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Canada: Workers and unemployed protest outside Tory conference
By Lee Parsons
26 March 2002
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Several thousand trade unionists,
unemployed workers, students and welfare rights activists participated
in a series of protests last weekend against seven years of Tory
rule in Ontario, Canadas most populous province. Elected
in 1995, Ontarios Tory government has spearheaded corporate
Canadas assault against the working class, making massive
cuts to public services, slashing welfare benefits and otherwise
victimizing the poor, lengthening the legal work-week to 60 hours,
and attacking trade union rights.
The focus of last weekends protests was the Ontario Progressive
Conservative (Tory) leadership convention, which chose a successor
to Mike Harris as party leader and provincial premier. As expected,
Ernie Eves, who served as Finance Minister and Deputy Premier
from 1995 to February 2001 and then took a high-powered, million-dollar-a-year
Bay Street job, won the Tory leadership race. The corporate media
has trumpeted Eves claims to be a moderate who will eschew
the confrontational-style of his predecessor. But in his victory
speech, Eves paid a gushing tribute to Harris. We begin,
Eves told the Tory faithful, with a strong foundation, and
for that, Mike, we will never be able to adequately express our
gratitude to you ... The greatest compliment we can give to him
[Harris] is to continue the common sense work that he began.
(Mimicking the Gingrich Republicans, the Ontario Tories dubbed
their radical, right-wing program the Common Sense Revolution.)
The largest of last weekends protests was a march by
more than 2,000 trade unionists and their supporters. It concluded
at a park across the street from the Metro Toronto Convention
Centre where the Tories were meeting. By far the largest contingent
at the Ontario Federation of Labour (OFL) protest was a 1,500-strong
delegation of striking Ontario Public Service Employees Union
(OPSEU) members. Across the street from the park, were scores
of riot police protected by steel barricades.
While the union protest proceeded
without incidentthe OFL had sent the police a letter reassuring
the authorities of their peaceful intentionsthe police set
upon a later demonstration organized by the Ontario Coalition
against Poverty (OCAP) at the same park.
When the OCAP supporters tried to leave, police, including
several on horseback, blocked their way and a melee ensued. Police
arrested twelve protesters and bloodied many others. Several of
the OCAP supporters required medical attention.
The previous evening, police had brutally expelled OCAP supporters
from an abandoned building they had occupied near the convention
site and arrested more than fifty people. Over the past five years,
the police have repeatedly engaged in violent confrontations with
OCAP, which, under conditions where the unions and social democrats
have abandoned any serious opposition to the Tories, have won
support from welfare recipients, the homeless and student youth.
In the wake of the latest police-OCAP confrontation, Toronto
Police Chief Julian Fantino called for the police to be given
new powers to deal with protesters.
The OFL rally heard ritualistic anti-Tory speeches from the
union officialdom. OPSEU President Leah Casselman, an accomplished
demagogue, said, The [Tory leadership] candidates were all
there during the cuts. Theyre just trying to repackage themselves
with new bows and ribbons. OFL President Wayne Samuelson,
who was instrumental in scuttling the popular opposition movement
against the Harris government in 1997, enumerated some of the
Tories crimes. People wont forget Walkerton;
Dudley George; Kimberly Rogers, who died under house arresther
crime?being poor; overflowing emergency rooms; schools starved
of cash; workers killed on the job no longer protected by legislation
and the homeless in ever-increasing numbers living on the streets.
Significantly, none of the trade union speakers made any mention
of a renewal of mass actions against the Tories or of a political
alternative to the current government. Although not explicitly
stated the message was clear: the union bureaucracy is banking
on the election of the Liberals at the next provincial election,
slated for 2003 or 2004. Both the Liberals and the unions
traditional ally, the social democratic New Democratic Party (NDP),
have accepted the central tenets of the Tories Common Sense
Revolution, including massive corporate and personal income tax
cuts and the shrinking of Ontarios public and social services.
Life and death accounts
In addition to various other union bureaucrats, the OFL rally
heard from two speakers who have been tragically affected by the
Tories actions. Sam George, brother of Indian protester
Dudley George who was murdered by police in 1995 while demonstrating
at Ipperwash Provincial Park, made an impassioned plea to any
future premier to call a public inquiry into the death of his
brother. As a result of a lawsuit brought by the George family,
evidence has emerged that indicates the unprovoked police assault
that resulted in Dudley Georges death was mounted on orders
from Premier Harris himself.
Bruce Davidson of the Concerned Walkerton Citizens sharply
criticized the government for its role in the tainted water tragedy
that left seven people dead and made thousands more ill in May
of 2000. (An inquiry established by the Harris government concluded
that the Tories deregulation of water-testing and massive
cuts to the Environment Ministry were directly responsible for
the Walkerton tragedy.)
I think its only fair, said Davidson, that
the real role of the government and its performance is judged
by the people whove lived with the consequences of what
they have done to us... They told us it was simply belt tightening.
Well I would suggest to you that when you tighten the belt to
the point where your abdominal muscles give way and your abdomen
falls out, its gone a little too far... We cannot look at
short-term economic gains and then end up with long-term disasters
and say thats just OK. If we have a public service
that is going to be responsible for us, lets have enough
public servants in sufficient numbers to make sure that its
still safe.
Davidsons remarks won the most enthusiastic response
from the crowd. Especially supportive were OPSEU members, who
have seen thousands of jobs eliminated from their places of work
in recent years, increasing their work loads and endangering public
safety.
OPSEU strike
The OPSEU strike is the second under the current Tory government.
The same Leah Casselman who castigated the Tories in her speech
on Saturday, led Ontario government workers in an even larger
strike in 1996, which ended with the union accepting an agreement
that gave the Tories the green light to eliminate 12,000 public
sector jobs.
The WSWS spoke to a number of people at the rally. An OPSEU
official described the outcome of the 1996 strike as a tremendous
learning ground for that sector of our union. With regards
to the present job action he said, Our folks are focused
and powerful and will win. With regards to the NDP, which
opened the door to the Harris Tories by repudiating their own
program and making massive social spending cuts, he declared,
I think the NDP are in a rebuild position... but there will
always be an NDP.
One worker named Debbie, who is employed by the ministry of
the Attorney-General, expressed her frustration with the strike.
We havent gained anything, weve lost a lot.
They keep hiring contract workers without benefits. If were
so essential, why are they hiring contract workers? Were
being forced to cross our own picket lines. (Almost one
third of OPSEU members are prohibited from striking due to essential
service provisions and in many cases have to cross their own picket
lines to get to work.)
Jill, who has worked with disabled people for many years, denounced
the press portrayal of the strike. Theres a misconception
out there that its just about the money. And thats
not it at all.... Those people are out of work six months after
they become disabled before they come under our program.
There have been no negotiations since the strike began March
12. The union is asking for five percent wage increases in each
of the next two years and improved job security. The government
is insisting on yearly increases of only 1.95 percent in a three-year
contract and cuts in benefits.
See Also:
33,000 public sector workers strike in
Ontario
[19 March 2002]
Ontario Premier forced
to testify about Ipperwash killing
[1 December 2001]
Ontario Premier resigns
Amid mounting legal and political crises
[23 October 2001]
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