Sunday, August 27, 2006

The NDP's Strategic Dilemma

The NDP is ensnared in a long-term strategic dilemma that was rendered more acute by the outcome of the last federal election and the role played by the NDP in the campaign. Jack Layton calculated that by pulling the plug on Paul Martin’s Liberals and by helping shape the central issue as Liberal corruption, he could hold the existing NDP vote and add to it. What the NDP feared above all was what party strategists referred to as “the demonization of Stephen Harper.” The NDP desperately wanted to prevent a panic among progressive voters that could drive them to vote Liberal to stop Harper from taking power.

Throughout the campaign the NDP insisted that a Harper government was no more to be feared than a Martin government. In its national advertising and in Jack Layton’s national tour, the relentless target for abuse was the Liberals. Only in a few cases in Saskatchewan and B.C., where the NDP was locked in races against Conservatives, did Layton take on Harper directly. National reporters found Layton unwilling to say anything about Harper beyond a pat statement that “the Conservatives are wrong on the issues.”

The consequence of Layton’s disciplined, tightly scripted campaign was a tactical victory. The NDP seat total increased from 19 to 29. In my view, this was a Pyrrhic victory, a strategic disaster.

Jack Layton forecast on election night that the election of more NDP MPs guaranteed a more progressive Canada in the form of tangible benefits for working families and seniors. Since Stephen Harper formed his government in early February, Layton has been proved stunningly, embarrassingly wrong. The Harper government has turned out to be more insistently, stubbornly right-wing than anyone predicted. Most people assumed that the truly reactionary colours of the Harper government would not be revealed unless and until the Conservatives won a majority in the next election.

On childcare, Harper did exactly what he said he would do---he scrapped the national program. On the Kelowna aboriginal accord, the Conservatives have scrapped a historic deal that had been years in the making. On relations with the U.S. and on foreign policy issues, Harper has aligned himself with George W. Bush more overtly than I thought he would prior to winning a majority. He has led Canada into the Anglo Sphere, the new Gang of Four, with the U.S., the U.K., and Australia far more overtly than a Martin government would have. Anyone who now imagines that if Harper wins a majority he will not decimate the social state in Canada has not been paying attention.

When NDP strategists are confronted with the stark fact of how reactionary Harper is, they respond in one of two ways: some still insist that Harper isn’t really so bad, although this cohort is diminishing in size; and some claim that the Liberals would be just as bad if they were still in office. Both of these positions put the NDP in an awkwardly defensive position vis a vis the Harper government. Instead of saying loudly and clearly what progressives want to hear---that this is the most reactionary government in Canadian history, and that it must not be allowed to win a majority, the NDP speaks in muted tones, opposing the government only on specific issues, but never providing a clear critique of what Harper is about. They still don’t dare do so because of their fear that such a critique will push their voters into the arms of the Liberals.

In the next election, if the Liberals choose one of the progressives---Gerard Kennedy, Bob Rae or Stephane Dion as leader---the NDP will be relentlessly reminded of its role in the last election and of its less than forthright opposition to the Harper government.

NDP strategists need to step back from the immediacy of the political wars to remember why their party exists and what it needs to do. Tommy Douglas was right when he said that the people need a party of their own and ought not to allow themselves to be fobbed off with switching back and forth from one capitalist party to another.

There are two problems here, though. In its battle to replace the Liberals as one of the country’s two major parties, the NDP has watered down its socialism almost to the vanishing point. Secondly, there are times in history when truly reactionary political formations come along. Stephen Harper’s Conservative Party is such a formation. While thankfully, it is not overtly racist in the manner of the far right parties in Europe, apart from that it shares all of the views and instincts of a far right party. Harper himself, as his speeches and writings reveal, would be very much at home in the Republican Party and in the American neo-conservative movement. To blur the differences between this political formation and a run-of-the-mill liberal capitalist party, as the NDP has done, is a blatant denial of the truth. The Harper government threatens all of the societal innovations the NDP and the CCF before it have inspired.

How then should the NDP promote its own interests as a party while acknowledging the nature of the Harper threat?

Necessarily (and not conveniently), there have to be two aspects to this, strategic and tactical, and they will not always fit together in easy harmony. Strategically the NDP should see itself as a movement-party dedicated to promoting the interests of working people and the interests of Canadians as autonomous actors, as free as possible from the constraints imposed by the American Empire. Winning people over to the NDP’s point of view is often, but not always, in line with the tactically optimal way to win more votes for the party. The tension between building the movement and winning converts on the one hand and winning votes on the other, has existed right from the beginning. The campaigns of the party establishment to replace the Regina Manifesto with the Winnipeg Declaration in 1956, to suppress the Waffle in the early 1970s and to contain the New Politics Initiative a few years ago were all episodes in a decades old effort to make vote winning the paramount, almost exclusive, legitimate activity of the party.

The historically successful drive to drain party membership of any real political content and to vest almost all power in the hands of the leader and his or her operatives has had the effect of making the tactics of each election campaign the only thing that really matters. And since the success of leaders is judged almost wholly by how many seats they win, ambitious NDP leaders have reached the not surprising conclusion that the party will tolerate virtually anything as long as it promotes the winning of more votes and more seats. In the hands of Jack Layton, the consequence has been the two most right-wing election campaigns in the history of the party.

The trouble with short-term tactical victories, cynically won only by systematically hiding the truth from Canadians, is that they lead nowhere. Ed Broadbent’s attacks on John Turner in 1988 helped re-elect Brian Mulroney’s Tories and opened the door to the ratification of the Free Trade Agreement with the U.S. Five years later, Broadbent’s record seat total was followed by the winning of only nine seats by the NDP as Canadians rushed in their disgust to throw out the Conservatives. What will happen next time out when a sizeable number of NDP voters switch to the Liberals to throw out Harper?

When David Lewis and Tommy Douglas decided in the autumn of 1970 to oppose Pierre Trudeau’s blatant disregard for civil liberties when he proclaimed the War Measures Act, these NDP leaders were not thinking about votes. Polls showed that ninety per cent of Canadians were on Trudeau’s side. In the short-run, what Lewis and Douglas did bled support away from their party. In the long-run, however, the NDP not only stood up for civil liberties when it was crucial that someone do so, the party gained respect and support for the stand they took.

That is how the NDP should see the coming electoral contest. The party should make itself the vehicle of a national campaign, inside parliament and out, to expose the Harper government for what it is and to drive it from power. If things go well, the Liberals will replace the Conservatives in power, hopefully with a minority government. This does not mean that the long-term goal of the NDP is to elect Liberals, but rather to truly act as the tribune of the people, warning of the dangers ahead and advocating progressive alternatives.

Such an approach may elect more or fewer New Democrats in the next election. But that is not the crucial question. What matters most is speaking the truth to the nation. Over the long-term that will allow the NDP to turn the tables on the Liberals. If the Liberals want to claim to be progressives, let them act consistently as progressives. Let them join with the NDP in the struggle against the neo-conservative Harper government. If they want NDP votes in some ridings to defeat Conservatives, let them offer Liberal votes in other ridings to elect New Democrats, something they have never done.

Building a people’s party and movement is a dynamic process in which some tactical victories are not worth winning. What does matter is that the NDP must earn the trust of Canadians over time that they will never shy away from speaking out on behalf of working people and the nation. That is the road to electing the first people’s government in Canadian history. It is a day that will come. Look what has been happening in Latin America.

Friday, August 25, 2006

Big Oil is Hosing Canadians

The most important victory ever achieved by neo-conservatives in their assault against those who believe that Canada ought to exercise sovereignty in economic matters was the implementation of the energy clauses in the Canada-U.S. Free Trade Agreement and in NAFTA. Actually it was a double victory and it was won at a time when oil prices were low so that few people noticed or complained. Along with the NAFTA energy clauses was the propagation, and nearly universal acceptance, of the myth that the Trudeau government’s 1980 National Energy Program (NEP) delivered a near death blow to Alberta’s petroleum industry.

Today the world is in the grip of rising petroleum prices, and while there will be ups and downs, the prognosis is that the trend-line of global oil prices will be upwards over the foreseeable future. Higher gasoline prices and higher prices for the fuels used to heat homes is taking a bite out of the living standards of most Canadians, dramatically increasing the precarious situation of poorer families.

It is time to reopen the notoriously difficult and intersecting debates about energy supply and pricing, living standards, and environmental protection.

From the end of 1973 until the election of the Mulroney government in September 1984, Ottawa experimented with controlling the price of oil in Canada, at the same time as it pursued a policy of increasing domestic ownership of the petroleum industry. When the world price of oil quadrupled between December 1973 and June 1974, the Trudeau government froze the price of domestic oil well below the world level while selling oil to the U.S. at the world price. Under this scheme, on exports to the U.S., Ottawa collected the difference between the domestic and the world price in the form of an export tax. Meanwhile, Canadians paid less for gasoline than Americans who had to fork out the world price.

In tandem with price controls, the Trudeau government, under pressure from the NDP, established Petro Canada as a publicly owned petroleum company whose mandate was to operate as a vertically integrated enterprise in the exploration, production, refining, transportation and retailing of petroleum and petroleum products. An important motive for the creation of Petro Canada was that the Trudeau government had developed an intense distrust for the major foreign oil companies that controlled the industry in Canada. (Petro Canada was privatized by the Chretien government in the 1990s.)

The government had good reason to be suspicious of the industry. Led by Exxon’s subsidiary, Imperial Oil, the foreign owned companies pressured Ottawa to increase the flow of petroleum exports to the U.S. in the years before 1973. The oil companies told Ottawa that Canada had enough conventional oil and natural gas to meet domestic demand for several hundred years. That was before the oil price revolution of 1973-74.

