05) COMMUNITY SUPPORT
STRONG FOR M.P. LIBBY DAVIES
(The following
article is from the July 1-31, 2010 issue of People's Voice,
Canada's
leading communist
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PV Vancouver
Bureau
In response
to ferocious attacks
by opponents of Palestinian rights, including within her own party, NDP
MP Libby Davies is also receiving an outpouring of public support.
Backing for Davies is especially strong in her riding of Vancouver
East, where she was greeted warmly by voters at the annual "Car Free
Day" festival, held June 20 along Commercial Drive.
The hate
campaign erupted after
an interview was posted on YouTube, in which Davies dated the
occupation of Palestinian territories by Israel from 1948. As
Palestinian-Canadians and many others have noted, this date is
accurate, since it refers to the Naqba, the terror campaign which saw
the newly-formed state of Israel destroy dozens of Arab villages and
drive hundreds of thousands of Palestinians out of the region.
However, the
pro-Zionist forces
which are pushing to criminalize any criticism of Israel jumped on the
interview, making absurd claims that Davies is anti-Jewish. PM Stephen
Harper joined in to demand the MP's resignation, and pro-Zionist
politicians including NDP MP Thomas Mulcair called on Jack Layton to
remove Davies as the party's deputy leader.
Davies
apologized for her
reference to 1948, in a letter calling this "a serious and completely
inadvertent error" and affirming her support for the NDP's two-state
solution.
"I reject
the allegation that I
hate Israel, and I reject the assertion that I said that Israel is
illegitimate or an abomination. Neither are true," said Davies.
The
interview, staged by a
supporter of Israel hoping to ambush Davies, took place at a rally in
Vancouver against Israel's murderous May 31 attack on the Gaza Freedom
Flotilla. Davies has been one of the few elected politicians in
English-speaking Canada with the courage to attend public events in
solidarity with the Palestinian people. She was one of three MPs who
visited Gaza last December; that delegation reported on the
humanitarian crisis created by the Israeli blockade and the war against
Gaza waged by Israel in December 2008-January 2009.
In the days
following the
interview, Davies has been the target of an astonishing volume of vile
hate messages, often extremely personal in nature. She has been
condemned by critics for supposedly being a corrupt or incompetent MP,
for being a "dupe" of Hamas, and even for being "a Jew-hater". These
absurd charges, mostly by unnamed people, are rejected by Vancouver
East residents, who re-elected her in 2008 with 54% of the vote, three
times as many as her closest challenger.
Davies is
recognized universally
in this riding, where she began her activist life during the 1970s as
an anti-poverty organizer. She was elected to Vancouver city council in
1982 as a 29-year-old candidate for the Committee of Progressive
Electors, and again in 1984, 1986, 1988 and 1990. Her only defeat came
in 1993, as COPE's candidate for mayor. She won election to Parliament
in 1997, holding the seat for the NDP with increasing victory margins,
reflecting her unwavering support for the poor and working people,
solid constituency work, and her dedication to human rights. The idea
that her support for the Palestinian people indicates "anti-semitism"
is seen here as a shameless lie, considering her long and well-known
political friendships with a wide range of Jewish progressives in
Vancouver.
These lies
have also been
rejected by a growing list of organizations, including Palestine
solidarity groups based in the Jewish community itself. The Vancouver
and District Labour Council overwhelmingly adopted a resolution backing
Davies at its June 15 meeting, and COPE members gave Davies an
emotional show of appreciation at the party's June 21 annual BBQ
fundraiser.
While Jack
Layton has so far not
caved in to demands that he fire Davies as deputy leader, many were
appalled when the NDP leader grovelled by sending a formal apology for
her statements to the Israeli ambassador to Canada. Layton's reluctance
to challenge the pro-US and pro-Israel foreign policy of the Harper
Tories is causing enormous unease within the NDP rank and file, the
anti-war movements, and sections of NDP supporters across Canada.
Rifts within
the NDP are also
showing over other issues, such as the Layton leadership's rejection of
public ownership or higher corporate taxes as important tools to
address the needs of the working class during the economic crisis.
There are
suspicions that Layton
may engineer Davies' removal before the next election, using some other
pretext. Such a move could further erode the NDP's electoral support
among progressive movements. On the other hand, Layton's attempts to
appease right-wing critics may open the door to higher votes for
progressive candidates, especially for the Communist Party of Canada,
whenever the next federal election takes place.