Monday, September 15, 2008

NAFTAgate

This one is so bad

http://www.scandalpedia.ca/Scandals/NAFTAgate_en.html


NAFTAgate

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In March 2008, the senior officials within the Stephen Harper government were accused of interfering in the U.S. Presidential race by leaking to media information damaging to the campaign of Democrat presidential candidate Barack Obama. Media were told of a private meeting between an Obama adviser and a Canadian diplomat to discuss Mr. Obama’s position on NAFTA.

Stephen Harper, Prime Minister of Canada

The sources of the leaks were alleged to include Prime Minister Stephen Harper’s Chief of Staff Ian Brodie and Canada’s Ambassador to the U.S. and Harper appointee Michael Wilson.

According to a leaked internal memo obtained by Associated Press, Obama advisor Austan Goolsbee told Canadian Consul General Georges Rioux that Obama’s attack on free trade is “more reflective of political manoeuvring than policy.”[1] Goolsbee, however, later insisted those weren’t his words, but rather a mischaracterization by a consulate employee.

At first the Conservatives denied involvement in the leak. “Ian Brodie does not recall discussing this matter,” claimed Harper spokeswoman Sandra Buckler. “We stand by that statement.” [2]

Later, however, it emerged that Brodie had in fact made similar comments to reporters during the February 26, 2008 Budget lockup, and the U.S. network ABC cited Brodie as the source.

Stockwell Day Stockwell Day, Minister of Public Safety (Source: pm.gc.ca)

The affair, dubbed NAFTA-gate, was played up in the U.S. with Hillary Clinton’s campaign using it to suggest Obama was being duplicitous in his stated opposition to NAFTA. Some believe it affected the outcome in the Ohio Democratic primary, a state with many blue-collar workers, which was won by Clinton. It also may have had an impact on the primary races in states with similar demographics, like Pennsylvania.

Democrat consultant Bob Shrum told U.S. television: “You’ve got a right-wing government in Canada that is trying to help the Republicans and is out there actively interfering in the campaign.” [3]

The Harper government announced it would investigate the leak internally, but said the investigation would focus only on the leak of the memo. This suggested they wouldn’t look at the verbal leak by Brodie. The government also avoided answering questions about whether Ambassador Wilson would be investigated over a conversation with CTV Washington Bureau Chief Tom Clark shortly before CTV broke the story.

Jason Kenney Jason Kenney, Secretary of State Multiculturalism and Canadian Identity (Source: pm.gc.ca)

On May 23, 2008, Kevin Lynch, Canada's top civil servant, tabled his investigation report. His report exonerated Brodie specifically when it came to the leak of the memo and laid blame on Department of Foreign Affairs officials for misclassifying the memo that led to the leak [4]. Opposition members united in calling the report a "whitewash" and a half-hearted effort of government investigating itself [5].

Only one week later, media reports found more evidence that the Prime Minister's office was directly linked to the leak. Multiple sources linked the controversial memo to Frank Sensenbrenner, son of Wisconsin Republican Congressman James Sensenbrenner. Frank Sensenbrenner was hired on a short term contract in the Canadian Embassy in 2006 and was sponsored by Public Security Minister Stockwell Day. Sensenbrenner has long been linked to Reform Party leaders such as Gerry Chipeur, a former legal counsel to the Reform and Canadian Alliance parties, Alberta MP Jason Kenney, John Reynolds, co-chair of the Conservative 2006 election campaign, and Preston Manning, former leader of the Reform Party of Canada [6].

References
[1] Kitchener-Waterloo Record, March 4, 2008
[2] Canadian Press News Wire, 29 February, 2008
[3] Canadian Press News Wire, March 2, 2008
[4] PM's aide fuelled uproar; Report exonerates Brodie over memo leak but confirms chat likely led to NAFTA furor, The Toronto Star, May 24, 2008
[5] Harper aide cleared in Obama leak; Opposition calls government investigation into PM's chief of staff 'a complete whitewash', Vancouver Sun, May 24, 2008
[6] Signs point to PMO memo to Republican, The Daily Courier (Kelowna), May 28, 2008; NAFTA leaker worked under the radar; PM's office, Stockwell Day had close ties to congressman's son, The Hamilton Spectator, May 28, 2008; The scandal that could really damage Canada, Winnipeg Free Press, June 11, 2008

Sunday, September 14, 2008

Flaherty and tailored disability fund

Flaherty and tailored disability fund

http://www.scandalpedia.ca/Scandals/Flahertydisabilityfund_en.html

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In April 2008 the Harper Conservative government announced a new $45-million Enabling Accessbility Fund, a program designed to improve facility access for the disabled. However, the request for applications for the program was announced suddenly, contained strict criteria and had an application period that closed within one month, leaving little time for proper submissions.

Jim Flaherty Jim Flaherty, Minister of Finance

Shortly after the announcement, reports surfaced that the Fund criteria seemed tailor-made for a project in Finance Minister Jim Flaherty's riding of Whitby. Minister Flaherty and people close to him had long advocated for such a fund to finance a new accessibility centre in his home riding. In fact. the centre's board of directors included Mr. Flaherty's wife, Ontario MPP Christine Elliott, and Nancy Shaw, Mr. Flaherty's executive assistant [1].

The application for the Whitby centre was submitted within eleven days of the Fund's announcement [3].

Organizations representing disabled individuals across Canada claimed that not only did the large grant component of the fund appear custom-made for the Minister's riding, but the smaller component of the fund had such strict criteria that many non-profit organizations could not meet them in such a short time [2].

Despite calls to extend the application period to allow more time for other applicants, the deadline was not moved.

In 2006, the Conservative Party of Canada campaigned on a platform of transparent and accountable government. The platform claimed: "Everyday Canadians – the hardworking people who pay their taxes and play by the rules – want and deserve a new government that will put the people's interest ahead of self-interest" [4].