By the end of 1974, the oil companies had changed their tune. In a complete about face, they advised Ottawa that Canada could face oil and natural gas shortages in the near future unless much more exploration was undertaken, and quickly. The motive of the companies, of course, was to force the federal government to drop price controls and allow the Canadian domestic price of oil to rise to the world level.

In 1980, the newly re-elected Trudeau government (after the Joe Clark interlude) systemized its petroleum strategy and announced the National Energy Program (NEP). In addition to price controls, the NEP set the goal of reaching fifty per cent Canadian ownership of the petroleum industry by 1990. This was to be achieved both through the expansion of Petro Canada and through the promotion of private sector Canadian petroleum companies. The mechanism was the Petroleum Incentive Program (PIP) grants. These taxed foreign owned oil companies at a higher rate than Canadian companies, using revenue from the foreign company taxes to buoy the rise of Canadian companies.

The Trudeau government’s policies provoked the wrath of the American administration which was furious at a system that enabled Canadian consumers and industry to pay less for oil than Americans paid. Also enraged were the oil companies and the governments of the oil producing provinces, Alberta and Saskatchewan.

The NEP was launched at a time of rising petroleum prices in the aftermath of the Iranian Revolution of 1979. That ended, however, with the abrupt crash of global petroleum prices in 1981, as a consequence of OPEC infighting, and the generation of a surplus supply due to the production of North Sea and Nigerian oil. The price crash had nothing to do with the NEP. In Alberta, boom turned to bust, unemployment soared and food banks opened. The crash hit Houston, Texas as hard as it did Calgary, but that did not prevent the birth of an urban legend. From the offices of Calgary oil companies, the provincial government in Edmonton and the media the message was trumpeted that Alberta’s slump was the result of the NEP. Albertans were taught to hate the NEP.

When Mulroney came to power in 1994, he quickly ditched the NEP, including price controls and the goal of increased Canadian ownership of the oil industry. Then the neo-con trump card was dealt in the form of the FTA negotiated with the Reagan administration, which came into effect on January 1, 1989. The FTA abolishes the right of Canada to embark on a future NEP. Not only does it, in the “national treatment” provision, specify that Canada cannot tax Canadian and foreign companies at different rates, thereby negating a repeat of the PIP grant scheme, it also provides that Ottawa cannot institute a two price petroleum policy with a higher price for foreigners and a lower price for Canadians. On top of these measures, the trade agreement stipulates that in the event of an interruption of global oil supplies, Canada will be required to continue its level of exports to the U.S., even if this means that eastern Canada (dependent on imported oil) has to go short.

What the hell kind of trade pact is this? Mexico did not sign on to a similar deal to supply the U.S. with oil no-matter-what for the simple reason that Mexicans never would have stood for it.

The invidious provisions in the NAFTA treaty constitute the greatest betrayal of Canadian sovereignty ever agreed to by a Canadian government. Those who are constantly on the look out for how the movement for Quebec sovereignty compromises Canada should take a close look at the NAFTA energy clauses. It is no exaggeration to say that Canadian sovereignty over our oil and natural gas has been effectively nullified. In countries less polite than ours, this would be described as an “unequal treaty” or a national disgrace.

Big Oil now has everything it wants from Canada: Canadians pay the world price for their oil; Albertans receive shockingly low royalties (compared to Norway for example) for the production of their petroleum; and the Klein and Harper governments are pushing ahead with the development of the Alberta oil sands as a new and secure petroleum source for gas guzzling America.

The consequence of the rapid development of the oil sands is that it will be impossible for Canada to meet its targets under the Kyoto Accord. Selling Canadians on the idea of taking expensive steps to clean up their own energy act while the inexorably filthy oil sands are geared up to ship ever more oil to the U.S. is a non-starter. (Using clean oil and natural gas to produce dirty oil is a perversely negative form of alchemy.) Big Oil is laughing all the way to the bank and their preferred political party is in power in Ottawa.

Can anything be done about all of this? First we have to recognize the sad fact that both the Liberals and the NDP have not thought these issues through and both are unwilling to take the steps needed to set things right. And we have to face up to the reality that emerging from our present prone position will provoke savage opposition from very powerful interests.

There is reason for hope, however. Canadians have never been fond of Big Oil and whenever they are polled, they express a preference for Canadian and public ownership of the oil industry, despite the fact that no political party now espouses such policies.

Our starting point should be to comprehend that energy is far too important to leave to the vagaries of a world market for petroleum that is set through great power rivalries, Middle East crises, and the machinations of the major petroleum companies. A classical free market, this is not.

A century ago, a remarkable Ontario Conservative politician, Adam Beck, came up with the idea that hydro-electric power should be produced and distributed by a public utility and provided for industry and individual consumers at cost. Energy was too important to be left in the hands of capitalist monopolists, he believed. (It should be noted that Beck was no socialist. He simply believed that business in general, as well as consumers, should not be held ransom to monopolists.)

Beck’s basic principle, the production of energy at cost, needs to be modified in the case of petroleum to meet Canadian requirements in the 21st century. Petroleum is a depleting resource and replacement costs for it need to be projected long into the future to include the costs of developing new technologies for the post-petroleum age which is fast approaching. Petroleum resources are owned by the governments of the producing provinces, not by the federal government, and the people of those provinces have a right to expect a decent return for the production of their depleting assets.

While the federal government ought not to interfere with the ownership of the resource by provincial governments, Ottawa has very real powers which also need to be respected and utilized. The federal government controls the marketing of petroleum across inter-provincial and international boundaries. That gives Ottawa the power to determine how much oil and natural gas is surplus to Canada’s long term needs and should be exported. It has been many years since Ottawa effectively exercised this latter power.

The most intelligent way to run Canada’s petroleum industry is to treat it as a public utility or rather as a set of public utilities. Such entities could combine community, cooperative, provincial and federal ownership. This industry is too basic to everything else to leave to the private sector, in particular to foreign owned giant monopolies.

What about the price of petroleum? We now have the ludicrous spectacle of many “environmentalists” taking the side of Big Oil in favouring the highest possible price for gasoline and other petroleum products in Canada. They argue that high prices put a brake on consumption and push industry and consumers to innovate in the development of energy saving technology. While there is some truth in this argument, the consequences of letting the price mechanism in a private market do the job utterly negate the meager benefits. The price mechanism allows the oil companies to make record high profits and expand their power in our economy. It also allows the very affluent to continue driving their gas guzzling SUVs. No brake is placed on their capacity to continue taking more than their share of the resources of the planet. On the other hand, the victims are workers in the non-energy sectors whose wages are held down by rising energy prices that must be paid by their employers. The hardest hit victims are average and poor families in regions such as Atlantic Canada who are being hit between the eyes by high gasoline and home heating prices. In small town and rural New Brunswick, for instance, there is no public transit to speak of, which makes automobile ownership a necessity for most families.

The energy issue is going to be a difficult one, no matter how we organize it. At least through public ownership, with the producing provinces getting a larger share of the take because it is their depleting resource that is being exploited, we can make the trade offs on the basis of social and economic equity. We dispense with the fantasy of a “free market”, which is patently unfree.

There was a time when the NDP favoured public ownership in the petroleum sector and up to a point so did the Liberals. And there was a time when both parties fought against the FTA and NAFTA. Public ownership needs to be put back on the table. And we need to make an urgent issue of the energy clauses in NAFTA. The demand must be that those clauses be dropped from the NAFTA treaty or else Canada will be forced to abrogate its membership in NAFTA.

On energy, the neo-cons have beaten progressive Canadians into incoherent timidity. It’s time to get back our sense of outrage on these questions.

Sunday, August 20, 2006

Two Cheers for Bob Rae

Two charges are regularly made against Bob Rae. The first, leveled by Ontario NDP leader Howard Hampton, is that Rae is an “opportunist.” The second, encountered frequently in comments from people with various ideological perspectives, is that Bob Rae left the Ontario government in a fiscal shambles and the provincial economy tattered and torn. Both of these charges are a crock.

Let me dispose of the second one first. Bob Rae was sworn in as premier of Ontario in September 1990, at a time when the North American economy was sliding into the deepest recession since the Great Depression of the 1930s. Two things made the economic plunge in Ontario particularly severe. The Bank of Canada’s tight money policy in the early 90s hit Canada right between the eyes. The Bank was more monetarist than Milton Friedman in those years, and was much more monetarist in refusing to ease up on interest rates than the Fed in the U.S. The consequence was a longer and deeper recession, with higher levels of unemployment, north of the border than in the United States. For a refresher course on what happened, read Linda McQuaig’s book, Shooting the Hippo.

The second disaster for Ontario was the onset of free trade in January 1989. The first years of the FTA and later of NAFTA were especially hard on Ontario. In that period, U.S. investments in Canada remained flat while Canadian investments in the United States skyrocketed. During the 1990s, Canadian investments in the U.S. soared until they were two thirds as high as American investments in Canada. That shift was underway even before free trade, but the onset of free trade dramatically intensified it. What was happening was that Canadian business was using the free trade regime as an opportunity to run away from Canada, to the southern U.S. and to Mexico, in search of lower wages and taxes, less stringent environmental rules, and to escape from unions. The flight of Canadian capital to the U.S. during the 1990s is the great untold story of the impact of free trade on Canada.

