|
WSWS : News
& Analysis : North
America : Canada
Quebec state yields to right-wing provocation on eve of provincial
election
A warning to workers
By Richard Dufour
26 March 2007
Use
this version to print
| Send this
link by email | Email
the author
Confronted, on the eve of the March 26 Quebec election, by
a new eruption of xenophobia whipped up by the media and the major
political parties, Quebecs Director General of Elections
(DGE) yielded Friday to the chauvinist demand that Muslim women
be prevented from voting if they come to the polls wearing a niqab
(face veil).
This decision represents at once a reflection and the culminating
point of an election campaign dominated by a turn toward outright
social reaction on the part of Quebecs ruling elite. It
is also a warning that the next Quebec government, whatever party
or combination of parties holds office, will greatly intensify
the assault on the social conditions and democratic rights of
working people.
On March 23 the Journal de Montréal, a subsidiary
of Canadian publishing and cable giant Quebecor, published a provocative
article under the title Voting in disguise, its legal.
The Journals editors hopes that their anti-Islamic
diatribe would cause a sensation were quickly realized. The leaders
of Quebecs major parties rushed to criticize the DGEs
legally flawless ruling that women wearing the veil ought to be
permitted to vote since the election lawone of whose stated
purposes is to encourage voter participationprovides for
several means other than photo identification to ensure that individuals
who fill out a ballot on election day are legal voters.
The Director General should assure that everyone is correctly
identified, declared Liberal Premier Jean Charest. As for
André Boisclair, the head of the Parti Québécois
(PQ), Quebecs other traditional big business party,
he went even further. He completely distorted the meaning of the
electoral law, saying that these [Muslim, veiled] women
must identify themselves with an identity card and . . . have
a photo on their card.
Facing pressure from the established parties and from radio
jockeys who incited their listeners to go to the polls wearing
all sorts of masks, and having received a multitude of emails
described as aggressive, the DGE invoked a section
of the electoral law that authorizes him to make last minute rule-changes.
Electors, declared DGE Marcel Blanchet, must have their
faces uncovered in order to exercise their right to vote.
Blanchet conceded that personally he would have
preferred not to do it, but the agitation makes me
fear things will possibly boil over.
A spokesperson for the Council on American-Islamic Relations
Canada, Sarah Elgazzar, decried the about-face of the DGE, declaring
her fear that veiled Muslim women (there are an estimated fifty
in Québec) will not go to the polls for fear of being mocked,
not to speak of verbally or physically abused.
The significance of this episode is not limited to the fact
that the democratic rights of a segment of the population have
been violated. The deeper implications are revealed if one considers
the sequence of events: backwards social elements employing threats
of violence demand that the rules governing the right to vote
be rewritten; the most prominent provincial political personalities
take up their battle-cry; and the organ of the state charged with
ensuring that the voting is free and fair falls into line citing
fears of violence.
The only conclusion that can be drawn is that within the political
establishment there does not exist any substantial constituency
committed to the maintenance of traditional, democratic norms.
It is not by chance that the 2007 Québec elections should
end on such a disturbing note. The distinguishing feature of this
electoral campaign has been the rise of the right-wing populist
Action Démocratique du Québec (ADQ).
For months, its leader Mario Dumont has been trying to whip
up anti-immigrant and xenophobic prejudices by denouncing the
legal principle known as reasonable accommodation,
established in order to combat discrimination on the basis of
disability, gender, religion, race or culture.
According to this principle, an employer or public organization
is obliged to take reasonable measures, without incurring any
large expense or violating the rights of others, to favour the
social integration of an individual or group of individuals while
respecting their differences.
A virulent campaign was launched in the mass media over the
past six months to denounce supposed overzealousness
in the application of this principleoverzealousness
that Dumont claims has put Québec culture in
peril and amounts to officially-mandated groveling (à-plat-ventrisme)
on the part of the majority.
This campaign rests on monstrous amalgams and distortions.
Various incidents without any relation to the reasonable accommodation
legislation, such as the moderate frosting of the windows of a
gym at the request of a neighbouring Hassidic synagogue, are mixed
up with others containing legitimate demands, such as the right
of Sikh truck drivers working for the Port of Montreal to wear
their turbans instead of a safety helmet when the risk is minimal
to themselves and nil for others.
A public furor has been instigated over such isolated and benign
episodes as a clinics decision to treat a Jewish patient
before others so he wouldnt be forced to break the Sabbath
and the demand of a Muslim man that his wife be examined only
by female doctors.
The transparent goal of this campaign is to create the impression
that Quebec society is besieged by new arrivals bringing
with them religious obscurantism. Entire religious and immigrant
communities are thus stigmatized.
The chauvinism being stoked up against immigrants and religious
minorities, and against Muslims in particular, plays the same
role in Québec society that it is playing internationallythe
prejudices of the most backward sections of the population are
being encouraged by the media and political establishment in an
attempt to develop a social base for the most reactionary measures.
Washington, for example, presents its war of plunder for Iraqi
oil as a crusade against Islamic fundamentalism. In France, the
ruling class condemns hundreds of thousands of French young people
of North and sub-Saharan African origin to live in dilapidated,
poverty- and unemployment-stricken suburbs, then points the finger
at young Muslim girls and women who are wearing Islamic headdress
and prevents them from attending public school on the fallacious
pretext of defending secularism.
