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Canada’s new minority Conservative government used Tuesday’s
inaugural parliamentary address or Throne Speech to reaffirm its intention to
shift politics sharply to the right. Key pledges included: “a stronger
military,” closer relations with the Bush administration, “more
police on the street,” tax cuts, “fiscal responsibility” and
“a more competitive” Canadian economy.
Especially noteworthy were the speech’s repeated references to the Canadian
Armed Forces’ intervention in Afghanistan and their coupling with vows
that Canada will take a more active role on the world stage.
All three opposition parties—the Liberals, the social-democratic New
Democratic Party and the pro-Quebec independence Bloc Québécois—responded
to the Throne Speech by proclaiming their readiness to work with the Conservative
government headed by neo-conservative ideologue Stephen Harper.
In signaling that they will not try to unseat the government, the opposition
parties are faithfully reflecting the wishes of corporate Canada, which strongly
supported the Conservatives coming to power in the January 23 federal election.
The 12-year Liberal government of Jean Chrétien and Paul Martin was
the most right-wing federal government since the Great Depression. Yet big business
grew increasingly dissatisfied with the Liberal regime for failing to press
forward with further social spending cuts after having implemented, between
1995 and 2001, the greatest budget and tax cuts in Canadian history, and for
clinging, in rhetoric, to a variant of Canadian nationalism that contrasts a
pacific and progressive Canada with the rapacious, militaristic dollar-republic
to the south.
Much of the Conservative Throne Speech was given over to reiterating the five
Conservative priorities that Harper identified in the final weeks of the election
campaign.
These priorities—the adoption of a federal Accountability Act, a two
percentage point reduction in the Good and Service Tax (GST), a “child-care”
benefit of $100 per month for each child under six, tougher penalties for those
convicted of violent crimes, and a wait-time guarantee for medically necessary
procedures—were formulated with the aim of partially masking and giving
a populist guise to the Conservatives’ reactionary, pro-big business agenda.
The Accountability Act will outlaw corporate, union and large personal donations
to political parties and prohibit newly retired ministers and federal officials
from lobbying the government. It arises from the Conservatives’ two-year
campaign to use a scandal that involved kickbacks to the Liberals’ Quebec
wing to denounce the Liberals as corrupt and frame the last election as a referendum
on government corruption.
Because they aim to win a majority in another election some time in the next
6 to 24 months, the Conservatives intend to keep highlighting “Liberal
corruption.” This also fits in well with their attempts to paint government
spending as out of control and thereby justify program cuts.
Thus Harper responded to a speech by interim Liberal leader Bill Graham that
mildly criticized the Throne Speech with a visceral attack, accusing the Liberals
of “13 years of waste, mismanagement, dithering and corruption.”
The Throne Speech touted the Conservative GST cut as a measure aimed at “helping
ordinary working Canadians and their families.” This is a cynical lie.
Its true purpose is to give popular legitimacy to the Conservatives’ plans
to make much more substantial cuts in corporate, personal income and capital
gains taxes—cuts whose benefits will overwhelmingly accrue to big business
and the well-to-do.
Likewise the Conservative child care benefit is a sham. One hundred dollars
will cover just a tiny fraction of a month’s child-care costs. The Conservatives’
real purpose is to provide themselves with political cover for the dismantling
of the Liberals’ belated and inadequately funded national day-care scheme.
The Liberals’ scheme raised the ire of the Conservatives and corporate
Canada for they feared it could evolve into a new, national public service program,
the first since the 1970s.
Most hypocritical of all is the Conservatives’ health-care “wait-time”
guarantee. Fifteen years of budget cuts and chronic under-funding of the health
care system by both Ottawa and the provinces have resulted in the rationing
of health services in the form of long waiting lists for medically necessary
and even life-saving medical procedures. Now, with the blessing of the Supreme
Court in the form of its Chaouilli decision, corporate Canada and the right
have seized on the injustice of waiting lists as a lever to expand the role
of private, for-profit companies in the management and provision of health care.
While the Conservatives have refrained from spelling out the details of their
wait-time guarantee, they have repeatedly said that they will not provide the
provinces, which have the constitutional responsibility for health care, any
more money to address the waiting list problem. Innovation, i.e., greater private
sector involvement in the health care system, is their preferred solution.
In the two months of his government, Harper has used his executive powers to
align Canada more closely with the Bush administration and to consign to the
rubbish bin the notion that Canada is a peace-keeping nation, as opposed to
one committed to using its armed forces to uphold “Canadian values”—that
is, the interests of the Canadian ruling class—through overseas military
action.
These changes were further underlined in Tuesday’s Throne Speech. It
promised greater Canadian involvement in world affairs, “stronger multilateral
and bilateral relationships, starting with Canada’s relationship with
the United States, our best friend and largest trading partner,” a “more
robust diplomatic role for Canada” and “a stronger military.”
The day after the speech, Harper confirmed that his government will proceed
with a multi-billion military procurement program and major expansion of the
CAF’s troop strength.
The Throne Speech also promised a new, “open federalism,” including
steps to accommodate the demands of the Quebec government for greater powers.
Decentralization is favored by Harper and his government as a means of both
satisfying the demands of the elite in Quebec and western Canada, especially
Alberta, for greater power and of pressing forward with the dismantling of what
remains of the welfare state.
Thomas d’Aquino, the chief executive and president of the Canadian Council
of Chief Executives, was possibly the most enthusiastic of a long line of business
spokesmen and newspaper editorialists who lauded the Throne Speech.
Said d’Aquino, “The core promises made by the Conservative Party
during the election campaign, including fiscal responsibility, lower taxes,
more innovative delivery of public services and more honest and effective government,
will by themselves contribute significantly to a stronger economy.”
“At the same time, Prime Minister Stephen Harper has recognized that
Canada faces very real challenges within a global economy that is being transformed
by the emergence of new giants such as China and India. His initial priorities
are clear, and he has sent an unmistakable signal that he is committed to continuing
efforts to make Canada’s economy more competitive and more productive.”
This praise from the head of the country’s most powerful corporate lobby
group did not give the NDP any reason to pause. NDP leader Jack Layton favorably
compared the Conservatives to their Liberal predecessors, saying the new government
seems more open to working with the opposition. “I’m cautiously
optimistic,” said Layton, “to see that the lessons of history have
not been lost on the new government.”
In the last parliament, the NDP first allied with the big business Liberals,
then joined with the Conservatives in framing a non-confidence motion that indicted
the Martin government not for its right-wing policies, but for its corruption,
thereby lending legitimacy to the Conservatives’ bid for power.
The Bloc Québécois, the party supported by the Quebec union bureaucracy,
has been even more open than the NDP in its support for the government. Within
minutes of the reading of the Throne Speech, BQ leader Gilles Duceppe said his
party would vote in favor of it, thus ensuring the Conservative government’s
survival.