As premier of Ontario, Bob Rae could do nothing about Canadian monetary policy and the impact of NAFTA. During its first couple of years in office, the Rae government tried to ride out the storm by not adding to the misery through sharp cuts in its own spending. Eventually, the government concluded that it had to face the worsening fiscal situation head on. It brought in a program that raised taxes, cut spending and reduced the payroll in the public sector, through the so-called “Rae Days”, additional holidays that cut public sector pay without laying off employees. The last element, the so-called “social contract”, was the most controversial and is the most remembered. It opened public sector contracts without the agreement of the unions involved. The alternative, as the government saw it, was to lay off employees. My beef with the social contract was that it was imposed from on high and that its political effect was to cast a pall over the Rae government, robbing it of its claim to be progressive.

The point here is not to rehash arguments that have been rehearsed a hundred times, but to stress the truly dire situation in which the Rae government found itself through no fault of its own. Ironically, had Rae stayed in power for another five years, the province would have returned to fiscal health and a balanced budget. Instead the people opted for Mike Harris whose Common Sense Revolution handed huge tax cuts to the highest income earners, and imperiled the government’s recovery and its ability to undertake new social programs. Ontario has still not rebounded from the nightmare of the Harris-Eves years.

The second charge, that Rae is a political “opportunist” grows out of a long established tradition on the left in which opponents charge each other with selling out the working class on the one hand or insist on the other that their rivals are “infantile” leftists. For all the good these arguments have done, this rhetoric would have been put to better use had it been published on rolls of toilet paper.

Philosophically, the Rae government straddled a rather wide area that could be described as progressive liberal or moderate social democrat. (It banned the use of strike breakers and it advanced the cause of employment equity.) People can get very fussed about such distinctions but there is no greater waste of time than the narcissism of small differences. Over the years, there may have been some evolution in the political values of Bob Rae, but I don’t see much. Today he favours a variety of capitalism that places the emphasis on social fairness, education and equality. He’d be very much at home in the centre left in Western Europe. I don’t buy into everything Rae supports. For instance, I sharply disagree with his notion that with higher tuition fees and more support for average and lower income students we can create institutions of higher education that combine quality with accessibility. I think we should work toward the abolition of tuition fees.

Now that Rae is seeking the leadership of the federal Liberal Party, we can see his vision of Canada more clearly than when he was a provincial politician. His federalism combines a strong recognition of the unique place of Quebec within the federation, with a philosophy of social fairness that should ameliorate regional antagonisms and disparities. Most of all, he is a clear opponent of a neo-conservative global policy for Canada. He would stand up to Stephen Harper on this most critical of issues and would keep Canada out of the Anglo Gang of Four (with the U.S., the U.K. and Australia.) He has sharply challenged Michael Ignatieff on this issue and has made it plain that he doesn’t want a Liberal Party that is an echo of the Conservatives.

Rae has decided over the past decade that his natural political home is in the Liberal Party. Fair enough. He has come to that conclusion in the same way that Pierre Trudeau did and for reasons that are just as legitimate. Others can disagree with the choice he has made, but they ought not to question his motives.

My own choice is to remain with the NDP. As a socialist, I believe that reforming capitalism in the interests of all is a much more daunting challenge than progressive liberals like Rae are willing to admit. Further, I believe that the socialist and social democratic tradition that has been fostered with such courage and energy over more than seven decades must be kept alive. The left needs a political party and it is the NDP.

That said, progressive liberals and socialists have a common foe in Stephen Harper’s hard-right government. Bob Rae has made it clear that one of the reasons for his switch to the Liberal Party is to combat the very real threat from the right.

As a non-Liberal, I won’t offer advice to Liberals on which candidate they ought to choose as leader. If Bob Rae gets the job and beats Harper in the upcoming election, I’ll sleep better at night. But I reserve the right to have sharp words of criticism for Rae on those not infrequent occasions when socialists and liberals need to argue about their important differences.

Saturday, August 19, 2006

Bernard Lord: An Election Too Far

Shediac, New Brunswick: Three years ago, New Brunswick Premier Bernard Lord was the toast of Canadian conservatives, who saw him as the man who could lead them out of the wilderness at the federal level. Now Lord could be four weeks away from defeat at the hands of the voters. New Brunswickers go to the polls in a general election on September 18.

I watched Lord this morning campaigning in the crowded food market in Dieppe, the French speaking east end of greater Moncton. Lord, who still looks more like an executive assistant than a premier, has become a relaxed and skilled campaigner, very much at home making his way through the throng.

In 1997, even though the young Bernard Lord did not have a seat in the provincial legislature and was only a few years out of student politics, he decided to contest the leadership of the New Brunswick Progressive Conservatives. To the astonishment of many, the inexperienced candidate, who had been born in Quebec, to a Francophone mother and an Anglophone father (from New Brunswick), won the party leadership. He went on to win a by-election that put him in the legislature and then led his party to power in the 1999 general election.

The perfectly bilingual Lord was not at all like the last Conservative premier of the province, Richard Hatfield, the Red Tory who served as premier from 1970 to 1987. He was soon being courted by the neo-cons. Brian Mulroney arranged for his old friend George Bush Senior to come to New Brunswick on a fishing trip to meet the young premier. For a time there was a great deal of speculation that Lord could replace Joe Clark as federal PC leader. Then came the merger of the Canadian Alliance and the PCs and the rise of Stephen Harper.

Reality intruded on Lord’s parade in the provincial election in the spring of 2003. Complaisant going into the campaign, the Conservatives soon found that they were facing a tide of anger because of rising auto insurance bills that were particularly directed against drivers who were seen as high risk or drove old cars. Especially in the Acadian regions of the north, insurance rates had spiked and were cutting into the already tight budgets of poor families. Lord won the election, but it was a squeaker. The PCs won 28 seats, to 26 for the Liberals and 1 for the NDP.

Since the general election, Elizabeth Weir, the NDP leader, has resigned her seat and the party lost the by election and now has no representation in the legislature.

In this election, the hot button issue is gasoline prices, which soared above $1.20 a litre level in recent weeks and have fallen back now to about $1.10. To take the edge off the issue, the Lord government recently brought in a system of gasoline price controls, which has been more show than reality. The government’s tinkering has had little effect on the price at the pumps.

In New Brunswick, where most individuals and families struggle to get by, the price of gasoline, and of fuels (often electricity) to heat homes in winter, and of auto insurance, are make or break questions. If the voters decide that Lord is doing nothing for them, they could punish him and drive his party for power.

So far, Liberal leader Shawn Graham, a man never accused by anyone of having charisma or being a visionary, has fiddled with the issue by saying he would get rid of price controls on gasoline if he is elected and would reduce the provincial gas tax. Throwing the people of the province back on the mercies of the market, will do nothing to ease their gasoline prices, however, and cutting gas taxes just invites oil companies to do more gouging. Graham could benefit from the issue, though, just by talking about it, on the theory that the people will take out their wrath on the sitting government.

Graham or the NDP could consider upping the ante in the gas price debate if they had the courage to do so. Graham could announce that if he is elected he will demand the convening of a First Ministers conference to discuss the urgent issue of energy prices and their impact on Canadians. He could point out that the oil companies and Alberta coffers are fattening at the expense of everyone else. He could say that it is intolerable for Canada to tolerate an internal OPEC in the country that is doing little to redistribute the take from soaring petroleum prices. He could demand that new federal policies be put into place to deal with the widening social and regional gaps that are the consequence of today’s do-nothing posture by Ottawa. Finally, he could point out that Bernard Lord is the political ally of Calgary’s Stephen Harper, the man who suits Big Oil just fine as prime minister. I’m not holding my breath for either opposition party to do much of this.

Keep an eye on the New Brunswick election. The province is often a cauldron of populist fury, where voters signal the emergence of issues that will soon take hold elsewhere.

Thursday, August 17, 2006

No Room for AIDS in Harper's Tidy Mind

Stephen Harper’s curt refusal to attend the international conference on AIDS in Toronto was much more than a major political gaffe, although it certainly was that. And it was not just that Steve would feel uncomfortable in the presence of Bill Gates, the world’s richest man, and Bill Clinton, the charismatic liberal who has more capacity to feel the pain of others in any pore of his body than Harper has in his whole being. As a neo-conservative true believer---Harper is a more principled neo-con than George W. Bush will ever be---Stephen Harper has no room in his tidy mind for most of the ills that roil the world.

Neo conservatives like Harper, and our Canadian export to Washington, David Frum, are offended by most of the human race. They picture themselves as members of an “elect”. They are the chosen ones who understand.

In the mind of the neo-con, personal responsibility is the highest good. You are what you make yourself. It is a sign that you are a member of the elect if you have prospered. Wealth is a badge of honour, of achievement, of self-discipline. The poor man you see outside your door is just as surely the author of his own misfortune as the rich man is of his bountiful success. In this atomistic social universe, the individual cares for himself and his family. If everyone would only behave this way, what a prosperous world we all would have. (For a simple, daily dose of this ideology, read the columns of Margaret Wente.)

In the mental system of the neo-con, AIDS sufferers are seen as having chosen the path that has led them to their misfortune. In the early years of the AIDS epidemic, neo-con writers like Washington journalist George F. Will went to great lengths to prove that AIDS was not a general social problem, but only a self-made affliction for gay men. As the pandemic has spread, so that tens of millions are now in its grasp, this uninformed, vicious take on the disease is no longer promulgated in polite company. It still, however, is at the root of the neo-con gospel that sexual abstinence is the key to combating AIDS. It remains all about individual behaviour as far as neo-cons are concerned.

This is not the first time in history that an inhuman, ruling ideology has stood in the way of the alleviation of the suffering of millions of people. In the middle of the 19th century, during the Irish potato famine, in which a million people starved to death, the British upper classes were determined not to feed the hungry on the other side of the Irish Sea. To have done so, and the British Empire was capable of doing so, would have been a violation of the rules of the market. Since the Irish had no means to pay for imported food, nothing could be done. Indeed, Ireland went on exporting agricultural products to other parts of the world at the peak of the famine.

