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Canadian Elections:
The Bloc Québécois a political instrument of
the québécois elite
By Guy Charron
25 June 2004
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The fraudulent character of the 2004 Canadian electionsin
which the establishment parties accuse one another of having a
hidden agenda while each prepares, behind the backs of the population,
to intensify the assault of big business on the social conditions
of workershas not spared Quebec. The party that leads the
opinion polls in Quebec, the Bloc Québécois (BQ),
is an indépendantiste party that articulates the
interests of an important section of the provinces elite
by pressing for a reconfiguration of the nation-state system in
North America to the advantage of the Quebec bourgeoisie. But
in an assiduous campaign, mounted in concert with the mass media
and the trade union bureaucracy, the BQ has attempted to pass
itself off as a progressive party that represents
all Québécois.
The Blocs rise in the polls is not because of any genuine
popular enthusiasm for its program. At the beginning of the year,
the polling companies were predicting that the BQ would suffer
a fate similar to that of its sister party, the Parti Québécois,
which was routed in the April 2003 provincial election, and that
the federal Liberals would win the vast majority of Quebecs
75 seats. But support for the Liberals collapsed in a matter of
only a few weeks. This was in part because of the sponsorship
scandal. In February, the auditor-general reported that possibly
tens of millions of dollars were doled out by Ottawa to Liberal-friendly
advertising agencies in exchange for little or no actual work,
under a program ostensibly intended to promote the image of the
federal government in Quebec after the near victory of the separatists
in the October 1995 Quebec referendum.
But from a more fundamental standpoint, the popular swing against
the federal Liberals is a reaction against years of deteriorating
public services and increasing economic insecurity and hardship.
Also, thanks to the support of the unions, the BQ has been able
to politically profit from the massive popular opposition to the
provincial Liberal governments socially destructive plans
to re-engineer the state through privatization and
deregulation and to promote corporate competitiveness through
outsourcing. The sponsorship scandal broke within
weeks of a series of mass and largely spontaneous protests against
the Charest Liberal government that threatened to become a general
strike.
The central slogan of the BQ, A party belonging to Quebec
[un parti propre au Québec], is a pun that plays on the
two senses of the word proprebelonging to
and clean or uncorrupt. It concentrates into a brief
formula the twin themes of the BQs electoral campaign. While
making vapid nationalist appeals like we will defend the
interests of Quebec, the BQ, to turn attention away from
the contradictions and right-wing substance of its own program,
rails against the corruption of the Liberals.
By claiming to defend the interests of Quebec,
the Blocs leader, the former union official and Maoist Gilles
Duceppe, seeks to obscure the fact that there are two Quebecs:
that of the elite, which subordinates all society to its quest
for profits; and that of the masses, who took to the streets by
the hundreds of thousands to protest against the war in Iraq and,
more recently, against the right-wing program of the provincial
Liberal government.
Duceppe seeks to perpetuate the myth that the Québécois
have common interests that transcend the profound disparities
in their socioeconomic status and that Quebec workers have more
in common with the Péladeaus, Lamarres, and other Quebec
capitalists than they do with workers in English Canada. But the
harsh reality of contemporary lifean economy more than ever
globally integrated on the one hand, a coordinated assault of
the transnational companies on the standard of living of workers
of all countries on the otherdemonstrates on a daily basis
that the pivotal differences in society are differences of class
and not language, race or ethnic origin.
A regional party born out of the constitutional crises of the
late 1980s, the BQ doesnt aspire to take federal office.
As it has in every federal election since 1993, the BQ is standing
candidates only in Quebec, which accounts for about a quarter
of all the seats in the House of Commons. Because it doesnt
seek to form the government, the BQ has the luxury of being able
to promise certain limited social reforms, the better to cultivate
the progressive image that the union bureaucracy has
helped fashion for it.
The BQ was founded by renegade Liberal and Tory politicians,
led by Conservative Prime Minister Brian Mulroneys Quebec
lieutenant, Luçien Bouchard. Yet unlike the PQthe
older and more politically important of the two separatist partiesit
today counts on its front bench a number of former trade union
officials, including Duceppe, Francine Lalonde and Pierre Paquette.
That the BQs claim to be progressive can
at all be taken seriously is a measure of the extent to which
the official politics of the bourgeoisie has moved to the right.
The BQ supports tax cuts for the rich, the anti-democratic laws
created in the name of the war against terrorism, and economic
protectionism, and has adopted the rhetoric of law and order.
Vying with the Canadian government for Washingtons favor,
the BQ supported Canadas participation in the NATO war on
Yugoslavia, the US invasion of Afghanistan, and the current NATO
mission that is propping up the US-installed regime in Kabul.
Like the federal Liberal government, the BQ was prepared to support
the participation of the Canadian Armed Forces in the invasion
of Iraq if only the UN Security Council had authorized it; and
the BQ supports the current occupation of Iraq, with the sole
reservation that this colonial enterprise should be covered by
a U.N. fig leaf.
Entirely indifferent to the fate of the workers in the rest
of Canada, the BQ looks kindly upon the possibility of a Conservative
minority government, to which it could offer its support in exchange
for concessions to the Quebec elite, including a massive decentralization
of powers in favor of the provinces. The Conservatives, led by
the neo-conservative ideologue Stephen Harper, see decentralization
as a means of demolishing what remains of Canadas social
programs.
