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America : Canada
Canadas Conservative government outlines agenda of social
reaction and war
By Keith Jones
19 October 2007
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Canadas minority Conservative government inaugurated
a new session of parliament Tuesday with a Throne Speech that
outlined a legislative agenda aimed at pushing the country sharply
right.
Key initiatives include extending the Canadian Armed Forces
(CAFs) counter-insurgency operation in Afghanistan to 2011,
further tax cuts for big business and the well-to-do, legislation
designed to hobble the ability of future federal governments to
initiate new social programs, a slew of reactionary law-and-order
amendments to the criminal code, and anti-terrorist measures that
overturn longstanding juridical principles.
Canadas governing party since February 2006, the Conservatives
chose in the late summer to prorogue parliament and present a
fresh Throne Speech, so as to reclaim the political initiative
and thereby give themselves the option of precipitating an early
election with the aim of securing a parliamentary majority.
Big business and the corporate media have been strongly supportive
of Stephen Harpers Conservative government, and especially
the shift it has made in Canadas geo-political and military
posture as exemplified by the CAF intervention in Afghanistan.
But opinion polls have consistently shown that the Conservatives
enjoy the support of only about a third of the electorate and
that a majority of Canadians oppose Canadas participation
in the Afghan war.
Tuesdays Throne Speech had a double purpose. It was aimed
at further strengthening the Conservatives big business
support by demonstrating the Harper government is determined to
push forward with corporate Canadas socio-economic agenda.
It was also designed to lay the groundwork for an election
campaign in which the Conservatives will seek to win a plurality
of votes40 percent of the vote is generally sufficient to
eke out a parliamentary majorityby making various reactionary
populist appeals. Thus, the speech sought to portray the Conservatives
as the defenders of Canadian families and ordinary
Canadians, by pointing to tax cuts that have put more
money in (Canadians) pockets, pledged to take stern measures
to stamp out a non-existent crime epidemic, and extolled an assertive,
militarist, Canadian nationalism.
Bolstering the Canadian elites predatory
ambitions on the world stage
The Throne Speech identified five Conservative government priorities.
Significantly, the first of these was strengthening Canadas
sovereignty and place in the world.
In pursuit of this priority, the Harper Conservatives pledged
to press forward with modernizing the Canadian militarythe
current government has announced almost C$20 billion worth of
new arms expendituresand lauded Canadas military intervention
in support of Afghanistans US-installed puppet regime as
proof of the governments commitment to restore Canadian
influence in global affairs.
The speech implicitly criticized the Liberal governments of
Jean Chretien and Paul Martin, which initiated the rapid expansion
of Canadas military and ordered CAF participation in the
Yugoslav and Afghan wars and the 2004 US-orchestrated coup in
Haiti, for weakening Canadas international influence by
concentrating on rhetoric and posturing. In contrast,
it vowed that the current government will provide international
leadership through concrete actions that bring results.
If there was any doubt as to what this meant, it was clarified
in the very next statement, a which underscores that the Harper
government is readying the CAF to fight a series of US-led wars:
A commitment to action means that Canada must make common
cause with those fighting for the values we uphold.
The Conservatives have repeatedly signaled that they want to
extend the current deployment of CAF personnel to Afghanistan
beyond February 2009. In Tuesdays Throne Speech, the government
publicly declared its intentions, announcing that the current
mission should be extended to 2011, although it added, in an echo
of the Bush administrations stand on US troop deployments
in Iraq, that the CAFs role will increasingly focus on training
Afghan army and police.
In Wednesdays parliamentary debate on the Throne Speech,
Harper went even further, specifying that post-February 2009,
he wants the CAF to remain deployed in Kandahari.e., to
continue to be in the very thick of the Afghan war.
Under this priority, the government also outlined plans to
assert Canadas claims to the oil and mineral wealth of the
Arctic. It promised to establish a world-class arctic research
station; collect the scientific-cartographic data to back
Canadas claim before the UN for a vast swathe of the Arctic
Ocean seabed; deploy military patrol boats to, and increase air
surveillance of, the Arctic; and expand the Arctic Rangers (a
part-time CAF militia).
The speech pointed to the growing opportunities in the Arctic,
an oblique reference to business hopes that global warming will
facilitate the regions capitalist development, but also
spoke of new challengesthat is, the growing
geo-political competition among Canada, Russia, the US and the
other polar states.
