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The Bloc Québécois: populism and nationalism
in the service of the Québec bourgeoisie
By Guy Charron
18 January 2006
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If the opinion polls prove correct, the Bloc Québécois
(BQ), the federal party which promotes the independence of Québec,
will obtain its best ever result in next weeks election.
When the federal elections were called, the BQ had 54 Members
of Parliamentall of them from Quebec, which accounts for
75 of the House of Commons 308 seats.
The BQ presents itself as a progressive party that defends
the interests of Quebeckers and is supported by virtually
the entire Quebec union bureaucracy. Some unions give the BQ their
official support and donate union facilities and funds. Others
officially refrain from supporting any party, but insist that
both the Liberals and the Conservatives should be opposed: in
other words, they call for a vote for the Bloc. The BQ also benefits
from the support of the Parti Québécois (PQ), its
sister party at the provincial level, which imposed savage budget
cuts in social spending when it last formed Quebecs government
(1994 to 2003).
Far from being a progressive party, the BQ defends the interests
of big business and of that section of the Québec bourgeoisie
that hopes to benefit from a rearranging of the nation-state system
in North America and the creation of a capitalist République
du Québec. Formed in 1993 by renegade Quebec MPs from the
Progressive Conservatives and the Liberal Party of Canada, and
supported at its birth by then-Quebec Liberal Premier (Robert
Bourassa), the Bloc Québécois displays a deep hostility
and contempt for the working class of both Québec and the
rest of Canada. The BQ supported the zero deficit
campaign, the name given to the PQs program of severe cuts
to social spending, and privately hopes that the Conservatives,
a right-wing party with close ties to the American Republican
Party, will form Canadas next federal government.
The BQ was eager for new federal elections, thinking the moment
propitious for it to gain more MPs and votes (each vote brings
a government subsidy of $1.75 per year), as opinion polls last
fall were showing that the BQ was poised to win more than 50 per
cent of the popular vote in Québec. Another important consideration
for the BQ is the weakening of the federal Liberals, who, together
with the Liberal Party of Québec, have long formed the
principal federalist political forces in Québec.
An increase in the number of BQ MPs and the weakening of the
Liberals is seen among the indépendantistes
as an important step toward a third referendum on the independence
of Québec.
While professing indifference to which party forms Canadas
next government, the indépendantistes would
prefer that the Conservatives replace the Liberals because the
Conservatives are closely tied to the bourgeoisie of western Canada,
which, like them, favors a decentralization of federal powers
in favour of the provinces. Decentralization, in addition to offering
more autonomy to the provinces of the West, is seen by the Conservatives
as an instrument through which to raze what remains of the welfare
State.
The BQ and the PQ also hope to use the election of a Conservative
government, along with the unpopular measures that such a government
would inevitably implement, as a way of arguing that Québec
is different from and alien to Canada. (The Conservatives have
for long been overwhelmingly based in English Canada, and the
chances that they will elect more than a handful of deputies in
Québec in this election are slim.)
The BQ collaborated closely with the Conservative Party of
Stephen Harper in the last parliament, joining with the Conservatives
in proclaiming the sponsorship scandal to be of unprecedented
importance and in seeking to frame the coming election as a referendum
on Liberal corruption. Their collaboration is so widely recognized
that both the BQ and the Conservative Party are regularly compelled
to deny that they are allies. The social conservatism and Anglophone-chauvinism
with which the Conservative Party is associated are very unpopular
in Québec, while the separatist option of the BQ provokes
a visceral hatred among much of the Conservative Partys
base.
The BQs increased strength in the 2004 elections and
likely strong result in this months vote is not due to a
popular groundswell for either the BQ or its indépendantiste
option. Indeed, after the 2000 federal elections, and even more
so after the PQ fell from power in 2003, there was much media
speculation that the BQ would disappear.
The corporate media attributes the BQs resurgence almost
entirely to the sponsorship scandalthe exposure of a kickback
scheme under which tens of millions in federal funds were supplied
to Liberal-friendly advertising firms for little or no work, with
a portion of the money then used to provide support to the Quebec
wing of the federal Liberal Party.
But the real cause of the rise in the Blocs fortunes
is the same as that responsible for the decline in popular support
for both it and the PQ at the end of the 1990s: deep-rooted, public
opposition to cuts to social and public services, and widespread
dissatisfaction with sinking living standards and increasing economic
insecurity. The Quebec Liberal Party won power in Quebec in 2003
by making a calibrated appeal to popular anger over the decline
of health care, education and other public and social services
during the nine years of PQ rule. But support for Jean Charests
provincial Liberal government melted away like snow in the sun
after it became clear that he wanted to go much further with privatizations,
the reduction of social and public services and tax cuts for the
rich than had his PQ predecessors.
That the BQ and the PQ were able to benefit from popular opposition
to the Charest government and its reengineering of the State
was far from automatic or inevitable. It is mostly because the
union leaders went out of their way to try to refurbish the tattered
progressive credentials of the PQ and BQ, by strengthening their
links with the two indépendantiste parties. At the
same time, the union leaders have done everything in their power
to suppress working-class opposition to the Charest Liberal government.
