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Canadas Green leader backs the Liberals
By Richard Dufour
23 April 2007
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Green Party leader Elizabeth May and Liberal leader Stéphane
Dion appeared together at a press conference April 13 to announce
that their parties will not stand candidates in each others
ridings in Canadas next federal election. Their joint statement
advocates a government in which Stéphane Dion serves
as Prime Minister that would work well with a Green
Caucus to promote action on climate.
For possibly the first time in their history, the Liberals
will not stand a candidate in all of the countrys ridings
during a general election. In the Nova Scotia riding currently
held by Conservative Foreign Affairs Minister Peter MacKay, the
Liberals will effectively support the election of the Green Party
leader.
Mays reciprocal commitment not to field a Green candidate
in Dions Montreal riding of Saint-Laurent-Cartierville,
where he was elected with a 20,000-vote margin in the last elections,
is entirely symbolic. The real political value of the May-Dion
pact from a Liberal standpoint is the Green leaders effusive
endorsement of the Liberals, which is accompanied by statements
such as, I see in Mr. Dion a true leader for this country.
While the Greens hope their no-compete arrangement
with Canadas traditional governing party will help them
gain respectability in the eyes of official public opinion, and
perhaps allow them to pull off an upset against MacKay in Nova
Scotia, the stakes for the Liberals are much higher.
In the hopes of returning the Liberals to power, Dion is trying
to tap into the growing popular opposition to the free market
and militarist policies of Stephen Harpers fourteen month-old
minority government, while preparing to continue and intensify
the very same policies as Canadas next prime minister.
The Liberals, it should be recalled, were in power from the
fall of 1993 through January 2006 under Prime Ministers Jean Chrétien
and Paul Martin. During that twelve-year period they posed as
opponents of the right-wing policy prescriptions advanced by the
Reform Party/Canadian Alliancewhich went on to absorb the
old Tory party to form the present-day Conservative Partyonly
to implement them in practice by gutting social programs and pushing
through massive tax cuts tailored to big business and the rich.
Taking a page from this history of duplicity, in which he played
a direct role as a minister under both Chrétien and Martin,
Dion claimed in a recent speech to be waging a battle against
poverty and exclusion. Pointing to government programs such
as employment insurance and health insurance,
Dion boasted that Canadas major social advances were
basically made under the Liberal Party of Canada.
The real Liberal record is very different. The anti-working
class austerity measures of the Trudeau governments of the late
1970s and early 1980s had, by the 1990s, given way to an all-out
assault on what remained of the welfare state. Under the Chrétien-Martin
government, billions of dollars were siphoned from the unemployment
insurance fund and denied to seasonal and unemployed workers who
were thrown into destitution as a result; federal funding for
health care and other vital government programs, meanwhile, was
cut to the bone. This right-wing record was a key factor in last
years defeat of the Liberals at the polls.
Dion himself senses that rehashing the old Liberal nostrums
will not be enough to stop the dramatic erosion of popular support
for his party. Thats why he is taking the unprecedented
step of not running a Liberal candidate in every single riding
and turning to the Greens for political assistance in refurbishing
the Liberals image as a progressive alternative to the avowedly
pro-big business and pro-Bush Conservatives.
The corporate media has reacted with open hostility to the
Dion-May deal, deriding it as a sign of Liberal weakness and an
unnecessary adaptation to popular concerns about the Conservatives
aggressive foreign policy and right-wing views on economic and
environmental issues. A Globe and Mail editorial, for instance,
denounced the deal as flaky, noting with alarm that
the Greens want to give six months notice of Canadas
withdrawal from the North American free-trade agreement and to
review its membership in the North Atlantic Treaty Organization.
This opposition reflects the views of the most powerful sections
of the ruling elite who fully support the Conservatives
dramatic shift of Canadian politics to the right and will not
tolerate any letup in the attacks on social programs and democratic
rights at home, or against the oppressed peoples of Afghanistan
and future targets of Canadian military intervention abroad.
But other more astute sections of the ruling establishment
recognize the depth of the popular opposition toward Harpers
far-right agenda and are worried that it may find an independent
political expression. They see the Liberals as playing a key role
in keeping such oppositional sentiment within the safe channels
of the existing political framework. Commenting on the Dion-May
deal, a columnist from the pro-Liberal Toronto Star wrote,
[T]hey agreed not to split the progressive vote. May
herself said in reply to questions about her rapprochement with
Dion that she did not want to become Canadas Ralph
Nader.