Under the heading, strengthening the federation and our
democratic institutions, the Conservatives pledged to refocus
the federal government on neglected core responsibilities such
as trade, defence, public safety and security
Towards that end, the Harper government will introduce legislation
limiting the federal governments power to establish new
programs in areas of provincial jurisdictionunder Canadas
constitution, the provinces have almost exclusive responsibility
for social policy, including healthcare, welfare and educationand
will consider invoking little-used federal powers
over trade and commerce to remove provincial trade barriers.
In this section of the speech, the Conservatives also served
notice that they intend to step up their chauvinist agitation
against veiled Muslim women voting in federal elections. Although
at most only a few thousand voters are involved and Elections
Canada officials have testified that they have adequate means
to verify the identity of veiled voters (let alone those who choose
to vote by mail-in-ballot), the government has vowed in the name
of democracy to introduce legislation to compel Muslim women to
take off their veils if they want to exercise their democratic
right to vote.
A big business economic agenda
The Conservatives economic and environmental initiatives,
respectively the third and fifth mentioned priorities, closely
followed the policy prescriptions of big business. The Throne
Speech pledged that the government will make broad-based
tax cuts, including corporate tax cuts, the building of infrastructure
to facilitate North American and trans-Pacific trade, and fostering
an entrepreneurial environment (i.e., deregulation)
top priorities. It also renounced Canadas commitment to
the Kyoto Accord on greenhouse gases and said that the government
will work with the US, Australia and others outside the accord
to develop a program for reducing emissions more in line with
the needs of big business and its goal of making Canada an
energy superpower.
The Throne Speech labeled the Conservatives fourth priority
as tackling crime and strengthening the security of Canadians.
In lines worthy of an authoritarian regime, it declared that there
is no greater responsibility for a government than to protect
[the] right to safety and security.
The speech claimed Canadians feel less safe today and
rightly worry about the security of the neighbourhoods.
But if this is truegovernment crime statistics show a drop
in most forms of crimethis is because the Conservatives,
their close allies in the Bush administration, and the corporate
media have whipped up fear of crime and terrorism, so as to garner
votes and justify the building up of the repressive powers of
the state and militarism.
One day after the Throne Speech, the Conservatives tabled Bill
C-2, The Tackling Violent Crime Bill and have promised to
soon introduce further amendments to the criminal code. Bill C-2
is an omnibus bill that brings together most of five anti-crime
bills that failed to be passed into law during the past parliamentary
session. It would, among other things, raise the age of consent
for sex, impose higher mandatory sentences for gun crimes, make
it more difficult for those accused of gun crimes to get bail,
and place the onus on persons convicted of three violent or sexual
crimes to prove that they should not be labeled a violent offender,
a designation making them liable to much longer incarceration.
The Conservatives also announced in their Throne Speech that
they intend to introduce new anti-terrorism legislation, so as
to restore provisions of the post-September 2001 law allowing
preventive detention and compelled interrogation. These provisions
lapsed earlier this year. They also intend to create a slightly
modified form of national security certificatesan order
whereby the government can indefinitely detain, without trial,
and without the detainee having access to the evidence against
him or her, any non-Canadian citizen deemed a threat to national
security. Earlier this year, the Supreme Court ruled that the
current national security certificate legislation is unconstitutional.
The Throne Speech and the Liberal crisis
If a government fails to secure parliamentary approval of its
Throne Speech, it falls.
As indicated both by its right-wing agenda and populist appeals,
the Conservatives speech was crafted with a view to an early
election.
But due to an earlier Conservative maneuver aimed at strengthening
the government holds on officethe passage of a bill
formally setting the date for the next federal electionthe
Conservatives dont have the leeway previous governments
have had in asking the Governor-General to dissolve parliament.
For an election to be called, the government will have to be
defeatedwhether willingly or noton a non-confidence
motion, the Throne Speech, a money bill, or any other piece of
legislation declared by the government to be a matter of confidence.
Believing the Conservatives now have the political advantage,
Harper has said passage of the Throne Speech will constitute parliamentary
approval for the governments agenda, and that, consequently,
the opposition parties should, if it passes, forgo their power
to block Conservative legislative initiatives. Toward that end,
adds Harper, the government will declare bills arising from the
Thorne Speech matters of confidence.
