05) RIGHT-WING TACTICS
DISRUPT CFS MEETING
(The following
article is from the January 1-15, 2010 issue of People's Voice,
Canada's
leading communist
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PV Youth Bureau
Debates around the future of the
Canadian Federation of Students, English-speaking Canada's largest
student organization, came to a head at its semi-Annual General Meeting
last month. Held Nov. 24-28 in Ottawa, the AGM was attended by over 300
delegates from about eighty student union locals.
The meeting
took place in the
context of thirteen organized defederation campaigns at colleges and
universities affiliated with CFS campuses this semester.
"These moves
are been vocally
supported by the Conservative Party," B.C. delegate Zach Crispin told
People's Voice. Crispin pointed to a series of cross-Canada workshops
bringing together Conservative youth and attended by sitting Members of
Parliament, previously reported in PV last spring.
"We know the
Conservatives have
been trying to disrupt the work of progressive organizations on campus,
like Public Interest Research Groups and Palestine solidarity
committees. This semester we've also seen malicious calls for
impeachment of anyone on a students' union board who is seen as
left-wing," Crispin said.
Of the
ninety motions on the
floor at the AGM, a large majority were proposed by locals where
defederation campaigns were taking place. While a few of these motions
publicly intending to "re-shape and reform" the CFS passed, Crispin
told PV, "many of these would break collective agreements with the
CFS's unionized employees, force elected leaders of the student
movement to earn the minimum wage, and institute procedures such as
leadership by lottery."
"In my
opinion, delegates from a
number of student unions attended the meeting in hopes of disrupting
the process and stifling regular discussion," Crispin said.
Kwantlen
Student Association,
the Graduate Students' Association of the University of Calgary, the
Concordia undergraduates and graduates, and the Post-Graduate Students'
Society of McGill University repeatedly put forward filibusters, were
ruled out of order by the chair, and on one day delayed discussion
until 5 am. When it appeared clear a vote would not be cast in their
favour, a fire alarm was pulled.
According to
Andrew Brett, a
student activist and writer for Rabble.ca, the McGill Graduates sent
three representatives who were not members of their student union. "One
of them was Jose Barrios, a University of Victoria defederation
activist flown in from British Columbia; another was Dean Tester, a
conservative student at Carleton University and owner of
http://www.alwaysright.ca
a right-wing blog, according to Brett. The third
delegate was a student at Concordia who is also leading a defederation
campaign.
Last month,
Brett and Crispin
were among over sixty signers of an "Open letter from progressive
students" calling for critical support of the CFS. "Those claiming the
CFS can't be reformed and must be destroyed don't address the objective
necessity for students to have a cross-Canada organization," the letter
stated, adding "After smashing the CFS, what's next? We would wake up
with a horrible hangover and have to rebuild."
"At best,
the defederation
campaigns are an incredible waste of time and distraction; at worst
they make all students, well beyond CFS members and including the
Quebec's student unions, incredibly vulnerable to the right's agenda,"
it said.
While the
letter was widely
reprinted on the web, the editor of the Concordia student newspaper
claimed it was evidence of conspiring between Communists and former CFS
employees.
"I think
that claim is
ridiculous," Crispin said. "the fact that they had to single out myself
and a few other former Communist Party candidates who signed this
letter - together with leaders of the Young New Democrats, anarchists,
and host of other progressives, including many who formerly and
currently have elected positions within the CFS - that just shows how
afraid the Conservative youth are of real debate. They have to go back
to the 1950s and the cheap anti-democratic tactics of McCarthy."
The CFS AGM
also responded to
the defederation campaigns, supporting a motion proposed by the
Carleton graduate students to change the rules around local student
unions leaving the CFS. Future campaigns now have to collect double the
number of signatures (20 per cent of the CFS local's membership) within
the first two months of the school year. Referendums can now only be
held once every five years, and only two membership referendums can be
held a year. The resolution passed with two-thirds majority support.
Despite
fractious debate,
delegates worked hard to get regular business achieved. Dave Molenhuis,
former CFS national treasurer, was elected new National Chairperson.
Delegates also heard a presentation by Malalai Joya, outspoken Afghan
anti-war parliamentarian.
By closing
plenary the AGM had
passed a number of resolutions, including solidarity statements with
students in California (where students have launched a mass actions
aimed at stopping a 30 per cent tuition increase and despite
heavy-handed measures by police) and Iran.