September 26, 2011 - No. 1
40th Ontario General Election
All Out to Establish a New Direction for Ontario
• Ontario
Political Forum
• All Out to Establish a New Direction for
Ontario
• 40th General Provincial Election
Underway
Election Issues
• Hudak's Anti-Worker Scheme to "Fix the
Arbitration System" - Pierre Chénier
• Ontario Health Coalition Presents Demands -
Interview, Natalie Mehra, OHC Director
Ontario Political Forum
We are pleased to provide you with Ontario
Political Forum, a political affairs supplement to The
Marxist-Leninist Daily, the national newspaper of the Canadian
working class published by the Communist Party of Canada
(Marxist-Leninist). It is starting publication two weeks into the
current 40th Ontario General Election. Its aim is to address the
problem that the voice of Ontario workers is mostly missing in the
election. While the voice of the workers is missing from the political
and economic affairs of the province in general, this is most apparent
in politics and the monopoly-controlled media
during an election, which is supposed to be a democratic exercise to
involve the people of Ontario in taking decisions which affect their
lives.
Ontario Political Forum is dedicated to filling
that void with a partisan stance in defence of the rights of the
working class of Ontario so that it has a tribune which speaks out for
its interests. These interests are synonymous with a society that
defends the rights of all.
To achieve this, Ontario Political Forum will
do its best to report on the matters of concern to Ontario workers, the
problems they are facing and how they are striving to provide the
problems they face with solutions. Amongst other things, it calls on
readers, writers and reporters to identify the blocks
they see to these problems being resolved in a manner which favours the
working people. We call on you to join the technical and editorial
staff by writing, sending your reports, photographs and views and those
of others, and distributing the paper to your co-workers, neighbours
and friends. Please also remember
to assist us financially, which is required to stabilize our work and
expand its scope. If possible, we would like to continue this
publication after the election as well.
Join Us!
All Out to Establish a New Direction for Ontario
Ontario Political Forum has chosen the theme
of a New Direction for Ontario because it has become clear that the old
direction for Ontario has led to nation-wrecking on an unprecedented
scale.
A good example was provided by federal MP Brian Masse
(NDP, Windsor West) when he spoke in the federal Parliament about the
problems we face as a result of the changes to Canada-U.S. border
security.
Masse said:
"I am concerned that the government has often been too
willing to sign agreements that have actually not delivered in terms of
the reduction of wait times or the red tape. I would point to one
concern in terms of significance, and it is symbolic too because it has
affected our tourism, which is that the government
tore up a treaty that we had from the War of 1812, which it celebrated.
What that did was allow gunboats on the Great Lakes again. We now have
gunboats out there that fire 1,200 rounds a minute. I do not know what
threat comes from Canada that requires 1,200 rounds a minute. These
guns were used in Afghanistan
and Cambodia. It is the Browning machine gun in particular.
"That has had a cooling effect in terms of trade and
tourism because people do not want to be around that stuff. Blackhawk
helicopters have been added and a number of different dirigibles that
do spying in Canada. Ironically, these things are not allowed to be
used to spy in America, but they were being used
to spy into Canada. The most famous one was in Sarnia. The people there
went out to moon the balloon because they did not accept that there was
a dirigible over top of their homes.
"I have talked to a lot of businesses to put some
pressure on the government. There should be some direct measureables
about signing those agreements. We signed that shipwright agreement
which now allows American boats to come into Canadian waters and arrest
Canadian citizens. Interestingly enough, we
are not even an equal partner in that particular program.
"The Americans have their state police, their federal
police, their customs officials and their municipal police who can now
arrest Canadians, but when it comes to us, only our RCMP can
reciprocate. Our own good men and women of the customs services are not
treated to the same degree. We are not even in
the same relationship at the same time." (Hansard, September 19,
the day Parliament opened.)
Please note that even though Masse is speaking in the
federal Parliament, the state of affairs he describes affects Ontario
profoundly. Furthermore, even though matters which concern the
Canada-U.S. border are considered a federal jurisdiction, Ontario
workers do not think much about the federal government
tearing up the Treaty of 1812 -- on the eve of its bicentenary no less!
More importantly, what about the loss of manufacturing jobs in Ontario?
What about the pay-the-rich schemes of successive governments whereby
hundreds and millions of dollars are handed over to the monopolies
while the rights of Ontario
workers are trampled in the mud? And what about our resources? What is
happening to them? And our communities, public services, public spaces,
public education and health care, besides many other things? Most
importantly, what is happening to our people? Why do we get no sense of
what the people think in this
election except in their response as targets of attack -- from attack
ads which turn
their brains to mush, to "issues" it is said they should vote for
because polls say this is their number one priority -- as if life is
divided into pigeon holes where people are supposed to park their
affairs as if this helps "balance priorities." Health care
versus an education; housing versus heating; a job for me versus a job
for my neighbour...
