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Canadas Liberal government faces imminent defeat
By Keith Jones
20 April 2005
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Canadas Liberal government is at grave risk of losing
a parliamentary non-confidence motion in the coming weeks, as
the opposition parties seek to take advantage of damaging testimony
before a public inquiry into government corruption.
Former Groupaction Marketing president Jean Brault and other
witnesses have told the inquiry headed by Justice John Gomery
that a federal program set up to raise the Canadian governments
profile in Quebecthe so-called sponsorship programserved
as a means to illicitly fund the Liberal Party. Groupaction, other
advertising firms, and ad firm executives allegedly made large
donations to the Liberal Party in exchange for sponsorship contracts,
subcontracted some of their sponsorship work to persons with close
Liberal connections, and put Liberal Party workers on their payrolls.
While this testimony has shocked many ordinary Canadians, veteran
observers of Canadian politics knowthe outrage of the opposition
parties and much of the press notwithstandingthat such practices
are far from unprecedented. In a Globe and Mail op-ed piece,
framed as an open letter to Conservative leader Stephen Harper,
Norman Spector, a top aide to Tory Prime Minister Brian Mulroney,
wrote this week: Stephen, youve been around Ottawa
long enough to know that most of the abuses in party financing
and government contracting could easily have taken place under
a Conservative government, and that many likely have.
Harper, however, has given every indication that he will ignore
Spectors plea that he refrain from bringing down the government
until Justice Gomery has weighed the evidence and drafted his
final report. The Conservative Party leader has said he will determine
his course of action by what his conscience dictates and the Canadian
people want. In other words, if the opinion polls indicate the
Conservatives can win a parliamentary majority in a late spring
or early summer election he will argue that the Liberals have
lost the moral right to govern.
The Conservatives are eager to precipitate an election in which
they could and would frame the central question facing the country
as for or against corruption. Close allies of the
US Republicans, the Conservatives aim to trumpet the allegations
and evidence of impropriety by Liberal Party organizers, officials,
and ministers so as to avoid debating their own right-wing program
and ties to the religious right.
They also calculate that they can distort the scale and import
of the scandal over the Liberals mismanagement and possible
criminal abuse of a program that spent some $200 million in close
to a decade to promote their claim that federal spending is out
of control and should, therefore, be sharply curtailed.
In reality, the sums involved in the sponsorship program are
chickenfeed when contrasted with the tens of billions of dollars
the Liberals have cut from public and social services and redistributed
to big business and the well-to-do through tax cuts.
The pro-Quebec independence Bloc Québécois (BQ)
also believes it to be in its interests to force a new election.
Just two years ago the BQs sister party, the Parti Québécois
(PQ), suffered a debilitating electoral defeat as a working class
voters deserted the party in droves to protest the deterioration
of health care, education and other public services during the
PQs nine years in government. But with the support of the
union bureaucracy, the PQ and BQ have been able to stage a political
comeback by exploiting public anger over federal Liberal corruption
and over the right-wing policies pursued by the Quebec Liberal
government.
The BQ calculates that it will gain seats. It is also not averse
to seeing the Conservatives, the party traditionally most associated
with Anglo-chauvinism, come to power in Ottawa, and this for two
reasons. A Conservative government would likely have no MPs from
Quebec, making it easier for the BQ-PQ to argue that the federal
government doesnt represent Quebecers; the Conservative
Party, which draws much of its support from big business in Western
Canada, has long-championed a devolution of power to the provinces.
Together the Conservatives and BQ have 153 MPs, one short of
the number needed to defeat the government in a non-confidence
motion if all MPs are present and none abstain.
Thus far the social-democratic New Democratic Party (NDP),
which has 19 MPs, has remained coy about whether it will vote
to defeat the government.
The NDP has a long and infamous record of allying with the
big business Liberals. In the campaign for the June 2004 federal
election, NDP leader Jack Layton made clear that his partys
principal goal was to win enough seats to be able to prop up a
minority Liberal government. But the Liberals rejected Laytons
overtures after the last election and have continued lurching
further to the rightcozying up to the Bush administration,
announcing further corporate tax cuts, and boosting military spendingmaking
it difficult for the social democrats to justify blocking with
the Liberals before their supporters.