References
[1] Fund tailored to help Flaherty 'pet project'; Critics see conflict as wife, staffer on board of centre applying for cash, The Ottawa Citizen, April 11, 2008; Flaherty in conflict, critics say; Wife on board of project seeking funds, National Post, April 11, 2008
[2] 'Rigged' fund still open to applicants, Tories retort, CanWest News Service, April 12, 2008
[3] Flaherty under fire over budget spending, The Globe and Mail, April 11, 2008
[4] Stephen Harper, Conservative Party of Canada 2006 Platform

Saturday, September 13, 2008

Green Party of Canada

Green Party of Canada

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Green_Party_of_Canada


Canadian federal political party founded in 1983 with around 9,000 registered members as of November 2007[citation needed]. The Greens, as their name indicates, advocate green politics and are the largest party in Canada to focus primarily on green politics, though other parties have included environmental stances in their platforms.

The party's support has ranged between 4.5% and 15% since the 2006 federal election and has not polled below 6% in any opinion poll from 2007 onwards. In mid-November 2007 the Greens placed third ahead of both the Bloc and the NDP in a Strategic Counsel poll.[1] In the 2006 election, the Green Party of Canada received 4.5% of the total vote but did not win any seats.[2]

Elizabeth May is the current leader of the party. She was elected on the first ballot by 65% of voting party members on August 26, 2006.

On August 30, 2008, Vancouver area MP Blair Wilson became the first-ever Green Member of Parliament, after sitting for nearly a year of the 39th Canadian Parliament as an Independent. He had been a Liberal MP, but was expelled from the caucus earlier in the parliament for alleged campaign finance irregularities, of which he was later cleared after an 8-month investigation by Elections Canada.[3] Wilson became a Green Member while Parliament was not in session and was subsequently dissolved on September 7, before he had any opportunity to vote on anything as a Green Party MP.

On September 10, 2008 it was announced that all of the four major political parties in Canada "agreed to let Green Party leader Elizabeth May into the country's election debates for the first time."[4] Opposition by two parties to the Green Party participating in the debates was reversed, prompting May to state that her "views are those of overwhelming gratitude to the tens of thousands of Canadians who protested vehemently".

Contents

[hide]

[edit] History

About one month before the 1980 federal election, eleven candidates, mostly from ridings in the Atlantic provinces, issued a joint press release declaring that they were running on a common platform. It called for a transition to a non-nuclear, conserver society. Although they ran as independents, they unofficially used the name "Small Party" as part of their declaration of unity - a reference to the "small is beautiful" philosophy of E. F. Schumacher. This was the most substantial early attempt to answer the call for an ecologically-oriented Canadian political party. A key organizer (and one of the candidates) was Elizabeth May, who is now leader of the Greens.

The Green Party of Canada was founded at a conference held at Carleton University in Ottawa in 1983. Under its first leader, Dr. Trevor Hancock, the party ran 60 candidates in the 1984 Canadian federal election.[5]

The Green Party of Canada is independent of other green parties around the world. However, all Green parties share the same philosophy. Its provincial counterparts in British Columbia, Alberta, Saskatchewan, Manitoba, Ontario, Quebec and Nova Scotia, support green economics, progressive social planning, and responsible and accountable governance.

The Quebec wing hosted the 1990 Canadian Greens conference in Montreal. But soon after that, Canada's constitutional problems interfered, and many Quebec candidates abandoned the Greens in favour of a Quebec sovereigntist party, the Bloc Québécois. There were only six Green candidates from Quebec in the 1993 election. In the spring of 1996, although the hopes of electing a representative to the BC legislature proved premature, Andy Shadrack in the interior of the province received over 11% of the vote. Overall, the party's proportion of the popular vote surged to a new high. Shadrack was also the most popular Green candidate in the 1997 federal election, scoring over 6% of the popular vote in West Kootenay-Okanagan.

[edit] Joan Russow years

British Columbia's Joan Russow became leader of the Green Party of Canada on April 13, 1997.[6][7] Russow won 52% of the ballots cast in the 1997 leadership race, surpassing Ontario's Jim Harris (39%) and Rachelle Small (8%). Immediately upon attaining the leadership, Russow was plunged into a federal general election.[7] Russow's campaign in 1997 set a number of important precedents. 1997 federal election was the first campaign in which the Greens conducted a national leader's tour, presented a national platform and a bilingual campaign. Previous campaigns, due in part to the party's few resources and, in part, to the party's constitutional straitjacket, had been characterized by policy and spokespeople operating, at best, province-by-province and, at worst, riding-by-riding. In her own riding of Victoria, Russow received just shy of 3000 votes and 6% of the popular vote.

Since its inception, the party has been developing as an organization, expanding its membership and improving its showing at the polls. In the 2000 federal election, the party fielded 111 candidates, up from 78 in 1997.

Candidates were not run in Newfoundland and Labrador, as a result of ongoing divisions over Joan Russow's refusal to endorse the Green candidate in an earlier St. John's West by-election. (The candidate in question supported the seal hunt and mining development, as most locals did.)[8] This caused much uncertainty and friction between Newfoundland's Terra Nova Green Party[8] Association and the Green Party leader as the party gradually adapted to the realities of functioning as a true national party rather than a disorganized federation of local activists.

The conflicts left Russow isolated and alienated from most members of the party. Volunteer efforts were substantially absorbed in provincial campaigns between 2001 and 2003, and the federal party became dormant between elections, as was typical in the past. Chris Bradshaw served the party as interim leader from 2001 to February 2003.

[edit] Breakthrough

In February 2003, Jim Harris, in his second bid for the leadership, defeated John Grogan of Valemount, British Columbia, and Jason Crummey. Crummey was originally from Newfoundland and involved with Newfoundland and Labrador Terra Nova Greens.

During the 2004 federal election the Green Party of Canada made history when it became only the fourth federal political party ever to run candidates in all 308 ridings. When the ballots were counted, the Green Party secured 4.3 percent of the popular vote, thereby surpassing the 2 percent threshold required for party financing under new Elections Canada rules.[9]

Momentum continued to build around the Green Party of Canada and in the 2006 federal election the Green Party again ran 308 candidates and increased its share of the popular vote to 4.5 percent, once again securing federal financing as a result.

