All We Are Say-ing … Is Give Jack a Chance October 1, 2008
Posted by rogerhollander in About Canada, Canada.Tags: Canada election 2008, Conservative Party Canada, Ecuador politica and government, Jack Layton Prime Minister, Liberal Party Canada, NDP Canada, NDP Liberal Green coalition, roger hollander, Stephane Dion, Stephen Harper
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There is an anti-war song that begins:
Last night I had the strangest dream
I’ve never had before
I dreamed the world had all agreed
To put an end to war.
I am reminded of this because of the strange dream I have been having that the next minority government in Canada will be an NDP/Liberal/Green coalition with Jack Layton as Prime Minister.
Before you consign me to the ranks of the pixie dusters, consider that with the NDP creeping up on the Liberals in the polls and with the Canadian economy on the brink of melt-down occurring on Stephen Harper’s watch, who knows?
When a Liberal candidate approaches my friend Charlie for support, Charlie tells me that he replies, “Why should I vote for you when I can vote for a real Tory?” This at first confuses the Liberal candidate, Charlie reports, but when the light finally dawns and he realizes Charlie’s point, Liberal candidate responds with unstatesman like anger (echoes of the Phil Ochs classic, “Love me, love me, love me, I’m a Liberal).
I’ll forgive Charlie for forgetting that there are, in fact, no “real” Tories left in Canada. Much in the same way the fundamentalist ultra-right hijacked the Republican Party in the United States, in a bloodless coup the ultra-right Reform Party has taken the reins of what was once the Progressive Conservative Party and turned it into Bush/Cheney neoCon Lite. Just as the Nelson Rockefellers and George Romneys are Republican museum piece artefacts, the Joe Clarks and David Crombies are an extinct species in what today passes for Canada’s Conservative Party.
And just as it would be an unmitigated disaster for McCain/Palin to triumph in November, another Harper government in Canada, minority or majority, would spell catastrophe for working folks, the middle classes, our major urban centres, arts and culture, etc. The opposite of my dream is a Harper nightmare in which social programs continue to be rolled back, the sacred Canada Health Act diluted in favour of creeping privatisation, environmental imperatives and shameful homelessness continue to be ignored, and urban infrastructures continue to deteriorate.
Unlike Stéphane Dion, who gave Harper his budget and his extension of Canada’s ill-advised and hopeless military commitment in Afghanistan, Jack Layton alone has shown strong leadership in challenging Harper and his anti-Canadian agenda head on. There is no doubt that on October 14, at least 60% of Canadian electors will exercise their franchise in opposition to the direction the Tory government has led the country. That they should be allowed to continue in power, only because of the Byzantine nature of our multi-party system, would be both a tragedy and an insult to the democratic process.
Just three days ago in Ecuador, where I have lived on and off for nearly fifteen years, 65% of its voters adopted a new progressive constitution that for the first time in recent history will give the country a chance to challenge the forces that have kept the majority of its people in poverty and hunger. In January of this year I wrote in rabble.ca that Canadians would do well to follow the example of their neighbours to the south (Toronto, by the way, is a sister to Ecuador’s capital city of Quito).
I am copying that article below:
Radical reforms in Ecuador: an example for Canada? |
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I am witnessing, for the first time in my life, a government that has won democratic power with a promise to implement badly needed political and economic reforms actually proceeding to do so. |
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Rafael Correa |
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A coalition with Liberals/Greens/NDPs isn’t a bad idea if it’s the only way we can get rid of Harper and his conservative minions. The left is diluted with too many parties, giving the right a chance they certainly do not deserve.