After Nader ran for the Greens in the 2000 US presidential
elections, he was accused by the Democrats of having taken votes
away from their candidate, Al Gore, and having paved the way for
a Republican victory. May implied as much in a TV interview earlier
this year when she said, One of the things Nader said that
was wrong was saying that there is no difference between Bush
and Gore.
In fact, the whole course of US politics since Bush stole the
2000 US elections and subsequently launched wars of aggression
against Afghanistan and Iraq has demonstrated that there is no
principled difference between the Republicans and the Democrats.
The Democrats are as much a party of war as the Republicans. They
support the war aims of the US ruling elitecontrol over
the oil-rich regions of the Middle East and Central Asiabut
criticize the conduct of the war in Iraq as incompetent and lacking
a diplomatic campaign to back it up.
There is a parallel between the positions of the US Democrats
and those of the Canadian Liberals. They both raise differences
with their political opponents over tactical aspects of a right-wing
governmental agenda that they have fundamentally in common.
The Liberals continue to support the Canadian Armed Forces
participation in the US-led counter-insurgency war in Afghanistana
military intervention they themselves initiated in the fall of
2001. But they lament Harpers too-close relationship with
the Bush administration as detrimental to the Canadian ruling
elites own geopolitical ambitions. As Dion said, We
have worked so hard for Canada to have its own voice in the world,
a voice different from a Bush-style or Harper-style conservatism.
In an apparent effort to appease big business concerns that
the deal with the Greens was taking his party too far to
the left, as a Globe and Mail columnist put it, Dion
followed it three days later with a major speech on economic policy
in which he attacked the Conservatives from the right. The Liberal
leader condemned Conservative decisions to end the [tax]
deductibility of interest on loans taken out by Canadian companies
to finance overseas expansion and to tax income trusts
at a punitive rate of 31 per cent.
This was a clear signal from Dion that he intends to put into
effect his pledge to come [to the next election] with a
platform and a team that will be much more pro-business than Mr.
Harper. This is the real class orientation that the Liberals
want to cover up with the help of the Greens.
May, who describes her party as financially and fiscally
responsible, has said many times that the environment is
a moral obligation that goes beyond partisan
politics. The environmental crisis is thus divorced from
its objective roots in the existing economic system, a system
driven by personal profit and the national interests
of competing nation-states.
In reality, the increasingly complex problems of modern mass
society, including the environmental crisis, cannot be tackled
without a fundamental restructuring of the global economy. Only
by ending the subordination of socio-economic life to the pursuit
of private profit and the division of the world into rival nation-states
will it be possible to use the worlds resources in a rational
and sustainable manner so as to meet human needs.
It is worth noting that none of these basic issues of principle
were raised by Canadas social democrats, who claim to be
left opponents of the Liberals. In language similar to that used
by the Conservatives, New Democratic Party leader Jack Layton
attacked the May-Dion pact as a backroom deal between party
leaders that is undemocratic because it will
deny Canadians the full range of choices in an election.
Throughout its history, the NDP has counterposed parliamentary
protest politics to an independent political struggle by working
people against the profit system. This has led it at many critical
junctures of the class strugglesuch as during an explosive
two-year period in the early 1970s or more recently for a six-month
period in 2005to prop up minority Liberal governments and
help politically disarm the working class precisely at junctures
where the ruling elite was preparing a major shift to the right.
The NDPs current denunciations of the Liberals, including
their deal with the Greens, do not mean a break from its decades-long
practice of channeling popular discontent into the safe channels
of parliamentary protest. It expresses rather their fear of being
sidelined in the milieu of official politics. In an attempt to
maintain the NDPs parliamentary group, Layton has of late
been politically flirting with Harpers Conservatives, seizing
upon their supposed concessions on issues such as
climate change as proof that the NDPs parliamentary maneuvers
can bring progress. In so doing, the NDP is in fact
providing political cover for Canadas most right-wing government
since the Great Depression.
See Also:
Canadas Liberals make
pro-war Ignatieff their second-in-command
[29 January 2007]
Canadas social democrats
lend support to the Conservative government in the name of the
environment
[20 January 2007]
NDP rallies to the defence
of Canadian imperialism
[5 January 2007]
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