Steve wouldn’t have fitted in at a conference where people accept the idea that there is a social dimension to the human journey, that we are all in this together and that the suffering of a large part of humanity is the suffering of the whole world.

This is one weird guy we’ve got at 24 Sussex. Picture him in a Puritan hat.

God Bless Canada!

Tuesday, August 15, 2006

On Terror

With the world reeling from the news of the arrests in London in connection with an alleged plot to blow up transatlantic airliners, we need to step back and consider the conundrum we all face as a consequence of the threat of terrorism. When we think of terror today, what comes to mind are the attacks of September 11, 2001 on New York City and Washington, DC, the bombings in London and Madrid, the Air India bombing, the suicide attacks in Israel and Iraq, and terrorist networks and organizations such as Al Qaeda, Hamas, and Hezbollah. If we cast our minds further back to 1995, we recall the bombing of the federal building in Oklahoma City by Timothy McVeigh, a disciple of the far right American militia movement. Beyond these terrible images, there is the packaging of our comprehension of terror, in the so-called “War on Terror”, the centrepiece of the global policy of the administration of George W. Bush.

I submit that the perception of terror that has been drilled into our minds has been coloured by the political agenda of those who have conceived the War on Terror. The resort to terror is a much broader, deeper and more persistent feature of human existence than we have been taught, and it defies the simple lessons that are constantly repeated by our political leaders.

What follows are thoughts on the history, purposes, and politics of terror, and a few observations on the existential pose we ought to adopt in facing it:
Terror is one of the dark arts of civilization and has been around since the dawn of recorded history. Indeed, the moment the state came into existence and began claiming its right to a monopoly over the means of violence, terror appeared and has been practiced ever since, both by those representing the established order and by those opposing it. It is misleading to claim, as is often done today, that terror, by default, is a weapon of the weak. While the weak and powerless have often resorted to terror, the implication that terror is never the weapon of choice of the strong is utterly false.

Here are a few examples of the uses of terror and counter-terror over the centuries followed by comments on the effects of terror on our world today:

The ancient Spartans ran what can be called a “terror” state against their slaves, the Helots. Male citizens of Sparta lived in barracks with their comrades-in-arms, long after they were married, so they would be ready to mobilize against a foreign foe, or to suppress a slave revolt. Young Spartans were even encouraged to kill Helots who exhibited leadership qualities or who seemed too strong and self-willed. In 464 B.C., the town of Sparta was severely damaged by a powerful earthquake. In the aftermath of this natural disaster, Messenian serfs took advantage of the disarray to rebel against their masters. Initially things went well for the rebels who managed to wipe out a force of three hundred Spartans in a pitched battle. Driven into a fortress in Messenia, the helots managed for several years to hold out against Spartan soldiers and formations from a number of Greek cities, before their final defeat. Solidarity among elites in ancient cities against slave rebellions, even among cities that were potential foes, was a widely recognized code. Slave risings have always been seen by slave owning societies as acts of terror of the most dangerous kind. Accordingly, their suppression has involved extreme acts of vengeance, designed to terrorize those who might emulate the rebels into abject submission.

The most famous slave revolt in history broke out in Italy in the first century B.C. and was led by the slave-gladiator Spartacus. Under his leadership, a formidable slave army was assembled and it succeeded in taking control of most of mainland Italy against the armies of Rome. In the end, the Romans triumphed and to underline both their fury and the futility of resistance to their authority, they crucified six thousand of Spartacus’ warriors along the Appian Way. In the eyes of the Romans, it was the slave-rebels who were the terrorists because they were in violation of the law and were seeking to overturn the social order. But what was the punishment meted out by the Roman state to Spartacus and his followers if not a terror warning to others that this too would be their fate if they took the path of rebellion?

The most notorious wave of mass executions in modern history was unleashed during the “reign of terror” in 1793-94 during the French Revolution. With armies invading France from the conservative powers of Europe determined to halt the revolution, the French republic tried and condemned thousands of enemies of the republic, many among them aristocrats. The most famous of the victims of the guillotine, King Louis XVI and Marie Antoinette were actually put to death before the period known as “The Terror” began. The terror is seared in the popular imagination in Charles Dickens’ A Tale of Two Cities. Less well known but even more bloody were the summary executions of twenty-five thousand Communards in Paris in one week following the suppression by the political right of the Paris Commune in 1871.

The great rising of Indians against British rule in 1857, was known by the British as the “Indian Mutiny” because it began among sepoys in the Army of Bengal. Depicting the uprising as a mutiny framed it for the British as an act of unspeakable treachery on the part of people who were benefiting from the wisdom of British administration and were the recipients of British military training. British newspapers provided their avid readers with lurid accounts of the uprising, which featured brown heathens killing captives, massacring babies and raping white women. That there were atrocities is undeniable, but the evidence suggests that few of the Indians who took women captive raped them. That did not stop the spread of vicious lies on the subject that fed the racial loathing of the British for dark skinned men who supposedly relished the idea of violating white women. The rebellion was put down with unspeakable ferocity. Some Muslim rebels were sewn into pigskins before being hanged, a deliberate way of dishonouring their religion and inflicting on them a terrible death. Other mutineers were fired out of the mouths of cannons or hanged. In the British public discourse of the time, the Indian Mutiny was seen very much the way contemporary terrorists are understood.

During the 20th century, terror was practiced on such a vast scale by regimes in power and by oppositional movements that only a few cases can be mentioned here. The bitter experience of 20th century bloodbaths yielded important lessons about advancing weaponry and the utility of terror. By the end of the First World War, the century’s potent new terror weapon, the aerial bombardment of civilians had already been baptized. During the 1920s and 1930s fear of aerial bombardment became an important weapon in the hands of the ruthless such as Adolf Hitler. The prevailing theory was that “the bomber will always get through.” In the early days of the Second World War, it was widely expected that cities such as London would be demolished as soon as urban areas became targets. Although London and other British cities suffered enormous casualties and devastation, they were not destroyed by the Luftwaffe and the V1s and V2s that Germany deployed in the last days of the war. Beginning in 1943 and continuing until hundreds of thousands of people died in Dresden in 1945, the allied bombing of Germany did end with the wholesale destruction of cities. Something very unexpected happened, however, as a consequence of the bombings of British, German, Russian, Chinese and Japanese cities. Civilian morale did not fall. Indeed, the hatred for the enemy grew in each of these cases. The massive allied bombing of Germany did not prevent German production of military hardware from increasing to its peak in 1944. Bombing of cities and civilians, it turned out, was a terror weapon that hardened the resolve of the people on whom the bombs fell, to continue their resistance. The recent conflict in the Middle East yielded the same results. The killing of Lebanese civilians and the destruction of their homes and infrastructure by Israeli warplanes roused the fury of the population under assault and drew them more strongly to the side of Hezbollah. Similarly, the hundreds of rockets fired by Hezbollah at northern Israel killed Israelis and destroyed property, but had virtually no effect on Israel’s military capability. The effect was to harden the sentiment of Israelis in support of the need for military action. The Olmert government was sharply criticized, not for striking out against Hezbollah, but for being relatively ineffectual in its military campaign. Bombing civilians, in almost every recorded case, has strengthened the resolve of peoples to fight on. Where the mass killing of tens of thousands of civilians did work was when the U.S. detonated atomic bombs over Hiroshima and Nagasaki in August 1945. These supreme acts of terror bombing did finally drive the Japanese government to surrender.

Over the course of the last hundred years, the politically and militarily weak, as well as the strong have resorted to terror. Terror has been used in targeted assassinations and bombings by groups such as the red brigades in Europe and the Black Panthers in the United States. Bombings and assassinations have been weapons in the arsenal of the Irish Republican Army, the Tamil Tigers and other political movements.

In general, it is not inaccurate to conclude that terror has had the general consequence of mobilizing those against whom it is directed. Regimes in power have seldom been overturned solely by campaigns of terror directed against them. Terror used indiscriminately against populations has overwhelmingly had the effect of reinforcing the willingness of people to submit to the strictures of those who govern them. Since September 11, 2001, the Bush administration has based its claim to legitimacy on its ability to protect the American people from the threat of terrorism. While the invasion of Iraq has increasingly lost support, whenever terrorism rears its head, the tattered reputation of the Bush administration revives, at least to some extent. Republican strategists are hoping that the recent arrests in London and the unearthing of a fearsome plot will improve their party’s chances in the fall Congressional elections.

It is abundantly clear that terrorism, in all its forms, whether practiced by the powerful or the weak, is the deadly foe of democracy. Anarchist bombs will always mobilize the state to suppress the people more than they will mobilize the people to achieve basic social reforms. Today, an army of politicians and so-called security experts have feasted off the terrorist threat to enhance their power and make lucrative careers for themselves. Together these people persist in making us an offer they calculate that “we cannot refuse”, to make us secure against the tribulations of the world. It is a phony offer that contains a sting in its tail---the creation of a surveillance state, through the USA Patriot Act and copy-cat legislation in other countries that allows the state to spy on, subvert, lock up, and censor the people who live in the democratic world. These offers we should turn down, not because there are not risks in this world which contains risks of all kinds, but because the risk of saying ‘yes’ to their agenda is greater than that posed by those wield terror against us. Democracies need to safeguard themselves against terrorist attacks, but never by placing themselves in the hands of those who use fear to take power.

Monday, August 07, 2006

Neo-Conned: How the NDP fell for Stephen Harper

(This is the next to last draft of my article that ran in The Walrus in May under the same title. There has been continuing interesting in the article so I decided to make it available.)


