Editor’s Note: Stéphane Dion announced December 8 that he would step aside as leader immediately upon the selection of a new or interim leader. The contest noted below concerning Bob Rae and Michael Ignatieff is over – Rae withdrew from contention December 9, leaving Ignatieff as the de facto leader of the Liberal Party of
About 3,000 people gathered in
The
The rallies occurred after a tumultuous week in Canadian politics, culminating with Harper, whose government faced imminent defeat on a non-confidence vote sparked by its parsimonious economic and fiscal update, prevailing upon Governor-General Michaëlle Jean to close parliament for seven weeks in order to buy his government more time to drive a wedge between the coalition partners. Never before had parliament been prorogued (suspended) so as to prevent MPs from voting out a government.
Supporters of the Socialist Equality Party (SEP) distributed a statement at the rallies titled “
The statement explained that “the suspension of parliament and of the MPs’ right to defeat and replace the sitting government strikes at the most fundamental democratic right—the right of the people to choose their own government.” While calling on workers to oppose this constitutional coup, the SEP statement added that workers should give no political support to the “progressive coalition”—the alternate government to be formed by the Liberals and NDP and supported from the “outside” by the Bloc Quebecois.
Noting that the leaders of the three opposition parties had failed to denounce Governor-General Jean’s proroguing of parliament as an attack on democratic rights, the statement declared, “The class character of the coalition—its subservience to big business—is underscored by its tepid reaction to [the Dec. 4] constitutional coup.”
At neither rally Saturday did opposition leaders denounce last week’s coup and the archaic, anti-democratic institution that made it possible, the office of the governor-general.
At the
The CAW bureaucracy is one of the biggest backers of the proposed Liberal-NDP coalition, calculating that this formation will be more amenable to a coordinated and structured down-sizing of the auto industry than Harper’s Tories. It is an open secret that many within Harper’s Conservative caucus, especially from western Canada, favour allowing one or more of the automakers to go bankrupt, viewing this as the best way to reduce auto workers’ wages, benefits, and working conditions and press for like concessions from workers in other industries.
Both Liberal leader Stéphane Dion and NDP chief, Jack Layton, addressed the gathering. But even as Dion was denouncing Harper for creating “an economic, parliamentary and national unity crisis all in the same week,” members of his own party were actively conspiring to relieve him of his position. John Manley, a former deputy prime minister under Jean Chrétien, that very morning had used the pages of the Globe and Mail to undermine Dion and the coalition. “As a Liberal, I believe the first step for my party,” stated Manley, “is to replace Stéphane Dion as leader with someone whose first job is to rebuild the Liberal Party, rather than leading a coalition with the NDP.”
At the rally itself, supporters of Bob Rae, a contender for the Liberal leadership, were actively organizing in the crowd to ensure that their man would be well-placed should Dion be forced from his position prior to his announced May 2009 departure date. Rae, who as the NDP premier of
Dion, flanked by grim-faced Toronto Liberal MPs and erstwhile supporters Ken Dryden and Gerard Kennedy, took less than ten minutes to address the crowd. Taking extreme care not to mention, even for a moment, the grave constitutional questions raised by Governor-General Jean’s acquiescence to Harper’s padlocking of the Canadian parliament, Dion restricted his speech to a series of political attacks on Harper combined with extremely vague proposals for more government spending to address the economic crisis. After all, there have already been open disputes within his Liberal caucus over how large any economic stimulus package should be.
It was left up to NDP leader Jack Layton to pick up Dion’s slack. Clearly pressing his advantage against Dion, the lame-duck coalition leader,
Layton did go to some length in spelling out the type of spending proposals he would expect the coalition to pursue, highlighting, for instance, the timid suggestion that the two-week waiting period before laid off workers receive employment insurance payments be waived.
A World Socialist Web Site reporter also visited the pro-Harper “Rally for
Saturday’s pro-coalition demonstration in
Québec Solidaire, the self-proclaimed left, Quebec sovereignist party, did not send an official delegation, but numerous of its partisans and candidates in the December 8 Quebec election were present. Following in the wake of the Bloc Québécois (BQ) and its sister party at the provincial level, the Parti Québécois, Québec Solidaire has officially lent its support to a Liberal-led coalition government.
In
The nationalist character of the demonstration was most clearly expressed in Duceppe’s speech. The BQ leader made much of the attempt of Harper and the Conservatives to whip up anti-Quebec sentiment—which, to be sure, was utterly reactionary and in keeping with the Conservative government’s attack on democracy. Duceppe concluded his speech by calling for
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