DEFEND EQUALITY RIGHTS,
DEFEAT THE TORIES
(The
following article is from
the March 1-15,
2008
issue of People's Voice, Canada's leading communist newspaper. Articles
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IWD 2008 statement
from
the Communist Party of Canada
On the
occasion of International Women's Day 2008, the Communist Party of
Canada sends greetings of solidarity to all who resist exploitation,
oppression, violence and war.
For
almost a century, IWD has been a day to unite and mobilize for the
right to vote, reproductive choice, labour rights, protections against
violence, improved social programs, and opposition to homophobia,
racism and xenophobia. But today, decades of hard-won gains are under
fire from profit-hungry corporations, fundamentalist groups, and
right-wing governments. The defence of women's equality rights is an
essential part of the struggle to stop the Tory/corporate attack on
working people and to defeat the Harper government at the polls.
The
war against equality
Across
the planet, women face rising unemployment, ecological crises,
imperialist bombs, and regional conflicts. Women work an estimated
two-thirds of the world's working hours and produce half of its food,
but earn only 10 percent of global income and own less than one percent
of property. 70% of people living in abject poverty in the world are
women. Yet today we see a global war against equality, led by Harper's
closest ally, the Bush Administration.
The
"biggest lie" of the Harper Conservatives is their claim that our
military is in Afghanistan to defend women. The truth is that seven
years after the defeat of the Taliban, "liberated" Afghan women still
face threats and violence for working outside the home, and female MP
Malalai Joya has been expelled from Parliament for challenging the
warlord-dominated Karzai regime. 87 percent of Afghan women are
illiterate, and just 30 percent of girls have access to education.
An
estimated one million Iraqi civilians, mainly women and children, have
died under the illegal US-led occupation. The Harper Tories cut off
humanitarian aid to Palestine, deepening the economic and social crisis
which imposes a terrible daily burden on Palestinian women and families.
The
Bush White House and patriarchal religious forces continue their
offensive against women's reproductive rights. After the restoration of
capitalism in the former European socialist countries, women face a
stark choice between ghettoized low-wage jobs, or entry into the global
capitalist sex trade.
The
Tory attack
Here
in Canada, the corporate media spreads the myth that women have
achieved full equality. But the reality is very different.
Official data show that 8.3 million women are in the lowest income
groups ($0-30,000), compared to 5.6 million men. Among the wealthy
(over $100,000 annual income) there are 660,000 men and just 196,000
women. Almost one in five Canadian women (2.8
million) live in
poverty; 56% of lone parent families headed by women are poor, compared
with 24% of those headed by men; 49% of single, widowed and divorced
women over 65 are poor; the median employment income for a disabled
woman is $8,360, compared to $19,250 for disabled men; for every $100
earned by men, women earn $30 less; even women with post-secondary
degrees are paid less than 70% of what their male counterparts earn for
full-time, full-year work.
Yet
the Harper Tories slashed the operating budget of Status of Women
Canada by forty percent, and changed the funding criteria for women's
groups, barring them from "equality advocacy". Harper's government
scrapped progress towards a Canada-wide child care system; the
$100/month tax credit does nothing to help families desperate for child
care. The ongoing shift towards "home care" for the sick and elderly is
forcing women to leave their jobs to care for relatives.
Violence against women remains widespread. Women make up over 80% all
victims of spousal homicide, and there are 500 missing or murdered
aboriginal women across Canada. Yet funding for women's shelters, rape
crisis centres, and women's organizations has been virtually wiped out.
The
double burden of capitalism
It was
no coincidence that International Women's Day was begun by socialist
women's organizations, since the attack on equality rights comes from
an economic system based on private ownership: capitalism.
Only
capitalists benefit from the systematic oppression of women and
minority groups. The transnational corporations super-exploit women as
workers, reaping extra profits by paying them lower wages. Women of
colour and Aboriginal women face even higher unemployment rates and
lower incomes, as well as racist discrimination by the legal system and
police. Millions of women are caught in part-time and temporary jobs in
the service industry, or home-based jobs difficult to organize into
unions. Some male workers think they benefit from this pattern, but
their wages and working conditions are also dragged down by the
oppression of female co-workers.
Women
still also do the bulk of domestic labour. While such unpaid labour is
not directly part of the cycle of capitalist exploitation, it is
essential in the process of raising each new generation of workers.
This double burden is a key form of oppression of women under
capitalism.
The
struggle for equality
The
entire working class movement must step up the struggle to defend and
expand women's rights. We must all combat the sexist, racist,
homophobic, anti-immigrant and militarist views promoted by the
corporate media and culture.
Above
all, the trade union movement must build on its historic record of
defending the social and workplace rights of women. That means more
efforts to organize part-time, temporary and contract workers, and the
unemployed, so that these workers can raise their living standards and
expand their political and economic action. By consistently combating
scape-goating, the labour movement can help unite all sections of the
working class.
The
women's movement remains a vital force in the battles for pay equity,
affirmative action, fully paid parental leave, reproductive choice,
universally accessible child care, social assistance, and housing for
all.
The
Communist Party believes that our daily struggles must be integrated
into a long-term strategy. We call for stronger unity of all
progressive forces in our communities, schools and workplaces, between
and during elections, to help build a People's Coalition. Full women's
equality must be a crucial element of the policies which unite such a
coalition.
This
strategy could open the way towards a socialist Canada, where the
principal means of producing and distributing wealth will the common
property of all, and the exploitation of labour will be abolished.
Ecological degradation will be replaced by measures to protect the
natural environment. Poverty, insecurity and discrimination will be
ended. Socialism will finally realize a new society based on
solidarity, equality and emancipation.
On
IWD 2008, the Communist Party of Canada demands:
* reverse
the federal attacks on equality rights.
* end all
Canadian participation in the U.S.-led "war on terror."
*
solidarity with the women of Iraq, Afghanistan, Iran, Haiti, Palestine,
Colombia, Venezuela, Cuba, the Philippines, Korea and other countries
resisting imperialist occupation and threats.
* reject
capitalist globalization "treaties"; cancel the external debts of the
Third World.
* full
funding for quality, public healthcare, education and social welfare
systems.
* a
universal minimum liveable income.
* a
universal, affordable, non-profit childcare system with Canada-wide
standards.
* a shorter
work week with no loss in pay and no reduction in public services; full
benefits for part-time workers.
* intensify
efforts to organize part-time workers and female dominated workplaces.
* restore
and extend employment and pay equity legislation; expand job creation
programs, especially for disadvantaged young women; remove barriers to
EI coverage; expand parental leave benefits to 52 weeks.
* emergency
federal action to save working farm families.
* reinstate
and expand core funding for equality-seeking women's organizations;
full funding for grassroots, feminist services to deal with violence
against women.
* enshrine
within the constitution the rights of Aboriginal peoples, Quebec, and
Acadians to self-determination and self-government, and guarantee the
full economic, social and political equality of Aboriginal women.
* safe,
public, accessible abortion clinics in all parts of Canada.
* allocate
1% of the federal budget to the creation of social, affordable and
subsidized housing.
* establish
a fair and just immigration and refugee policy.
* protect
and expand equality gains by lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgendered
people.
* replace
the student loans program by student grants; phase out post-secondary
tuition fees.
Found
at:
http://www.peoplesvoice.ca/articleprint13/01%20EQUALITY_RIGHTS,_DEFEAT_THE_TORIES.html