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The March 26 Quebec elections and the Canadian elites
turn to the right
By Richard Dufour
6 March 2007
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Canadas minority Conservative government and the most
powerful sections of the Canadian ruling elite are seeking to
use the March 26 Quebec provincial election as a means of shifting
politics sharply further right in Quebec and across Canada.
It is common knowledge that the federal Conservativeswho
have expanded the Canadian armed forces participation in
a colonial-type counterinsurgency war in southern Afghanistan,
vowed to expand the Canadian military to the point that the worlds
major powers take notice, and aligned Canada even more closely
with the Bush administrations predatory global ambitionsview
the re-election of Quebecs Liberal government as pivotal
to their own plans for winning a parliamentary majority in the
next federal election.
The Liberal government of Jean Charest, which won a five-year
mandate in April 2003, could have waited till spring 2008 to go
to the polls. But after consultations with Stephen Harpers
federal Conservatives, Quebec Premier Jean Charest decided to
call early elections in hopes of taking advantage of a spurt in
popular support as measured by the opinion polls and, thereby,
delivering a major blow to their common Quebec indépendantistes
political rivals, organized in the Parti Québecois (PQ)
and, at the federal level, the Bloc Québecois (BQ).
In 2003 the Liberals ousted a nine-year-old PQ government by
making vague and hypocritical appeals to popular anger over a
dramatic deterioration in the quality of healthcare, education
and other public services and by rallying the support of big business
and the corporate media with promises to slash taxes on business
and high-income earners, amend the labour code to facilitate the
contracting out of work, and scale back the size of the
state.
The Liberals right-wing agenda soon brought them into
headlong conflict with the working class and for most of the past
four years the Liberals and Charest have registered the lowest
or among the lowest-ever popular support recorded for a sitting
Quebec government and premier.
Although the Charest Liberal government proved unable, due
to popular opposition, to fulfill its pledge to slash income taxes
by $15 billion over five years, it did succeed in imposing a raft
of right-wing measures.
Especially important was legislation establishing a mechanism
for the dismantling of Medicare, the universal, public health
insurance program, by allowing the private sector to insure and
provide at partial state expense hip, knee and cataract surgery.
This list, moreover, is soon to be expanded to include such medical
procedures as cardiac care and cancer-related surgery.
In December 2005, the Charest government used an emergency
law to strip half a million healthcare, education, and other provincial
public sector workers of the legal right to strike until March
2010 and impose on them seven-year contracts providing wage increases
well below the annual rate of inflation.
The immense popular opposition to the Liberals right-wing
agenda twice burst into the open. In December 2003 there was a
wave of demonstrations and walkouts and widespread calls from
workers for a general strike; in the winter and spring of 2005
a student strike forced the closure of many of Quebecs post-secondary
institutions for days and in many cases weeks.
These opposition movements were torpedoed by the trade union
bureaucracy, lest they become a threat not just to the Quebec
government but to the Canadian ruling elite as a whole. As Confederation
of National Trades Union President Claudette Carbonneau argued
at the height of the December 2003 anti-Charest protests, I
do not wish that he [Charest] give up his right to legislate and
to govern.
The union bureaucracys suppression of the working class
opposition to the Liberal government is the first reason why Charest
has been able to make a political comeback.
A second reason is that Quebecs other major big business
party, the Parti Québécois (PQ), can hardly differentiate
itself from the Liberals, being obsessed with the desire to, in
the words of party leader André Boisclair, comfort
capital by making Quebec the most profitable place in the
world to invest.
Boisclairs open courting of big business follows in the
wake of nine years of PQ rule, from 1994 to 2003, which saw PQ
premiers Jacques Parizeau, Lucien Bouchard, and Bernard Landry
impose the greatest social spending cuts in Quebec history, then,
when the annual provincial budget deficit had been eliminated,
declare tax cuts their first priority.
Neither the right-wing governmental record of the PQ, nor the
self-proclaimed pro-business agenda of the partys head,
has dissuaded the unions from maintaining and reaffirming their
political support for this capitalist party. At a special congress
last weekend, the Quebec Federation of Labour, Quebecs largest
trade union federation with a half million members, voted to endorse
the PQ in the current election campaign.
Charest has also benefited from increased big business support.
Capital was long-chagrined by the Liberals failure to
fully implement their tax-cutting pledges and there were even
complaints that Charest was jeopardizing the Quebec model
of using the labour bureaucracy to push through major anti-working
class measures by engaging in inflammatory, antiunion rhetoric.
But in the past 18 months, the corporate elite in Quebec and
across Canada has warmed to Charest. While a factor in this is
the fears of the most powerful sections of capital of a return
of the PQ to power and a third referendum on Quebec independence,
Charest has won business accolades for his success in targeting
Medicare and public sector workers, even while repositioning himself
as a moderate.
