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Canada: union bureaucrats sponsor candidate for Parti Québécois
leadership
By our correspondent
15 November 2005
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The SPQ libreSyndicalistes et progressistes pour
un Québec libre (Unionists and Progressives for a
Free Québec)has put forward its secretary,
Pierre Dubuc, as a candidate for the leadership of the Parti Québécois
(PQ).
Dubucs campaign to lead the PQthe pro-Quebec-independence
party that has formed Quebecs provincial government in alternation
with the Québec Liberal Party since the beginning of the
1970shas received scant media attention, and Dubuc is expected
to garner only a small percentage of PQ members votes. Nevertheless,
his candidacy is significant, for it represents a concerted drive
by the union bureaucracy to revive the big-business PQ.
Behind rhetorical denunciation of neo-liberalism, the SPQ
libre strives to subordinate the working class to the bourgeoisie
and to divide Québec workers from the working class in
English Canada and internationally.
Recently, the SPQ libre proclaimed that André
Boisclair, the candidate currently leading in opinion polls of
PQ members, is too far to the right and that it, therefore, wants
its members and supporters to give their second-ballot votes to
Pauline Marois, a candidate every bit as much identified with
the PQ establishment as Boisclair.
To claim that Marois is a politician of the left requires a
great deal of imagination and fabrication. At one time or another,
she has occupied all of the most important ministries in various
PQ governments. Moreover, she was a minister during both of the
major assaults PQ governments have mounted against the working
class, in 1981-1983 and again between 1996 and 1999.
If for the SPQ libre Marois is more to the left
than Boisclair, this is because of her close personal ties to
the union bureaucracy. She is a good friend of Henri Massé,
the president of the Québec Federation of Labour (FTQ),
and her husband, Claude Blanchet, is a financier who for many
years served as president of the Solidarity Fund,
a multibillion-dollar investment fund created and directed by
the FTQ.
Marois has welcomed the SPQ libres endorsement
as an example of the coalition from the left to the right
that she says she would like to create so as to win Québec
independence.
The support of the SPQ libre for Marois is not a temporary
tactical maneuver. It represents the very axis of the SPQ libres
politics. It is necessary to construct, wrote Dubuc
in a document meant to explain the SPQ libres aims,
a grand coalition of sovereignist [i.e., pro-independence]
forces, with a political spectrum ranging from the left to the
right, from the social democrats to the neo-liberals.
Nor is the SPQ libre holding its nose as
it gives its support to Marois. It was in the following terms
that Dubuc recommended his supporters give their second-ballot
support to Marois: She is a rassembleuse [someone who can
rally support from diverse groups] and the only one who can achieve
the objectives of the SPQ libre, that is, to defeat the
Charest [Liberal] government and lead us to independence.
The SPQ libre already controls the position of PQ party
president. But, if it has stood Dubuc as a candidate for the party
leadership, it is not with the intention of capturing the post
of party leader. (Under the PQs constitution, the president
heads the party apparatus, while the party leader
is the key figure in the party and its candidate to become provincial
premier.) Electing a trade unionist and purported leftist
as PQ leader could cause the party to lose middle-class and big-business
support, thus undermining the very coalition of social democrats
to the neo-liberals that the SPQ libre wants.
So as to make clear that its campaign is directed not at winning
the leadership, but at trying to refurbish the PQs tattered
credentials as a progressive party and gaining the
union bureaucracy greater influence in the PQs inner councils,
the SPQ libre chose Dubuc as its candidate, instead of
one of at least half a dozen other SPQ libre leaders who,
having served as the presidents of various major unions and labor
federations, are well known to the media and Québec public.
Serving as the front man for the union bureaucracy is a familiar
role for Dubuc. Since the liquidation in the early 1980s of the
little-known Maoist organization of which he was a member, Dubuc
has acted as a publicist and apologist for the union bureaucracy.
The monthly newspaper he founded in 1984 and continues to edit,
LAutJournal, gives a left colouring to the
policies of the union bureaucracy and in particular to its support
for Québec nationalism and Québec independence.
In exchange, the unions have patronized LAutJournal,
by purchasing advertising space and promoting its distribution
among their members. Since 1992, Dubuc has become more directly
integrated into the union bureaucracy, serving as an information
officer for the teachers union.
During the present PQ leadership race, Dubuc and the leaders
of the SPQ libre have crisscrossed Québec in an
attempt to convince workers who have left the PQ en masse
since the early 1980s to rejoin the party or at least once again
give it their votes. Says Dubuc, Im participating
in the race with the objective of strengthening the Parti Québécois,
especially by bringing new members from the unions and from progressive
organizations.... Much has been said in recent years about the
influence of civil society. But the real centre of decision-making
and power is in a political party.
The SPQ libre was founded at the beginning of 2004 by
a cabal of prominent union bureaucrats and retired bureaucrats,
including the just-retired leaders of two of the provinces
three major union federations. Its formation represented a significant
change in the union bureaucracys public posture relative
to the PQ.
Since the early 1970s, the union bureaucracy has consistently
given its support to the PQ. Yet it nevertheless maintained a
pretense of the unions being politically independent, so as to
be better able to maneuver with the other governmental party,
the Liberals, and to rally support for the PQ at decisive moments.
With the creation of the SPQ libre, the union bureaucracy
has established an organized faction within the PQ, with the aim
of trying to revive the PQs flagging fortunes and salvaging
the national coalition of left and right that it claims
is necessary to win independence and preserve the French character
of Quebec.