The party's 2006 election campaign was disrupted by allegations made by Matthew Pollesell, the party's former assistant national organizer, that Harris had not filed a proper accounting of money spent during his 2004 leadership campaign, as required by law. Pollesell issued a request that Elections Canada investigate. Pollesell and another former party member, Gretchen Schwarz, were subsequently warned by the party's legal counsel to retract allegations they had made or face a possible legal action. Dana Miller, who served in the party's shadow cabinet with responsibility for human-rights issues, made public her earlier complaints that the party has violated election law and its own constitution and has also asked for an Elections Canada investigation. Miller had been expelled from the party after filing a complaint within the party in April.[10]

[edit] Elizabeth May days

A leadership vote was held at the party's August 2006 convention. On April 24, 2006, Jim Harris announced his intention not to stand for re-election as party leader.[11] Three candidates officially entered the leadership race: David Chernushenko, Elizabeth May, and Jim Fannon. May won the leadership with 65% of the vote on the first ballot.

On October 22, 2006, Elizabeth May announced she would run in the federal by-election to be held on November 27, 2006 in London North Centre, Ontario. She finished second behind the Liberal candidate but garnered 26% of the popular vote. On August 30, 2008. British Columbia Independent MP Blair Wilson joined the party, becoming its first MP. [12]

[edit] Policies

The GPC had originally adopted a form of the Ten Key Values originally authored by the United States Green Party.

The August 2002 Convention adopted the Six Principles of the Charter of the Global Greens, as stated by the Global Greens Conference held in Canberra, Australia in 2001. These principles are the only ones included in the GPC constitution.

An emphasis on a green tax shift in the 2004 platform, which favoured partially reducing income and corporate taxes (while increasing taxes on polluters and energy consumers), created questions as to whether the Green Party was still on the left of the political spectrum, or was taking a more eco-capitalist approach by reducing progressive taxation in favour of regressive taxation. Green Party policy writers have challenged this interpretation by claiming that any unintended "regressive" tax consequences from the application of a Green Tax Shift would be intentionally offset by changes in individual tax rates and categories as well as an 'eco-tax" refund for those who pay no tax.

As early as 2000, the party had published platform comparisons indicating the reasons why supporters of any of the five other Canadian federal political parties should consider voting Green. The Greens have always had right-wing, leftist and centrist factions that have been ascendant at different times in the party's history. Many Greens also claim that this traditional left-right political spectrum analysis does not accurately capture the pragmatic ecological orientation of an evolving Green Party.[13]

The ecumenical approach (expressing affinities with all Canadian political tendencies and making cases to voters on all parts of the left-right spectrum) has been advocated by those who believe their success can be measured by the degree to which other parties adopt Green Party policies. It has however not been discerned the degree to which this process has contributed to phenomena like the Liberal Party of Canada adopting several key items which also appear in the Green program, such as accelerated Capital Cost Allowance deductions restricted to sustainable technology only, and the adoption of the ecological and social indicators and green procurement rules Greens have long advocated. Neither have the relative degrees of influence been discerned which non-partisan environmental groups and the party's own Green wing have in developing the policies of the Green Party.

Under Elizabeth May's leadership, the Green Party has begun to receive more mainstream media attention on other party policy not directly related to the environment - for example, supporting labour rights[14] and poppy legalization in Afghanistan.[15]

[edit] Leadership


Green leader Elizabeth May.

Long-time environmental activist and lawyer Elizabeth May won the leadership of the federal Green party at a convention in Ottawa on August 26, 2006. Elizabeth won with 2,145 votes, or 65.3 per cent of the valid ballots cast defeating two other candidates. The second-place finisher David Chernushenko, an environmental consultant, owner of Green & Gold Inc. and two time candidate, collected 1,096 votes or 33.3 per cent of the total, while Jim Fannon, real estate agent at RE/MAX Garden City Realty, four time candidate and founder of Nature's Hemp finished a distant third, collecting just 29 votes or 0.88 per cent of the vote of the vote. ("None of the above" finished last with 13 votes or 0.44 per cent of the final vote.)[16]

On November 21, 2006, May appointed outgoing Green Party of British Columbia leader Adriane Carr and Quebec television host Claude Genest as Deputy Leaders of the Party.[17] David Chernushenko, who ran against Elizabeth May for the party leadership, was the Senior Deputy to the Leader for the first year after Elizabeth May was elected leader.

Previous leader Jim Harris was first elected to the office with over 80% of the vote and the support of the leaders of all of the provincial level Green parties. He was re-elected on the first ballot by 56% of the membership in a leadership challenge vote in August 2004. Tom Manley placed second with over 30% of the vote. A few months after the 2004 convention, Tom Manley was appointed Deputy Leader. On September 23, 2005, Manley left the party to join the Liberal Party of Canada.

[edit] Party leaders

[edit] Federal election results

Election # of candidates nominated # of seats won # of total votes % of popular vote
1984 60 0 26 921 0.21%
1988 68 0 47 228 0.36%
1993 79 0 32 979 0.24%
1997 79 0 55 583 0.43%
2000 111 0 104 402 0.81%
2004 308 0 582 247 4.32%
2006 308 0 665 940 4.48%

Source: History of Federal elections since 1867

[edit] Electoral status

The Green Party fielded candidates in all 308 of the nation's ridings in the last two federal elections. In the 2006 federal election, the Green Party received 4.5% of the popular vote, only slightly more than in 2004, despite having received public funding (over $1 million CAD per year) for the first time and receiving more media coverage. A reason for the slow growth might be that in that election, left-leaning supporters of the party were encouraged to vote Liberal (by Liberals) in order to prevent a majority government by the right-wing Conservative party.

No Green Party candidate has yet been elected to the federal or provincial level of government in Canada, but the West Vancouver-Sunshine Coast-Sea to Sky Country MP, Blair Wilson joined the Green Party on August 30th, 2008. He became the first Green Party elected official at the federal level. Members of the party have achieved municipal offices, though most were elected as individuals and not on Green Party slates or labels in local (at least officially) non-partisan municipal elections. However, some people have been elected with a Green Party affiliation identified directly on the ballot. The first two were elected in the 1999 municipal elections (20 November 1999):

  • Art Vanden Berg, elected as a City Councillor in Victoria, British Columbia, and
  • Roslyn Cassells, elected to the Vancouver Parks Board on the same day.[18]

Current Greens in office include:

Andrea Reimer was elected as a trustee on the Vancouver School Board in 2002 as a Green. Former Councillor Elio Di Iorio was narrowly defeated in his 2006 reelection bid in Richmond Hill, Ontario and former Councillor Rob Strang did not run for reelection in Orangeville, Ontario. The late Richard Thomas served as reeve of Armour Township, Ontario from 2003 until his death in 2006. There are about 16 other Greens elected to local governments in BC.