On election night, January 23, 2006, New Democratic Party leader Jack Layton stood before a buoyant victory party crowd in downtown Toronto and announced that Canadians had voted for change and that more New Democrats in Parliament would mean better lives for working families and seniors. For Layton, winning twenty-nine seats and 17.5 percent of the popular vote represented an electoral triumph vindicating a very particular campaign strategy: an attack focused almost exclusively on the scandal-plagued Liberal government. With 460,000 new voters, ten more Members of Parliament than in 2004, better regional representation, and, judging by the jubilant crowd, momentum, Layton had every reason to be pleased. Indeed, not since the heady days of Ed Broadbent’s leadership was the optimism so palpable.
Just the same, in many respects it was what Layton did not say that evening that was more interesting. He did not mention that the most ideologically right-wing prime minister in Canadian history was about to be sworn into office; and he did not mention that while the NDP’s 2006 election result was impressive, the party would no longer hold the effective balance of power in Parliament.

Layton’s speech capped a campaign in which he studiously avoided warning Canadians about any potential threat from Harper and the Conservatives. This odd fact had been driven home to me a few days earlier when a newspaper reporter phoned to do an interview. Clearly frustrated, he told me he had been on the NDP campaign plane for three weeks and that despite repeated efforts, he had been unable to induce Layton to say anything about Harper. The NDP leader was quick to attack Paul Martin and the Liberals, but all he would say about the front-running Conservatives was that they were “wrong on the issues.” Shortly after the election, arguing that Canadians wanted parliament to function and for the sniping to end, Layton said that he could and would work with Harper. But based on ominous early warning signs from the Conservatives, he must be wondering if Harper will work with him.

Following negotiations with the Liberals that seemed designed to fail, Layton broke with the Martin government in a letter to health minister Ujjal Dosanjh on November 7, 2005. He wrote that he was halting talks with the Liberals vis-à-vis stopping “the growing privatization of public health care in Canada” because “in our view, on this key test of whether the Government has a real desire to make the present Parliament work, we must regretfully conclude that there seems to be none.” Three weeks later, the NDP joined with the other two opposition parties to defeat the minority Liberal government in a vote of non-confidence.

Inside the NDP, the move was divisive. By voting day, within the broader left community it had created a veritable chasm. The federal election “badly tested the relationship” between social movements and the NDP, wrote Canadian Auto Workers economist Jim Stanford in the Globe and Mail a few days after Harper’s election victory. “NDP strategists precipitated the election, sensing a moment of opportunity to win more seats. But their decision was made over the explicit objection of many progressive movements. They had used the Liberals’ fragile minority position to extract impressive, important gains (child care, new legal protections for workers, the aboriginal deal, and others); they wanted to solidify those victories, and win new ones.” Leaders from these progressive constituencies “all wanted the election later, not sooner.”
The most visible sign of division was Canadian Auto Workers’ president Buzz Hargrove’s campaign to stop the Conservatives by supporting New Democrats in ridings where they were likely to win and Liberals elsewhere. Three weeks after the election, the Ontario NDP executive suspended Hargrove from the party; its president, Sandra Clifford, explaining that the sum of the union leader’s actions led to the suspension. “It was appearing with the prime minister….hugging him. Saying that he wanted a Liberal minority government,” Clifford said. In effect, the party had decided that it was an expellable offence for members to advocate strategic voting. While many insiders wanted Hargrove to “Buzz off,” others were just as concerned about the decision to bring down the government; still others, viewing the entire NDP campaign as strategic, thought Hargrove’s dismissal deeply ironic.

Prime Minister Martin had promised to call the election within thirty days of the release of the second Gomery Report. Either way, therefore, a trip to the polls was imminent. But NDP strategists considered it dangerous to allow the government to set the terms of debate, and were concerned that on the key issue of political ethics the party would be caught in the squeeze between the Liberals and the Conservatives. They believed that the Liberals would accept virtually all of Justice Gomery’s recommendations and that, as such, a chastened Liberal Party could win a majority government.

Still smarting over Martin’s successful 2004 last-ditch appeal to NDP supporters to vote Liberal to stop Harper, Layton’s campaign team was determined not to let history repeat itself. Polls indicated that NDP supporters were the most worried about a Conservative government and, the thinking went, many again would vote strategically (for the Liberals) in the event of a successful campaign to demonize Harper. So, as revealed by NDP press releases, campaign literature, and Layton’s speeches, to prevent erosion of NDP support, the party concentrated its fire on the Liberals, barely mentioning the Conservatives in their attacks. The most memorable NDP television advertisement depicted Canadians giving the corrupt Liberals the boot.
This kind of messaging set the tone, and Maude Barlow, Chairperson of the Council of Canadians, for one, told me that she felt pressure “not to critique Harper,” and that the top priority was “to win more seats for the NDP.” During the election, the Council was involved in the Think Twice coalition, made up of groups that came together to warn Canadians about Stephen Harper’s record.” Barlow said: “if the NDP was not going to talk about Harper’s record, we felt we had to.”

A crucial division between the NDP and the wider progressive community is whether it really matters if a Stephen Harper or a Paul Martin is in power. The NDP answer during the election campaign was a flat no, a position that Maude Barlow couldn’t agree with. Offering a more charitable interpretation, author and social activist Naomi Klein reasons that Layton’s “strategy is pretty much vindicated by his having won so many seats.” Klein speculates that in a relatively depoliticized period of our history Canadians may have a growing appreciation of minority governments and that the NDP could win many more seats in the next election. “Why not?” she asks. “The party stands for what Canadians want.” At the same time, however, Klein insists that Layton “has a lot to prove. He must show that he can be a counter-weight to Harper.” Moreover, the Canadian left requires a “strategy of revival” akin the ones adopted in places like Mexico and France. In those countries there is considerably more policy interplay between social movements and political parties. The NDP, Klein contends, needs to be “more than a conference and less than a party.”

Klein’s comments echo debates from years ago, and in many respects the 2006 NDP election strategy actually had its origins in the political wars of the 1980s, wars that culminated in the landmark free trade election of 1988. Until that decade, strategic voting was not an important consideration in federal election campaigns for the simple reason that left-leaning Canadians were no more alarmed by a Tory government than a Liberal one. Conservative leaders like John Diefenbaker, Robert Stanfield, and Joe Clark were in the Red Tory tradition – fiscally conservative, socially progressive, and not joined at the hip to big business – and were not anathema to the left. In the election of 1984, leader Ed Broadbent painted his NDP as the only genuine alternative by dubbing the Liberals and Conservatives the “Bobbsey Twins of Bay Street.” It was good politics and the NDP won thirty seats, managing to resist Brian Mulroney’s Conservative tide which left the Liberals with a mere forty seats.

If depicting the Liberals and Conservatives as tweedle-dum and tweedle-dee worked in 1984, replicating this strategy would have dire consequences in the next election. Under Ronald Reagan and Margaret Thatcher, neo-conservative revolutions were surging forward in the United States and Britain. Happy to swim with the current, the Conservatives abandoned their historic opposition to free trade (that dated back to John A. Macdonald), and began negotiating a far-reaching agreement with the US.

Rarely before had capital and labour been so polarized in a Canadian election campaign as in 1988. On the table was a deal that threatened to undo the most fundamental difference between Canada and the US; the state’s right and responsibility, vigorously exercised north of the border but largely neglected to the south, to mitigate the harsher effects of the free market. Trade unionists, social movement activists and many people in the cultural sector made the battle to stop free trade the fight of their lives. By the time the Tories called the election, Liberal leader John Turner had pledged that, if elected, his government would tear up the free trade deal.
Free trade, which conventionally simply meant reciprocal tariff elimination, was a stunning misnomer for the treaty Mulroney was negotiating with the Reagan administration. Under the investor-state provisions of the agreement, for instance, Canada would be required to accord “national treatment” to US firms located here. This measure would severely curtail Canada’s ability to foster winners in the public and private sectors, and to develop Canadian expertise, performance, and economic output for both national and international markets. In an equally significant giveaway, Canada would relinquish basic sovereignty over its oil and natural gas. In the event of a global petroleum shortage, Canada would be required to continue supplying the US with the pre-shortage share of petroleum, even if this meant that in some regions Canadians would go short.

Far from being a reciprocal trade deal, the agreement would allow Washington to retain its own trade laws and to hit Canadian producers with countervailing duties. The treaty would tie the hands of the Canadian government, drastically limiting its ability to implement policies regarded as inimical to the US, transnational business, and big oil in Canada. It was an ideological agreement that, once implemented, would essentially alter Canada’s constitutional order by negating social democratic approaches to the economy.

But on the day the writs for the 1988 election were issued, Broadbent failed to even mention free trade in his campaign kick-off statement. In the early days of the contest, the Conservatives topped the polls. In a televised leaders’ debate, however, Turner scored a powerful hit on Mulroney by issuing a warning about the trade deal’s consequences for Canadian sovereignty. The impact was immediate. The Liberals, having seized an issue that was at least as dear to the hearts of left-wing progressives, took the lead in the polls. It was a moment of truth for business, labour, social movements, and for the NDP.

Rather than joining the Liberals and other nationalists in a full frontal assault against free trade, the NDP reprised their 1984 election strategy, turned its guns on Turner (who was not even in office), and declared that there was no real difference between Grits and Tories. Those running the NDP campaign decided that what mattered most was the party’s seat total and its vote share vis-à-vis the Liberals, not the fight for economic sovereignty.

