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Commentary by the Central Executive Committee, Communist Party of Canada
The May 2nd federal election gave Stephen Harper and his Conservative
Party an absolute majority in the new Parliament. But to do it they had
to hide their real agenda, and spend millions in payoffs and promises
they may never deliver. They haven’t convinced a majority of Canadians
to privatize medicare and social programs, and they haven’t sold
Canadians on their sky-high military spending, the wars in Afghanistan
and Libya, or their war on civil, democratic and labour rights. The
outcome did not reflect a political swing to the right among voters, and
Harper has no real mandate to impose his reactionary agenda on the
working class and the peoples of Canada.
In fact, the Conservatives garnered less than 40% of votes cast, and
only 24.3% support among all registered voters. There was no seismic
shift to the Conservatives; rather, the Tory majority came about
primarily due to vote-splitting between the Liberals and the social
democratic NDP in key ridings, especially in Southern Ontario and
British Columbia.
This election revealed yet again the archaic, undemocratic nature of
the “first-past-the-post” electoral system, which always distorts
electoral outcomes and in this case negated the anti-Tory sentiments of
the majority of the Canadian people. The struggle for democratic
electoral reform, beginning with some form of proportional
representation, has become more urgent than ever.
While support for the Harper Conservatives rose just 2%, there were
substantial shifts in voting patterns for the other large established
parties. Most significant was the growth in both popular support (30.6%)
and seats (102 out of 308) for the New Democrats, earning the NDP the
status of “official opposition” for the first time. These gains came
particularly at the expense of the pro-sovereigntist Bloc Québécois, and
the Liberal Party in English-speaking Canada.
The collapse of the BQ was dramatic, with its popular vote in Québec
sliding to 23.4% (from 38.1% in 2008) and its seats reduced from 49 to
only 4, with a corresponding massive increase in support for the NDP. A
certain fatigue with the sovereignty debate among Québec voters helped
caused the Bloc vote to collapse, in favour of the anti-Harper
alternative presented by the NDP. It would be wrong to conclude however
that this signifies a marked drop in support for the sovereignty option,
considering Layton’s public commitment to respect the results of a
future referendum vote on separation, and the Québec NDP’s shift to
support “asymmetrical federalism.”
The increased vote for the NDP, and its enlarged caucus which
includes many young first-time members, is a welcome development,
reflecting a growing trend among working people to break away from the
grasp of the old-line parties of big business. Clearly, a larger
proportion of electors, especially among youth and students, were
attracted by NDP leader Jack Layton’s call for “change”. Québec is now
the NDP’s main base, which may push them to take stronger positions on
the national question, on war and militarism, and on protection of
medicare and social programs. It must be said however that although many
identified the NDP as a left-progressive alternative, the party under
Layton’s leadership has in fact moved steadily toward the “centre” of
the political spectrum as part of their long-held strategy of
supplanting the Liberals as the official opposition.
Also noteworthy and welcome was the breakthrough election of
Elizabeth May as the first Green Party representative in Parliament,
even though the overall popular vote for the Greens slipped compared to
2008.
Both the Liberals and the BQ emerged from the election badly mauled,
and their respective leaders (Ignatieff and Duceppe) have resigned. The
post-election crisis in both these camps could take the form of further
political realignments in the future.
Not surprisingly given the continued media blackout, votes for the
Communist Party of Canada’s 20 candidates remained low. But the
Communist campaign helped to inject the anti-war views of millions of
Canadians into the debates, and to win support for radical new policies
to put people’s needs ahead of corporate greed.
The most immediate outcome is the catastrophic reality of a Harper
Tory majority in Ottawa for the next four years. The carefully
orchestrated Conservative campaign (heavily financed by its big business
patrons) convinced at least a section of the electorate that they had
somehow moderated their radical, right-wing political agenda and could
therefore be “trusted” with the immense power of a parliamentary
majority. But this scripted image is belied by the facts. The Tories’
first two terms in office – even as a minority – revealed much of their
militarist, pro-corporate, anti-environmental and anti-democratic
policies, carried out by the most arrogant, dictatorial and secretive
government in Canadian history.
The Harper Conservatives’ full-blown program will quickly come to the
fore: their “law and order” agenda (starting with the “omnibus” crime
bill), the further imperialist drive to militarization and war, and a
sharpened assault on labour, democratic and social rights and services,
not unlike the vicious “austerity” policies being imposed by right-wing
governments across Europe, and by Republican-controlled states in the
U.S. Workers in the federal public service are likely to be among the
first targets of Harper’s “plan” to eliminate the deficit within three
years.
The so-called “social conservatives” are already raising demands to
“reopen” the debate on women’s reproductive rights and to strip away
other gender and equity-based gains, and to eliminate Human Rights
Tribunals.
Given the new balance of forces within Parliament, the capacity of
the NDP and other opposition parties to counter this agenda will be
significantly weakened; they will offer up their critiques and may
succeed in delaying various pieces of legislation, but with the Tories
in full control of both the Commons and the Senate, the possibilities of
actually blocking or defeating government bills by parliamentary means
alone have all but disappeared. In such circumstances, the focus of
resistance and struggle against this reactionary agenda must shift
decisively to the extra-parliamentary arena. This is where the next
battles will be fought and where victories can and must be won.
The trade union movement has a critical and central role to play in
initiating and leading a broad-based, pan-Canadian fightback movement
against a renewed “Tory majority” onslaught. The Canadian Labour
Congress is currently meeting in Vancouver, to be followed shortly by
the congress of the Québec-based CSN labour central. The Communist Party
of Canada urges delegates at these key labour conventions to seize upon
this opportunity to set those wheels in motion.
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