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Canadas Liberals make pro-war Ignatieff their second-in-command
By Richard Dufour
29 January 2007
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Michael Ignatieffthe former Harvard professor who has
written extensively in support of pre-emptive war,
the curbing of democratic rights, and torturehas been confirmed
as the number-two man in Canadas Liberal party.
Federal Liberal leader Stéphane Dion named Ignatieff
the vice-chairman of a new Priorities and Planning Committee,
which mirrors a powerful cabinet committee of the same name, when
he unveiled his shadow cabinet January 18. Dion will himself head
the new committee.
Ignatieffs planning committee appointment comes on the
heels of his selection as the partys deputy leader. Dion
named Ignatieff deputy leader in mid-December, just days after
winning the Liberal leadership at a delegate-convention over Ignatieff,
although the latter was supported by the majority of the party
establishment.
There are numerous instances in Canadian politics when the
number two-finisher in a party-leadership contest has quickly
withdrawn from active politics. The titles and responsibilities
Dion has awarded Ignatieff make clear that he wants his erstwhile
leadership rival to play a pivotal role in the party and a possible
future Liberal government for years to come.
Ignatieff has a long record as a liberal advocate of imperialist
war and of Bushs war on terror. In the decade
prior to his return to Canada in 2005, he lent his credentials
as a scholar of the liberal political-philosophical tradition
and human rights expert to support imperialist intervention in
Yugoslavia, to campaign for revising international law to give
the great powers the right to violate national sovereignty in
the name of an obligation to protect, advanced arguments
to justify the Bush administrations assault on democratic
rights, and sought to drum up support for the 2003 illegal US
invasion of Iraq. In a May 2004 piece for the New York Times
Magazine, he argued, for example, for indefinite detention
of suspects, coercive interrogations, targeted assassinations,
even pre-emptive war.
Public opinion, meanwhile, has increasingly turned against
the war in Iraq, as demonstrated by the stunning reversal that
the Republicans suffered in last Novembers US congressional
elections.
Canadas own neo-colonial military intervention in Afghanistan
is also facing mounting popular opposition.
Undoubtedly, the weakening of the Bush administration and the
unpopularity of Canadas Afghan intervention, which Ignatieff
has enthusiastically promoted, were significant, if not decisive,
factors in his failure to win the Liberal Party leadership.
His elevation to the Liberals number two, however, makes
clear that Canadas traditional governing party is no less
committed than the Conservatives to aggressively defending the
ruling elites economic and geopolitical interests in the
world, whatever the cost for the living standards, democratic
rights and lives of working people and youth in Canada and overseas.
Since his defeat in the leadership race, Ignatieff has continued
pushing for his militarist agenda. During a private meeting with
Liberal MPs and senators in the aftermath of the leadership convention,
he reportedly warned Dion not to let Afghanistan divide the party.
He took particular exception to the fact that several Liberal
MPsincluding Dion himselfhad voted against a Conservative
motion last May to extend Canadas military intervention
in southern Afghanistan, where Canadian troops are embroiled in
a colonial-type counterinsurgency war, by two years to February
2009.
Dion and others had criticized the way that motion was rushed
through Parliament by Prime Minister Stephen Harper, with little
advance notice given and only a few hours allowed for debate.
The new Liberal leader has since repeatedly made clear that he
and his party do not oppose the Afghan intervention.
We are in Afghanistan to help the population live more
securely, Dion claimed at a news conference wrapping up
a two-day party caucus meeting to prepare for todays return
of parliament from Christmas break.
We support the troops, insisted Dion. He only wants
the House of Commons foreign affairs committee to have hearings
on ways to improve this missionthat is, to make
it more palatable for the Canadian public by placing greater emphasis
on reconstruction projects and by pressing Canadas NATO
allies to shoulder more of the burden of fighting the insurgency.
The Liberal leader declared that demanding a pullout of Canadas
2,200 soldiers from their combat rolea demand raised by
the social-democratic NDP for opportunist reasons--was nothing
short of shameful.