Prior to the Throne Speech, two of the three opposition parties,
the social-democratic New Democratic Party (NDP) and the pro-Quebec-independence
Bloc Quebecois (BQ), had all but announced that they would vote
against it.
Canadas social democrats facilitated the coming to power
of the Conservatives in the 2006 election by echoing Harpers
claim that the key issue in the election was Liberal corruption
and subsequently offered to work with the new minority government.
But the Conservatives rejected these overtures so as to be
able to pursue their right-wing agenda unencumbered, especially
after the NDP leadership, under conditions of mounting public
opposition to the Afghan war, withdrew its support for the CAFs
counter-insurgency mission in southern Afghanistan.
The BQ has repeatedly voted to prop up the Conservatives with
the claim that the Harper governments willingness to curtail
the federal governments role in social policy corresponds
with Quebecs interests. But after suffering a series of
electoral setbacks, the BQ has concluded that it best put some
distance between itself and the government.
The official opposition Liberals, by contrast, signaled that
they would vote against the budget only if contained a poison
pill, because the Canadian electorate, or so claim the Liberals,
doesnt want a third federal election in three years.
This was a patent subterfuge. The Liberals are in disarray,
with the Quebec wing in quasi-revolt against the national leadership
following the partys disastrous showing in four September
by-elections, and palpably fear a mauling if a federal election
were held before the end of the year.
Liberal leader Stephane Dion denounced the Conservative Throne
Speech Wednesday, but then announced that his party will abstain
when it comes to a vote, thus ensuring the Harper Conservative
government remains in office.
While the corporate media has criticized Dion for calling for
the current CAF mission in Afghanistan to end in February 2009
and for striking an electoral pact with the Green Party, it generally
attributes the Liberal crisis to Dions reputed failures
as a leader and internecine fighting within the party.
In reality, the Liberal crisis is a product of the sharp turn
of the Canadian bourgeoisie to the right.
The Liberals well recognize that the most powerful sections
of Canadian capital are currently backing the Conservatives as
the best instrument for pursuing their predatory agenda. Moreover,
much of the Liberal party establishment agrees with the basic
direction of the Harper government.
This is exemplified by the emergence of Michael Ignatieff,
a prominent liberal advocate of the Iraq War and the use of torture
in the so-called war on terror, as Deputy Liberal Party leader.
In May 2006, Ignatieff led more than a quarter of the Liberal
caucus in voting to extend the CAF counter-insurgency campaign
in Afghanistan for two years. (The majority of Liberal MPs, mind
you, voted against the Conservative motion on procedural grounds,
not necessarily because they opposed prolonging the CAF deployment.)
Last week, John Manley, for several years Chretiens finance
minister and deputy prime minister, agreed to serve as chairman
of the independent committee of experts Harper has
appointed to give non-partisan sanction to his decision
that the CAF should remain deployed in Afghanistan post-February
2009.
Dion, while making a calibrated appeal to popular opposition
to Harpers close alliance with US President George Bush
and pro-big oil environmental policy, has himself attacked the
Conservatives for not being sufficiently pro-big business. In
an address to the Economic Club of Toronto last week, Dion pledged
a Liberal government would move aggressively to slash corporate
taxes.
Exploiting the crisis in the Liberal ranks, Harper has taken
the political offensive, mocking Dion for abstaining on the budget
and demanding that the Liberals give the Conservatives an effective
free hand in pushing through their reactionary agenda.
But the reality is the Conservative government rests on a narrow
base, socially and even regionally. There is not a single Conservative
MP from Montreal or Toronto. And while the government boasts about
the strength of the Canadian economy, it fears that the crisis
in the US housing market will impact heavily on the North American
economy.
The strength of the Conservatives derives from the sharp turn
of the bourgeoisie to social reaction and war and the political
disenfranchisement of the working class. Over the past quarter
century, the organizations that historically claimed to speak
for the working class, the unions and NDP have renounced even
their traditional reformist programs and emerged as open accomplices
of capital in the assault on the working class.
See Also:
Harper commits billions to
build Canada an Arctic navy
[19 July 2007]
The Canadian Ministers
of Hamid Karzais Afghan government
[4 July 2007]
Why the Canadian Liberals
elected Stéphane Dion as new leader
[5 December 2006]
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