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Canadian elections: candidates debates filled with by
posturing and lies
By Keith Jones
18 June 2004
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The leaders debates in Canadian elections are more bad
theatre than serious exchange of political views. The leaders
posture, delivering lines largely scripted in advance, while the
corporate media sets itself up as the judge of who won
the debate. Monday evenings French-language and Tuesdays
English debate were true to form. Based on polling data and the
advice of spin-doctors, Liberal Prime Minister Paul Martin, Conservative
leader Stephen Harper, Jack Layton of the social-democratic New
Democratic Party (NDP), and Gilles Duceppe, head of the indépendantiste
Bloc Québécois (BQ), made their pitches to the voters
and press gallery, while resorting to various evasions, half-truths
and outright lies to hide their true intentions and the interests
that they serve.
In three successive federal elections the Liberals have captured
a majority of seats by railing against their opponents on the
right, while instituting as government massive public spending
and tax cutsin short, the most right-wing socio-economic
agenda since the Great Depression. Hoping to repeat the trick,
Paul Martin is posing in this election as the defender of Canadas
underfunded and dangerously frayed universal public health system,
Medicare. Time and again during this weeks debates, Martin
insisted that the number one priority for a re-elected Liberal
government will be to fix health care for a generation. Only Martin
is himself among those chiefly responsible for emergency room
overcrowding and lengthy waiting lists for life-saving medical
procedures, having as Finance Minister from 1993-2002 imposed
cuts totaling tens of billions of dollars in the transfers Ottawa
makes to the provinces to help pay for health care, welfare and
post-secondary education. And till he decided to place health
care at the center of the Liberal campaign, Martin and the Liberals
had been encouraging the provinces to experiment with
reform in health care management and delivery, that is to give
private, for-profit corporations a wider role in the provision
of health care.
Harper, a neo-conservative ideologue, meanwhile has been at
pains to present his new Conservative Partythe
result of a merger between the Western-based, right-wing populist
Canadian Alliance and the Progressive Conservativesas a
modern, moderate alternative to the Liberals. To this
end, Harper has tried to package his plan to cut $37 billion in
taxes over 5 years as a middle class tax cut that
will in no way impact on public services. Likewise, when asked
in the debate about the Tories child care policy, Harper
said his party preferred to support families by providing
a personal tax exemption for every child. What he omitted to say
was that only those who pay taxes, including the rich, but not
many of the working poor, will be able to take advantage of this
exemption.
As he has throughout the campaign, Harper repeatedly sought
to deflect attention away from the Conservatives program
and intentions during he debates, by raking up the sponsorship
scandalallegations that Ottawa funneled millions, possibly
tens of millions, to Liberal-friendly ad agencies for little or
no work.
The Conservatives claim that they can slash taxes and
massively increase military spending without making substantive
cuts to government programs has been criticized by sections of
Canadas corporate elite that fear a Harper-led government
might mimic the Bush administration and plunge the federal government
into the red. Articulating these concerns, Martin accused Harper
of fiscal irresponsibility. Replied Harper: How
can you talk about my promises with your record of disappearing
billions? Where is the sponsorship money?
Later when Martin challenged Harper over his views on abortion
and gay rights, Harper responded, This is just a campaign
of fear and falsehoods to cover up your disgraceful record of
scandal and mismanagement.
Harper, however, was also able to parry some of the Prime Ministers
attacks by pointing to the right-wing views of many in the Liberal
party, including Martin. When the Prime Minister accused the Conservatives
of planning to attack womens right to choose and demanded
to know if Harper would use the notwithstanding clause
in the constitution to overturn a Supreme Court ruling in favor
of gay rights, Harper noted that Martin and many other Liberals
MPs had voted in favor of a Canadian Alliance motion restricting
marriage to heterosexual couples and that Martin had himself mused
about using the notwithstanding clause in regards
to gay marriages.
Of especial interest in this regard was the exchange between
Martin and Harper over Iraq.
In March 2003, only days before the US launched its illegal
invasion of Iraq, the Liberal government, then headed by Jean
Chrétien, scuttled plans, in the works for months, to have
the Canadian Armed Forces (CAF) participate in the Iraq war.
Martin, who had earlier been fired from cabinet as a result
of his struggle to wrest the leadership from Chrétien,
publicly defended the governments decision not to participate
in the invasion given the USs failure to win the backing
of the United Nations Security Council. However, during the Liberal
leadership campaign and in the first weeks of his primer ministership,
Martin said mending fences with the Bush administration was a
top priority and demonstrably sought to distance himself from
Chretiens decision on the war. Thus he named David Pratt,
the most vocal Liberal proponent of Canadian participation in
the war, as his Defense Minister, pledged significant new funds
for the military, and said Canada will be involved in many foreign
military interventions in the future and should be ready to so
without UN sanction.
Harper, for his part, angrily denounced the Liberal government,
for not standing with its closest allies and accused
Chrétien of endangering Canadas interests by irritating
Washington. But, during the current election campaign, in deference
to the unpopularity of the war and the Bush administration, Harper
has repeatedly said that he did not favor Canadian participation
in the war.
Hoping to exploit the popular opposition to the war and the
contradictions in Harpers position, Martin in Tuesdays
debate cited an article the Conservative leader had co-written
with former Canadian Alliance leader Stockwell Day in April 2003
and had published in the Wall Street Journal condemning
the Chrétien governments failure to have Canadian
troops participate in the conquest of Iraq.
