06) YOUNG COMMUNISTS IN
THE FEDERAL ELECTION
(The
following
article is from the October 1-15, 2008, issue of People's Voice,
Canada's
leading communist newspaper. Articles can be reprinted free if the
source is credited. Subscription rates in Canada: $25/year, or $12 low
income rate; for U.S. readers - $25 US per year; other overseas readers
- $25 US or $35 CDN per year. Send to: People's Voice, c/o PV Business
Manager, 133 Herkimer St., Unit 502, Hamilton, ON, L8P 2H3.)
Special to PV
Behind the Marché Maisonneuve in
Montreal's Hochelaga riding is
a green park. Sounds of Cuban music are coming from a large tent -
today is Montreal-Cuba friendship day. On the other side of the grass,
a small crowd of people are having a picnic. It is the local committee
of Québec Solidaire.
Marianne Breton Fontaine is smiling as she
talks to people milling around. She's just collected fifteen
signatures, another step closer to nomination as a candidate for the
Communist Party.
"I am impressed by the openness of all the
people I speak to," she says. "This is a working class neighbourhood.
People are angry about the ruling class and think we have good ideas."
Marianne is one of several youth and student
candidates the Communist Party has nominated across the country for the
Oct. 14 election. "The candidates will raise issues that won't be
discussed in this campaign otherwise," Johan Boyden tells People's
Voice. Boyden is the leader of the Young Communist League and running
in Toronto Centre.
"With the threat of a Tory majority, it is
vital for all opposition to become stronger - not weaker," he adds.
"Now is the time for clear, audacious policy alternatives, for bold
ideas, fighting candidates, and parties with a progressive and
unambiguous vision - that's what we'll be putting forward."
That vision, he says, includes "zero tuition
fees," grants not loans; massively increase funding to post-secondary
education; free books, eliminate ancillary fees; ban military
recruitment and research from campus; restore and expand funding to
arts and science for peaceful purposes; reverse privatization, curb
corporate power on campus; enact and enforce equity in university
hiring; raise minimum wage to $15/hour; universal, accessible child
care; and expanding Aboriginal student funding, and d Aboriginal-run
education initiatives.
Communist youth and student candidates
are running in six ridings.
Calgary
East: Jason Devine, a
28-year-old who was born and raised in Calgary, is married and has four
children. He is a full-time student at the University of Calgary, in
his fourth year of studying history. He is a leading member of
Anti-Racist Action Calgary and is also active in anti-war and social
justice movements. Earlier this year, while his spouse Bonnie was
running in the Alberta provincial election, Neo-nazis in Calgary
attempted to fire-bomb their house.
Guelph: Drew Garvie is a
graduate of the U of Guelph, a service sector worker, and Young
Communist League organizer. Drew supports the CFS Drop Fees Campaign,
and calls for eliminating tuition, massively increasing funding, and
stopping military recruitment and privatization on campus. He actively
protests Canada's war inAfghanistan, and supports the Six Nations
reclamation in Caledonia. "People and nature before profits!" he says.
Toronto Centre: Johan Boyden
campaigns for peace and against campus
military recruitment. He is for raising minimum wages, expanding LGBTQ
rights, and freedom for the Toronto 18. "Massive public pressure from
youth, tenants, immigrants, unions and all progressive movements can
abolish racial profiling, eliminate tuition fees, and win public
housing," he says.
Hamilton Centre: Ryan Sparrow
works in customer service in downtown Hamilton, part of the new low-pay
industry replacing manufacturing jobs. He was inspired into political
action by a May Day "No Concessions" rally organized by Steelworkers
Local 1005, against bankruptcy protection fraud by Stelco management.
Ryan spares no efforts fighting the corporate nation-wrecker from
destroying Canadian manufacturing and running away with billions.
Laurier-Sainte-Marie: Samie
Pagé-Quirion is a student in sociology in focusing on feminist
studies at the University of Quebec at Montreal. She participated in a
journey to Cuba of international cooperation with the agency ARO
International in 2006, and traveled to several regions in Latin
America, primarily in Mexico. She has also traveled in Europe and
Western Canada. She has worked in Amnesty International and
participated in events organized by la
Table de concertation et solidarité Québec-Cuba.
She is a member of the Young Communist League.
Hochelaga: Marianne Breton
Fontaine is a photography student at Cégep
du Vieux-Montréal, working for her Student Union as a
Secretary. Her main activity is within the Young Communist League of
Quebec, where she has been an organizer for the past two years. She is
also active in the peace movement with Echec a la Guerre, in the
Québec-Cuba Caravan of Friendship, and in Québec
Solidaire, where she
holds the post of delegate for the Hochelaga-Maisonneuve Committee for
Women.
Together with the Young Communist League, the
candidates will be pushing to get their voices heard and to expand
democracy in the election campaign, using Facebook, YouTube, blogs, and
focused outreach to high schools and university campuses.