[mobglob-discuss] 2004 Canadian federal elections - Canada is entering a new period of turmoil
Chris Palecek
Chris at Marxist.ca
Wed Jun 23 16:35:32 PDT 2004
2004 Canadian federal elections
Canada is entering a new period of turmoil
By Russ Piffer and Alex Grant
The 2004 Canadian federal election is looking to be the closest race since
the 1970s. The Liberals hold a narrow lead over the Conservative Party, with
the New Democrats looking to make gains and the Bloc Quebecois optimistic
that it will retain much of the Quebec vote. For the first time in over a
decade, the Liberals are in a position where they could fail to win a
majority government.
When Paul Martin replaced Jean Chretien as Prime Minister this January, few
would have thought he'd find his government in such a predicament only six
months down the road. The Liberals seemed as solid as ever. Martin was to be
a dose of fresh blood that would remove any public concerns that the party
had grown stagnant during ten years of Chretien leadership. The Canadian
Alliance and Progressive Conservatives were locked in the same talks of
uniting the right that had failed to succeed so many times before. And as
for the New Democrats, they had languished low in the polls for years.
Then in March came the sponsorship scandal. The auditor general revealed
that Liberal bureaucrats and Crown Corporation chiefs were funnelling
millions of dollars worth of public money into their own pockets. The
Liberals' slide in the polls began almost immediately.
However, to say that the Liberal Party's fall in the polls is strictly the
result of the sponsorship scandal alone is to oversimplify the situation.
Rather, the drop in support that followed the sponsorship scandal is an
expression of a discontent with the ruling government that had long been
festering. Paul Martin's reception as Prime Minister was not nearly as warm
as expected; voter turnout is at record lows, and years of cuts to public
spending have taken a toll on the social infrastructure. While the polls
leading up to the scandal may have said that 60 percent of the population
supported the government, what they did not say was that the resolution with
which that 60 percent supported the government had been dwindling for some
time. The sponsorship scandal was merely the event that finally pushed
people from increasingly reluctant support for the government to actual
opposition. Marxism explains that necessity is sometimes expressed through
accident.
The newly formed Conservative Party of Canada, which came into being when
the Canadian Alliance annexed the Progressive Conservative Party and renamed
itself yet again, has leapt all over the Liberal's sponsorship scandal. Such
misappropriations of the public's money are synonymous with the type of big
government the Liberals offer, claims opposition leader Stephen Harper. The
Liberals are overtaxing Canadians and mismanaging their money. The
government is an over-sized, corrupt bureaucracy that has been in power too
long to be in touch with ordinary Canadians. According to the Conservatives,
what is needed to revitalize Canada is a drastic tax cut (for middle income
earners) and a move towards smaller, hands-off government.
In response, Martin is attacking Harper as a betrayer of Canadian values. A
Conservative government would dismantle our social programs (or at least
what's left of them after the last 10 years of Liberal government) and make
us more like America. Martin who was elected Liberal leader on the support
of the party's right wing now finds himself between a rock and a hard place.
Out of one side of his mouth he attempts to cater to the will of the
electorate, promising to put drastic amounts of money back into healthcare.
Out of the other, he must prove his loyalty to the interests of those who
supported his leadership, vowing that putting more money into healthcare
will not mean higher taxes. Precisely where Martin intends to find this
surplus of cash (or whether it can be found at all) is apparently one of
those things that can only be discovered once he is safely back in office
for the next four years.
Despite all their campaign rhetoric, the Liberals and Conservatives more
than anything else, both defend the rights of the ruling class. Harper,
through the looser economic regulations that come with smaller government',
wishes to open the floodgates to American capital, while Martin, using the
guise of Canadian values' wishes to defend the interests of himself, and
the Canadian business class that supports him, from that US capital. Neither
party will improve the lives of working people in Canada. Paul Martin's
promises to restore healthcare ring about as hollow as those made ten years
earlier by Jean Chretien to eliminate the GST and rebuild the welfare state.
The New Democratic Party is currently faced with the greatest opportunity to
win public support that it has had in years. The Canadian people are
dissatisfied not only with the current political situation, but with the
roots of the bourgeois democratic process itself. This is indicated not only
by the drop in support for the Liberals but the drop in voter turnout that
has been seen in recent years. Young people especially, while more
politically active than ever before, are voting in record low numbers.
