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Budget vote leaves Canadas Liberal government hanging
by a thread
By Keith Jones
26 May 2005
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Canadas minority Liberal government escaped defeat in
the House of Commons May 19 by the slimmest of margins, with the
speaker forced to break a tied vote on a budget bill.
The subsequent scenes of a jubilant Prime Minister Paul Martin
celebrating his governments victory with fellow Liberals
notwithstanding, last Thursdays vote has not resolved or
staunched the political crisis. The government continues to hang
by a thread. Moreover, it, the official opposition Conservatives,
and the Canadian bourgeoisies political-party system have
all been badly damaged by the Conservatives campaign to
use corruption allegations to topple the government.
The Conservatives were determined to force a June election,
because they see recent revelations that Liberal officials and
workers in Quebec filled their own pockets and party coffers with
money siphoned off from a federal advertising program as providing
them with their last, best hope of seizing power. By framing the
next federal election as a referendum on corruption, the Conservatives
intend to escape public debate of their right-wing platform and
intimate ties to the Bush administration and religious right.
While much of big business was ready to support the Conservatives,
even if it required their forging an anti-Liberal alliance with
the pro-Quebec independence Bloc Québécois (BQ),
the public proved increasingly hostile to the Conservative-power
bid. Polls repeatedly showed the Conservatives with the support
of no more than a third of the electorate. The failure of the
Conservatives to generate more public support led several of their
prominent press supporters to argue in the days immediately before
the budget vote that it might be a blessing in disguise if the
government survived.
Voting for the budget bill were: 131 sitting Liberal MPs, including
Belinda Stronach, the former CEO of auto-parts giant Magna International
who crossed the floor from the Conservatives just two days before
the vote; the 19 MPs of the social-democratic New Democratic Party
(NDP); an independent who was kicked out of the Liberal caucus
for deriding Martin and George Bush; a Conservative who was re-elected
as an independent after losing his partys nomination; and,
last but not least, the speaker.
Voting to defeat the government were all 98 Conservative and
54 Bloc Québécois MPs.
The corporate media responded to the vote by calling on the
Conservatives to accept the result and put off a further push
to defeat the government at least until parliament reconvenes
next September. An election some time between now and next February
is, noted the newspaper editorialists, in any event, inevitable.
(In an April 21 address to the nation Martin pledged to call an
election within 30 days of a public inquiry into government corruption
delivering its final report and that report is due before the
end of the year.)
Whether the Conservatives, who are led by neo-conservative
ideologue Stephen Harper, will heed the medias calls for
them to stand down is far from clear. Influential establishment
voices have repeatedly expressed concern that Harpers scandal-mongering
is undermining public confidence in the entire political establishment
and serving only to boost the fortunes of the BQ and the cause
of Quebec independence. But Harper continues to make Liberal corruption
the Conservatives principal point of attack. In his first
remarks after last Thursdays vote, Harper painted the Liberal
Party as a criminal enterpriseone moreover that in its lust
for power has fatally undermined its commitment to fiscal
responsibility.
According to CanWest News Service, Harper told his caucus that
had the Conservatives succeeded in toppling the government they
would have made the first plank of their partys election
platform widening the mandate of Justice Gomerys corruption
inquiry to include the power to recommend the laying of criminal
charges and to investigate other federal advertising contracts,
including some awarded by the Finance Ministry when headed by
Paul Martin.
Should they choose, the Conservatives and BQ could mount more
than half a dozen further attempts to defeat the government on
an issue of confidence before parliament recesses
for the summer in June.
A by-election victory Tuesday has made the Liberals position
in the House of Commons slightly less precarious. But given the
narrowness of the budget vote and the volatility of the political
situation, it is by no means assured the government will survive
the coming month.
The roots of the current political crisis
At root, Canadas political crisis has two principal causes.
First and foremost, there is the ever-widening chasm between the
reactionary political trajectory of big business and the needs
and aspirations of working people. Because of the subservience
of the official labour movement, that is the trade unions and
the NDP, to the profit system, the popular frustration and dissatisfaction
has not found a positive and coherent expression. But there have
been signs of a political radicalization, including the mass antiwar
demonstrations of early 2003 and this years Quebec student
strike. Ruling class spokesmen have been forced to concede that
there is a deep-rooted and, in their view, dangerous popular alienation
from establishment politics.
A second factor is the pressure Canadas ever-increasing
economic integration with the US and the eruption of a new inter-imperialist
struggle for markets, resources, sources of cheap labour and geo-political
advantage is placing on the Canadian nation-state. The development
of a continental economy is destabilising relations
between the various regionally-based components of the Canadian
bourgeoisie, even as the most powerful sections are seeking through
the federal state to project their power onto the world stage.
Canadas ruling elite is dissatisfied with both of its
principal political partiesa sentiment which was exemplified
by the title the Globe and Mail, the traditional voice
of Canadas banks and financial houses, gave to its lead
editorial two days after the budget vote: Harper and Martin
are both on sufferance.
In the view of corporate Canada neither party nor leader has
yet demonstrated the capacity and willingness to mount the massive
new assault on the social position of working class for which
it has been pressing through reports issued by the Canadian Council
of Chief Executives, the Fraser Institute, and other lobby groups
and think-tanks.
Whilst there are differences, in some cases not insignificant,
over how to overcome popular resistance, there is a ruling class
consensus on the need to dismantle what remains of the welfare
state, further transfer wealth toward the most privileged sections
of society and give Canadian capital greater global reach.