However, even without the NDPs votes, the Conservatives
and BQ could defeat the government, if they get the support of
just one of the three independent MPs, two of whom are one-time
Conservatives.
Just how close the Liberals perceive their government to be
on the brink of defeat was indicated Monday, when the Liberals
took the rare step of invoking their prerogative as the government
to cancel an Opposition Day on the House of Commons calendar.
On Opposition Days, one of the opposition parties chooses the
topics for debate and can present motions. The Liberals apparently
feared that the Tories were going to present a motion that if
adopted would have given the opposition parties the power to decide
the scheduling of such opposition days, thereby enabling them
to time a non-confidence motion to their best advantage.
Even more revealingly, the Liberals have stepped up their anti-Conservative
rhetoric, claiming the Tories are helping the separatist BQ and
if elected will pursue divisive social policies. The Liberals
were quick to call public attention to a report authored by former
Ontario Conservative Premier Mike Harris and Preston Manning,
the founder of the Canadian Alliance (the principal component
of the new Conservatives), to warn that under a Harper-led government
MedicareCanadas universal public health schemewill
be at risk. Among a series of right-wing proposals, that include
a further $80 billion a year in tax cuts, Harris and Manning advocated
in their Canada Strong and Free report, that the federal government
cease any role in the financing of health care and that a two-tier
health care system be established in which the well-to-do have
access to the best health care money can buy, while the majority
are forced to rely on an under-funded public system.
The Conservatives replied by saying that Harris and Manning
do not formulate their partys policy and countered the Liberals
charges of a hidden Tory agenda by accusing the Liberals
of demonizing them.
In a sense both are right. The Tories are, as their focus on
Liberal corruption attests, anxious to hide their true intentions.
Harper speaks about the Conservatives constituting a moderate
alternative to the Liberals. But he is a neo-conservative ideologue,
whose party views the US Republicans and the Bush administration
as their model. A Conservative government would unquestionably
be Canadas most right-wing national government since the
Great Depression.
As for the Liberals, they have used the Progressive Conservatives,
Reform Party, Canadian Alliance, and now the new Conservative
Party as right-wing foils, winning votes by claiming to be the
only means of preventing the coming to power of a reactionary
government that will savage public and social services and favor
the rich. Then, when firmly ensconced in office, the Liberals
have implemented the policy prescriptions of their opponents on
the right. Thus the Liberals adopted the Mulroney governments
GST and NAFTA; implemented the massive spending and tax cuts demanded
by Reform and the Canadian Alliance; embraced the hardline anti-Quebec
separatist stance advocated by Harper and Manning that includes
the threat of partitioning Quebec; and are now implementing, if
only on the instalment plan, the Conservatives call for
a massive increase in military spending.
The NDP, meanwhile, whenever and wherever it has held office
over the last decade-and-a-half, has pursued a neo-liberal program
of cuts to public and social services, balanced budgets, privatization,
and anti-union laws not essentially different from that of the
Liberals and Conservatives.
A capitalist, establishment party, the NDP has found itself
hard-pressed to answer the claims first of Jean Chrétien
and now the multimillionaire shipping magnate Paul Martin that
working peoples interests would be better served by voting
for the Liberalsthe traditional governing party of Canadian
big businessthan for the NDP.
According to the Globe and Mail, the NDP leadership
is worried about the Liberals sudden, brazen attempt to
recast themselves as a progressive party now that
an election appears imminent. Its the exact repeat
of last time, an NDP insider told the Globe. Which
is why we dont want to play into demonizing and vilifying
the Tories right now, because it actually has a backlash for us.
Wed rather a moderate image for the Tories and have a legitimate
three-way race.
The answer to the never-ending assault on the social position
of the working class is neither to block with the Liberals against
the Conservatives nor to downplay the threat from the Conservatives.
It is for the working class to repudiate the failed nationalist-reformist
perspective of the NDP and constitute itself as an independent
political force fighting for an internationalist and anti-capitalist
program.
See Also:
Canada: Martin and Chrétien
testify in corruption scandal
[19 February 2005]
Canada: Big business
exhorts Martin to demonstrate leadership by imposing unpopular
policies
[31 December 2004]
Canadian Liberals
cling to power, but results attest to mass popular disaffection
[30 June 2004]
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