|
WSWS : News
& Analysis : North
America : Canada
The Royal Canadian Mounted Polices inexplicable
intervention into Canadas election campaign
A warning to the working class
By Keith Jones
9 January 2006
Use
this version to print
| Send this
link by email | Email
the author
Media commentators agree: the Royal Canadian Mounted Polices
announcement that it is conducting a criminal investigation into
the possible leaking of a Liberal government decision on the taxation
of investment income has had a major impact on the campaign for
the January 23rd federal election.
Writing the day after the Royal Canadian Mounted Police (RCMP)
confirmed that it is conducting an investigation into allegations
of insider stock market-trading surrounding Finance Minister Ralph
Goodales November 23 tax announcement, John Ibbitson, a
pro-Conservative Globe and Mail columnist, gushed that
the police probe could cost the Liberals this election.
According to Andrew Coyne of the right-wing National Post,
the RCMP announcement was a bombshell. Susan Delacourt,
author of a flattering biography of Liberal Prime Minister Paul
Martin, has said that the RCMP announcement has so altered the
dynamics of the campaign, Canadas national police have emerged
as a fourth Liberal political opponent,
alongside the Conservatives, Bloc Quebecois and New Democratic
Party.
The opposition parties seized on the RCMPs December 28
criminal investigation announcement, touting it as further proof
of their claims that the 12-year-old Liberal government is mired
in corruption. They have demanded that Goodale, arguably the second
most important Liberal minister, step down pending the outcome
of the police investigation.
For two years, the Conservatives have made the sponsorship
scandalthe looting of a federal government program by Liberal-friendly
advertising firms and their provision of kickbacks to the Quebec-wing
of the federal Liberal Partythe axis of their opposition
to the government. Their aim in this has been to escape scrutiny
of their neo-conservative program and close ties to the US Republican
right and thereby bamboozle their way to power.
As would be expected, the Conservatives have made the RCMP
announcement new fodder for this campaign. Conservative leader
Stephen Harper proclaimed the as of yet unproven allegations of
insider-trading part of an ongoing pattern of scandal and
corruption and reference to the scandal was soon incorporated
into the Conservatives television ad campaign. In a January
2 speech, Harper proclaimed that the first priority of a Conservative
government would be passage of a Federal Accountability Act that
will purportedly ensure ethical, corruption-free government.
The Conservatives, however, have let the social-democratic
NDP take the lead in trumpeting the charges of possible illegalities
surrounding Goodales November 23 announcement. This is because
corporate Canada is none too anxious for light to be shed on the
events surrounding the Liberals decision to maintain the
tax-free status of income-trusts and lower the taxation rate on
stock-dividend incomeand not just because if anyone profited
from insider information about Goodales announcement it
was almost certainly large institutional investors, such as the
brokerage firms of the countrys six major banks.
Any serious look at the Liberal governments decision
would expose how corporate Canada dictates policy to the government
and how the various political parties vie with each other in trying
to please big business. According to economic affairs columnist
Eric Reguly, Bay Street was drunk on income trust brew,
ensuring that any effort to tame the truststhat is
to tax them like other corporationswould be met by
a formidable political backlash.
The NDP, for its part, has placed the criminal investigation
into the income trust affair at the very center of its campaign,
with party leader Jack Layton leading the calls for Goodale to
resign and the partys campaign headquarters issuing a stream
of related news releases. By so doing, the social democrats, who
propped up the Liberals in parliament for half-a-year, hope to
counter Liberal attempts to woo potential NDP voters and Conservative
attempts to paint the NDP as soft on Liberal corruption.
This has nothing to do with a principled, working-class opposition
to the major parties of Canadian big business. Obscured by the
NDPs campaign over whether well-connected Liberal
friends financially benefited from prior notice of Goodales
announcement is what Goodales decision to implement corporate
Canadas solution to the income trust issue reveals about
the evolution of Canadas fiscal and social policies and
the state of class relations.
Indeed, the NDP has been so anxious to take up the cudgels
for ordinary investors, it has not even spelled out
with clarity or consistency whether it opposes the substance of
Goodales decision: to maintain the tax-free status of income
trustsa financial vehicle which has grown to represent more
than 10 percent of the total value of all shares trades on the
Toronto Stock Exchange because its enables companies to escape
all income taxand to level the playing field
for investors in traditionally-structured companies by slashing
the taxation rate on their dividend income.
The NDPs decision to make corruption allegations the
focus of its opposition to Goodales November 23 announcement
arises from the fact that the social-democrats relations
with big business are not fundamentally different from those of
the Liberals and Conservatives. Where the NDP has held power at
the provincial level, most importantly in Ontario and British
Columbia, it has implemented massive public spending cuts and
suppressed worker rights to win investors favor. The social
democrats and their allies in the trade union officialdom have
insisted time and again over the past two decades that workers
accept job cuts and concessions so as to boost corporate competitiveness,
i.e., profits.
As is generally the case, opportunism goes hand-in-hand with
criminal political shortsightedness. While there certainly are
legitimate questionsquestions worthy of investigationconcerning
the November 23 stock market surge, the NDP leaders have not paused
to consider whether in raising a hue and cry over corruption they
are serving as dupes for an RCMP dirty-tricks operation aimed
at lending legitimacy to the Conservatives attempt to stampede
the electorate by framing the ballot-choice as a referendum on
corruption.
Under any circumstances, a mid-election campaign announcement
from the RCMP of a criminal investigation with potential political
ramifications would have been unprecedented. All the more so under
conditions where the principal opposition party has proclaimed
government corruption to be the overriding issue.
