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Canada: ex-union bureaucrat to head Parti Québécois
executive
By Guy Charron
8 June 2005
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Monique Richardthe president of the Syndicalistes
et progressistes pour un Québec libre (Trade Unionists
and Progressives for a Free Quebec)was acclaimed president
of the Parti Québécois at the partys convention
last weekend. (In Canadian politics, the position of party president
is distinct from that of the party leader. It is the party leader
who is a partys principal spokesperson and its candidate
to become premier or prime minister.)
The election of Richard, a former president of the Centrale
des Syndicats Québécois (CSQ), to the head of
the Parti Québécois (PQ) executive is a manifestation
of the ever-closer collaboration between the union bureaucracy
and the PQ apparatus. The PQ, which today forms the official opposition
in Quebecs National Assembly, is a separatist party that,
prior to losing power in 2003, formed Quebecs provincial
government for nine years.
Holding up its privileged relations with the union bureaucracy
as proof, the PQ likes to describe itself as a progressive party
that is sensitive to the concerns of workers. But between 1994
and 2003, the PQ implemented the same type of right-wing policies
as the Conservative government of Mike Harris in Ontario and the
federal Liberal government of Jean Chrétien. Under the
leadership of Luçien Bouchard and his then Finance Minister,
Bernard Landry, the PQ, in the name of eliminating the provincial
budget deficit, imposed massive social spending cuts, closed hospitals,
threw the mentally ill onto the streets, slashed tens of thousand
of public sector worker jobs, and cut social assistance (welfare)
benefits.
The founding of the SPQ libre in 2004 and the rise of
Monique Richard to the highest post in the PQ apparatus mark a
significant change in the relationship between the union bureaucracy
and the PQ, one of the Quebec bourgeoisies two principal
parties.
Since the early 1970s, the union bureaucracy has always collaborated
closely with the PQ, sparing no effort to tie the working class
to this party. The union leaders turned towards the PQwhich
was formed in 1968 as the result of the fusion of a breakaway
group from the Quebec Liberal Party and two smaller separatist
partiesin the context of a wave of militant trade union
struggles and a profound radicalization of the working class.
By subordinating the working class to the PQ and its indépendantiste
program, the union bureaucracy helped to quarantine the struggles
of the Quebec workers from those of their brothers and sisters
in English Canada and from the powerful working-class radicalization
that swept the globe between 1968 and 1975.
However, till now the union leadership has maintained the pretense
that the unions are politically independent from the PQ, since
the unions have only officially extended their support to it on
a conjunctural (ponctuelle) basis at election
times. In this way, the union leaders have sought to retain more
room to maneuver with the other major big business party, the
Liberals, and to fend off criticism from the left that they are
agents of the pro-capitalist PQ.
Many retired union bureaucrats have gone on to a second career
serving as PQ legislators and cabinet ministersalthough
in recent years this phenomenon has been much more true of the
PQs sister party in the federal parliament, the Bloc Québécois
(BQ).
One of the principal motivations for the founding of the SPQ
libre in early 2004 was the perception of a section of the
union bureaucracy that their weight in the PQs counsels
has declined. To rectify this, this section advocates that the
union officialdom act as a coherent and identifiable pressure
group with the PQ. Another section, represented by Henri Massé,
the president of Quebecs largest union federation, the Fédération
des Travailleurs du Québec (FTQ), thinks that the cohabitation
of the SPQ libre within the PQ goes too far in identifying
the union bureaucracy with the PQ and involving the union officialdom
in party politicsthis notwithstanding the fact
Massé is himself a well-known PQ supporter.
The PQs tattered progressive
credentials
The election of Richard by acclamation to the post of PQ president
shows that the PQ leadership is eager to work more closely and
openly with the union bureaucracy.
The PQs claims to be a progressive party have been left
threadbare as a result of its two periods in government (1976-1985
and 1994-2003). On both occasions the PQ proved itself a faithful
servant of Quebec big business and the Wall and Bay Street (Toronto)
banks. The 2003 provincial election highlighted the PQs
loss of working-class electoral support. The PQ lost almost a
third of its votes relative to the previous election and received
in terms of its percentage of the popular vote its worst result
since 1973, when the party was just five years old and had yet
to form a government. After the PQs rout in the 2003 election,
political commentators mused about the possible death of the separatist
movement.
Even if the newspapers have remained silent on this question,
there is no doubt that the rise of Monique Richard to the position
of president was the result of an agreement between the top leadership
of the PQ and the SPQ libre.