[edit] Exclusion from debates

In the 2004 election, the consortium of Canadian television networks did not invite Jim Harris to the televised leaders debates. The primary reason given for this was the party's lack of representation in the House of Commons. There were unsuccessful legal actions by the party, a petition by its supporters to have it included, and statements by non-supporters such as Ed Broadbent who believed it should be included.

The Green Party was also not included in the leaders' debates for the 2006 election.[19] The same reason was given,[20] although some also believed the party's lack of visibility and meaningful input into Canadian federal budgets and bills was a factor[citation needed].

On September 8, 2008, the consortium announced that they would once again exclude the Greens from the French and English debates for the 2008 election, to be held on October 1 and 2 respectively. The party had secured a seat in the House at this point (Blair Wilson), satisfying the necessary criteria used in all previous debates dating to at least 1993. (Wilson was not elected as a Green MP; however, the situation parallels that of the Bloc Quebecois in 1993 - to that point, all its members had been elected as either Conservatives or Liberals or, in Gilles Duceppe's case, as an independent, before the group formally registered as a political party. The Bloc was nevertheless included in the 1993 debates.)

However, the consortium said that three parties (later identified as the Conservatives, NDP, and one other party) had threatened to boycott the debate if the Green Party was included, and that it had decided it was better to proceed with the four larger parties "in the interest of Canadians". Liberal leader Stephane Dion supported May's inclusion in the debates but said he would also pull out if Harper withdrew. Bloc leader Gilles Duceppe said that while his party is against the Greens' inclusion, he would attend the debate whether or not they were included.[21] The Green Party said it would sue to force the consortium to allow it to participate.[22][23]

This was not necessary, however, because of the networks reversal two days later. Many people protested the threatened boycott of Layton and Harper by staging protests, and phoning in and emailing the networks and the opposing parties, prompting both parties to recant their position.[24]

[edit] Internet innovation

While the organizing and election planning was centralized, policy development was to be decentralized. In February 2004, the Green Party of Canada Living Platform was initiated by the Party's former Head of Platform and Research, Michael Pilling, to open the party's participatory democracy to the public to help validate its policies against broad public input. It also made it easy for candidates to share their answers to public interest group questionnaires, find the best answers to policy questions, and for even rural and remote users, and Canadians abroad, to contribute to Party policy intelligence.

[edit] Membership exclusions

In 1998, the party adopted a rule that forbids membership in any other federal political party. This was intended to prevent the party from being taken over.

In the past, some Green Party members have been comfortable openly working with members of other political parties. For instance, GPC members Peter Bevan-Baker and Mike Nickerson worked with Liberal MP Joe Jordan to develop the Canada Well-Being Measurement Act that called upon the government to implement Genuine Progress Indicators (GPI). While the act was introduced into the House of Commons as a private members bill, it never became law. A small number of Greens who advocate the more cooperative approach to legislation object to the new rule not to hold cross-memberships, a tool they occasionally employed.

[edit] Peace and Ecology Party of Canada

In 2005, some members of the Green Party of Canada, who disagreed with what they considered to be the right-wing direction taken by leader Jim Harris, founded the Peace and Ecology Party of Canada. This left-wing political party was devoted to issues such as labour, the environment, and bioregionalism. The party was never registered with Elections Canada, and did not run candidates in the 2006 federal election.[25]

[edit] May-Dion electoral co-operation

With Stéphane Dion winning the Liberal leadership on a largely environmentalist platform, and both the Liberals and Greens having a shared interest in both defeating the Conservatives, whose environmental policies have come under criticism from members of both parties, some political observers questioned if an alliance of some sort between the two parties might take place.

When May made the announcement that she would run in Central Nova, currently held by Peter MacKay, local Liberals would "neither confirm nor deny" that they had had discussions with May over ways to unseat MacKay.[26] On March 21st, Dion said, "Madame May and I have conversations about how we may work together to be sure that this government will stop to do so much harm to our environment". The speculation was confirmed when Dion and May agreed not to run candidates in each other's ridings. [27]

May earlier attempted to broker a deal with the NDP, by contacting Stephen Lewis to set up a meeting with party leader Jack Layton, who both rejected the notion outright. When the May-Dion deal was announced, it was criticized by the Conservatives and NDP.[28][29][30]

[edit] Elected officials

[edit] Provincial parties

Almost every province has a Green political party.

There is currently no provincial Green Party per sé in Newfoundland and Labrador. The Terra Nova Greens were originally loosely affiliated with the federal party, but most supporters cut ties to the national party in 2006 (or earlier) over its opposition to seal hunting. TNG is not a registered provincial political party and seems to have been disbanded; its website has not been updated since 2000.

[edit] See also

[edit] External links

[edit] References

  1. ^ Microsoft PowerPoint - 2007-11-12 GMCTV Nov 8-11 Final.ppt [Read-Only]
  2. ^ Official voting results
  3. ^ "Green party announces its first member of Parliament", CBC News. Retrieved on 2008-08-30.
  4. ^ Greens win spot in TV election debates, Reuters Canada, September 10, 2008, (accessed September 10, 2008)
  5. ^ "History of the Green Party of Canada," Green Party of Canada website
  6. ^ Globe and Mail Election 2000
  7. ^ a b Affidavit of Joan Russow
  8. ^ a b http://www.infonet.st-johns.nf.ca/providers/green/policy.html
  9. ^ "Financial summary," Elections Canada website
  10. ^ globeandmail.com
  11. ^ "Harris to give up on Green leadership," Globe and Mail, April 24, 2006.
  12. ^ "Green party announces its first member of Parliament", CBC News. Retrieved on 2008-08-30.
  13. ^ Martin, Chip. Left, right support Green London Free Press
  14. ^ Green Party Press Release, 09/02/2007
  15. ^ Green Party Press Release, 08/29/2007
  16. ^ Canadian Press,May wins Green Party leadership
  17. ^ Elizabeth May Announces Prominent Greens Adriane Carr and Claude William Genest as Deputy Leaders of federal Green Party Green Party of Canada press release, November 21, 2006.
  18. ^ City of Vancouver, Election Summary Report November 20, 1999
  19. ^ "Leaders' Debate," Green Party of Canada press release, November 30, 2005.
  20. ^ CBC ombudsman's review, 2006
  21. ^ MacCharles, Tonda. Greens slam debate exclusion. The Toronto Star. September 9, 2008.
  22. ^ Debate consortium press release, September 8, 2008
  23. ^ Greens can't participate in leaders' debate, Yahoo! Canada, September 8, 2008
  24. ^ "Green leader allowed into debates, networks confirm". CBC News. Retrieved on 2008-09-11.
  25. ^ Peace and Ecology Party Website
  26. ^ Green party leader expected to run against MacKay
  27. ^ Liberals agree not to run candidate against Green leader
  28. ^ Globe and Mail (April 13, 2007). "Dion, May confirm election deal".
  29. ^ New Democratic Party (April 13, 2007). "Jack Layton on the Liberal – Green deal".
  30. ^ Allan Woods, "Green party strategist resigns over pact," Toronto Star, April 17, 2007.