In December 2003, angry workers took to the streets in protests
and spontaneous strikes against the Charest government. In order
to maintain control of their members, the union leaders were forced
to pledge that they would organize a one-day general strike early
in the coming year. The strike was never called. Instead, the
union leaders began promoting the claim that the only way to answer
Charest was by returning the PQ to power in elections in 2007
or 2008, and a section of them created a faction within the PQthe
Syndicalistes et progressistes pour un Québec libre
(SPQ libre)to promote support for the BQs sister party.
Because it will never form the federal government, the BQ has
great latitude in making populist promises, such as increased
funding for Québec universities, the construction of social
housing in Québec and reform of the employment insurance
program to make it more beneficial to the jobless in Québecs
impoverished, hinterland regions. Such promises are combined with
others that articulate the demands of big business, such as the
BQs call for federal subsidies for large enterprises with
subsidiaries in Québec, including the aerospace industry
(Bombardier, Oerlikon, Bell Helicopter), the pharmaceutical industry,
and the tobacco industry.
The BQ also echoes the traditional demands of the right for
the reinforcing of law and order and supports the anti-democratic
anti-terrorist laws adopted by the Chretien-Martin Liberals. In
the electoral platform of the BQ, a document of 200 pages, one
will find a lone mention of the war in Iraq as illegal and
illegitimate, but this represents nothing more than a rhetorical
flourish. In effect, the BQ insists that Canada preserve
its alliance and its friendly ties with the United States... [without]
supporting all of the initiatives of the present American administration.
In its attitude to the war on Iraq, the BQ adopts the traditional
position of the Canadian bourgeoisie, which holds that its predatory
interests are best served by balancing between European and US
imperialism. In any case, the BQ would have supported the war
in Iraq if it had been sanctioned by the United Nations, and supports
pre-emptive wars carried out under the auspices of
the Security Council of the UN.
The BQ and the PQ cultivate a calculated ambiguity regarding
their call for Québecs independence. In order to
win maximum support and in order to better defend the interests
of the bourgeoisie, the sister parties leave vague how they envisage
the political and economic links between a sovereign Québec
and Canada. Independence is touted as though it would be a paradise
for workers, but the laws and the politics of an independent Québec
would in fact be tailor-made to defend the interests of big business.
The BQ, like the PQ, calls for an independent Québec that
will participate in all of the major treaties in which Canada
presently participates, including NATO and the North American
Free Trade Agreement (NAFTO).
On social questions, the real attitude and class character
of the Bloc Québécois is revealed by its relationship
with the Parti Québécois. (While formally the two
parties are distinct, they function in tandem, with the BQ serving
as a farm team for the older and more politically important PQ.)
Between September 1994 and April 2003, the PQ formed one of
the most right-wing governments in North America. It imposed,
beginning in 1996, severe cuts in public and social spending,
and eliminated tens of thousands of jobs in the public sector,
so PQ Premier (and BQ founder) Lucien Bouchard could realize a
promise to Wall Street to reduce public sector wage costs by 6
percent. The totality of these measures, along with the PQs
anti-union laws, was saluted by the BQ.
Today, the BQ is ready to play the same role in a new big-business
offensive against the working class. BQ leader Gilles Duceppe
works hand in hand with André Boisclair, who won the PQ
leadership by advocating the party move still further right. In
December, Boisclair announced that if the PQ were to form the
government after the next election, it would not reopen the wage-cutting
and concessionary 7-year collective agreements the Charest government
had just imposed on 500,000 public sector employees by decree.
This anti-worker law also includes very severe reprisals for any
job disruption, a measure the government included so as to pave
the wave for implementing its plans for privatization, contracting-out
and job reductions in the public sector.
While Duceppe poses as sympathetic to the concerns of working
people, he proclaimed that the Manifesto for a Clear-Eyed Vision
of Québec, which was co-written by Lucien Bouchard,
was a valuable contribution to public debate. This document, which
has been endorsed by many prominent indépendantiste
and federalist leaders, calls for a series of radical right-wing
measures, such as reducing the income taxes of the well-to-do,
increasing consumption taxes, carrying out privatizations and
public-private partnerships, raising residential electricity rates
and gutting labor regulations.
The campaign of the BQ, its close ties to the PQ, its defence
of big business and its nationalism together constitute a warning
for workers: this party is a trap for the working class.
See Also:
Canadas social-democrats hope to
sustain Liberals in power after January elections
[14 January 2006]
Canadian party leaders debatepopulist
posturing and lies
[11 January 2006]
The Royal Canadian Mounted Polices
inexplicable intervention into Canadas election
campaign
[9 January 2006]
Quebec government
adopts draconian law against half-million public sector workers
[23 December 2005]
Le Parti Québécois
chooses André Boisclair as its new leadera further
shift to the right
[14 December 2005]
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