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Quebec: government funding of private schools provokes public
outcry
By Jean-François Girard
23 February 2005
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The Quebec nationalist daily Le Devoir revealed January
13 that the provinces Liberal government was going to give
$10 million to five private Jewish schools in the Montreal region.
The additional funding would have increased the provinces
per student funding of the Jewish private schools from 60 percent
of the funding given public schools to 100 percent, or from $3,120
per student per year to $5,200.
This planned increase in state funding for private schools
provoked an outcry, both from the general population and from
within Quebecs political elite. Wide layers of the population
correctly saw the funding announcementwhich was dressed
up by the government as a means of promoting inter-community understandingas
the latest step in the Liberal governments assault on public
services. For their part, the corporate media and the two opposition
parties attacked Jean Charest and his government for having made
the funding decision without any prior consultation, and then
failing to explain it to the public.
Following their election in April 2003, the Liberals launched
a major drive to reengineer the state, by which they
mean drastically scaling back the scope and reach of public services,
so that personal income and corporate taxes can be reduced by
an additional $1 billion per year or $15 billion over a five-year
period. Toward that end the Liberals have set about privatizing
the construction of public infrastructure and the management and
the delivery of services in all sectors of government activityfrom
water, highways and hydroelectricity to public transport, ambulance
services and health care. At the end of last year, the Liberals
adopted legislation creating a new Agency for Public-Private Partnerships,
which is charged with promoting PPPs in Quebecs public and
para-public sectors and reviewing any significant new government
infrastructure project to determine whether it would be possible
to involve the private sector.
A week after the January 13 announcement, the Charest Liberal
government retracted its decision to provide 100 percent per capita
financing to some private schools. Its clear that
we havent met the support that we expected, conceded
the premier.
The official reaction, both on the part of the opposition parties
and the union bureaucracy, had been limited almost entirely to
reproaching the government for having acted in secret. And some
Quebec nationalists made veiled appeals to anti-Semitic sentiment,
with accusations that the funding announcement was tied to contributions
from wealthy Jews to the Liberal Party.
Rare were those among the elite who spoke out against the deterioration
of public schools and the governments privatization drive.
But the popular reaction clearly was fuelled by these concerns.
A poll by Léger Marketing found that 89 percent
of people were against the government financing private Jewish
schools and 85 percent were against the idea of state financing
for private schools irrespective of religious orientation.
Over the last decade, especially since the Parti Québécois
government of Luçien Bouchard massively cut public and
social spending beginning in 1996, students have shifted in ever-increasing
numbers from public to private schools. During the last four years,
attendance at Quebec public schools has risen by 0.65 percent,
while that in private schools attendance has increased by 12 percent.
Of Canadas 10 provinces, Quebec has the highest percentage
of its youth attending private schools: 10.6 percent of Quebec
students attend the provinces 220 private schools, for the
most part at the secondary level.
The increase in private schooling has been fuelled both by
the decline in state support for public schools and by the generous
support that the Quebec government gives to private schooling.
The total state support for private schoolsas opposed to
the per capita granthas risen in the past five years from
40 percent of the support given the provinces public schools
to 44 percent. During fiscal year 2004-2005, Quebec will give
some $375 million to private schools.
The popular outcry over public funding for private schools
is only the most recent manifestation of deep-rooted working class
opposition to the Liberal governmentan opposition that has
repeatedly exploded to the surface but which has then fallen latent
not finding a conscious political expression.
In the last two months of 2003, there was a sudden groundswell
of demonstrations and strikes against a battery of reactionary
bills, including abolition of Article 45 of the provinces
labor code that restricted employers ability to contract
out work. In order to regain control over the opposition to the
Charest government, union leaders had to threaten to organize
a general strike. The union bureaucrats then used the Christmas
period to demobilize the opposition and since then have sought
to suppress any serious mobilization of working people against
the Charest government, while intensifying their efforts to boost
the big business Parti Québécois.
A poll by CROP-La Presse, carried out January 15-24,
found that 63 percent of Quebecers consider themselves somewhat
or very dissatisfied with the Charest government, an increase
of 3 percentage points over the month before.
Because the working class opposition to Charest has not found
an independent and conscious political expression, Quebecs
elite have been able to contain and defect it, even manipulate
it to their profit. This phenomenon has again been witnessed in
the mini-crisis provoked by the Charest governments plan
to increase state funding for Jewish private schools. The corporate
media used the school funding issue to give a lesson to Charest,
whom it perceives as wasting the little political capital he has
remaining on questions that, in their eyes, are secondary, while
wavering before popular opposition to the governments plans
to slash public spending and redistribute income to the well-to-do
and big business.
An article by long-time columnist Alain Dubuc, appearing in
the Montréal newspaper La Presse and other dailies,
is very revealing in this regard. For Dubuc, the Charest government
has not been up to the reforms that it promised. Noting
that an opposition movement has crystallized against
the governments plans, Dubuc says he is prepared to give
the Liberals a second chance. But he warns them that they find
themselves under the uncomfortable obligation of carrying out
their reforms at the end of their mandate rather than the beginning.
But the challenge is not impossible if the Charest government
succeeds in that at which it has long failed: explaining its plans,
targeting its objectives and not retreating.
Others make more explicit the objectives to which the Charest
government should devote itself. Quebecs most powerful business
lobby group, the Conseil du patronat du Québec (CPQ), calls
for personal and corporate income tax cuts to be sharply reduced
and the capital tax eliminated, while the Institut économique
de Montréal (IEDM) is pressing for a flat income tax rateall
measures that would undermine the financial basis for vital public
and social services.
It is worth noting, that the IEDM, a right-wing think tank,
has been pushing for some time for the expansion of private schools.
Each year it publishes a report on the performance of Quebecs
schoolsranking every school, public and private. It goes
without saying that generally the private schoolswhich can
select their students according to economic and scholastic criteria,
systematically weeding out students in difficultycome out
ahead.
* * *
Four weeks after his reversal on the private schools questionweeks
in which the media continued to criticize the Liberals for their
lack of directionPremier Charest tried to demonstrate he
had gotten big businesss message by announcing a major cabinet
shuffle and associating it with a new drive to push through spending
and tax cuts.
With his new cabinet, Charest has shifted his government sharply
to the right. Finance Minister Yves Séguin was returned
to the Liberal backbench, because he had warned that cutting taxes
by a billion dollars per year will have a massive adverse impact
on the most vulnerable sections of society. He has been replaced
by one of the most right-wing members of the Liberal caucus, former
Quebec Chamber of Commerce president Michel Audet.
In introducing his cabinet to the press, Charest said a key
part of his ministers mandate is to persist in the
clear explanation of the difficult choices that lie
ahead. Speaking before the Montreal Board of Trade three
days later, Charest paraphrased a recent La Presse editorial
declaring, If we had to have a theme-song the title would
be, Free us from the status quo!.
See Also:
Canada: budget cuts
have contributed to spread of super-bug
[30 August 2004]
Quebec unions shelve
plans for one-day strike
[11 August 2004]
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