So what should the people of Ontario do to provide
Ontario with a new direction?
The Need for Solutions
We started by checking the dictionary definition for the
word "direction":
1. A course along which someone or something moves.
2. The course that must be taken in order to reach a
destination.
What then is the course along which Ontario workers are
moving? What is its destination? Is it satisfactory? Is it a
destination we can call our own? If so, what can we do to get there
faster? If not, what destination do we need and what can we do to
define it and get ourselves there?
We are convinced a new direction is needed for Ontario
and we call on you to join us in the important endeavour of defining
this new direction -- why it is needed; what is going on at present
that is not acceptable; what harm is it causing and what are the
dangers inherent to it? How do these deliberations
inform us about what must be done to embark on a new direction?
Ontario Political Forum will strive to be a
forum where the workers speak about the problems they and their society
face but also what they think can be done about these problems. This
alone will provide a new direction for Ontario because once the
workers, who are never even asked what they
think about the problems they face, start proposing solutions in a
collective manner, it will be a whole new ball game.
Join us!
Jane Steeple,
on behalf of the Editorial Board
40th General Provincial Election Underway
The 40th Ontario General Provincial Election is well
underway. The election officially began on September 7 with the
dropping of the writ and polling day is Thursday, October 6, for a
campaign of 30 days.
Potential candidates had until September 15 to submit
their nomination forms. As of September 16, there are a total of 656
candidates; 29 of whom are independents, running in the 107 ridings
across
Ontario. Meanwhile, 21 political parties are officially registered with
Elections Ontario. These
figures are an increase from the 2007 election in which 599 candidates
and 12 parties were registered.
At the time of dissolution of the 39th Ontario
Provincial Legislature, the Liberals held a majority with 70 seats
while the Progressive Conservatives were the Official Opposition with
25 seats;
and the New Democrats held 10. Two seats were vacant, both previously
held
by Liberals.
Increasing Degeneration of
Electoral System and
Consolidation of Anti-Social Offensive
The 2007 election marked the lowest voter turnout in
Ontario since 1975 with only 52.1 per cent of registered voters voting.
This
year, numerous measures have been taken by Elections Ontario to reverse
the decline
in voting, on the premise that there are obstacles to voting and more
people will vote if the process is easier. These measures of course do
not address the fundamental issue of people's disenchantment with
voting, namely that merely voting does nothing to sort out the problem
of the people's empowerment so as to
be able to solve the problems they are facing.
Contrary to efforts to increase voting, the big
political parties use a process known as micro-targeting, which
involves
the collection of huge amounts of data about individual voters, to
predict how they might vote and sway them toward voting for that party.
For a party using micro-targeting, a decreasing voter
turnout is favourable because the aim is to maximize only the turnout
of the key demographics that will vote for that party. In 2008, the
Harper Conservatives' campaign successfully focused on less than half a
million voters out of about 23 million eligible voters.
Following the May 2 federal election, the
Marxist-Leninist
Party of Canada pointed out that the electoral coup carried out by the
Conservatives was engineered through micro-targeting. In particular in
Toronto, the Conservatives micro-targeted electors they labelled "very
ethnic," resulting in victories in 18 federal ridings
previously held by the Liberals. (See TML
Weekly
Information
Project,
No. 2 July 16, 2011). It is reported that the main battlefront in the
provincial election is also Toronto, with the Harper Conservatives
putting their election machine at the disposal of the Progressive
Conservatives.
Their hope is to complete a "hat-trick," a reference to
adding a Progressive Conservative win provincially under Mike Harris'
acolyte
Tim Hudak, to the election victories of Toronto Mayor Rob Ford
municipally and the Harper Conservatives federally. This would have the
effect of each level of this reactionary triumvirate
consolidating and reinforcing the anti-social offensive already being
waged at all levels of government.
