01) G8/G20: Fight for a Real Alternative
to the new Capitalist "Consensus"
(The following
article is from the July 1-31, 2010 issue of People's Voice,
Canada's
leading communist
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Issued by the
Central Executive Committee, Communist Party of Canada, June 2010
On the eve of the G8/G20 meetings,
mass labour and democratic mobilizations are building in Southern
Ontario and across Canada to protest this wasteful, security-obsessed
extravaganza. The Communist Party of Canada salutes this resistance and
takes its rightful place alongside workers, students, women, Aboriginal
peoples and social activists in denouncing these summits which aim to
hammer out a strategic line among the ruling imperialist states and
international finance capital on how best to advance their shared
interests, and then present their agenda as a fait accompli to the
world's peoples.
This set of
G-summits is
particularly important because global capitalism continues to be mired
in a profound economic and structural crisis, notwithstanding the
soothing media reports that the 'worst is behind us' and that recovery
is well under way. Saving capitalism and restoring profit margins are
the main concerns of these 'leaders', rather than solving the burning
problems afflicting the world today. That is why issues like climate
change, the world food crisis, ending wars of occupation and rampaging
military spending, and the worsening problem of "under-development",
especially in Africa, have all be swept off the agenda of the G8/G20
meetings.
Bank of
Canada governor Mark
Carney admitted as much this June when he declared that the Summits
must focus attention on the continuing crisis, especially in Europe,
which has had a serious "impact on financial conditions ... [and] it's
not over." He then parroted the World Bank which earlier raised
the
possibility of a "second recession affecting most of the industrialized
world if governments don't deal successfully with the unfolding
European debt crisis."
In fact, the
leading imperialist
countries, including Canada, want to use the Summits to showcase their
determination to impose further social and economic austerity on all
states and peoples, as the only viable solution to overcome the crisis.
But this is a false 'international consensus" - one that serves the
interests of finance capital, but which consigns the vast majority of
the world's working class and oppressed peoples to even more hardship
and suffering.
In Europe,
the Austerity agenda
pushed by the European Union brass and the International Monetary Fund
(IMF) is already having a devastating effect, especially on public
sector workers, youth, and pensioners. Minimum wages are being slashed,
social programs cut, and the retirement age extended for workers.
But this
savage attack is being
met by heroic resistance across the European continent, especially in
Greece and Portugal where the left, Communist-led unions and popular
movements are mounting escalating general strikes and other forms of
mass resistance to fightback against this anti-social onslaught of Big
Capital and its governments.
In Canada,
we need to replicate
the kind of militancy building in Europe, Latin America and elsewhere
around the world. The right-wing Harper government and their
pro-corporate provincial counterparts (both Conservative and Liberal)
are also moving to deepen the assault on workers' conditions, social
programs, and democratic and equity rights. And they will succeed in
pushing through these reactionary 'reforms', unless the labour and
people's forces move quickly to mount a militant, coordinated,
Canada-wide counter-attack.
This is such
a progressive
alternative to this reactionary, pro-capitalist 'solution',, but it
must go beyond, palliative demands to soften the impact. It must
include sweeping measures which challenge the dominance of monopoly
capital, such as the nationalization of the banks, the big energy
monopolies, and other key sectors of our economy. These steps need to
be combined with social measures like expanding access to healthcare,
public and post-secondary education, raising the minimum wage to
$16/hour, reducing the workweek with no loss in take-home pay, and
improving public pensions. And with sweeping tax reform which would
shift the burden from working people onto the corporations and the
wealthy, and with an immediate withdrawal from the disastrous war of
occupation in Afghanistan, along with a 50% cut in military spending
which would save another $10 billion every year.
As we state
in our May Day 2010
statement, "the big monopolies and banks want to make working people
pay for the economic recovery through lower wages, higher unemployment,
and huge cuts in social spending. We say: those who reap billions in
profits must pay! Unite and fight for a fundamentally new direction,
placing the needs of working people and our environment before
corporate greed, [and for policies] based on peace and disarmament!"