy embraced his leadership bid.
Prominent among Laytons supporters were Judy Darcy, president
of the countrys largest union, the Canadian Union of Public
Employees, and Wayne Samuelson, who on becoming president of the
Ontario Federation of Labour in late 1997 shut down the mass protests
against the provincial Tory government. Most important of all
was the support that Layton received from Ed Broadbent, the federal
NDP leader from 1975 to 1989.
Broadbent placed Laytons name in nomination and sat by
his side for much of the convention.
For his part, Layton has been quick to claim Broadbent as his
mentor.
During the 1990s, the NDP, like social-democratic parties the
world over, moved sharply to the right, actively participating
in the dismantling of the very social welfare programs they once
held up as proof capitalism could be humanized through collective
bargaining and parliamentary reforms. In Ontario, the NDP government
of Bob Rae came into headlong conflict with the working class,
slashing billions from public and social services, imposing a
wage- and job-cutting social contract on one million
public sector workers, eliminating grants for post-secondary students
and initiating the transformation of welfare into workfare.
As a result, the NDP suffered a massive decline in its electoral
support. In the last federal election it won only 8.5 percent
of the popular vote and just managed to elect sufficient MPs to
cling to official party status in the House of Commons.
But Layton was quick to take exception when a CBC Radio interviewer
suggested that the collapse in support for the NDP was due to
its having abandoned its natural base. That
wasnt my observation, said Layton. I dont
think it was that [the NDP] moved to the centre particularly or
tried to compete with the Liberals ... Laytons alternative
explanation for the NDPs crisis is that its core message
has gotten lost in too many policy statements.
Earlier, Layton distanced himself from those who want the NDP
to place on record its opposition to British Prime Minister Tony
Blairs Third Way, saying he aims to bridge the differences
between those in the party urging the NDP emulate Blair and those
who criticize his unbridled pro-big business program.
Throughout his campaign, Layton was at pains to present himself
as both media savvy and a pragmatic politician. He pointed to
his experience on Toronto City Council to show that he understood
the importance of fiscal responsibility and had personally
matured, evolving from mere opposition
to the politics of proposition.
That said, it is clear that in selecting Layton, Canadas
social democrats are seeking to reposition themselves in response
to growing anti-big business sentiment, mounting anxiety over
increasing poverty and economic insecurity, and the burgeoning
opposition to a US invasion of Iraq.
Whilst the substance of Laytons politics is no different
from that of his rivals, he emphasized the need to give the NDP
a more radical image. He argues for the social democrats to switch
their focus from parliamentary debates to campaigning,
that is to associating with the anti-war, anti-globalization and
other protest movements.
By such a makeover, the social democrats hope to boost their
electoral fortunes. But the principal concern of the most politically
astute among them is that the influence of the social democrats
and the trade unions has been so eroded that they could be brushed
aside by a radicalized working class.
Broadbent articulated this clearly in a letter explaining his
surprise decision to endorse Layton over Blaikie, a long-time
colleague. It would be a mistake, explained Broadbent, to assume
that growing popular opposition to the big business offensive
of the past decade will fall under the leadership of the social
democrats: They can swing right past us to any number of
other options.
The same concerns lie behind the NDPs turn toward the
anti-war movement. At the urging of outgoing party leader Alexa
McDonough, the delegates to last weekends convention stood
and repeatedly chanted No war in Iraq. Whilst the
NDP had previously suggested it would support action against Iraq
if sanctioned by the United Nations Security Council, Layton and
other prominent New Democrats have now gone on record as saying
they would oppose Canadian participation in an invasion of Iraq,
even if given UN sanction, and that any war on Iraq would be unjustified.
The NDP is seeking to impart a Canadian nationalist orientation
to the anti-war movement, portraying the war drive not as an expression
of the essential tendencies of capitalism, but simply a particularly
rapacious American strand. Thus they contend that if pressure
is brought on the Chrétien Liberal government, the Canadian
state can be a force for peace and international progress.
Needless to say, this is diametrically the opposite of a socialist
struggle to oppose war through the mobilization of the international
working class against capitalism.
Layton is now trying to appeal, even if only meekly, to the
deep chord of popular opposition to the big business offensive
against the working class, while simultaneously trying to reassure
Canadas economic and political elite that he is a player
whom they can trust and work with. Thus, in his victory speech,
he both denounced the Liberals for implementing the agenda of
ultra-right Canadian Alliance and held out hope that after the
next election the NDP would hold the balance of power and could
barter its support to the Liberals, the traditional governing
party of Canadian capital.
See Also:
Race to lead Canadas social democrats
limps to finish
[24 January 2003]
Canada: Mass protests against war on
Iraq
[20 January 2003]
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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