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SEP public meeting on Canadian elections
Workers need a new political orientation
By David Adelaide
24 January 2006
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Canadas federal election was held Monday, January
23. The World Socialist Web Site will post an initial assessment
of the results on Wednesday, January 25.
On the afternoon of Sunday, January 22, the Socialist Equality
Party (Canada) held a successful public meeting in Toronto, the
countrys largest city, to discuss the real issues in the
2006 Canadian elections.
The meeting was attended by a diverse and receptive audience,
including WSWS readers from in and around the Toronto area and
a contingent of SEP supporters from Montréal. The two principal
speakers were Keith Jones, the national secretary of the SEP (Canada)
and a member of the WSWS International Editorial Board, and Jerry
Isaacs, a leading member of the SEP in the United States.
Jones, who gave the first report, began by stating that the
2006 Canadian federal elections have in two ways underscored the
urgency of the international working class constituting itself
as an independent political force.
On the one hand, said Jones, In pursuit of their aim
of bringing to power a Conservative government, the ruling class
has mounted a media manipulation campaign of unprecedented scope
and audacity. The corporate media at every turn has amplified
the Conservative claim that this election should be a referendum
on so-called Liberal corruption, while whitewashing the political
record of the forces that have come together in the new Conservative
Party, including the record of Stephen Harper, the neo-conservative
ideologue who leads the Conservatives.
On the other hand, the 2006 Canadian elections have once
again demonstrated the utterly reactionary role of the official
leadership of the working classthe social democrats of the
New Democratic Party (NDP) and the trade union officialdom, who
act as an integral part of the existing social order.
For the social democrats and the leadership of the Canadian
Labour Congress, the election campaign has been an occasion for
the NDP to audition for the role of holding the balance of power
in the next parliament, which is to say that the NDPs objective
is to win enough seats that it will be able to support one of
the two principal parties of big business as the government. In
keeping with this objective, the NDP has moved still further right,
proclaiming its support for fiscal responsibility,
abandoning its call for increased taxes on the well-to-do, and
embracing the anti-democratic Clarity Act.
A dissident faction of the trade union bureaucracy led
by Canadian Autoworkers president Buzz Hargrove has campaigned
openly for the reelection of a minority Liberal government. While
the NDP leaders have deplored this, their disagreement is only
over tactics. The NDP leadership believes Hargroves electoral
support for the Liberals will cut into the NDP vote, thus weakening
the NDPs hand in future negotiations with the Liberals and
Conservatives over the terms under which the social democrats
will sustain them in power.
The Quebec unions for their part have rallied behind
the Bloc Québécois (BQ), the sister party of the
Parti Québécois (PQ). While the BQ and PQ proclaim
ad nauseam that they uphold Québecs interests,
they have demonstrated time and time again that when push comes
to shove what they mean is upholding the interests of Québec
big business against the overwhelming majority of Québecs
populationthe working class. Jones then reviewed the
history of cuts to social programs and attacks on workers rights
carried out by the last PQ government of Lucien Bouchard and Bernard
Landry.
We dont have a crystal ball. It is impossible to
predict what the results are going to be on January 23rd, which
party or combination of parties is going to form the next government.
But what we can say with certainty is that whatever the exact
distribution of seats in the House of Commons following the 23rd,
the coming period is going to see a dramatic intensification of
the class struggle. This is demonstrated by the decisive shift
of the ruling elite behind the Conservatives, and by the ruling
classs readiness to employ anti-democratic methods to accomplish
their goal of replacing Martin and his Liberals with a Harper-led
Conservative government.
Jones reviewed the record of the outgoing Liberal government,
which by any measure...has been the most right-wing Canadian
government since the great depression. The Liberals have won four
elections in a row by portraying themselves as a bulwark against
the principal party on their right.... Then, once ensconced in
power, they have implemented much of the program of their ostensible
right-wing opponents.
But despite this record, the ruling class has increasingly
grown frustrated with the Liberals because they believe that they
have dithered on carrying through an even wider assault on basic
social programs and have not asserted with sufficient vigor
its predatory interests on the world stage. Jones then discussed
the debate within ruling class circles about how best to accomplish
the dismantling of Medicare, and how through the Supreme Courts
decision in the Chaouilli case a mechanism has been created for
dismantling Medicare and the creation of a two-tier health-care
system.
Next, Jones dealt with the corporate medias claim that
the Conservative Party of Canada has evolved into a moderate,
mainstream party. He reviewed the political biography of the Conservative
leader, Stephen Harper, who supported the 1984 campaign of Brian
Mulroney only to later break with the Tories for their supposed
betrayal of neo-conservative principals. Harper would then become
a key policy advisor of the newly formed Reform Party, and would
champion the idea (later adopted by the Martin-Chrétien
Liberals) that dismantling public and social services in the name
of eliminating the federal deficit should be the pivot of federal
government policy.
In the present campaign, Jones explained, the social conservatives
in Harpers party have been put on a leash or muzzled,
to the point where Conservative candidates have been ushered out
of meetings by their handlers before any chance for uncontrolled
interaction with either the press or the public. Behind
this lies the fears of the Canadas corporate elite that
the agenda of the social conservatives could serve as a lightning
rod...and disrupt what they see as the real issue, the imposing
of right-wing economic measures.