In Canada, the federal Conservative government, which has intensified
the neo-colonial Canadian Armed Forces intervention in Afghanistan
with the aim of promoting the geo-political interests of the ruling
class, presents this turn toward militarism as a response to Taliban
terror and a blow for womens liberation.
The repeated sorties of ADQ leader Mario Dumont against
unreasonable accommodation, which have played such
a large role in the 2007 Quebec elections, are similar attempts
to manipulate the popular anger, fear, and anxiety produced by
a social and economic crisis that continues to deepen and under
conditions where the traditional political establishment is completely
deaf and hostile to popular aspirations and interests.
With its traditional parties of government, the Liberals of
Charest and the Parti Québécois of André
Boisclair, less and less capable of obtaining the support of the
population for their shared program of dismantling social programs
and reducing taxes on the rich, Québec ruling elites
views the right-wing populism of Dumont as a useful tool for manipulating
social tensions and pushing public debate even further to the
right.
This is the reason for the extremely favourable coverage given
Dumont by the corporate media. Some sections of the mediathe
Journal de Montréal and various radio stationshave
amplified Dumonts chauvinist appeals. Others closer to the
traditional political establishment have on occasion criticized
Dumont for going too far in his anti-immigrant tirades,
while welcoming his contribution to public debate as a breath
of fresh air. And all the while, both sections of the media downplay
the radical character of the ADQs neo-liberal program.
It has been the ADQs proposals for tighter controls on
social spending and the complete privatization of the public health-care
system that have animated the electoral debate as far as social
and economic matters go. Throughout the campaign Charest and Boisclair
have responded by proposing like measures: to further reduce taxes
on business and the rich, to further reduce social spending, and
to continue down the road to a health-care system focused on profit.
If the ruling elite does not yet consider the ADQ a tested
political force ready to assume the reins of power, it nevertheless
has embraced Dumont and his party as a means of preparing the
political terrain for a sharp turn to the right, by pushing for
and giving legitimacy to chauvinist, socially conservative, and
neo-liberal policies.
Thus La Presse, the principal daily of the Quebec elite,
declared in an editorial last week, To the extent that it
does not result in the ADQ becoming the government in the short-term,
the renaissance of the ADQ is welcome. This party represents a
deep nationalist and conservative current . . This current, fed
by an evident and often justified popular anger, must have a place
[in Quebec politics] commensurate with its real strength.
From the standpoint of the establishment, another useful function
of the ADQ is to serve as a political scarecrowaiding the
two traditional parties in their desperate efforts to convince
workers and the middle class to continue to vote for them, under
the pretext that they represent a lesser evil when
compared with Dumont.
Popular disgust with the traditional parties is such that the
outcome of Mondays votes remains highly uncertain. The dream
scenario of the most powerful sections of the ruling classa
Liberal majority government with a strong presence of the ADQ
in the National Assembly so as to maintain pressure on Charest
from the rightis far from guaranteed.
A serious warning must be delivered to workers and to all those
who are concerned with the defence of democratic rights. The right-wing
populist ideas advanced throughout the election by Mario Dumont,
and to which Boisclair and Charest have increasingly adapted themselves,
have brought into the foreground of political life the most backward
social elements.
Responsibility for this dangerous turn of events falls entirely
on the traditional leadership of the working classthe trade
union bureaucracyand the middle class protest groups that
are tied to the bureaucracys apron-strings. Defenders of
the capitalist system, which is the source of their own privileges,
the union bureaucrats in Quebec have historically subordinated
the working class to the big business PQ.
The repeated attempts of the working class in the past period
to challenge the big business assault on wages, working conditions
and public services have been systematically suppressed by the
unions in the name of social peace. The Charest Liberal
government, whose attempts to take a wrecking ball to what remains
of the welfare state provoked a wave of social unrest in December
2003 and the spring of 2005, owes its survival to the unions
sabotage.
The union bureaucracy and its nationalist, pro-capitalist perspective
have led the working class into a blind alley.
The bourgeoisies patronage of the chauvinist ADQ, the
Liberals and PQs support for changing the voting rules
in accordance with a right-wing provocation., and the DEGs
capitulation before threats of racist violence demonstrate the
indifference of the entire bourgeois establishment to democratic
rights and give a preview of the deeply reactionary nature of
the government that will emerge from the 2007 election whatever
its composition.
To prepare for the battles ahead, workers in Quebec consciously
repudiate the union bureaucracys alliance with the PQ and
join hands with their class brothers and sisters across Canada
and around the world in developing a socialist-internationalist
challenge to the profit system.
See Also:
Parti Quebecois stumbles through Quebec
election campaign
[26 March 2007]
Canadian abuse of Afghan POWs: Harper
smears his critics as pro-Taliban
[23 March 2007]
Quebec elections 2007: Quebec Federation
of Labour officially backs Parti Québécois
[14 March 2007]
The March 26 Quebec elections and the
Canadian elites turn to the right
[6 March 2007]
Bloc Québécois
support for Canadas Afghan war exposed
[27 December 2006]
Top of page
The WSWS invites your comments.
Copyright 1998-2008
World Socialist Web Site
All rights reserved |