But Québec society is becoming ever more socially polarized,
between a business and political elite that works hand-in-glove
with Anglo-Canadian and US capital in fleecing the working class
and the mass of working people. The interests of the Québec
workersfrancophone, anglophone and immigrantare infinitely
closer to those of workers in the rest of Canada, the United States
and the rest of the Americas, than they are to the interests of
the Québec bourgeoisie.
According to the SPQ libre, the PQ must become the
grand coalition it was in the 1970s. But the neo-liberal
turn on the part of the PQ is rooted in its class character.
Born in 1968 as the result of a split-off from the Québec
Liberal Party (the traditional party of the business establishment),
the PQ has always been a bourgeois party, with close ties to Québec
business and a strong orientation toward US capital.
The constitutional question aside, the PQ and the PLQ have
always had similar programmes. During the 1960s and 1970s, both
advocated that the provincial state be used to encourage the development
and enrichment of the Québécoisi.e., francophonebourgeoisie.
The PQ simply took this position somewhat further than the PLQ,
by advocating independence and a wider use of government ownership.
As for the PQs much-vaunted Bill 101, it well articulated
the needs of the petty bourgeois layers that then as now constitute
the bulk of the PQ cadre. By making French the principal language
of business and commerce, it opened up managerial jobs for them.
The PQ programme resonated with the union bureaucracy, because
it shared a similar nationalist political vision, but above all
because it saw in the PQ a means of chaining a working class then
involved in militant trade union and social struggles to the existing
social-political order.
In summary, the grand, PQ-led nationalist coalition
of the 1970s was the principal political mechanism by means
of which the political domination of big business and the elite
over the working class workers was preserved.
And ever since, the close collaboration between the union leadership
and the PQ has proven to be a major weapon for the bourgeoisie
in prosecuting its offensive against public and social services
and worker rights.
During the 1981-1983 slump, the then PQ government cut teachers
salaries by 20 percent, a measure without parallel at the time.
This was part of a frontal assault on the working class, which
saw the PQ reopen all provincial public sector contracts by decree
so as to impose wage rollbacks and rewrite work-rules. Then, in
the 1984 federal election, the PQ mobilized support for Brian
Mulroneys Conservative Party, helping to bring to power
a right-wing government that pioneered privatization and deregulation
in Canada. Subsequently, the PQ was one of the main supporters
of the free trade agreement between the United States and Canada
championed by Ronald Reagan and Mulroney.
After a number of years on the opposition benches, the PQ returned
to power in 1994 and promptly began a program of hospital closures.
After posturing during the 1995 referendum on Québecs
secession from Canada as a bulwark against a right-wing
wave sweeping North America, the PQ proclaimed eliminating
the provincial budget deficit to be its top priority, and with
the unwavering support of the union bureaucracy, imposed savage
public spending cuts.
As a result, support for the PQ eroded, and in the 2003 Québec
election, the PQ suffered a crushing electoral defeat, losing
a third of its votes and obtaining its worst electoral result
since 1973, when the party was just five years old and had yet
to form the government.
Parallel with the mounting popular disaffection with the PQ,
the Québec bourgeoisie has abandoned its support for the
so-called Québec model, under which the Québec bourgeoisie
advocated significant state intervention in the economy so as
to bolster it against its Anglo-Canadian and US rivals. Under
the PQ, in the 1970s, the Québec model was broadened to
incorporate extensive, institutionalized tripartite collaboration
between the provincial government, business and the union bureaucracy.
One of the chief objectives of the SPQ libre is to maintain
the existence of this tripartite system of collaboration in which
the union federations participate in elaborating the strategy
and policies of the Québec bourgeoisie. In arguing that
such collaboration is in the national interest, the
union leadership never misses an opportunity to remind the bourgeoisie
of the key role it played in the success of the PQs zero
deficit campaign.
More fundamentally, the union leadership is conscious of and
fears the immense alienation of the working class from official
politics. At the end of 2003, six months after the election of
the provincial Liberal government of Jean Charest, the union leaders
had to work mightily to derail the popular opposition to Charests
project of reengineering the State. Earlier this year,
Québec was rocked by a weeks-long strike of post-secondary
students against C$100 million in cuts to the provinces
bursary program that targeted the most financially vulnerable
students. The union leaders came to Charests aid, by pressuring
the students to accept a compromise that left the
cuts fully intact for the last school year. And today, even as
polls show less than 25 percent support for the provincial Liberal
government, the union leaders are doing everything in their power
to ensure that negotiations for new contracts for close to half
a million provincial public sector workers dont become a
frontal confrontation with the Charest Liberal government.
The creation of the SPQ Libre is the bureaucracys
reaction to the intensification of class conflict and its sense
that workers are coming to recognize that none of the official
parties represent their interests. Through nationalism and hollow
denunciations of big business, it hopes to divert the opposition
to the Charest Liberal government behind the alternate governing
party of the Québec bourgeoisie, portray the federal statenot
capitalismas the principal source of the problems confronting
working people, and prevent Québec workers from joining
with their class brothers and sisters in English Canada, the US,
Mexico and around the world in a common struggle against capitalism.
See Also:
Canada: ex-indépendantiste
premier calls for intensified assault on working class
[28 October 2005]
Canada: Parti Québécois
thrown into unexpected leadership race
[11 August 2005]
Canada: ex-union bureaucrat
to head Parti Québécois executive
[8 June 2005]
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