Just how unprecedented is made clear in a column by Jeffrey
Simpson in Fridays Globe and Mail. The national affairs
columnist for the countrys most politically influential
newspaper for more than two decades, Simpson has innumerable contacts
and connections with senior politicians and government officials
and members of the police and judiciary.
You dont, writes Simpson, have to be
a shill for the Liberals to ask what the heck the Mounties [RCMP]
thought they were doing in announcing a criminal investigation
during an election campaign.
... What the RCMP did was inexplicable and quite wrong.
Informed friends who know about RCMP practices are baffled. Theyve
never seen anything like it before.
Simpson adds that normal RCMP practice, according to
those familiar with such matters, would have been to acknowledge
receipt of a November 28 letter from NDP MP Judy Wasylycia-Leis
asking for a police inquiry into the events surrounding the large
spike in the volume of trading and value of Toronto Stock Exchange
shares in the hours preceding Goodales Nov. 23 announcement.
Then the RCMP should have determined whether there was sufficient
reason to warrant an investigation and if it did, launch one,
but without informing the world. Instead, writes Simpson
the Mounties put themselves smack in the middle of an election
campaign, which is where they should not be.
In the face of such criticism, the RCMP has sought to justify
its actions by pointing out that it was the NDP, not the force,
that informed the press that the RCMP had launched a criminal
investigation. But this attempt to pass off the RCMPs conduct
as routine cannot pass muster. If the NDP was in a position to
make public that Canadas national police had launched a
criminal investigation into possible insider trading surrounding
the Liberal governments announcement of changes to the taxation
of dividends and income trusts, it was because the head of the
RCMPCommissioner Guiliano Zaccardellitook the extraordinary
step of writing to Wasylycia-Leis to tell her that the RCMP
will be commencing a criminal investigation.
Zaccardelli could not have expected that Wasylycia-Leis would
not make the police investigation public. Nor did he ask her to
keep it private.
Zaccardellis involvement underscores that the decision
to make public the criminal investigation into the insider-trading
allegations was made at the highest levels of the forceby
those who presumably would be most aware of the political impact
of such an announcement.
While Jeffrey Simpson terms this conduct inexplicable,
it can be readily explained: the RCMPs top brass is seeking
to influence the results of the January 23 election.
The Liberal government of Jean Chretien and Paul Martin has
been the most right-wing federal government since the Great Depression.
In addition to imposing massive social spending cuts and rewarding
the rich and corporate Canada with massive tax cuts, it has responded
to the emergence of the Bush administration and its war
on terrorism by launching a major expansion and rearmament
of the Canadian Armed Forces, massively hiking the budgets of
the RCMP and Canadian Security Intelligence Service (CSIS) and
giving them sweeping new powers that in many cases overturn long-established
judicial principles.
Nevertheless, there is a long history of bad blood between
the RCMP and the government, with elements in both the RCMP and
CSIS insinuating that the Liberals are soft on crime and terrorism.
The Conservatives meanwhile have ingratiated themselves with the
police, CSIS and the military, by championing their demands for
increased budgets and powers. The pro-Conservative National
Post has repeatedly served as a conduit for leaks by members
of Canadas national police and intelligence service complaining
about various government decisions and policies.
It is well-known that the RCMP top brass believed that the
Liberal government failed to shield the force from complaints
that it manhandled protesters at the 1997 APEC summit in Vancouver,
although the order to clear the protesters arguably came from
Prime Minister Chretiens top aides.
Much more significant is the controversy surrounding the RCMPs
role in the US governments seizure of Maher Arar, a Syrian-born
Canadian citizen who was falsely fingered by Canadas security
forces as a terrorist suspect, then rendered by the CIA to Syria,
where he was brutally tortured. To the consternation of CSIS and
the RCMP, the Martin government called a public inquiry into the
Arar affair. Undoubtedly the public outcry over the treatment
of Arar was a major factor in Martins decision, made shortly
after he became prime minister and with an election in the offing,
to order a public inquiry. But it is also likely, the government
was angered by the failure of either CSIS or the RCMP to fully
disclose to their civilian political masters their respective
roles in the Arar affair.
The RCMPs intervention in the 2006 elections must serve
as a warning to the working class. Under conditions of intensifying
social inequality and the increasing reliance of the bourgeoisie
on the repressive powers of the state to suppress strikes and
other forms of opposition, the men in uniform are taking courage
from their increasing importance and challenging the norms that
have traditionally upheld their subordination to the elected government.
No less significant is the relative silence of the press about
the RCMPs intervention in the election campaigna silence
that signals not only the readiness of much of Canadas corporate
elite to use an RCMP dirty-trick to help bring to power a Conservative
government, but even more fundamentally their indifference, if
not hostility, to key tenets of bourgeois democracy.
The struggle to defend democratic rights is inseparable from
the development of an independent political movement of the working
class against the big business assault on public and social services,
wages and working conditions, and worker rights.
See Also:
Canada: Liberal campaign
side-swiped by insider-trading allegations
[31 December 2005]
Canada: Martin wraps
himself in the Maple Leaf after scolding from US envoy
[16 December 2005]
Week One of Canadas
federal election campaign
Posturing, demagogy and reaction
[6 December 2005]
Canada: Liberal government
falls setting stage for January election
[29 November 2005]
Top of page
The WSWS invites your comments.
Copyright 1998-2008
World Socialist Web Site
All rights reserved |