In early May, at about the same time that it became evident
that Richard would become PQ president, since the other candidates
in the race had withdrawn, she voiced her support for Bernard
Landry remaining the leader of the PQ through the next election
in 2007 or 2008. Earlier Richard had refused to publicly back
LandryLuçien Bouchards right-hand man in the
zero-deficit campaign and successor as Quebec premier.
(To the surprise of the entire PQ-BQ establishment, Landry
quit his post as PQ leader and his National Assembly seat last
Saturday after only 76 percent of PQ convention delegates approved
his leadership.)
Richard and the SPQ libre have not lost any time in
demonstrating that they are among the most chauvinist tendencies
within the PQ. At last weekends convention they trumpeted
a motion put forward by the hardline indépendantiste
or pur et dur (pure and hard) faction to prohibit francophones
and the children of immigrants to Canada from attending English-language
CEGEPs (the first level of post-secondary education in Québec).
An attempt to politically suffocate the working
class
The SPQ libre was founded in the beginning of 2004 in
response to the PQs electoral defeat and the eruption of
working-class opposition to the Liberal provincial government
of Jean Charest. Its founding members included the leaders of
several major Québec unions, former presidents of two of
Quebecs three major union federations, and various personalities
from the social-welfare and community organizations that are patronized
by the union bureaucracy.
Landry and the PQ leadership were quick to embrace the SPQ
libre and, at its request, modified the partys statutes
to allow for the existence of political clubs. The
SPQ libre chose to define itself as a political cluba
political form borrowed from the French Socialist Party that permits
an organization to exist both independently and as an organized
tendency within a partybecause the union bureaucrats saw
this form as giving them maximum flexibility: the possibility
of participating actively in the PQ, while posturing, when needed
to retain credibility before their members, as opponents of certain
party policies and decisions. As one union leader quipped, the
status of political club allows them to disapprove
of some PQ positions without having to tear up their membership
cards.
In creating the SPQ libre, the union bureaucracy
is seeking to resuscitate the illusion that the PQ is a party
that is favorable to the workers or at least susceptible to working-class
pressure. Commenting on her election to the presidency of the
PQ, Richard declared that she hoped that her presence would
give a signal that people more to the left can find a place within
the Parti Québécois. I hope that the skeptics will
be confused.
Through the SPQ libre, the union bureaucracy is consciously
trying to salvage the principal political mechanism used since
the 1970s to prevent the development of an independent political
movement of the working class and to divide the struggles of Quebec
workers from those of workers across North America and around
the world.
It is thanks to the support of the unions that the PQ was able
to become the party that has alternated in power with the Liberals
for the past 35 years. In 1996, in order to carry out its zero
deficit program of massive social spending cuts, the PQ
obtained the active support of the union leaders. It was the union
leaders who then insisted that the government use surplus pension
funds in order to eliminate tens of thousands of public sector
jobs, leading to an increased work-load for the public sector
workers who remained and a serious deterioration in the quality
of public services. The present deplorable state of the health
care system is a direct consequence of the union leaders
program of subordinating the working class to the dictates of
the market and politically tying it to the PQ.
By working to revive the PQ, the union leaders are trying to
protect their own social position, which is threatened by the
lurch to the right of all official politics. So successful has
the union bureaucracy been in suppressing the class struggle that
big business and the Charest Liberal government have begun to
question the need for the system of tripartite, institutionalized
collaboration between government, business and the unions that
was put in place in Quebec in the 1970s.
Even more importantly, the union bureaucracy is trying to head-off
a radicalization of the working class. It fears that the neo-liberal
politics of the present Liberal government will provoke mass social
struggles and under conditions where the PQ has been discredited
in the eyes of workers.
Six months after coming to power, the Charest government confronted
a militant working-class upsurge against its plans to re-engineer
the State and to amend the labor code so as to promote the
contracting out of work. The union bureaucrats were compelled
to threaten a one-day general strike, the better to suffocate
a mobilization that risked escaping their control. This spring,
a student strike against cuts to student aid provoked a significant
political crisis and again the union leaders rushed to the aid
of the government, pressing student leaders to negotiate a compromise
with the Charest government. Since the end of 2003, the level
of dissatisfaction with the provincial Liberal government has
hovered around 70 percent.
See Also:
Quebec unions shelve
plans for one-day strike
[11 August 2004]
Mass social disaffection
reflected in electoral rout of Quebec separatists
[18 April 2003]
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