It is not an accident that the increased support for the NDP coincides with
a leftward movement in the party. The election last year of Jack Layton as
leader represented the final defeat of the Blairite "Third Way" faction.
Layton has courted all sections of the party (left and right, green and
labour) and has enthused the rank-and-file. The 2004 NDP election platform
is the most left-wing since the 1980s. It includes a new higher tax bracket
for those earning more than $250,000 per year, reverses Liberal corporate
tax breaks, and implements an inheritance tax on estates greater than $1
million. In total this will raise about $10 billion per year. The NDP's
redistributive program offers reforms in the way of eliminating income tax
for those earning less than $15,000, reducing tuition fees by 10%, investing
$29 billion in healthcare and halting privatization, doubling the child tax
credit, creating 2 new national holidays, creating 200,000 low-cost
childcare spaces, giving 5 cents per litre of the gas tax for reconstruction
of cities, creating a new nationalized crown corporation for green energy
(mostly wind power), and on top of all of this the NDP proposes to remove
general sales tax from family essentials such as children's clothing, school
supplies, and women's hygiene products. Marxists have consistently
criticized social democratic parties for not offering the working class any
reason to vote for them here we see Canada's labour party offering real
reforms and in response their national support has doubled.
However, it is wrong to view the NDP platform as any sort of solution. There
is an important catch the reforms are planned to be within a balanced
budget and if this cannot be reached then the package will be curtailed. The
plan is supposed to be achievable if budget surpluses reach a projected $50
billion per year. Herein lies the problem the NDP platform is
fundamentally utopian while Canada has a capitalist economy. There are very
good internal and external reasons why the NDP's targets will not be
reached. As we have explained in previous articles, Canada's economy is
dependent on selling manufactured goods to the USA. This is a well that is
likely to run dry in the next period. George Bush has built up a massive
debt load to fund his imperialist adventures. This will likely lead to a
period of austerity or protectionism cutting the market for Canadian
goods. Internally the reforms will face both the political and economic
pressure of the ruling class. The banks and finance houses will organize a
credit strike against any government that does not do their bidding. There
is a basic flaw in reformism; if you tax the rich they will not invest. They
will pack up and move to Mexico, or China, or Indonesia. There are many
examples of this; the British Labour government in the 1970s was told by the
banks that they could not implement their program of mild reforms even
though they had been elected on that platform. In a similar way we can look
at the Ontario NDP government to see how the capitalist class can bring down
a reformist program and force the reformists to do their dirty work (e.g.
Bob Rae).
The fundamental truth is that you cannot control what you do not own. If the
NDP came to power on their program then they would be faced with two
choices; either betray the working class (who supported the NDP in the hope
of seeing real improvements), or mobilize the workers against Capital and
take control of the banks and top 150 corporations that control 85% of the
Canadian economy. While we support taxing the rich as a reform, by itself it
merely causes capital flight. However, if the banks and monopolies have been
nationalized and are being controlled by the workers then the profiteers
will have problems when they want to make a withdrawal. The choice is
capitulation or confrontation. This may not be palatable to some, but there
is no middle road.
Unfortunately the leaders of the NDP have no perspective of taking power and
do not have confidence in their platform or in the working class. They are
in fact mistaken; the barrier to victory is not the NDP's program but the
doubt that the workers have in their leaders being serious. The Liberals
know this and in previous elections were able to split away NDP voters by
raising the spectre of the fundamentalist right-wing. This tactic was aided
and abetted by the corporate media that did everything possible to ignore
the NDP. Jack Layton has partially recognized this and attacks both the
Liberals and Conservatives as corporate parties; it is good for once to see
an NDP leader face up to right-wing attacks rather than cower and apologize.
A measure of the NDP's success is seen by how many editorials are attacking
the NDP for their program of "class war". Despite this, workers still know
that all the NDP leaders are aiming for is a role as junior partner in a
minority Liberal government. All the reforms would be dumped for a few
cabinet portfolios and the Liberals would have no problem appointing an
NDPer as minister for windmills! There is also a mythology, promoted by the
NDP right wing, that the good things in Canada have only come about during a
minority Liberal-NDP government.
