03) ONTARIO STUDENT
LEADER CALLS FOR PROVINCE-WIDE MOBILIZATIONS
(The
following
article is from the April 1-15, 2009, issue of People's Voice,
Canada's
leading communist newspaper. Articles can be reprinted free if the
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With the current
economic down‑turn, province‑wide mobilizations are needed bringing
together labour and students in the style of the Ontario Days of Action
to demand substantial investments in public services, Ontario
Chairperson of the Canadian Federation of Students (CFS) told People's
Voice recently.
Shelley
Melanson criticised Ontario's McGuinty Liberal government for doing
nothing on their anti‑poverty strategy, a response to widely condemned
explosion of precarious work, growing income gaps and food bank usage
across Ontario.
"With the
economic crisis more and more students are aware of the increasing
privatization of institutions," Melanson told PV. "The Educational
Policy Institute [a right‑wing US‑based think tank] was talking about a
25% increase in tuition. I think this sent shockwaves through the media
and public discussion. It was front‑page of the Toronto Star."
Melanson, who participated in numerous radio talk shows in response to
the report, said she heard overwhelming support for immediate action on
reduced tuition fees.
EPI's report,
"On the Brink: How the Recession of 2009 Will Affect Post‑Secondary
Education in Canada", was co‑authored by Alex Usher. Back in 1995 (with
the facilitation of the federal Liberals), Usher led a right‑wing split
from the CFS, arguably to dampen large student mobilizations against
drastic federal cut backs to social programmes and downloading.
Melanson
addressed revelations that the Conservative Party is training campus
activists to manipulate student organizations, as well as the rising
attack on freedom of speech on campuses.
"Now, more
than ever, students need to come together regardless of your political
beliefs, and defend our Charter rights," she said. "I think that the
minister of citizenship and immigration, Jason Kenney, has posed a
serious threat to freedom expression and speech on campus. It would
appear the Canadian government is not interested in people who disagree
with them - for example their treatment of the Canadian Arab
Federation, George Galloway, and the attempt to shut down discussion on
international conflicts and occupations. "Can the government limit
freedom of speech because of positions on war and international policy?"
"This
government clearly has an interest in undermining democratic
organizational structures that exist on campuses," she said, pointing
to a recent leak about the Conservative Party organizing workshops
about keeping the CFS off campus, running candidates in student
elections, overturning student levies, and setting up front group clubs
by students affiliated with the Tories. "These workshops took place
with sitting MPs in attendance," Melanson noted.
On leaked
tapes, a former student union president at the University of Waterloo
describes how he coordinated directly with the local Conservative club
to launch an attack on the campus chapter of the Ontario Public
Interest Research Group. Melanson condemned this anti‑democratic
involvement a political party in providing strategy and support for
campaigns undermining student's right to organize.
"I'm not
necessarily shocked by what is happening. We've seen student codes of
conduct - which should be about safety and equity, stopping harassment,
safer spaces for women - instead used to stifle dissent," Melanson
said. "Take the case of the fourteen students at the University of
Toronto, who were engaged in a peaceful demonstration, and faced
criminal charges, many of which have now been dropped and the students
cleared, and also code of conduct charges. Perhaps [what is new is
that] it is more visible, and there is more media attention. I think
that institutions are more blatant."
Melanson
spoke to People's Voice at
the end of a weekend‑long "Student Assembly
Against War and Racism." The event, jointly organized by the Canadian
Federation of Students and the Canadian Peace Alliance, aimed to
provide an opportunity for students and allies to build skills for a
sustained anti‑war movement on campuses. "We wanted to provide an
opportunity for people with a significant background with activism to
come together through skill building workshops with people who are just
finding a political outlook."
A major theme
of the weekend was military recruitment on campuses, and military
spending, both issues the CFS Ontario plans to continue to organize
around. The effort will also help build for anti‑NATO demonstrations on
April 4. The workshops "showcased in a variety of ways how our
government is out of step with the sentiments of everyday Canadians and
students" Melanson said.