Amazingly, the strategy worked. On election day, Ed Broadbent was rewarded with forty-three seats, the most ever for the federal NDP. Almost forgotten in the NDP enthusiasm was that a renewed push by its big business allies had won the Conservatives a majority government. With 43 percent of the vote, against 52 percent for the parties that opposed free trade, Mulroney salvaged his free trade agreement, which took effect on January 1, 1989. The legacy of this deal is the current softwood lumber dispute and other disagreements which bring into question Canada’s right to subsidize crown and private corporations and to use other instruments of state economic intervention.

Paralleling statements made by progressives today, short months after the 1988 election then- Canadian Labour Congress president Bob White expressed the labour movement’s fury with Broadbent’s electoral strategy. “What was and remains an issue, was the style and orientation of the NDP campaign,” he wrote in a report to the NDP’s federal council. “Is our party becoming a pale imitation of the other parties? Can we still count on it to stand up for us?”
With free trade, the NDP’s policies that dealt with questions of economic strategy effectively disappeared. (Some are still there on party policy books, but they are never discussed at election time.) Before 1988, under pressure from economic nationalists, the NDP advocated the use of public ownership as the means for Canada to gain control of its resource industries, particularly oil and gas. Afterwards it stopped making an issue of the fundamental structure of the economy. The party became, above all, the defender of social programs, and in particular medicare. Philosophically, the differences between the NDP and the Liberals blurred to the point that Mackenzie King’s famous quip that Canada’s social democrats were simply “Liberals in a hurry” had become a reality. The NDP was unable to translate its vastly improved parliamentary status from 1988 into something grander. Beginning with the election of 1993, in which the NDP won only nine seats and lost official party status, the result for the party was a decade in the electoral wilderness, a fact it might well remember today.

The sense that the Conservatives had become arrogant and proto-American, and, perhaps, even more crucially Mulroney’s courting of Quebec nationalists, led to the Tories’ collapse under new-leader Kim Campbell in 1993. Once returned to office, the Liberals abandoned their opposition to free trade, but Canadians largely bought the idea that they would lessen the impact of the deal through strong social programs. This despite the fact of drastic social program spending cuts in the face of an enfeebled NDP. On the constitutional front, Prime Minister Jean Chretien (a Trudeau Liberal), would deal with Quebec. Without any traction in la belle province, at least in the minds of most Canadians, the federal NDP stood largely outside of the Quebec sovereignty battles of the early 1990s. In short, the NDP, having forsaken an ardent defence of economic nationalism to become the defender of Canada’s social-safety net and not being as intimately involved in the historic French-English divide, had less and less to talk about.
The NDP’s lean years during the Chretien era, of course, featured the growth of a markedly different form of Prairie populism from that which spawned the NDP’s ancestor, the Co-operative Commonwealth Federation (CCF), in 1932. Seizing on a deep-seated sense of western alienation, the Reform Party threatened the Toronto-Ottawa-Montreal nexus and federalism itself, uniting the centre-left behind the Liberals.

But the decade also featured a phenomenon that might have favoured the NDP had the party been prepared for it. The anti-globalization movement, demanding “fair trade not free trade,” stole headlines. Many of its supporters, young potential NDP backers who were joining civil society groups, didn’t see enough in NDP policies to support Canada’s progressive mainstream political party.

On top of this, the creeping separation between the values of rural (and to a lesser extent suburban) and urban Canada, were becoming more pronounced. And young urbanites questioned whether the NDP understood the issues related to contract employment or that an entire generation, the baby boomers, was preventing young people from gaining access to the halls of power. Adjustments were clearly necessary, but what rankled most inside the NDP during this divisive decade was having “their” issues (childcare, the environment, etc.) stolen at election time, and then ignored by the ruling Liberals. To this, the body-politic responded with a collective shrug, content, it seemed, with having a “party of principle” that would never be a party of power.

With the election of Jack Layton as leader in 2003, NDP hopes for the future were re-kindled. Here was a talented, energetic, media savvy politician who understood cities and the environment, and who could go onto university campuses and actually draw crowds. In his 2004 book, Speaking Out, Layton provided Canadians with a coherent social democratic vision, full of workable ideas that promised to restore the NDP’s capacity to debate economic issues and to challenge the priorities of capitalism, if not capitalism itself. What was more, Layton’s rhetoric suggested a keen appreciation that the left was about more than electoral politics, that process politics and reaching out to civil-society groups was critical.

Strangely, however, in the 2004 election, and much more overtly in 2006, exhibiting a penchant for short-term fixes over long-term party-building, the NDP leader became a servant to the proposition that what was good for working people and for the left was more seats for the NDP, no more, no less. Playing right into Conservative hands, in the 2006 election, Layton helped frame the central issue as Liberal scandals. The Canadian Election Study (CES), published just after the election, suggests this issue was responsible for the Conservative victory. It showed that outside Quebec, the proportion of people rating Liberal scandals as salient jumped from 19.7 percent at the conclusion of the 2004 campaign to 30.4 percent at the end of January’s election. The proportion of people rating Harper positively actually declined slightly from 48.8 percent to 46.7 percent, over the same interval. The share of people who believed that Harper “is just too extreme” barely budged, down from 49.1 percent to 48.3 percent of those interviewed. But this did not matter. While the NDP’s prospects improved, its strategy clearly helped install the Conservative minority government.

Analysts agree that the major turning point in the campaign came in late December with the RCMP’s letter to NDP MP Judy Wasylycia-Leis informing her that a criminal probe was being launched about possible leaks in Ralph Goodale’s finance department on Income Trusts. Wasylycia-Leis had written to the RCMP to request an investigation and when the Mounties, in a questionable move during an election campaign, wrote her back, she released the letter to the media. The Liberals never recovered.

In the last week of the campaign, Layton advocated strategic voting, urging traditional Liberals to “lend” the NDP their vote, while the Liberals went into the “repair shop” for refitting. To cap it off, in what was billed as his last statement as an MP, Ed Broadbent thundered that power “should be taken away” from the Liberals, that the party “no longer has the moral authority to deserve people’s votes.” Meanwhile, Broadbent said not a word about what a Harper government would mean for the country.

What was the NDP leadership playing at? Did it actually prefer a Conservative victory? Unlikely as it may seem, there are reasons for thinking so. Since the founding of the CCF, social democrats have dreamed that one day their party would replace the Liberals as one of the nation’s two major political vehicles. Inspired by the British Labour Party which had relegated the once mighty British Liberal Party to middling status following World War I, CCFers saw this as the natural course of Canadian political development. For a few years following the founding of the New Democratic Party in 1961, with Tommy Douglas as its first leader, the dream returned, only to fade as a result of relatively poor election results in 1962, 1963 and 1965. The dream was extinguished when Pierre Trudeau swept to power in 1968.

In the advanced world, Canada is that rare case where a centrist party has been dominant for many decades, borrowing ideas from the left and the right, whichever was opportune. Rarely innovative, always adaptive, the federal Liberals have been the bane of their opponents, detested by NDP and Conservative insiders for their lack of principle. Under Layton, NDP strategists have resumed the search for the Holy Grail: the realignment of Canadian politics around the centre-left pillar of the NDP through the marginalization of the Liberals. For the dream to become reality, the NDP will have to move even further to the centre, and to abandon its half-remembered social democratic aspirations.

Here’s a way to measure just how far the NDP has journeyed from the left to the centre as a result of free trade. When it held the balance of power from 1972 to 1974, led by David Lewis the party pushed for the creation of a national oil company. Having won back its majority, Trudeau’s Liberal government completed the launch of Petro Canada as a publicly owned petroleum company in 1975. Though no longer under effective NDP pressure, the Liberals aggressively built Petrocan, which acquired the assets of foreign owned oil companies in Canada in the process. Within a few years, Petrocan grew into a vertically integrated company that operated in all aspects of the oil business, from exploration and production to retailing. Petrocan’s purpose was clear: to establish a public window on an industry controlled by global oil giants that regularly altered estimates of Canadian oil and natural gas reserves to suit their purposes.

Along with Petrocan, Ottawa froze the price of domestic oil well below the world level while exporting to the US at the world price. The policy sheltered Canadian consumers from the full impact of the quadrupling of world oil prices between December 1973 and the summer of 1974. Ottawa collected the difference between the domestic price and export price as an export tax. This under a Liberal government. If this all sounds terribly radical – and to oil companies, horrifying – it’s simply a sign of just how tame Canadian economic policy has become since the free trade election. Today, Layton’s NDP wouldn’t dare advocate such policies, and not just because a two-price system would violate NAFTA rules. It would represent too much interference with the operations of the market. Too radical for today’s NDP but all in a term’s work for the Trudeau Liberals.

And yet, such policies, modified to meet environmental goals and to pay proper royalties to Alberta and other petroleum producing provinces, make eminent sense in our age of spiraling petroleum prices and record high profits for the oil companies. High energy prices have forced poorer Canadians in the Atlantic provinces and elsewhere to have to choose between food and home heating. One of the reasons so many people are jaundiced about reports of how well our economy is performing is the bite energy prices take out of their incomes. Over the past two decades, the real incomes of wage and salary earners have barely kept up with inflation, while the incomes and, more impressively, the accumulated wealth, of corporate executives have soared.

(The members of the Calgary Petroleum Club are laughing all the way to the bank. And now the political party that was built in their backyard, the party whose policies they adore, is in power. Is it possible that the reason that Stephen Harper won’t release the names and contributions of donors to his 2002 run for the Canadian Alliance leadership is that so many big oil names are on the list? Certainly, Layton didn’t make an issue of Harper’s connections to big oil during the campaign.)

