10)
DUMB-OCRACY AT ITS BEST
(The
following
article is from the November 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.)
Post-election
roundup by David Tymoshchuk, PV Manitoba Bureau
TORONTO - Voters in
Eglinton-Lawrence went to the polling station shown on their election
cards, a church that wasn't there. It had been torn
down. Earlier in
October, Liberal supporters who had lawn signs noticed that their cars
had the brake lines cut or/and an "L" keyed on a car door or other body
panel. Some had their homes spray painted with anti-Liberal slogans.
Many supporters were intimidated by the vandalism, which was akin to
fascist tactics. Some asked that the signs be removed after hearing the
news.
SUDBURY - J. David Popescu, an
independent candidate, stated at an election debate at a high school in
front of students that "homosexuals should be executed". Students booed
and called for him to be pre-empted but he was allowed to continue on
other topics. On Oct. 2 he said during a radio broadcast that Egale
Canada's director Helen Kennedy should be executed. He is under
investigation for hate crimes. Popescu has discredited himself before.
He has stated music stores should be closed because they "promote
satanic music" and that dragon boats invoke the devil. He was living
off his mother's pension and was found guilty in 2003 of assaulting her.
MONTREAL - On Sept. 28 and 29,
Westmount Public Security removed election posters of Communist Party
of Canada candidate Bill Sloan from public poles in the riding of
Westmount-Ville-Marie. The recently posted signs, duly authorized by
the registered agent of the Communist Party, put forward his positions
on Canadian policy concerning Afghanistan and Israel. In one case,
"CANADA OUT OF AFGHANISTAN" and the other, "END CANADIAN SUPPORT TO
APARTHEID ISRAEL". The signs were removed by the Westmount
administration without giving either the candidate or the Party notice.
Sloan learned of the City's actions when the Westmount Independent
published a story on the issue, mentioning that "Offensive" posters had
been taken down by Westmount public security.
"I called
their public security
on October 9 and spoke to the Director, Mr. Richard Blondin," says
Sloan. "He confirmed that his service had indeed removed my posters on
September 28 and 29, but did not tell me what they had done with them.
He declined to explain for what reasons or under what authority they
had acted. The next day I read a press release from Marc Garneau,
Liberal candidate in the riding where he joins the Canadian Jewish
Congress in denouncing the election campaign of the Communist Party of
Canada, and alleges that my signs `may be' illegal because of their
content!... The electoral laws allow an advertising message that
promotes or opposes a registered party or the election of a candidate,
including one that takes a position on an issue with which a registered
party or candidate is associated. They were so sure of themselves that
they filed a report with the Montreal Police (SPVM), leaving them a
pair of each of the `offending' posters. As though I were the criminal.
"This is a
flagrant violation of
freedom of expression, which the Supreme Court reminds us is at its
most precious during an election campaign. These shameful acts,
committed not by anonymous vandals, but by a public authority, must be
punished and remedied in a public fashion."
SURREY - RCMP physically blocked and
removed reporters from interviewing Prime Minister Steven Harper during
the election, on the orders of a Harper aide. A similar scene with
reporters and the RCMP took place in St. Eustache, Quebec. In addition,
the Conservative Party gave gag orders to its candidates, most of whom
did not show up at all-candidate meetings or talk to media for the
duration of the election.
WINNIPEG - The city had more
campaigning by activists than by politicians as sit-ins were a regular
event. At 10 am on Sept. 20, anti-war activists staged a sit-in at the
campaign office of Conservative candidate Trevor Kennard to make known
that Canadians were not pleased with his party's policy towards war
resisters. The office occupation was in opposition to the planned
deportation of Jeremy Hinzman and his family to face persecution in the
U.S. Students from the University of Manitoba had a "study-in"
simultaneously at three campaign offices in Winnipeg to protest the
lack of funding towards students, Aboriginal students especially.
On Oct. 14,
the electoral
engineering done by a Harper- overhauled Elections Canada made itself
known as many Aboriginals, youth, students, homeless and workers who
frequently move were turned away at polling stations across Winnipeg's
North and West Ends.