Friday, September 12, 2008

New Democratic Party

New Democratic Party

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/New_Democratic_Party

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Jump to: navigation, search

New Democratic Party
Nouveau Parti démocratique


Active Federal Party
Founded June 17, 1961
Incorporated CCF and CLC

Leader Jack Layton
President Anne McGrath
Headquarters 300 - 279 Laurier Avenue W
Ottawa, Ontario
K1P 5J9

Political ideology

Social democracy,
Democratic socialism,
Third Way

International alignment Socialist International
Colours Orange and Green

Seats 30 House
1 Senate (not officially recognized)
Website www.ndp.ca

The New Democratic Party (French: Nouveau Parti démocratique) is a political party in Canada with a progressive social democratic philosophy that contests elections at both the federal and provincial levels. In the Canadian House of Commons, it holds a left-wing position in the Canadian political spectrum. The leader of the federal NDP is Jack Layton. The provincial New Democratic Party currently form the government in the province of Manitoba, and provincial parties have previously formed governments in British Columbia, Ontario, Saskatchewan and in the Yukon territory.

Contents

[hide]

[edit] Principles, policies and electoral achievement

The NDP grew from populist, agrarian and democratic socialist roots. While the party is secular and pluralistic, it has a longstanding relationship with the Christian left and the Social Gospel movement, particularly the United Church of Canada. However, the federal party has broadened to include concerns of the New Left, which advocates issues such as gay rights, peace, and environmental protection.

New Democrats today advocate, among other things:

The NDP has never formed the federal government, but has at times wielded influence during federal minority governments, such as in the recently dissolved 38th Parliament and, before, the Liberal governments of Lester B. Pearson and Pierre Trudeau, due to being a large enough group to decide outcomes when the others are split. Provincial New Democratic Parties, technically sections of the federal party, have governed several provinces and a territory. They currently govern the province of Manitoba, form the Official Opposition in British Columbia, Saskatchewan and Nova Scotia and have sitting members in every provincial legislature except those of Quebec, New Brunswick (although the New Brunswick NDP had an elected member until 2006) and Prince Edward Island. They have previously formed governments in the provinces of Ontario, Saskatchewan and British Columbia, and in the Yukon Territory. The NDP also formed the official opposition in Alberta during the 1980s.

The New Democrats are also active municipally, and have been elected mayors, councillors, and school and service board members — Toronto mayor David Miller is a leading example, although he did not renew his membership. Like most municipal office-holders in Canada, they are usually elected as independents or with autonomous municipal parties.

[edit] History

[edit] Origins and early history

Tommy Douglas (centre left),  Leader: 1961-1971
Tommy Douglas (centre left),
Leader: 1961-1971

In 1956, after the birth of the Canadian Labour Congress (CLC) by a merger of two previous labour congresses, negotiations began between the CLC and the Co-operative Commonwealth Federation (CCF) to bring about an alliance between organized labour and the political left in Canada. In 1958 a joint CCF-CLC committee, the National Committee for the New Party (NCNP), was formed to create a "new" social democratic political party, with ten members from each group. The NCNP spent the next three years laying down the foundations of the New Party. During this process, a large number of New Party Clubs were established to allow like-minded Canadians to join in its founding, and six representatives from New Party Clubs were added to the National Committee. In 1961, at the end of a five-day long Founding Convention which established its principles, policies and structures, the New Democratic Party was born and Tommy Douglas, the long-time CCF Premier of Saskatchewan, was elected its first leader. [6] In 1960, before the NDP was founded, one candidate, Walter Pitman, won a by-election under the New Party banner.

The influence of organized labour on the party is still reflected in the party's conventions as affiliated unions send delegates on a formula based on their number of members. Since approximately one-quarter of the convention delegates have recently been from affiliated labour groups, after the party changed to an Every Member Vote method of electing leaders in leadership races, labour delegate votes are scaled to 25% of the total number of ballots cast for leader.

[edit] Trudeau minority

David Lewis,  Leader: 1971-1975
David Lewis,
Leader: 1971-1975
Early NDP logo
Early NDP logo

Under the leadership of David Lewis (1971-1975), the NDP supported the minority government formed by Pierre Trudeau's Liberals from 1972 to 1974, although the two parties never entered into a coalition. Together they succeeded in passing several socially progressive initiatives into law such as pension indexing and the creation of the crown corporation Petro-Canada. [7]

In 1974, the NDP worked with the Progressive Conservatives to pass a motion of non-confidence, forcing an election. However, it backfired as Trudeau's Liberals regained a majority government, mostly at the expense of the NDP, which lost half its seats. Lewis lost his own riding and resigned as leader.

[edit] Height of popularity

Under the leadership of Ed Broadbent (1975-1989), the NDP played a critical role during Joe Clark's minority government of 1979-1980, moving the non-confidence motion on John Crosbie's budget that brought down the Progressive Conservative (PC) government, and forced the election that brought Trudeau's Liberal Party back to power.