Registered Political
Parties in the October 6 Ontario
Election
The registered political parties confirmed by Elections
Ontario as of September 16 are as follows:
- Canadians' Choice Party
- Communist Party of Canada (Ontario)
- Family Coalition Party of Ontario
- Freedom Party of Ontario (Originally registered as the
"Unparty Party (Ontario)")
- The Green Party of Ontario
- New Democratic Party of Ontario
- Northern Ontario Heritage Party
- The Only Party
- Ontario Liberal Party
- Ontario Libertarian Party
- Ontario Provincial Confederation of Regions Party
- Pauper Party of Ontario
- Paramount Canadians Party
- Party for Human Rights in Ontario
- Party for People with Special Needs
- People First Republic Party of Ontario (Originally
registered as the "Republican Party of Ontario")
- The Peoples Political Party
- Progressive Conservative Party of Ontario
- Reform Party of Ontario
- Socialist Party of Ontario
- Vegan Environmental Party
For a list of all the registered candidates, including
the 29 independents click here:
http://wemakevotingeasy.ca/media/en/candidates.pdf
Election Issues
Hudak's Anti-Worker Scheme to
"Fix the Arbitration
System"
- Pierre Chénier -
Toronto Day of Action for Public
Services, April 9, 2011
One of the major aspects of the Tim Hudak
Progressive Conservative platform in the Ontario election is a pledge
to "fix the broken arbitration system." He is referring to the use of
arbitrators to decide collective agreements of mainly, but not
exclusively, public sector workers, an increasing number of whom are
deemed by law to be "essential." More than
260,000 workers in Ontario fit this description, including the Toronto
Transit Commission (TTC) workers, hospital workers and nurses, as well
as firefighters and policemen.
As more and more workers' struggles are being
criminalized through back-to-work legislation and legislation declaring
workers essential makes going on strike illegal, arbitration is
becoming increasingly frequent. In certain cases, it is the workers
themselves who demand arbitration because they are getting nowhere at
the bargaining table and they hope that an independent arbitrator will
do them justice.
For a long time now, the politicians of the rich, the
monopoly media and various so-called labour relations experts have
complained that the rulings of the arbitrators are too costly for the
municipalities and the province. Hudak has made this part of his
platform. He has invited Liberal leader, Premier Dalton McGuinty
to join
him and to stop fearing the public sector unions, which are rapidly
being declared by the politicians of the rich the number one enemy in
Ontario.
In speeches to organizations representing
municipalities, Hudak has said that he wants to amend the Ontario Arbitration Act in three
ways. First, he wants to make the ability of the provincial government
or a municipality to pay a "dominant factor" in determining an
arbitrator’s ruling. It is very common that the ability to pay is
provided to the arbitrator as a guideline but those pushing to amend
the Arbitration Act
say that this guideline is routinely ignored by arbitrators. They refer
to arbitrators who have refused to abide by the
dictate of the McGuinty government to impose a two-year wage freeze on
public sector workers and have granted workers a minimal raise.
Secondly,
Hudak wants what he calls "local circumstances" to
be included as a guideline for arbitrators. This is to address the fact
that arbitrators base their rulings largely on comparable
collective agreements of workers from the same sector, so rulings
passed in richer municipalities are being imposed on poorer
municipalities. Thirdly, he wants the time given for the arbitrator to
make his ruling shortened.
The anti-social offensive is being stepped up against
the whole working class by targeting public sector workers in
particular. Not only are the workers' struggles being criminalized, but
it is the governments that are setting the working
conditions of the workers. Good faith negotiations are being eliminated
and the right of workers to working conditions commensurate with the
work they do and to have a say in their determination is negated. The
proposal to change the arbitration system so that the governments
dictate the content of the arbitrators’ rulings is a step
further in this retrogressive direction. The aim is to crush workers'
resistance so that privatization and all other aspects of the
anti-social offensive can be given free rein.
That the aim is to attack workers can be seen in Premier
McGuinty's response to Hudak, that the Ontario government elected on
October 6 must be very careful because such a measure could lead to
labour unrest. McGuinty is telling the rich that a government led by
his
party is going to be able to crush workers without their revolt.
The
anti-worker outlook of these anti-social warriors is such that
attacking workers, especially organized workers, is the solution for
just about everything. In addressing municipal
authorities, Hudak presented the amendment of the arbitration system as
a way to improve the financial
situation of the municipalities. When asked by the press what his
policy is regarding
uploading the municipal services that were downloaded onto the
municipalities by the Harris government (of which he was a part), he
refused to answer. He said that fixing the arbitration system, thereby
attacking workers, will provide more money to the municipalities.
Hudak said that the amended arbitration system has to
ensure that the rulings of the arbitrators result in a fair deal
between those whose wages are paid by the taxpayers (the public sector
workers) and the taxpayers themselves. He even said that the working
conditions set by arbitrators are like bills that taxpayers have to
pay and that he has to ensure that the bill is affordable to taxpayers.
Hudak recognizes only taxpayers because he wants to
eliminate the concept of workers and the working class who are the
producers of the social wealth and have claims on the value they create
and the services they provide. He is reducing the issue to one of mere
cost -- a financial transaction, a bill to pay -- in order to deny the
value that these workers create and for which they have claims that
need to be met.