Other sections of the separatists see that the bringing of
the Conservatives to powera party that has little support
in Quebec, will in all likelihood hold not a single Quebec seat,
and contains a good number of Anglo-chauvinists and Protestant
social-conservativeswill help create the winning conditions
for a referendum on Quebec secession. Thus, the most recent edition
of the separatist journal Le Québécois declares
that with a Conservative government it would be evident
to all that Canada has a completely different and irreconcilable
personality from that of Quebec. It must be recalled that
at the time of the 1995 referendum, the argument advanced by these
same forces for Quebecs secession from Canada was that the
new country would be a rampart against the right-wing wave
sweeping across North America. Then, no sooner was the referendum
over, than the PQ government, like right-wing governments across
North America, declared that public and social services must be
massively scaled back to balance the budget.
The true class nature of the BQ becomes clear if one looks
at the balance sheet of the Parti Québécois (PQ),
with which it shares not only a common cause, but virtually the
same leadership and electoral organisations. BQ founder Luçien
Bouchard headed the PQ provincial government from 1995 to 2001,
and Duceppe is already being touted by some as a possible candidate
for the PQ leadership.
The Bloc Québécois gave its unconditional support
to the zero-deficit program implemented by the PQ government of
Bouchard under which billions were cut from health care, education
and social services; it likewise backed every other major initiative
taken by the PQ during the years it most recently formed Quebecs
government (1994-2003).
If the PQ was routed in the April 2003 provincial election,
that was because it was the Québécois version of
the right-wing governments seen across Canada over the last 10
years: the Conservative government led by Mike Harris in Ontario,
the Liberal government led by Gordon Campbell in British Columbia
and the federal Liberal government of Jean Chrétien and
Paul Martin. Already, by its second term, the PQ government had
introduced a barrage of anti-union laws, imposed savage budget
cuts in the name of zero-deficit politics, closed
some dozen hospitals, thrown the mentally ill into the street
in the name of a phony social reinsertion plan, mounted frontal
attacks on welfare recipients and eliminated tens of thousands
of jobs in the public sector.
In this electoral campaign, the union leaders are supporting
the BQ even more strongly than ever. The two largest trade union
federations in Quebec, together accounting for almost a million
of Quebecs 4 million workers, have called upon their members
to vote for the Bloc.
Henri Massé, president of the Féderation des
travailleurs du Québec (FTQ), invited Gilles Duceppe to
address the workers at the Montreal plant of aircraft manufacturer
Bombardier. The two issued a resounding call for the federal government
to consider giving another half-billion dollars to Bombardier
in order to save the aeronautical industry in Quebec.
Massé openly called for a Bloc vote: I will say
it and say it again: it is clear that among our members there
is much sympathy for the Bloc and there are many who are working
for the Bloc. Massé justified his support for the
BQ by adding that the Liberals and the Conservatives are more
right wing and the New Democrats are too committed to a strong
central government.
The union leaders fear that the immense opposition to the Charest
Liberals program of privatization, budget cuts, and elimination
of public services will escape from their control and that of
the discredited PQ. They have redoubled their support for the
BQ, hoping by this means to engineer a political revival of the
PQ. At the same time, a phalanx of former leading union bureaucrats
has organized a new faction inside the PQ, Les syndicalistes
et progressistes pour un Québec libre [Unionists and
progressives for an independent Quebec] so as to once more politically
subordinate the working class to the PQ and its reactionary project
to carve out a new capitalist nation-state in North America.
However, the political situation has evolved greatly since
the 1960s and 1970s, when the union leaders succeeded in containing
the militancy of the Quebec working classa part of a worldwide
worker radicalizationwithin a capitalist framework by channeling
it into the blind alley of Quebec nationalism. In that period,
the PQ associated the idea of independence with an expansion of
the welfare state. Today, the Quebec sovereignty project put forward
by the PQ and BQ is explicitly right wing, a means for providing
Quebec business with a state more attuned to its struggle for
overseas markets and profits. As the PQ and BQ have spelled out,
a sovereign Quebec would be entirely committed to
NATO and NAFTA. Indeed, many in the separatist camp argue that
Quebec should adopt the US dollar to further cement its relations
with Washington and Wall Street.
Quebec nationalism, like the Canadian nationalism of the social-democratic
NDP and trade union bureaucracy in English Canada, has left workers
politically disarmed in the face of the demands of the financial
markets for reduced wages, poorer working conditions and job cuts.
According to the logic of nationalism, one must ally with our
businesses for them to remain viable in face of global competition.
The only progressive option, including in the struggle against
discrimination and for the democratic rights of all Québécois,
is for Quebec workers to unite with those in the rest of North
America in a common struggle to reorganize the economy towards
the end of satisfying human needs, not multiplying the profits
of a tiny minority.
See Also:
Canadian elections: candidates debates
filled with by posturing and lies
[18 June 2004]
SEP to hold Toronto meeting on Canadian,
US elections
[17 June 2004]
Canadas business elite considers
throwing its weight behind the new Conservatives
[15 June 2004]
Canadian elections: Campaign
hype cannot mask popular disaffection
[29 May 2004]
Quebec: Mounting opposition
to Liberals class war agenda
[16 December 2003]
Mass social disaffection
reflected in electoral rout of Quebec separatists
[18 April 2003]
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