In the 1984 election, which saw the Conservatives win the most seats in Canadian history, the NDP won 30 seats, only one behind the 31 it won in 1972. The Liberals were decimated, falling to 40 seats, and there was some talk that the NDP could push them into oblivion. Afterwards, Broadbent himself consistently out-polled Liberal leader John Turner and even Prime Minister Brian Mulroney.

On July 20, 1987, the NDP swept three by-elections in Newfoundland, Ontario, and the Yukon, picking up two formerly Conservative seats and holding one NDP seat. These by-elections brought Audrey McLaughlin to the House of Commons, as the MP for Yukon.[8]

The NDP elected a record 43 Members of Parliament (MPs) in the election of 1988. The Liberals, however, had reaped most of the benefits of opposing free trade to emerge as the dominant alternative to the ruling government. The Conservatives' barrage of attacks on the Liberal momentum, as well as vote-splitting between the NDP and Liberals, helped them win a second consecutive majority. In 1989, Broadbent stepped down after 14 years as federal leader of the NDP. [9]

[edit] Decline

At the party's leadership convention, former B.C. Premier Dave Barrett and Audrey McLaughlin were the main contenders for the leadership. During the campaign, Barrett argued that the party should be concerned with western alienation, rather than focusing its attention on Quebec. The Quebec wing of the NDP strongly opposed Barrett's candidacy, with Phil Edmonston, the party's main spokesman in Quebec, threatening to resign from the party if Barrett won. [10] Barrett's campaign was also hurt when his back-room negotiations with leadership rival Simon De Jong were inadvertently recorded by the latter's CBC microphone. In these discussions, De Jong apparently agreed to support Barrett in exchange for being named House Leader, but he changed his mind at the last minute and supported McLaughlin instead, announcing his endorsement of her before the vote. In the course of his discussion with Barrett, De Jong explained "It's a head and heart thing," i.e., that his head told him to go with Dave while his heart told him to go with Audrey. McLaughlin won the leadership on the fourth ballot, becoming the first woman in Canada to lead a political party.

Although enjoying strong support among organized labour and rural voters in the Prairies, McLaughlin tried to expand their support into Quebec without much success. In 1989, the Quebec New Democratic Party adopted a sovereigntist platform and severed its ties with the federal NDP. Under McLaughlin, the party did manage to have the first MP from Quebec elected under the NDP banner, Phil Edmonston, who won a 1990 by-election.

The NDP chose to align itself with the Conservatives and Liberals on the "yes" side of the Charlottetown Accord referendum in 1992. Barrett reluctantly endorsed it to comply with party policy (he opposed the Meech Lake Accord in 1987), but later referred to the NDP's support for the Accord as a mistake. Edmonston, a Quebec nationalist, frequently clashed with his own party over this position on Canadian federalism, and did not run for re-election.

The NDP was routed in the 1993 election. It won only nine seats, three seats short of official party status in the House of Commons. Several factors contributed to this dramatic collapse just one election after winning a record number of seats and after being first in opinion polling at one point during the previous Parliament. One was the massive unpopularity of NDP provincial governments under Bob Rae in Ontario and Michael Harcourt in British Columbia. Not coincidentally, the NDP was routed in these provinces; it lost all 10 of its Ontario MPs and 17 of its 19 British Columbia MPs. The Ontario NDP would be soundly defeated in 1995, while the British Columbia NDP recovered and won reelection in 1996.

The NDP was also indirectly hampered by the collapse of the Progressive Conservatives, who were cut down to only two seats. Exit polls showed that 17% to 27% of NDP supporters from 1988 voted Liberal in 1993. It was obvious by the beginning of October that Liberal leader Jean Chrétien would be the next prime minister. However, the memory of 1988's vote splitting combined with the tremendous antipathy toward the PCs caused NDP supporters to vote Liberal to ensure the Conservatives would be defeated. Many voters in the NDP's traditional Western heartland also switched to the right-wing Reform Party of Canada, while in Ontario fear of the Reform Party helped cause NDP supporters to vote Liberal. Despite sharp ideological differences, Reform's populism struck a chord with many western NDP supporters. Barrett's warnings about Western alienation proved to be prophetic, as the rise of the Reform Party replaced the NDP as the protest voice west of Ontario.

[edit] Recovery

NDP logo under Alexa McDonough
NDP logo under Alexa McDonough

The party recovered somewhat under new leader Alexa McDonough, electing 21 New Democrats in the 1997 election. The NDP made a breakthrough in Atlantic Canada, unseating Liberal ministers David Dingwall and Doug Young. The party was able to harness the discontent of Maritime voters, who were upset over cuts to employment insurance and other programs.

Afterwards, McDonough was widely perceived as trying to move the party toward the centre of the political spectrum, in the Third Way mode of Tony Blair. Union leaders were lukewarm in their support, often threatening to break away from the NDP, while Canadian Auto Workers head Buzz Hargrove called for her resignation. MPs Rick Laliberté and Angela Vautour crossed the floor to other parties during this term, reducing the NDP caucus to 19 seats.

In the November 2000 election, the NDP campaigned on the issue of Medicare but lost significant support. The governing Liberals ran an effective campaign on their economic record and managed to recapture some of the Atlantic ridings lost to the NDP in the 1997 election. The initial high electoral prospects of the Canadian Alliance under new leader Stockwell Day also hurt the NDP as many supporters strategically voted Liberal to keep the Alliance from winning. The NDP finished with 13 MPs--just barely over the threshold for official party status.

The party embarked on a renewal process starting in 2000. A general convention in Winnipeg in November 2001 made significant alterations to party structures, and reaffirmed its commitment to the left. In the May 2002 by-elections, Brian Masse won the riding of Windsor West in Windsor, Ontario, previously held for decades by a Liberal, former Deputy Prime Minister Herb Gray.

[edit] Jack Layton elected leader

Jack Layton,  Leader: 2003-present
Jack Layton,
Leader: 2003-present

McDonough announced her resignation as party leader for family reasons in June 2002, and was succeeded by Jack Layton. A Toronto city councillor and recent President of the Federation of Canadian Municipalities, Layton was elected at the party's leadership election in Toronto on January 5, 2003, defeating his nearest rival, longtime Winnipeg-area MP Bill Blaikie, on the first ballot with 53.5% of the vote. [11]

Layton had run unsuccessfully for the Commons three times in Toronto-area ridings. In contrast to traditional but diminishing Canadian practice, where an MP for a safe seat stands down to allow a newly elected leader a chance to enter Parliament, Layton did not contest a seat in Parliament until the 2004 election. In the interim, he appointed Blaikie as deputy leader and made him parliamentary leader of the NDP.

