There is a lot of controversy surrounding recent developments in the New Democratic Party in Canada.
I lived in Manitoba for ten years until I was deported because of my
political views after the Liberal government joined the right wing in
attacking me.
At the present time, I am a member of the
Lake-of-the Woods Communist Club, one of three co-chairs of the club
which has members from Minnesota, Manitoba and Ontario. Members of our
club have been very involved in the NDP and our club had members at the
recent NDP meeting.
There are those making the outrageous claim that the NDP is a "social democratic party."
This was my response to one person making this claim: Wrong. Dead wrong, Andy Span.
The New Democratic Party is not a social democratic party.
The NDP includes all views from the left... and beyond... or, at least it should.
Social democrats should go start their own party if they want an exclusively social democratic party.
But, this wouldn't solve any problems, either.
The NDP would be severely weakened should the social democrats
withdraw; but, the social democrats are going to have to learn to be
respectful of the views of others.
There is no proof that the
Leap Manifesto won't gain tremendous traction with the vast majority of
working class Canadians. Why would anyone oppose it being debated and
discussed. These debates and discussion will bring new life into the
NDP.
The most successful provincial NDP government of all time in
Canada was led by Howard Pawley in Manitoba and he had an open door to
all of the entire left... and most others willing to work with him for
the common good.
I would suggest everyone take a few deep breaths and read Howard Pawley's excellent book, "Keep True, My Life in Politics."
The NDP paid a very heavy price for Bob Rae's treacherous betrayal (and I was very involved in helping get this guy elected as the first NDP premier of Ontario) and
the NDP is paying a very heavy price for making a substantial part of
the left in Canada feel like they have no home in the NDP because there
are those who try to pigeon hole the NDP as a social democratic party.
Tom Mulcair started coming to his senses in his later speeches in Toronto but it was too little, too late.
Buying into this crap about the need for "baby steps" and "incremental reforms" is sure to doom the NDP.
Tommy Douglas, from his deathbed, urged the NDP and all Canadians to
take up the task of struggling and fighting for fully socialized health
care and if we examine this issue as a way to look at most other
struggles for required reforms we can do so by asking a very simple
question concerning the right to have dental care included as part of
health care:
Would you vote for any politician who didn't care if you have a toothache and can't afford to get dental care?
Working people have very serious problems from poverty wages to lack of
child care (and what is with this "affordable child care crap" when
child care should be universal through a public system and free for all?
Is this too much for the well-heeled crowd of social democrats to
comprehend?
And why don't the social democrats like Mulcair want
to talk about a Minimum Wage that is tied to actual cost of living
factors which would bring in a Minimum Wage of just over $20.00 an hour
for a forty hour work week?
Or, what is the position of the
social democrats when it comes to a Basic Income Guarantee which worked
so well as an experiment in Dauphin, Manitoba when the NDP forced the
Liberals to fund the experiment?
When it comes to health care,
child care, unemployment, Minimum Wages, the cost of higher education---
"baby steps" and "incremental reforms" are not what the severe problems
working class families confront need... a giant Leap forward is
required and it is time for the NDP to bring forward some kind of
program and platform to make the multi-national corporations which have
been raping the land of resources pay for it all.
I have traveled
and met with Canadians in every single province and a point of great
unity is that Canadians are sick and tired of U.S. and other
multi-national corporations taking everything they can grab while
leaving nothing behind to improve the lives of the people and this theft
has been carried out in a way that has left tremendous damage to the
environment.
As far as the oil in Alberta... bring these oil
fields under public ownership like the NDP originally believed in doing.
Then take a look at the situation and decide how to proceed. Again,
this is foreign multi-nationals raking in huge profits at the expense of
the Canadian people while doing great harm to the environment. Cut out
the huge corporate profits and perhaps an environmentally sound way can
be found to manage the production of oil. In the long run as the oil
industry is going in Alberta it would be cheaper to just halt it right
now because the mess that is being made is going to end up costing a lot
more than what is being gained right now.
What gave the social
democrats the right to use bullying tactics to replace the demand for
public ownership of the mines, mills, factories and entire industries
like banking, communications and energy with this coddling of private
industry--- domestic and foreign--- while pushing higher taxes on the
working class?
And why would Mulcair seek to ally the NDP with
Obama's neo-liberal Wall Street Democrats as a way to appease Bay Street
instead of seeking out allies from among the working class?
The
social democrats who have bullied their way into the NDP while trampling
on democracy insisting that the NDP be a social democratic party have
been very selfish and their selfishness cost the NDP an election victory
that was there for the taking.
The NDP should have gone to
Canadian with a plan to reduce the retirement age to 60; free universal
child care; free public education through university; tax the hell out
of the foreign multi-nationals; for a socialized health care system that
includes everything from pre-natal through burial... and a commitment
to pull out of NATO and end all complicity with U.S. imperialist wars
and a promise to raise the Minimum Wage to at least $20.00 an hour while
outlining a strategy to put an end to the cost-of-living crisis every
single working class family in Canada is experiencing.
The base of the NDP must be the working class and farmers along with real small businesses and professionals.
The Manitoba NDP put a full dental program into every single elementary
school and the Conservatives and Liberals killed that program--- as
Manitobans today how they like paying for private dental care for their
children.
Manitoba had a provincially owned and operated
telephone system providing Manitobans with the least expensive phone
service in North America... the Conservatives and Liberals connived
together to kill this... ask Manitobans how they like paying through the
nose for private for-profit telephone service today.
The NDP
government took over bus manufacturing in Manitoba saving hundreds of
jobs; the company was doing just great. The company was sold to a
foreign multi-national after being subsidized by Manitoba tax-payers.
Manitoba has government owned casinos... the profits go for health care
and education not into the pockets of Las Vegas mobsters. And
Manitoba's casinos were among the first to go smoke-free to protect the
health of its workers and the general public.
Because of the
fight led by Howard Pawley, Manitoba has a provincially owned auto
insurance program. I don't hear many people other than the Conservatives
and few of the more die-hard free-enterprise Liberals complaining.
The NDP should be for public ownership not just out of some old
principle articulated in a Marxist pamphlet but because public ownership
works better for the people than private ownership in most cases.
The strength of the NDP has always been that all views from the left
are always welcome... and not just those with left wing view but those
with liberal and progressive world outlooks, too; and this is the way it
should remain.
I want to point out that in Manitoba, the NDP
always got along with Communists like Jacob Penner and Joe Zuken... in
fact, the NDP took the initiative to name a public park after Jacob
Penner.
And Jacob Penner's son became an outstanding Minnesota Attorney General.
I counted Howard Pawley among one of my best friends and we got along
just fine even though we had some differences on some issues.
My
suggestion is that the problems should be articulated and a common
approach should be found to solving these problems in a way that works
best for the working class.
Tom Mulcair and his social democrats
are just going to have to learn to live with the fact that working
people want their problems solved now--- while they are still alive, not
later after they die.
These are very important developments now
taking place in the New Democratic Party and there will be much for
everyone to learn.