While propping up the Liberals may be initially popular within the NDP, it
will rapidly fall into disfavour. The youth and the Marxists will be at the
forefront of opposing the coalition and any further watering down of the
NDP's platform (which is already too watered down). Appeasing the Liberals
and maintaining cabinet portfolios is not an excuse for letting poverty,
homelessness, and unemployment increase. The first major attack by the
government on the working class will cause every contradiction to come to
the fore. It is possible that a section of the right wing will split away to
stay with the Liberals (like we have already seen former BC NDP premier
Ujjal Dosanjh and IWA leader Dave Haggard do). It is not even certain which
side of the divide Layton will find himself on. Suffice to say, the
perspective for both society and the NDP is not stability.
Elections are merely a snapshot of the processes within a society at any
given time. The recent period in Canada has seen economic stagnation and an
upturn of the class struggle. The Conservatives were defeated in Ontario,
there are general strike movements in BC and Quebec, and Newfoundland
recently saw both the largest strike and largest demonstration in its
history as a province. Capitalist governments everywhere have been forced to
attack the working class and the fightback is in its first stages. These
events form the backdrop of this election. While it is impossible to predict
every outcome the general processes can be highlighted. A majority
Conservative government is extremely unlikely given they have zero support
in Quebec, and a minority Conservative government would be highly unstable
and would not last the year. The only way the Conservatives could form a
lasting government is if they united with the Liberals in a government of
national unity. However, the crisis in society has not yet reached such a
level for the two parties to be willing to put aside their differences in
order to preserve the rule of capital. The most likely outcome is a minority
Liberal government supported by the NDP. The NDP is fundamentally a working
class party (despite its leadership) and the class forces acting on the
party will eventually force it to break the coalition with the capitalist
government. Those on the "left" who do not recognize that the NDP is
organically linked to the working class will be at a loss to explain these
movements. If the NDP was just another capitalist party then a Liberal-NDP
(capitalist-capitalist) coalition would be perfectly stable when doing the
bidding of the capitalists. In fact the intense class forces inherent in the
situation raise the possibility of a real left-wing force developing within
the NDP. We do not know who will lead this movement, or what form it will
take, but it was under similar conditions during the last Liberal-NDP
coalition that the radical Waffle movement formed within the NDP. For the
first time in a generation there is a possibility for genuine socialist
ideas to come to the fore on the picket line, at the ballot box, and on the
streets. Canada is entering a new period of turmoil.
June 2004
<http://www.marxist.com/canada/canada_fed_elections04.html>
http://www.marxist.com/canada/canada_fed_elections04.html
www.marxist.ca <http://www.marxist.ca/>
See also:
* Ontario
<http://www.marxist.com/canada/ontario_liberal_budget04.html> Liberal
budget continues assault on workers By Camilo Cahis (June 2004)
* Canada: <http://www.marxist.com/canada/canada_gs_betrayed.html>
General Strike Betrayed By Union Bosses - Workers vow to continue illegal
strike By L <http://www.marxist.ca> Humanité Editorial Board (May 2, 2004)
* The
<http://www.marxist.ca/Documents/CanadianPolitics/DefeatofthePartiQuebecois.
htm> Defeat of the Parti Québécois -An analysis of the 2003 Québec Election
by Lorenzo Fiorito and Miriam Martin (November, 2003)
* Desperate
<http://www.marxist.ca/Documents/Economy/Desperate_Capitalism.htm>
Capitalism- A report on the WTO meetings and political repression in Quebec
(November, 2003)
* British Columbia
<http://www.marxist.com/canada/bcndp_elections.html> NDP Bureaucracy
maintains stranglehold - Left builds support for future battles By
L'Humanité <http://www.marxist.ca> Editorial Board (November, 2003)
* Canada- <http://www.marxist.com/canada/canada_ubc_strike.html>
Lessons of the University of British Columbia Teaching Assistants' Strike
(May 21, 2003)
* Canada -
<http://www.marxist.com/usa/canada_stud_workers_strike.html> Student
workers strike against tuition hikes by Alex Grant (December 31, 2002)
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