What would have happened if the NDP had proposed a return to the two price system for Canadian oil? The revenues from the export tax could be dedicated to paying oil rich provinces for forgone royalties and to lowering the bill for oil imported for large parts of eastern Canada. Some would argue that the scheme would promote wasteful energy consumption. But until this country is prepared to do something about SUVs in posh neighbourhoods, the idea that the less than well-to-do, farmers, and small businesses should bear the burden of higher energy prices is preposterous. Environmentalism for ordinary Canadians and unprecedented consumption for the few simply isn’t a defensible path to a sustainable economy.

What prevents the NDP from putting these questions on the political agenda? Tommy Douglas or David Lewis wouldn’t have hesitated to do so. Nor for that matter would Pierre Trudeau. The political appeal of the energy issue is abundantly clear. Bernard Lord’s Conservative government in New Brunswick was very nearly overturned in the provincial election of 2003 on the issue of skyrocketing auto insurance rates. Energy prices are a similar issue with enormous populist potential. Beyond prices, the issue of who controls Canadian resources is once again crucial. The US government is looking at the Alberta oil sands as a huge source of petroleum that could lessen American dependence on supplies from the Middle East. China and India are also eyeing Canadian petroleum and other resources. The question that has dogged Canadians throughout their history, the control of Canadian resources by outsiders, is on the table, and so far the NDP hasn’t touched it.

Proposing to regulate energy prices could expand the NDP’s base among wage and salary earning Canadians, the “working families” it claims to represent. But the NDP does not want to be seen intervening in the economy, its current goal being simply to render capitalism a little more humane. That’s not a disgraceful philosophical stance. It’s just not in keeping with the radicalism of the party labour activist J.S. Woodsworth founded and firebrand preacher Tommy Douglas built. The NDP is fighting the Liberals today over which of the two parties is best able to represent the liberalism of an urbanized, multi-cultural Canada, and the reason NDP strategists are so thin skinned about the Liberals is that they are after the same turf. What divides today’s NDP from the Liberals is the narcissism of small differences; what unites them is political pragmatism. Even the cultures of the two parties have merged. As with the Liberals, there is now a definite career path in the NDP, and the party today is very much in the hands of professionals.

While some NDP insiders are already speculating about the party becoming the major alternative to the Conservatives, the broader progressive community has a different outlook and quite different aspirations. For one thing, there is the blunt fact of political tactics in a system with a first past the post voting system: an all out fight between the NDP and the Liberals for control of the same real estate is an incalculable gift to the Conservatives. To improve his chances in the next election, Harper must make it appear that those who voted NDP did not waste their ballots. We can expect the Conservatives to seek an alliance with the NDP on two issues on which they essentially sang from the same song sheet during the election campaign: government ethics and crime.

Knowing that a unified centre-left vote means the end of the Conservative government, in many respects, on these two issues Harper has the NDP right where he wants them. Never mind that Harper displayed a neo-conservative contempt for democratic due process by appointing Liberal turncoat David Emerson and newly-minted Senator Michael Fortier to Cabinet; the NDP is unlikely to win electoral support on ethics because it has never formed the government federally, and thus has no record of moral probity while in office upon which to base its outrage. The Conservatives credibility on this issue stems from western alienation, and the propaganda that the crooks in Ottawa are running away with their tax dollars without the good grace of political representation in return.

On crime, Layton tried cravenly to capitalize on urban anxiety, attempting to trump the law and order Conservatives by proposing five-year minimum sentences for certain gun-related offences. Urban advocacy is one thing, but a mountain of US-based evidence suggests that such punitive policies simply don’t work. Nonetheless, Harper can now conscript the NDP’s positions in support of his own proposed legislative solutions. On this terrain, the party of progressive principle has become an accessory to the Conservative agenda.

Childcare advocates are, in turn, furious at the NDP for its electoral tactics. Immediately after Harper was sworn into office, and after Layton announced that he could work with the new Conservative government, the new prime minister made good on his promise to scrap the Liberals $5 billion universal childcare program. While he will honour the agreements for one year, they will lapse on March 31, 2007. The deal the Liberals had negotiated with the provinces would have provided $1.2 billion annually for five years to create spaces, hire staff, and launch provincial child-care programs that would be affordable and available to all families.

“As a result of the early election call,” Martha Friendly, the coordinator of the Childcare Resource and Research Unit at the University of Toronto, told me the implementation of the childcare agenda was “considerably less advanced than it could have been several months further down the road.” Friendly has worked for a couple of decades in pursuit of a national, not-for-profit, early childcare program of the kind that exists in Western Europe. Though the Liberal childcare program did not deliver everything she and her allies had been fighting for, it went a long way in that direction. Beyond the initial five-year commitment, the Liberal election platform promised to continue the funding for an additional five years with at least that level of funding. With the victory of the Conservatives, Friendly says that the quest for universal, not-for-profit childcare has been put on hold.

While Harper ran a near-flawless campaign and masterfully disguised many of his core beliefs, his prescriptions for childcare -- $100 a month for families with children under six – speaks to an anti-big government bias, an individualist ethic, and, perhaps most importantly, a rejection of the notion of imposing social programs of any kind on the provinces. Such top-down impositions run counter to Harper’s libertarian political instincts (and against the Conservative policy platform), but part of the brilliance of Harper’s campaign rests in a calculated judgment: in an already decentralized Canada, the path to Ottawa must lead through placating the provinces, especially Quebec and Alberta. Satisfied that they had a friend in Harper, Gilles Duceppe quickly announced that the Bloc Quebecois would prop up the Conservative minority government; Thomas d’Aquino and the Chief Executive Officers of Canada called on the prime minister to delegate federal powers to the provinces; and, in a delicious irony, Alberta’s Ralph Klein dubbed his privatization of healthcare delivery the “Third Way” – the term used to describe Tony Blair’s highly moderated British socialism – and dared Ottawa to respond.
The rapidity of these moves suggests that right wing and provincialist power-brokers are testing Harper, but beneath the high drama of high politics others are quaking. On the sensitive issue of refugees, for instance, the Harper government does not need new legislation to clamp down. The portfolio is in the hands of Stockwell Day, Harper’s minister of public security. In the weeks following 9/11, Day, then the leader of the Canadian Alliance, insisted that there was a Canadian connection to the terror attacks. In the House of Commons, he alleged that there were “thousands of these claimants roaming around Canada who should have been detained and some possibly deported…We know that there have been terrorists living among us. We know that they get here illegally through our refugee system.”

The aboriginal accord, negotiated just prior to the election call, is likely to be negated by Harper. Again, no legislation would be required, and none would be necessary to gut the cultural sector. The ideological right gets the importance of culture, and believes that the arts and non-governmental organizations are breeding grounds for left and/or liberal thought. While the Harper government may not privatize CBC television, it will almost certainly slash the network’s budget, and bleed NGOs of federal funds.
Another element in the culture war will be the Harper government’s revisiting of the same-sex marriage issue. While Focus On The Family, a US-based organization dedicated to “family values” is now a registered Canadian charity with offices in Ottawa, Harper is unlikely to re-open the abortion debate in this parliament. But the anxiety list goes on. The Harper government will have difficulty passing anti-labour legislation, and is shrewd enough to know that an upset civil service can be awfully troublesome to a minority government, but a significant downsizing in the number of federal employees can be anticipated. Having welcomed provincial premiers as federal government bedfellows, Harper will likely take his cue on the all-important New Deal for cities from them, not from the more demanding mayors of large municipalities. And if indeed Harper as prime minister becomes little more than a “headwaiter to the provinces” – as Trudeau dismissively characterized Joe Clark – this will no doubt reshape policies from Kyoto to healthcare privatization, the issue on which Jack Layton triggered the 2006 election.

In the aftermath of the Conservative electoral victory, the left needs to revisit a question dating back to the founding of the CCF: the relationship between the Party and progressive movements. From the beginning tension has existed between those devoted to “movement politics” (trade unionists, farmers, and today, civil society groups) and those principally concerned with electoral politics; between those committed to building people’s institutions and transforming the political culture, and those who insist that winning votes, seats, and eventually power (at the provincial and federal levels) is all-important. When the CCF first won in Saskatchewan under Tommy Douglas in 1944, this tension was immediately evident. Many, imbued with a strong western Canadian belief in direct democracy, thought that the Douglas government should adhere exclusively to policies set at party conventions. But Douglas maintained that the government was responsible to all of Saskatchewan and that his cabinet was responsible to the provincial legislature. His view prevailed, as it has ever since with every elected social democratic government in BC, Saskatchewan, Manitoba, and Ontario. The premier and the Cabinet would rule and would listen to the party convention as one voice among many in its formulation of policy.

With Harper in office, Maude Barlow thinks that “dialogue and healing need to take place” among progressives. For her, the road ahead needs to spring from an alliance of forces inside and outside parliament, which could include New Democrats, some Liberals, and some members of the Bloc. “If Stephen Harper wins a majority in the next election,” she says “we will lose decades in the social struggles we are involved in.”

Talk of tactical cooperation is one thing. This must be tempered, though, by the the clear need for a left political party in Canada. Merging the NDP with the Liberals would extinguish a seventy-year social democratic tradition. It would kill an important part of what makes Canada distinctive. The NDP must survive. Ironically, its survival is most threatened by its move to the centre, which has led many to conclude that the country does not need two liberal parties. A critical outlook on capitalism and the championing of the interests of the non-affluent majority were the reasons the party was founded in the first place. Those reasons remain as compelling as ever. The NDP should fight avidly to expand its influence, but that does not mean that its leaders should give in to the cynical politics of short-term electoral advantage, as they did in the recent federal election.

Saturday, August 05, 2006

Keeping Canada out of the Anglo-Sphere

A century ago, the top Anglo-Canadian capitalists of the day and their publicists were determined to ape the British and to compel Canada to share the burden of British imperial struggles. In 1899, when Britain went to war against two small Afrikaner Republics, the Orange Free State and the Transvaal, the pro-imperialists of the day clamoured for Canada to send troops to South Africa to stand shoulder to shoulder with the British.