[edit] 2004 election

The 2004 election produced mixed results for the NDP. It increased its total vote by more than a million votes; however, despite Layton's optimistic predictions of reaching 40 seats, the NDP only gained five seats in the election, for a total of 19. The party was disappointed to see its two Saskatchewan incumbents defeated by the Conservatives, both in close races, [12] perhaps due to the unpopularity of the NDP provincial government. Those losses caused the federal NDP to be shut out in Saskatchewan for the first time since the 1965 election, despite obtaining 23% of the vote in the province.

Exit polls indicated that many NDP supporters voted Liberal to keep the new Conservative Party from winning. The Liberals had recruited several prominent NDP members, most notably former British Columbia premier Ujjal Dosanjh, to run as Liberals as part of a drive to convince NDP voters that a reunited Conservative Party could sneak up the middle in the event of a split in the centre-left vote.

The NDP campaign also experienced controversy after Layton suggested the removal of the Clarity Act, considered by some to be vital to keeping Quebec in Canada and by others as undemocratic, and promised to recognize any declaration of independence by Quebec after a referendum. Although this position was consistent with NDP policy, some high-profile party members, such as NDP House Leader Bill Blaikie, publicly indicated that they did not share this view. (Layton would later reverse his position and support the Act in 2006.)[citation needed]

The Liberals were re-elected, though this time as a minority government. Combined, the Liberals and NDP had 154 seats--one short of the total needed for the balance of power. As has been the case with Liberal minority governments in the past, the NDP were in a position to make gains on the party's priorities, such as fighting health care privatization, fulfilling Canada's obligation to the Kyoto Protocol, and electoral reform.

The party used Prime Minister Paul Martin's politically precarious position caused by the sponsorship scandal to force investment in multiple federal programs, agreeing not to help topple the government provided that some major concessions in the federal budget were ceded to. The governing Liberals agreed to support the changes in exchange for NDP support on confidence votes. On May 19, 2005, by Speaker Peter Milliken's tie-breaking vote, the House of Commons voted for second reading on major NDP amendments to the federal budget, preempting about $4.5 billion in corporate tax cuts and funding social, educational and environmental programs instead. [13] Both NDP supporters and Conservative opponents of the measures branded it Canada's first "NDP budget". In late June, the amendments passed final reading and many political pundits concluded that the NDP had gained credibility and clout on the national scene.

[edit] 2006 election

Jack Layton is the current leader of the NDP.
Jack Layton is the current leader of the NDP.

On November 9, 2005, after the findings of the Gomery Inquiry were released, Layton notified the Liberal government that continued NDP support would require a ban on private health care. When the Liberals refused, Layton announced that he would introduce a motion on November 24 that would ask Martin to call a federal election in February to allow for several pieces of legislation to be passed. The Liberals turned down this offer. On November 28, 2005, Conservative leader Stephen Harper's motion of no confidence was seconded by Layton and it was passed by all three opposition parties, forcing an election. Columnist Andrew Coyne has suggested that the NDP was unlikely to receive much credit for continuing to further prop up the Liberals, so they ended their support for the Martin government.

During the election, the NDP focused their attacks on the Liberal party, in order to counter Liberal appeals for strategic voting. A key point in the campaign was when Judy Wasylycia-Leis had asked the Royal Canadian Mounted Police (RCMP) to launch a criminal investigation into the leaking of the income trust announcement [14]. The criminal probe seriously damaged the Liberal campaign and prevented them from making their key policy announcements, as well as bringing Liberal corruption back into the spotlight. After the election, the RCMP announced the conclusion of the income trust investigation and laid a charge of 'Breach of Trust' against Serge Nadeau, an official in the Department of Finance [15], while Liberal Finance Minister Ralph Goodale was cleared of wrongdoing [16].

The NDP campaign strategy put them at odds with Canadian Auto Workers, which had supported an NDP-backed Liberal minority government and which was only backing NDP candidates that had a chance of winning. After the campaign, the Ontario NDP expelled CAW leader Buzz Hargrove from the party (which has a common membership both federally and provincially) for his support of the Liberals.

On January 23, the NDP won 29 seats, a significant increase of 10 seats from the 19 won in 2004. It was the fourth-best performance in party history, approaching the level of popular support enjoyed in the 1980s. The NDP kept all of the 18 seats it held at the dissolution of Parliament (Paul Dewar retained the riding of Ottawa Centre vacated by Broadbent). Bev Desjarlais, an NDP MP since 1997, unsuccessfully ran as an independent in her Churchill riding after losing the NDP nomination. While the party gained no seats in Atlantic Canada, Quebec, or the Prairie Provinces, it gained five seats in British Columbia, five more in Ontario and the Western Arctic riding of the Northwest Territories.

[edit] Conservative minority

The Conservative Party won a minority government in the 2006 election, and initially the NDP was the only party that would not be able to pass legislation with the Conservatives. However, following a series of floor crossings, the NDP also came to hold the balance of power.

There have been four confidence votes in the current parliament, and the NDP is the only party to have voted against the Conservatives on all of them. These were votes on the United States-Canada softwood lumber dispute, extending the mission to Afghanistan, the 2006 Canadian federal budget and 2007 federal budget. On other issues the NDP has worked with the Conservatives. After forcing the Conservatives to agree to certain revisions, the NDP helped pass the Accountability Act. After the NDP fiercely criticized the initial Conservative attempt at a Clean Air Act, the Conservatives agreed to work with the NDP and other parties to revise the legislation.[17] The NDP also supported the government in introducing regulations on income trusts, fearing that trends toward mass trust conversions by large corporations to avoid Canadian income taxes would cause the loss of billions of dollars in budget revenue to support health care, pensions and other federal programs. At the same time, the NDP was also weary of the threat of investor losses from income trusts’ exaggerated performance expectations.