Jones emphasized that the SEP anticipates the emergence of
popular opposition to the right-wing program of big business.
But the question is one of drawing the lessons of the past
quarter century of defeats and reversals that the working class
has suffered. Time and again, we have seen major movements of
the working class, such as the huge opposition to the Harris government
here in Ontario between 1995 and 1997, such as the recent BC teachers
striketime and again, we have seen such movements of opposition
strangled by the trade unions and by the New Democratic Party.
We in the Socialist Equality Party are fighting for the
working class to reorient itself on the basis of a new program.
At the centre of that program is the struggle for the international
unification of the working class against capitalism. The only
way to defeat globally organized multinational and transnational
corporations is to develop a global offensive of the working class.
Bringing his remarks to a close, Jones laid out the three essential
principles upon which the SEP fights to build a new mass party
of the working class: (1) the struggle to forge the international
unity of the working class; ( 2) the rejection of the subordination
of socio-economic life to the capitalist profit imperative and
the struggle for socialism; (3) the struggle to establish the
political independence of the working class from parties, such
as the NDP, that seek to tie it to the profit system.
The meeting was then addressed by Jerry Isaacs, from the Canadians
SEPs sister party in the United States. Isaacs began his
contribution to the meeting by outlining the political and social
crisis unfolding under the Bush administrationan administration
so admired by Canadas likely prime-minister-to-be, Harper:
In the more than four years since the Bush administration
launched its so-called war on terrorism, the American government
has descended to a level of unprecedented criminality, with the
White House demanding unchecked powers for the president. Falsely
assuming the mantle of commander-and-chief of the American people,
the president now claims the right to spy on US citizens, jail
indefinitely and without charges anyone the president deems a
threat, and torture and disappear opponents into secret
prisons in far-flung countries.
At the same time, one can see the future that Canadian
workers are threatened with by looking at the social disaster
produced by the decades-long promotion of the free market and
deregulation by both Democratic and Republican parties.
The US government is incapable of protecting its own
citizens from natural disasters; it cannot guarantee economic
security or health care benefits to tens of millions of its citizens;
nor carry out its charge to guarantee safe working conditions,
for example, in the coal mines where over the past three weeks
15 miners have perished after the Clinton and Bush administrations
systematically dismantled safety regulation in the name of a partnership
with the coal companies.
Isaacs pointed to the growing popular hostility to the Bush
administration, popular hostility that finds virtually no expression
in official Washington. According to a poll conducted by the Zogby
International polling organization in early January, a majority
of the American people want the Congress to impeach Bush if he
ordered (as he did) the wiretapping of US citizens without a judges
approval.
Isaacs then discussed the role played by the Democratic Party,
which far from spearheading a popular struggle against the
Bush administration functions as its cowardly accomplices.
Isaacs said that the objective basis for the support of both
wings of the American political establishment for policies of
imperial plunder is to be found in an underlying decline in the
position of American capitalism, characterized by the collapse
of major corporate icons such as General Motors and United Airlines,
the growing trade and budget deficits and dependence on foreign
capital, particularly from China, and the unsustainable indebtedness
of the entire population.
Isaacs took up remarks made by Delphi CEO Robert Miller to
the effect that the social contract between employers
and the working class has ended and that it was necessary for
workers to give up any idea that they might be guaranteed retirement
benefits. Answering Miller, Isaacs said, It isnt that
America or Canada or any other country cant afford its workers.
The real issue is that America cant afford its rich.
He went on to cite statistics on the enormous growth of social
inequality over the course of the two and a half decades since
1979, in which the share of US national wealth enjoyed by the
wealthiest 1 percent of the population has more than doubled,
from 19 per cent to 40 per cent. Isaacs noted that the average
corporate CEO makes 431 times the wage of the average worker.
Isaacs then discussed the intervention of the Socialist Equality
Party in the 2006 US elections: At the center of this campaign
is the struggle for the international unity of the working class
and, counterposing to the ceaseless demands that the needs of
the worlds people be sacrificed to enrich a financial oligarchy,
the rational, democratic and cooperative reorganization of economic
life to meet the needs of the masses.
Isaacs concluded his remarks by pointing to the international
nature of the problems that confront workers in both the United
States and Canada: War, the attack on democratic rights,
exploitation, unemployment, poverty and the destruction of the
natural environment are not simply American problems. They are
world problems and require global solutions. In the epoch of world,
economy, the problems of mass society can be resolved only on
the basis of an international socialist program.
The meeting was then opened to questions from the audience,
which led to further discussion of the SEPs critical stance
towards Québec nationalism, the NDP and the unions, the
role of the radical left in the Canadian elections, the SEPs
attitude towards the regime of Hugo Chavez, and the nature of
the SEPs intervention in the Canadian elections.
A call for help with the cost of producing the meeting was
issued, resulting in a sizeable collection. A substantial quantity
of literature on socialism, and particular on the history of the
International Committee of the Fourth International, was also
sold.
See Also:
Canadian elections herald a dramatic
intensification of class conflict
[21 Jan 2006]
Who is Stephen Harper, the Conservative
poised to be Canadas next prime minister?
[20 Jan 2006]
The Bloc Québécois: populism
and nationalism in the service of the Québec bourgeoisie
[18 Jan 2006]
Canadas social-democrats hope
to sustain Liberals in power after January elections
[14 Jan 2006]
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