The latter tack has been facilitated by the emergence of the
Action démocratique du Québec or ADQ, a party that
denounces universal social programs in the name of personal freedom
and preaches the most vulgar forms of chauvinism and anti-immigrant
prejudice. It is being used by the ruling elite to push public
debate even further to the right. And established bourgeois parties
such as Charests Liberals use it as a foil to conceal their
own reactionary agenda and appeal to voters as the lesser evil.
If the Canadian ruling class favours the re-election of Charest,
as testified by a Globe and Mail editorial that praised
him as a sensitive, mature politician who has brought good
government to his province, it is not only as a way to maintain
the right-wing trajectory of Quebec politics.
Canadian capital sees the Quebec elections as having a major
impact on the federal political equation.
Charest, himself a former head of the federal Progressive Conservatives,
is a long-time and key political ally of federal Conservative
Prime Minister Stephan Harper, who has led a minority government
in Ottawa for the past 13 months. The re-election of the Quebec
Liberals is seen by many analysts and Conservative strategists
as an essential element in Harpers efforts to secure a majority
in a fresh federal election that could be engineered as early
as this spring.
One of the highlights of the Quebec election campaign will
be the tabling of a federal budget scheduled for March 19, barely
a week before polling day. The Harper government, which advocates
a decentralization of the Canadian federation as a mechanism to
undermine national social programs, could announce a major transfer
of powers and funds from Ottawa to the provinces. That would make
it possible for Charest to praise the virtues of Canadian federalism,
the better to denounce the sovereignty or separatist option promoted
by the PQ.
Charests reelection would in turn be seized upon by Harper
as evidence that his so-called openness to Quebec,
i.e., to the demands of Quebecs elite for more powers, is
paying off for Canada. He would then be tempted to precipitate
federal elections in the hope that an increased Quebec Conservative
vote would be enough to give him the majority government that
he covets in order to push ahead with a radical right-wing agenda.
For Harpers Conservatives, in other words, hopes of forming
a majority government do not rest upon the prospect of convincing
the public of the soundness of their positions. This would be
a near insurmountable task, given the very weak popular support
for a program aimed at dismantling what remains of the welfare
state, trampling upon democratic rights under the pretext of a
war on terrorism, and conducting an aggressive foreign
policy to assert the geo-strategic interests of the Canadian ruling
class.
Harper, who in the last election sought to bamboozle the electorate
with a demagogic campaign focusing on Liberal corruption and law
and order, hopes rather to consolidate the Conservative grip on
power by manipulating the electoral process and regional divisions
within the elite.
The use of such methods, based on contempt for public opinion,
is inseparable from the political agenda being pursued by the
Conservatives and the political establishment as a wholean
agenda that in the name of free markets aims to subordinate ever
more completely the social needs of the majority to the profit
interests of a tiny minority of capitalist owners and to revive
the Canadian states militarist traditions so that Canadas
elite can take an active part in the neo-colonial re-division
of the world.
By aligning Canadas foreign policy still more closely
with Washingtonsas demonstrated in its decision to
extend the Canadian Armed Forces intervention in Afghanistan
and to rally to the support of Israel when it invaded Lebanon
last summerthe Harper government is tying the Canadian bourgeoisies
fortunes to the most destabilizing and incendiary element in contemporary
world politics. Following its fiasco in Iraq, the Bush administration
is getting ready to launch another war of conquest, this time
against Iran, while whipping up communal conflict in the region.
For a US administration politically weakened by its catastrophic
failure in Iraq and the rout suffered at the 2006 midterm elections,
and on the verge of launching another military adventure with
incalculable consequences, the support of a country like Canadathat
long maintained for its own reasons the posture of a foreign policy
independent of Washingtoncould play an important role.
Within the framework of Harpers electoral manoeuvring
to consolidate his grip on power and reinforce Canadas collaboration
with Washington, the Quebec elections could become a link in an
international chain of events leading to a major conflagration
in a critical area of the world.
It is, thus, all the more imperative for working people in
Quebec and Canada to raise the life-and-death issues that will
be kept out of the Quebec election campaignthe neo-colonial
wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, and the unending attacks on the
democratic rights and living standards of working people at home.
The urgent task of the hour is the building of a mass global
movement of working people against the imperialist wars being
carried out and planned by the United States and their allies,
including Canada.
To the nationalistic calls being made by all parties in the
Quebec elections working people must counterpose the international
unity of workers in a common struggle against the root cause of
war and mounting social inequality, the profit system.
See Also:
Canadas Afghan interventionthree
probes launched into prisoner abuse
[16 February 2007]
Canadas Liberals make
pro-war Ignatieff their second-in-command
[29 January 2007]
Bloc Québécois
support for Canadas Afghan war exposed
[27 December 2006]
Canada: Parti Québécois
seeks to rally business support
[8 December 2006]
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