Such language is meant to reassure Canadas corporate
elite that the Liberals will not shy away from taking tough,
unpopular decisionsincluding continuing a bloody counterinsurgency
operation, which has resulted in significant civilian casualties,
in one of the worlds poorest countriesto assert Canadian
capitals global interests and ambitions.
The Chrétien/Martin Liberal government, which held power
from 1993 to last January and in which Dion served in the cabinet
for a decade, presided over a massive redistribution of wealth
toward those at the top in the form of massive tax breaks for
the rich and the gutting of vitally needed public and social services,
including health care, education, unemployment benefits and welfare.
While Jean Chrétien refrained at the eleventh hour from
joining Washingtons so-called coalition of the willing
in waging war on Iraq and submitting its population to death and
terror on a gigantic scale, he had previously deployed Canadian
troops to Afghanistan and embarked on a major expansion and rearmament
of Canadas armed forces. His successor, Paul Martin, as
part of a policy of aligning Canada even more closely with Washington,
agreed to send large numbers of Canadian troops into battle in
southern Afghanistan beginning in February of last year, thereby
allowing the Bush administration to shift more troops to Iraq.
Nevertheless, the Canadian elite came to view the Liberals
as moving too cautiously both at home and abroad in asserting
their predatory interests under conditions of ever-intensifying
global competition for markets, resources and geo-political influence.
With the benchmark in terms of attacking the living standards
of working people and waging wars of plunder abroad being set
by the giant neighbor and rival to the south, Canadian big business
demanded an intensification of socially regressive measures at
home and a more aggressive foreign policy, and, toward this end,
shifted decisively behind the neo-conservative ideologue Stephen
Harper and his Conservatives in the January 2006 federal election.
The strong support that the Liberal Party establishment gave
the leadership bid of Ignatieffalthough he had lived outside
of Canada for most of the preceding three decades and had only
become an MP in the January 2006 electionwas a response
to this more anxious and more aggressive mood within the Canadian
elite.
Harper has shifted Canadian politics significantly to the right,
echoing Bushs support for the Israeli invasion of Lebanon,
championing the Canadian military intervention in Afghanistan,
dramatically hiking military spending, introducing a raft of reactionary
law and order measures, making tax and spending policy changes
to enrich the privileged and starve public services, and scuttling
a national daycare initiative. But to the chagrin of big business,
Harper, despite lavish favorable press coverage and an agenda
carefully constructed to camouflage the extent and reach of the
Conservatives right-wing agenda, has failed to boost his
partys popular support. Indeed, most recent opinion polls
have shown the Conservatives trailing the Liberals.
With Harpers close ally Bush mired in crisis and the
Conservatives apparently unable to broaden their appeal, sections
of the ruling elite are turning their attention to grooming the
Liberal Party, which in the past has so effectively implemented
big businesss wishes by posing as a party of social justice
and using its political opponents on the right as a foil, for
a return to office.
Hence, the attention given by the Globe and Mail and
other sections of the corporate media to the change in Liberal
leadership.
Dion, for his part, is anxious to prove to Canadas elite
that he is the best defender of their interests. Alongside his
promotion of Ignatieff and defence of the Canadian intervention
in Afghanistan, he has pledged to uphold the Chrétien-Martin
record of fiscal responsibility and instructed his
MPs to continue their efforts to force the Conservative government
to delay the introduction of a tax on income-trusts. Income-trusts
have proliferated in recent years, because they enable businesses
to escape all taxation on their income and profits.
See Also:
Canadas social democrats lend support
to the Conservative government in the name of the environment
[20 January 2007]
Canada: Cabinet shuffle points to spring
elections
[12 January 2007]
Why the Canadian Liberals
elected Stéphane Dion as new leader
[5 December 2006]
Canadas Liberal
leadership contesta race to the right
[1 December 2006]
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