Since the election, the NDP caucus rose to 30 members following the victory of NDP candidate Thomas Mulcair in a by-election in Outremont. This marked the second time ever (and first time in seventeen years) that the NDP won a riding in Quebec.

[edit] Provincial and territorial wings

Campaign sign for a federal NDP candidate in the riding of Kelowna—Lake Country, British Columbia
Campaign sign for a federal NDP candidate in the riding of Kelowna—Lake Country, British Columbia

Unlike most other Canadian parties, the NDP is integrated with its provincial and territorial parties, such that a member of the NDP is automatically a member at both the provincial or territorial level and the federal level. This precludes a person from supporting different parties at the federal and provincial levels. A key example of this was Buzz Hargrove's expulsion by the Ontario New Democratic Party after he backed Paul Martin in the 2006 election.

There are three exceptions. In Nunavut and the Northwest Territories, whose territorial legislatures have no parties, the federal NDP is promoted by its riding associations, since each territory is composed of only one federal riding.

In Quebec, the Quebec New Democratic Party and the federal NDP agreed in 1989 to sever their structural ties after the Quebec party adopted a sovereigntist platform. Since then, the federal NDP is not integrated with a provincial party in that province; instead, it has a section, the Nouveau Parti démocratique-Section Québec/New Democratic Party Quebec Section, whose activities in the province are limited to the federal level, whereas on the provincial level its members are individually free to support or adhere to any party.

Provincial and territorial parties, current seats, and leaders
Party Seats/Total Leader
Alberta New Democratic Party 2/83 Brian Mason, MLA
New Democratic Party of British Columbia 33/79 Carole James, MLA, Leader of the Opposition
New Democratic Party of Manitoba 36/57 Hon. Gary Doer, MLA, Premier of Manitoba
New Brunswick New Democratic Party 0/55 Roger Duguay
New Democratic Party of
Newfoundland and Labrador
1/48 Lorraine Michael, MHA
Nova Scotia New Democratic Party 20/52 Darrell Dexter, MLA, Leader of the Opposition
Ontario New Democratic Party 10/103 Howard Hampton, MPP
Island New Democrats (P.E.I.) 0/27 Vacant
Saskatchewan New Democratic Party 20/58 Lorne Calvert, MLA, Leader of the Opposition
Yukon New Democratic Party 3/18 Todd Hardy, MLA

(Those forming government in bold)

From 1963 to 1994, there was a New Democratic Party of Quebec.

Chart of the best showings for provincial parties, and the election that provided the results
Province/Territory Seats - Status Election years and party leaders at the time
Alberta 16 - Official Opposition 1986, Ray Martin; 1989, Ray Martin
British Columbia 51 - Government 1991, Michael Harcourt
Canada 43 1988, Ed Broadbent
Manitoba 36 - Government 2007, Gary Doer
New Brunswick 2 New Brunswick 1984 by-election, George Little
Newfoundland
and Labrador
2 1987 by election Peter Fenwick ; 1999, 2003, Jack Harris
Nova Scotia 20 - Official Opposition 2006, Darrell Dexter
Ontario 74 - Government 1990, Bob Rae
Prince Edward Island 1 1996, Herb Dickieson
Quebec 1 1944, (CCF, David Côté)
Saskatchewan 55 - Government 1991, Roy Romanow
Yukon 11 - Government 1996, Piers McDonald

The most successful provincial section of the party has been the Saskatchewan New Democratic Party, which first came to power in 1944 as the Cooperative Commonwealth Federation under Tommy Douglas and has won most of the province's elections since then. In Canada, Tommy Douglas is often cited as the Father of Medicare since, as Saskatchewan Premier, he introduced Canada's first publicly-funded, universal healthcare system there. Despite the continued success of the Saskatchewan branch of the party, the NDP was shut out of Saskatchewan in the 2004 federal election for the first time in recent history. This is a trend that has been continued in the 2006 federal election. The New Democratic Party has also formed the provincial government in Manitoba, British Columbia and Ontario, and the territorial government in Yukon.

[edit] Current members of Parliament

The election of January 23, 2006, gave the NDP 29 seats; it subsequently won one seat in a by-election. Twelve of its MPs are women; after the general election this represented 41% of its seats, the highest proportion of women that has ever existed in a Canadian parliamentary caucus with official party status. For a list of NDP MPs and their critic portfolios, see New Democratic Party Shadow Cabinet.

Senator Lillian Dyck chooses to associate herself with the NDP. However the party does not allow her to be part of the parliamentary caucus, as the NDP favours the abolition of the Canadian Senate. She sits in the Senate as an Independent New Democrat.[1]

[edit] 39th Parliament

[edit] Federal leaders

# Leader From To Birth Death Ridings while leader
1 Thomas Clement "Tommy" Douglas August 3, 1961 April 23, 1971 October 20, 1904 February 24, 1986 Burnaby—Coquitlam, BC
2 David Lewis April 24, 1971 July 6, 1975 June 23, 1909 May 23, 1981 York South, ON
3 John Edward "Ed" Broadbent July 7, 1975 December 4, 1989 March 21, 1936 - Oshawa—Whitby, Oshawa, ON
4 Audrey Marlene McLaughlin December 5, 1989 October 13, 1995 November 7, 1936 - Yukon, YK
5 Alexa Ann McDonough October 14, 1995 January 24, 2003 August 11, 1944 - Halifax, NS
6 John Gilbert "Jack" Layton January 25, 2003 - July 18, 1950 - Toronto—Danforth, ON

[edit] Federal election results 1962–2006

Election # of candidates # of seats won # of total votes % of popular vote
1962 217 19 1,044,754 13.57%
1963 232 17 1,044,701 13.24%
1965 255 21 1,381,658 17.91%
1968 263 22 1,378,263 16.96%
1972 252 31 1,725,719 17.83%
1974 262 16 1,467,748 15.44%
1979 282 26 2,048,988 17.88%
1980 280 32 2,150,368 19.67%
1984 282 30 2,359,915 18.81%
1988 295 43 2,685,263 20.38%
1993 294 9 933,688 6.88%
1997 301 21 1,434,509 11.05%
2000 298 13 1,093,748 8.51%
2004 308 19 2,116,536 15.7%
2006 308 29 2,588,200 17.5%

[edit] See also

[edit] References

[edit] External links