The pro-imperialists condemned as disloyal anyone not ready to participate in the Boer War. The tory-imperialist Toronto News condemned those who opposed sending Canadian troops as people whose ideas "are not those of the Anglo-Saxon. They would cast off their allegiance to Britain’s Queen tomorrow if they dared."

Today the imperialist ultras are in power in Ottawa. Stephen Harper, his government and party, and the media outlets who are their backers, are pushing the imperialist agenda on Canadians. The words they use are not the same as those employed by the imperialists a century ago, but the meaning is very similar. The empire today is American, not British, and while the Harper Conservatives do not sound the praises of the Anglo-Saxon race, they are determined to have Canada join the Anglo-Sphere, whose charter members are the United States, the United Kingdom and Australia.

Those three countries formed the heart of the “coalition of the willing” that invaded Iraq. While Canada stayed out of that conflict, the Harper government is using the mission in southern Afghanistan, whose bloody consequences for young Canadians are all too apparent, to secure membership in the Anglo-Sphere.

The Anglo-Sphere is the world’s tightest imperial alliance, constructed around the hoary idea that Anglo-Saxon civilization is the most advanced on earth and that the task falls to its members to bring enlightenment and liberty to the rest of humankind.

Canada has never been a very good fit for it because the ultimate logic of the Anglo-Sphere negates the very existence of this country. First, there is the fact of Francophone Canada, a quarter of the country, counting the Quebecois, Acadians and the French-Canadian minorities. Francophones have never been enthralled with being enroled in an Anglo-Saxon brotherhood. They weren’t in 1899, when the pro-imperialists pressured Canada into the Boer War and they are not today. Second, there is the rise of the Canada which is neither Anglo-Saxon, nor French, with its Aboriginal component, and with the growing weight of immigrants and the descendants of immigrants, from many parts of the world.

The Reform Party, the Canadian Alliance, and the Conservative Party of Canada, under leaders Preston Manning, Stockwell Day, and Stephen Harper, have always wanted to press this country onto the procrustean bed of the Anglo-Sphere. Their politics draws them closer to their ethnic cousins who run the United States than to the very large parts of Canada that don’t fit comfortably with their kind of people.

Ever since the American Revolution, the logic of our history has been that if the Anglo-Saxons of the continent could be drawn together it would be the end of Canada. To survive, Canada has had to be an alliance, or at the very least, a functioning union, between the diverse elements that make up the country. The logic of Canada has always depended on convincing people to overcome ethnic loyalties to a sufficient extent that the country can work. This has been a daunting, never ending challenge, but the result has been the creation of a remarkable country.

A century ago, the pro-imperialists who were the spiritual ancestors of today’s Anglo-Sphere zealots, came close to wrecking Canada. While the Liberal government of Wilfrid Laurier did manage to limit Canada’s participation in the Boer War to the sending of a few contingents to South Africa, during the First World War, the full horror of the imperial project struck the country with a vengeance. Under Conservative Prime Minister Robert Borden, Canada mobilized an enormous army first through voluntary enlistment and later through conscription.

Conscription tore Canada asunder with Anglo-Canada voting for it in the 1917 general election, while French Canada completely rejected it. There were anti-conscription riots in Quebec, and thousands of men dodging conscription hid out in the countryside.

Nearly sixty thousand Canadians died in the trenches on the western front.

Today, the American Empire and its allies in the Anglo-Sphere are engaged in a vast struggle that extends across the Middle East and into Central Asia. That struggle, about many things, including control of the world’s cheapest and most plentiful supply of oil, could yet erupt into a single major war, fought on a number of fronts all the way from Gaza to the border regions of Pakistan. There are neo-conservatives in the United States who relish the idea of such a wider conflagration, which they conceptualize as a Fourth World War (they call the Cold War the Third World War).

The number one priority of progressive Canadians must be to prevent this country from being drawn into that wider war, and to throw our weight on the side of those around the world who would prevent that conflagration from developing.

We can win the fight against Stephen Harper. This time, while Francophones remain the most determined to oppose the imperial agenda, opposition to it is strong right across the country. To defeat Harper in the next election, progressive Canadians will need to focus on what is at stake for the country and to put questions of party advantage into the background. That is never easy in a country with a first-past-the-post electoral system, in which party insiders think only about the number of seats they can win. That means that those of us who don’t plan to run for office will have to hold the feet of Liberals and New Democrats to the fire. The job is to get Harper out.

Thursday, August 03, 2006

How Harper Wants Washington To See Us

Canadians are well aware of the sharp right turn in foreign policy taken by the Harper government. For instance, fifty-three per cent of those polled by the Strategic Counsel for the Globe and Mail and CTV said they believed Harper has supported Israeli actions in the Middle East conflict because this is in line with U.S. President George W. Bush and his administration.

In Washington, the Harper government has been even more overt in presenting Canada as a freshly minted neo-conservative power and fervent ally. On a website called
CanadianAlly, the government of Canada tells American decision makers just how much in step the northern neighbour is with the Bush administration.

On the title page of this official site, you see heavily armed Canadian soldiers heading into battle. No blue helmets here. Canadians are tough warriors, standing shoulder to shoulder with the Americans. In an article on July 6, the day Stephen Harper visited George W. Bush in the White House, the right-wing Washington Times got the point of the website: “Canada has been eager to alert Americans to a more militaristic image. A smartly designed Web site (www.CanadianAlly.com) -- promoted with ads in the D.C. Metro system and elsewhere – bristles with photos of Canadian troops in action abroad.”

The first item on the web site, titled “War on Terrorism”, reads:

“Canada has deployed 16,000 personnel and 20 Warships to Afghanistan and the Persian Gulf since 2001. Canadian ship-borne Helicopters, patrol and transport aircraft have flown more than 5,000 sorties and at least 22,500 hours of mission flights. Canada has 2,300 troops in Afghanistan and Command of the Multi-national Brigade in Kandahar. Canada has suffered 18 Deaths and 67 wounded/injured personnel.”

The tone of the web site can be seen in the items it features on its title page:

Statement by Prime Minister Stephen Harper on the deaths of Corporal Francisco Gomez and Corporal Jason Patrick Warren
2 Canadians killed in Afghan suicide bombing
NATO Plans to Expand Afghanistan Mission
Canadian Government Deploys Military to Assist With Departure of Canadians in Lebanon
Statement by the Prime Minister on Cyprus airlift
NATO troops to battle mock disasters
Canada sends six ships to Lebanon
Envoy says Canadian soldiers 'in eye of storm'
Canada’s New Government keeps its commitment to support our military
The 2006 G8 Summit
Canadian soldiers feel like "bullet magnets" after Taliban ambush
Forces launch big attack in Afghan south
Canadians find link between Taliban, drug trade during furious firefight
UK and Canada strong allies in war on terror
No relief for Canucks - Canadians likely to endure more bloody battles
Three dead in military chopper crash
Death of a soldier
Soldiers engaged in lethal two-day game of cat-and-mouse with Taliban fighters
Canadian Soldier Dies in Afghan Fighting
2 Canadian soldiers hurt in Afghan firefight
Canada funding Toronto headquarters of global anti-terrorism financing group
Bush: Diplomacy is Key to North Korea Solution
Canada: Moving Itself Militarily
Cdn troops make progress in Kandahar allow for more aid to flow
Bush lauds Canada's terror efforts
EU, Canada to jointly patrol North Atlantic to stop illegal fishing
New Canadian leader to rebuild military
NORAD alert status stepped up
Canada Condemns North Korean Missile Launch
NORTHCOM, Canada Command Cooperate to Secure North America
Canadians in U.S. Honor Their Independence
10 responses to myths about Canada
Canadian forces coming to aid of Afghan Police post kill attacking insurgents
Aerial Drones on wish list
Canadians, Americans moving to each other's country in increasing numbers
Troops refuse to let attack mar Canada Day break

All this looks more like briefings from a war room than a summary of news items about Canada for Americans to read.
The other major emphasis on CanadianAlly.com is on trade and security. We are informed that: “Canada has the second-largest known oil reserves in the world” and that “Canada is America’s largest supplier of oil, gas, hydro-electricity, and uranium.” Colourful maps are provided with large arrows that track the southward flow of Canadian resources to a hungry United States. For those who thought we might have outgrown our role as a “hewer of wood and drawer of water”, the web site provides a nasty wake up call. Get out your copies of Harold Innis’ Fur Trade in Canada. Nothing has changed.
Indeed, in the new relationship being pitched to the Americans in the web site, Canada will be side by side with the U.S. in American wars and will be pitching in to provide secure oil to the United States. Developing the second largest oil reserves in the world means butchering northern Alberta, lobotomizing the landscape, using clean natural gas to produce oil from the oil sands and polluting and wrecking the province’s rivers. All this to feed American SUVs and to generate super profits for the friends of Dick Cheney. (Alberta collects shockingly low royalties on the oil and gas it produces compared to Norway.)
Under the rules of NAFTA, the more oil we supply to the United States, the more we are required to supply during a time of reduced supplies from overseas. Anyone who wants to know why the Harper government is ditching the Kyoto environmental accord should look at this web site and the role being planned for Canada. To export vast quantities of oil from the oil sands makes the Kyoto environmental targets absolutely impossible to achieve.
People are often told that they need to see themselves as others see them. On
CanadianAlly, we see ourselves as our government wants others to see us. The Washington Times understood the message, saying that in Stephen Harper, “President Bush will find an ideological soul mate.”