Big business principal policy prescriptions include: slashing
taxes on business and the well-to-do; gutting environmental and
labour regulations; giving private-for-profit companies a far
greater role in the provision of health care and making individuals
and their families assume a greater portion of health care costs;
reducing the proportion of state expenditure on non-productive
Medicare and income support programs so as to increase that on
public infrastructure and the development of a more competitive
workforce; greatly expanding Canadas military so as to increase
its capacity to participate in colonial-style pacification and
stabilization missions; and the forging of a still
closer economic, military and geo-political bloc between Canada
and the US.
Big business looked to Martin, to pursue this agenda and therefore
supported him in his campaign to wrest the prime ministership
and Liberal Party leadership from Jean Chrétien. After
all, had not the multimillionaire shipping magnate implemented
the biggest social spending cuts in Canadian history, then unveiled
a five-year $100 billion scheme of tax cuts, while serving as
finance minister from 1993-2002?
But Canada corporate elite has become increasingly dissatisfied
with Martin, accusing him of dithering and of failing to show
leadershipthat is of failing to defy public opinionon
such issues as Canadian participation in the US missile defence
shield.
As for the Conservative Partya new political formation
born of the marriage, less than 18 months ago, of what remained
of the Progressive Conservatives and the right-wing populist Canada
Allianceit has, in the view of important sections of big
business, yet to demonstrate that it is a viable instrument for
imposing wrenching, unpopular changes.
In regards to such issues as Canada-US relations and tax cuts,
the Conservatives have spelled out policies that conform more
closely with those demanded by big business. But important sections
of the elite view Harpers courting of the religious right
to be problematic since it could become a lightening rod for opposition
to a Conservative government. Even more importantly there is concern
that a Conservative government, with its policy of ceding power
to the provinces, will weaken the federal state, especially given
Harpers own long association with the demands of the Westi.e.,
the corporate and political elite of western Canada and especially
oil-rich Albertafor greater autonomy for the West and power
in determining national policy.
Harpers readiness to ally with the BQ in recent weeks
and eagerness to sully the name of the Liberal Partythe
Canadian bourgeoisies traditional governing party and the
only one of its parties that can make a legitimate claim to being
a national partyhas raised further questions in ruling class
circles as to his judgement and reliability.
Belinda Stronach is a political lightweight, who owes her political
prominence to her fathers fortune and a fawning media. But
when she condemned Harpers strategy of allying with the
BQ, she was voicing the reservations of many in the business circles
she frequents.
Significantly, much of the editorial criticism of Harper and
the Conservatives has been from the right. Both David Asper, the
chairman and co-proprietor of the neo-conservative National
Post, and the editorial board of the Globe and Mail
have criticized the Conservatives for not more vigorously championing
tax and public spending cuts. There is plenty of room,
declared the Globe, for a party of the center-right
that will stand up for fiscal conservatism, competitiveness and
the prosperity that pays for social programs. But instead,
Harper popped up jack-in-the-box style ... to say me
too when Mr. Martin extended funding for day care, the environment
and the cities.
The current political crisis is a harbinger of a rapid intensification
of the class struggle. The great danger is that while the ruling
class is striving to fashion a political instrument to shred what
remains of the social conquests of the working class, the organizations
that purport to speak for working people are doing their utmost
to tie them to the existing social-political order.
At the insistence of the Canadian Labour Congress (CLC), the
NDP has forged a parliamentary alliance with the Liberals. Thus
the social democrats are now propping up a government that during
its twelve years in office has implemented systematically, although
in piece-meal fashion, the socio-economic policies and many other
planks of the Reform/Canadian Alliance and Conservative platforms.
The NDP has itself played a major role in the assault on the
working class, carrying out major social spending cuts and other
fiscal austerity measures in those provinces where it has formed
the government in the past 15 years.
Just how far right the NDP has moved was well-illustrated by
the campaign it mounted in this months British Columbia
provincial election. NDP leader Carole James criticized the union-baiting,
budget-slashing, and tax-cutting Liberal government of Gordon
Campbell for being too confrontational, but said an
NDP regime would leave most of its reforms intact.
To further appeal to big business, James criticized every previous
NDP government in British Columbia for being fiscally irresponsible
and biased in favor of the unions.
While the CLC and federal NDP have aligned with the Martin
Liberal government, the unions in Quebec are promoting the BQ
and its sister party at the provincial level, the Parti Québécois
(PQ). When last in power, the PQ carried out socio-economic policies
that closely paralleled those of their federalist opponents, Martin
and Chrétien.
Through their support for the BQ-PQ, the Quebec unions are
providing assistance to the drive of the Conservatives to topple
the Liberals and bring to power a government modelled after the
Bush administration.
Because the labor bureaucracy has suppressed the class struggle
and split the working class, big business and its governments
have succeeded time and again over the last quarter century in
imposing policies bitterly opposed by the majority of the population.
To prevent a new round of debilitating reversals, working people
must adopt a new perspective, one that challenges the subordination
of social needs to the profits of big business and consciously
strives to unite the struggles of workers across Canada with those
of workers in the US and around the world.
See Also:
Canada: Tories want governor-general to
use emergency powers to force new election
[16 May 2005]
Canada: Social democrats rush to aid
of embattled Liberal regime
[7 May 2005]
Canada: Using corruption scandal
as a smokescreen, Tories prepare neo-conservative assault
[27 April 2005]
Canadas Liberal government
faces imminent defeat
[20 April 2005]
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