07mobile) COMMUNIST CANDIDATE
BREAKS GROUND IN KOOTENAY WEST
(The following
article is from the
April 16-30, 2009, issue of People's Voice, Canada's leading communist
newspaper. Articles can be reprinted free if the source is credited.
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Three
candidates of the
Communist Party of BC, the registered provincial party of British
Columbia Communists, will be on the ballot on May 12. Party leader
George Gidora will run in Surrey-Newton, and retired health care worker
Peter Marcus is a second-time candidate in Vancouver-Mount Pleasant.
Our next issue will report on their campaigns.
Progressives
and working people
in the southern interior of British Columbia are rallying around the
campaign of a youth candidate in the May 12 BC election. Zach Crispin,
a student and young worker, will challenge the big business agenda of
the Campbell Liberals by carrying the red flag in the riding of
Kootenay West. He is the first Communist candidate in the area in
almost fifty years.
"The three
major issues in
Kootenay West are education, health care and jobs," Zach says. The
Kootenays, like many rural areas, have suffered from years of
devastating cutbacks and privatization of public services, first by the
New Democrats and greatly accelerated under the Campbell Liberals.
"More than
six public schools
have been shut down in this riding because of the actions of the
Liberal government, which also used undemocratic back-to-work
legislation against a B.C. teachers strike," says Zach. "Health care
has been constantly threatened by profiteers and P3 privatization.
There is only one major hospital in the riding, up to five hours
driving distance for some residents. We urgently need a massive
increase in public funding for not‑for‑profit community clinics to
adequately serve the people."
Zach's
candidacy comes at a
period of intense attack on Canadian jobs and public control of natural
resources. Kootenay West, home to the large Teck Cominco Smelter in
Trail as well as a pulp mill and forestry industry, has a proud history
of militant working class struggle. He will campaign for a new
direction, based on peoples' needs not corporate greed, as well as
protecting Canada's sovereignty, and manufacturing and industrial base.
The future
for industry in Trail
is uncertain. Earlier in 2009, Teck Cominco's stocks were reduced to
junk bond status. After a recovery on the market, the company announced
over 1,000 layoffs, including 400 miners in south-eastern BC.
Unemployment in the region has skyrocketed, up to officially around 8
percent and higher than the Canadian average.
"I have
spent much of my life
here in Trail, and I love the Kootenays," Zach says. "My family is from
here and I met my wife-to-be here at high school." Zach, who is 19 and
organizer of the Young Communist League in Trail, works part‑time at a
gas station. He is a first‑year student at Castlegar college and an
active member of the students' union, which works on youth and student
issues such as minimum wage and affordable housing
Zach's
campaign is also
advancing bold, new demands for young people, including universal,
accessible public childcare, lifting the minimum wage above the poverty
line to $16, eliminating the training wage, lowering the voting age to
16, establishing a system of grants not loans, and abolishing tuition
fees. He calls for a major increase in public funding to education, and
lifting the federal cap on Aboriginal student post-secondary funding.
Many of
these policies are in
place elsewhere: Newfoundland has frozen tuition fees, Ontario's
minimum wage is moving to $10, and Quebec has $7 a day child‑care.
While hardly enough (and BC can do better) this exposes the lie that
there is no alternative. Socialist Cuba, a much poorer country than
Canada, has free education and trains vast numbers of doctors from
around the world. Another key issue is peace. "I spent a year with the
Canadian Military Reserve, which allowed me to see the great error in
imperialist warfare and the backwards ideology of the Canadian Forces,"
says Zach. He calls to support the troops by bringing them home now
from the racist war in Afghanistan, and has spoken out for solidarity
with the Palestinian people.
"Working
class families, youth,
women, racialized communities, and the poor, will benefit immensely
from the election of Communists to the legislature," says the
candidate, noting that a vote for the Communists is a sharp break with
the current direction and a demand for fundamental change. "People here
need immediate measures to raise living standards and expand our
rights, including our right to democratic control of our land, jobs,
and economy, putting a stop to the corporate domination of our province
and opening the door to fight for a socialist Canada," says Zach. "This
is urgent, necessary, and possible."