01) MASS STRUGGLES
SHAKE CHAREST LIBERALS
(The following
article is from the April 16-30, 2010 issue of People's Voice,
Canada's
leading communist
newspaper. Articles can be reprinted free if the source is credited.
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PV Québec Bureau
Québec's political landscape is
becoming increasingly volatile. A
number of recent mass demonstrations by labour and other peoples'
organizations have rocked the province with tens of thousands of people
hitting the streets. As People's Voice goes to press, a major
government scandal appears to be coming to a head, and a recent poll by
Léger Marketing and Le Devoir newspaper has announced that Jean
Charest's Liberal government is at an historically all-time low
approval rating.
The major direction of public anger has been
against the Charest
Liberals' budget, unveiled in late March. Over 12,000 students, workers
and community groups mobilized on April 1 against the budget. On April
11, 50,000 people rallied against the budget in Québec City.
These huge
protests came just weeks after the March 20th mobilization of 75,000
people in Montréal under the banner of the Front Commun (Common
Front)
- a coalition of trade unions representing almost all public and
para-public sector workers in Québec (see our April 1-15 issue).
According to labour and social movements, the
Liberal budget has
attracted strong opposition because it targets workers and the poor
through increased fees and taxes, including a $200 per-person
"contribution" for health care and higher tuition fees. The budget also
steps up a sharp privatization attack on public services.
"In fact, the budget is probably illegal
because of its reforms to
health care," Robert Luxley, editor of the Québec communist
newspaper
Clarté, told People's Voice in an interview.
"It violates the Canada
Health Act and provokes a federal-level attack on Medicare."
"People in Québec are mobilizing now
because they think enough is
enough," Luxley said. He pointed to the case of the labour unions where
the Common Front is negotiating against a government position of five
per cent wage increases in five years. "This is after a two year wage
freeze, which is a decrease with inflation, and many years of other
cutbacks."
The government is demanding a series of harsh
austerity measures
from the Common Front's members. For example, nurses' overtime will
essentially be abolished, reclassified as regular work hours. Sick
leave pay will be regressively reduced from 80 per cent to 50 per cent.
At the same time as the budget, the Liberals
have announced they
will build two major university hospitals in Montréal as
"public-private partnerships", in spite of strong public opposition and
a damning review of P3s by Québec's Auditor General. The
contracts are
worth more than three billion dollars. In the case of the
Montréal
University Research Centre, the contract will be awarded to a former
Québec Liberal Party official.
"Over the past year there have been a lot of
revelations showing
the government is linked in an illegal way to the big bosses -
especially in the building industries who are the first beneficiaries
of the government's bailout packages," Luxley said. Radio Canada (CBC)
has just revealed statements by the former Minister of Justice, Marc
Bellemare, that construction companies have conspired with Charest to
appoint three Québec judges.
The Radio Canada revelations show that some of
the companies are
possibly linked with the Mafia or the Hells Angels, Luxley told PV.
"But that is not the major point. We see that the bosses have decided
to make the laws for the government. This again proves what the
Communists say [about capital and the state] and what happens `behind
the curtain!'"
"At this moment we think it is necessary for
the Common Front to
place itself at the core of the fight-back and make a bigger commitment
to the broader people's struggle," Luxley said. "It is not enough to
stay the course and continue fighting on their immediate bargaining
demands. The Common Front must go further, denouncing the budget."
Québec solidaire, the province's left party with one
member in the
National Assembly, has called for the resignation of the government.
Luxley also regards as very positive the resolution adopted on April 9
by some of the health sector unions in the Confederation of National
Trade Unions (CSN), calling for the government to resign.
"This is an excellent idea. What is needed is
a political general strike against the budget," Luxley said.
If the spirit of resistance is being taken up
by the people, the
evidence lies in the April 1 action of the students and workers in
Montréal, and April 11 mass mobilization in Québec City,
according to
Luxley.
The student demo featured a larger turn-out
than recent years.
Bold speeches by youth and community activists suggested the struggle
was a class conflict. In Québec the rally came together under
the
direction of a man better known to the public as an organizer of pop
music concerts. It bought out people from the broad sweep of civil
society.
"While the Québec demonstration was,
perhaps, `mixed' - for
example, there were evidently some anti-taxation voices - it is correct
to say that the workers and poor people pay far too much taxes. The
people are seeing clearly that the rich do not pay enough," said Luxley.
He noted that the Communist Party had
longstanding demands for a
progressive tax system based on ability to pay, including increasing
the corporate tax rate to 29 per cent, ending tax loopholes and
shelters and jailing corporate tax evaders, while eliminate taxes on
incomes under $35,000/yr and abolishing the regressive GST and QST.
"These kinds of demands could be won through the type of struggle we
see developing with the Common Front," he said.
Following the Common Front's mass action on
March 20, the
government publicly called for a flurry of negotiation. Before long,
however, it was clear the government was not willing to change any of
its demands and talks remain jammed. Instead, the Charest Liberals put
forward their budget as a way to divide the people from the demands of
the Common Front, Luxley suggested.
"I think both sides are very conscious that
this is a battle to
win the public's opinion," Luxley said. "The government is running a
series of large ads in the media. They are suggesting that cutbacks
will save public services. It is blatantly hypocritical."
The ads say that the debt load because of the
economic crisis can
be re-paid - 38 per cent by the public and corporations, and 62 per
cent by the government itself. In fact, Luxley explained, this means
the main victims of the cutbacks will be the workers and people at
large.
Meanwhile, the Charest Liberals are touring
Québec, meeting with
local business associations and boards of trade. "They desperately want
to be the hero of big business at all costs," Luxley said. "Charest
knows this is the Liberals' last mandate. They are not afraid to use
their powers."
"The Common Front exists because of the past
experience of the
trade union movement in Québec," he added. "When the unions were
divided, the people were defeated. They have learnt from this to be
united. Today the people want to make pressure on the government, and
are searching for real alternatives. The Le Devoir poll reinforces the
idea that the people are not satisfied by the main political parties.
This is a very important situation. It calls for more united action of
the working class and people's forces, with the Common Front at the
core."