Unable to deny the evidence of his own words, Harper conceded
he had in fact favored deploying Canadian troops to Iraq, then
noted that some 30 Canadian military personnel seconded to US
military units had in fact participated in the invasion.
While Harper did not press the issue, the truth is the position
of the Liberal government on the Iraq War has been completely
hypocritical and duplicitous. The Chrétien government gave
the Bush administration secret assurances that it would not make
any statements against the war other than those necessary to placate
popular opinion. Moreover, Canada actively supported the US invasion
by deploying troops to Afghanistan to prop up the US-installed
puppet government there and by deploying a naval task force in
the Persian Gulf. Currently an embedded CAF Major-General
is serving in Baghdad as the deputy commander of the Multi-national
Corps.
Both the BQ and NDP did make carefully calibrated appeals to
the popular opposition to the Liberals right-wing socio-economic
policies. NDP leader Layton observed that Martin bore responsibility
for the health care crisis and that the Liberals promise
to provide significant financial support for daycare was in fact
re-cycled from the Liberals 1993 election platform, the
Red Book. The BQs Duceppe accused Martin and the Liberals
of having eliminated the budget deficit on the backs of
the unemployed by emptying the Employment Insurance fund
and by drastically curtailing eligibility for jobless benefits.
Needless to say, both the NDP and BQ leaders were silent on
their own parties complicity in the destruction of public
and social services. NDP provincial governments, especially in
Ontario and British Columbia, themselves carried out major spending
cuts and attacks on the unions, in the process opening the door
to two of the most right-wing governments in Canadian historythe
Harris Tory government and the current BC Liberal government of
Gordon Campbell. Like the federal Liberals, the Quebec government
headed by the BQs sister party, the Parti Québécois,
declared the elimination of the deficit its first priority and
in the latter half of the 1990s imposed massive cuts to health
care, education and social services and when nurses rebelled used
draconian anti-labor legislation to force them back to work.
Similarly, both the NDP and BQ appealed to popular opposition
to the Iraq War, but for a decade these parties supported the
sanctions regime that the UN, at US insistence, imposed on Iraq.
The sanctions took a devastating toll on the Iraqi people and
helped pave the way for last years war.
Layton frequently made the valid point that the Liberals and
Conservatives hold essentially the same positions. But it is an
open secret that he and his party are hoping that the post-election
arithmetic will result in the NDP holding the balance of power,
so that it can then cut a deal to support a Martin-led Liberal
government.
As for the BQ, it is hoping to be in a position where it has
the power to prop up a Conservative government. Already, the BQ
and Conservative election campaigns have dovetailed, with both
parties focusing much of their fire on the sponsorship scandal.
The Quebec nationalist BQ and the Conservatives share a common
animosity to the Liberals and both support a radical redistribution
of power within the Canadian federal state in favor of the provinces.
The BQ claims to defend Quebecs interests.
But Quebec, no less than the rest of Canada, is polarized along
class lines. Four decades have shown that the indépendantistes
are no less subservient to the interests of capital than the other
parties, and whenever faced with a working-class challenge will
join with their federalist rivals. The BQ and PQ speak for a sections
of business and the petty bourgeoisie that hope to be able to
forge their own ties with Wall Street and Washington, without
having to go through Bay Street and Ottawa, or at the very least
to wangle more money and powers for the Quebec provincial government.
Thus, in the name of Quebecs interests, the
BQ has served notice that among the prices for its support in
the next parliament will be Ottawa continuing financial subsidies
for the Quebec-based aerospace and train-manufacturer Bombardier
and support for the Kyoto Accord, which the Quebec elite believes
will give a boost to Quebecs hydro-electric power industry.
Reflecting the divisions within the ruling class, the press
coverage of the debate was split. Montreals La Presse
repeated Martins assertions that the strong popular support
for the BQ was paving the way for a Conservative government, warning
that such an outcome would be inimical to Quebecs
interests, since there would be no Quebecers in the government
and the indépendantiste cause would receive a major
boost. The right-wing National Post declared Harper the
winner of the English-language debate and tried to argue that
there was a national groundswell for a Conservative government.
The Globe and Mail, the traditional voice of the Bay
Street financial interests, once again voiced concern over the
readiness of the Conservatives to assume the reins of power, given
their divisive social conservative views and inexperience.
In an editorial titled Why Martin failed to rise in the
debates, the Globe repeated its earlier charger that
Martin is not showing leadership, i.e. not defying
popular opinion to pursue the agenda of big business. In this
case, the Globe was referring to Martins refusal
to categorically state Canada will participate in Bushs
missile defense program. The Globe editorial concluded
by taking Martin to task for not having placed front and center
the two great Liberal achievements of the past decade:
eliminating the deficit and the Clarity Act, which makes Canadas
parliament the arbiterafter the factof the legitimacy
of any future Quebec referendum on secession.
Notwithstanding the differences between them, the positions
of the capitalist press underscore that whatever the composition
of the next government, Canadas corporate elite is pressing
for a sharp intensification of the assault on the working class.
See Also:
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]
Canadas Liberal government
boosts military, courts Bush administration
[22 May 2004]
Canadas Liberal government
rocked by financial scandal
[14 February 2004]
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