According to Hudak, workers are a cost which must be
reduced. According to this view, the majority of taxpayers are not
workers who produce goods, provide services and use these services. He
is constantly trying to drive a wedge and create animosity between
organized workers fighting for their claims on the value they create
and those workers Hudak depicts as depressed and hopeless victims of
the
anti-social offensive. When it comes to the rich of course the argument
is different. According to him, when the monopolies are being paid by
governments through subsidies or tax cuts, there is no loss to the
taxpayers and no bill to foot. He never complains that when the rich
receive tax cuts or subsidies and there is less money in the public
treasury, the taxpayers have to pay more for social programs.
Hudak also says that the arbitration system has to be
fixed so that public sector agreements mirror those of the private
sector. The fraudulent argument behind this is that private sector
workers have been decimated by the anti-social offensive and the burden
of the recession has been shifted onto their backs, while the public
sector workers have allegedly been spared up until now. This false
propaganda denies the severe impact that the war of
the rich and their governments to dismantle and privatize public
services has had on public sector workers. It makes the lowering
of working and living standards the new norm and demands that
whatever protection or say workers still have must be
eliminated.
This must not pass! Workers do not accept that they are
to be scapegoated for the financial problems of the municipalities and
criminalized. This so-called fixing of the arbitration system is part
of the class struggle waged by the rich to crush workers' resistance,
eliminate negotiation and have governments decree the workers’ working
conditions. It is anti-worker and anti-social and must be firmly
defeated.
Ontario Health Coalition Presents Demands
- Interview, Natalie Mehra, OHC Director
-
On September 12, over 1,000 people gathered at Queen’s
Park for a rally organized by the Ontario Health Coalition (OHC).
People came from all across Ontario, including the Greater Toronto
Area, the Niagara
Peninsula, Sudbury and Cornwall for the rally, which kicked off the
OHC’s campaign for the October 6 provincial election, "Public
Health Care in the Public Interest: Protect and Expand Public Health
Care for Ontarians." To read the full platform, go to www.web.net/ohc/. TML interviewed OHC Director
Natalie Mehra at the rally.
Ontario Healthcare Coalition Action, September
12, 2011
|
TML:
You said in your remarks at the rally that OHC
is demanding firm commitments from all parties and candidates to defend
and expand public health care. Why the emphasis on firm commitments?
Natalie
Mehra: We demand firm commitments because of the tough economic
times ahead and because the platforms of the Liberals and the
Conservatives include tax cuts that
are depleting the money that is available for health care. Both the
Liberals and the Conservatives are advocating tax cuts and most of
these tax cuts are for the very wealthy and the corporations. That is a
problem especially considering the looming recession. We feel
there is not going to be enough money for health care, not even enough
to meet the financial targets of the platforms of the Liberals and the
PCs. Right now, even as they are, there is not enough money in
these platforms to finance health care adequately. That is why we want
a firm commitment now from all the parties, that whatever the economic
conditions, they will put aside enough money for health care to cover
the needs of the people. We want them to commit now and to be held to
account once the election is over. That is why we are presenting
demands that must be met by whichever government is elected on October
6.
TML:
What are the main demands of your platform?
NM:
We demand that the hospital beds and services that were closed be
restored. We demand that the hospitals that have been closed in the
Niagara region be reopened and that the closures of rural emergency
departments and acute care beds be stopped. To just demand a moratorium
on cuts of beds and services would not be enough. Ontario now has the
fewest hospital beds per person of all the provinces. Compared with all
industrialized countries, Ontario is fourth from last.
Our second main demand is to improve the access to
health care services outside of hospitals. We are demanding access as a
right to long-term care and home care. The way it is now, once people
are taken out of a hospital, they are removed from protection under the
Canada Health Act.
The health care system does not have to provide the
care anymore. The care is very severely rationed and the people are
subjected to co-payments. We want a policy with a clear right to access
once you are moved out of the hospitals. Long-term care and home care
need to be reformed. There has to be a clear minimum care standard in
nursing homes and home care. Care provided outside of hospitals has to
be built as a public not for profit system.
Our overall demand is to keep health care public and not
for profit.
TML:
What kind of work is OHC doing to push forward these demands?
NM:
The rally today is the kick-off of the campaign. We released our
platform last week. We are going to distribute 400,000 leaflets
door-to-door, in community centres and everywhere else we can across
Ontario. We are organizing many media events and we want to put a lot
of pressure on the media so that they take up some of these issues we
are raising. We want the media to ask that the party leaders present
clear commitments on health care.
Read Ontario Political Forum
Website: www.cpcml.ca
Email: ontario@cpcml.ca
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