Saturday, March 10, 2018

A Trip to the Carpathian Mountains in Soviet Ukraine, 1973

This postcard packet was produced in the USSR in 1973 and featured views of cities, attractions, natural settings, etc. of the western edge of the Ukrainian SSR in the Carpathian mountain region. It was meant for domestic tourists as the cards are in Ukrainian and Russian alone.

The cards are interesting as they feature pictures from four different cities/towns (Kalush, Ivano-Frankivsk, Yaremche and Kolomyia) as well as famous natural attractions like the Dovbush Rocks. There are hotels, administrative centres, avenues, a square named for the Polish poet Adam Mickiewicz, a sanatorium and more. Trips to hotels and sanatoriums in the USSR were often heavily subsidized or even free for Soviet workers and members of Soviet trade unions.

We have translated the cards so as to identify what is pictured.

(Click on images to enlarge)

   

War Memorial


Cosmic Cinema, Ivano-Frankivsk


Mountain Air Sanatorium


Yaremche Tourist Complex


Museum


Bohdan Khmelnytsky Ave, Kalush


Bridge Over Waterfall


Department Store, Kolomyia


Post Office, Ivano-Frankivsk


Hutsulshchyna National Park Restaurant


Camp Office


Railway Station, Ivano-Frankivsk


Dovbush rocks


Hotel, Kalush


Administrative Building, Ivano-Frankivsk


Leningrad Street, Ivano-Frankivsk


Adam Mickiewicz Square, Ivano-Frankivsk



Tuesday, March 6, 2018

Portugal Freedom Year One 1926 - 1975, Ministry of Mass Communication

Vintage Leftist Leaflet Project

See the end of this post for details on the project.

Leaflet: Portugal Freedom Year One 1926 - 1975, Ministry of Mass Communication 

This remarkable document details the aims and goals of a revolutionary government in its infancy and in action.

It was published in February, 1975 in Portugal by the popular and far left/Communist influenced government that came to power after the Carnation Revolution of April 25, 1974. The Carnation Revolution (so-called due to its relatively peaceful unfolding and its leftist character) had swept away decades of fascist rule. The revolution not only liberated the Portuguese people from fascism, it also led to the end of the Portuguese colonial empire. After a series of sweeping reforms and democratization in all aspects of Portuguese society the far left attempted to seize power in November, 1975 and failed. This ultimately led to a wave of counter-revolution that, after elections in 1976, entrenched a liberal capitalist system in power.

The leaflet here gives an outline history of fascism in Portugal, the resistance to it, the reforms of the revolution and the move to total decolonization.


(Click on scans to enlarge)










When The Left Chapter began part of what I wanted to do on the blog was to show and highlight vintage public leftist election/political leaflets and booklets. While many of these have been offered with commentary to date, a very large collection of hundreds of them from several different sources remains and to preserve these often quite rare documents we will be posting them on a regular (almost daily) basis now often without or with minimal commentary so that people may have access to them as quickly as possible as an historical resource. 

While these will all be leaflets from a variety of different leftist viewpoints and countries, they are being posted as an historical/study resource and the views or opinions expressed in them do not necessarily reflect the views of this blog or blogger.

All of these posts (as well as posts made to date) will be listed on the page: Vintage Communist/Socialist Leaflets (which is still being updated with past posts).


If you have any public, vintage leaflets or booklets you would like to contribute to this project please contact us via theleftchapter@outlook.com

Sunday, March 4, 2018

James Laxer on Canadian Social Democracy: Past, Present and Future

By Matt Fodor 

In this wide-ranging interview, conducted in April 2014, James Laxer discusses his personal history and involvement in the NDP and the Waffle, the ideological trajectory of Canadian social democracy and the continuing relevance of a socialist vision for the future.

Note that at the time this was conducted Tom Mulcair was still NDP leader and Corbyn was not yet Labour leader. 

James Laxer passed away in France, February 23, 2018.



(Matt Fodor = MF / James Laxer = JL)


MF: In what area do you feel you made the biggest difference for the NDP?

JL: I would say that what the Waffle did and I was very much involved in that in the late 60s and early 70s was to do I think two or three things. One was to bring the debate and discussion about the American empire and its control of Canada much more into the NDP than it had been before – doesn’t mean that it hadn’t existed before but there’s no question is what the Waffle did and what I did as part of it hugely increased that perception, the perception that Canada was a dependency of the United States as a capitalist power, and it was in terms of American economic domination of the country, and political domination and military domination of the country, that this was a very serious crisis that Canada faced. So I think that would be the first thing. Related to that very much was the focus on the resource sector, the primary sector of the Canadian economy and the need to Canadianize through public ownership parts of the resource industry especially the petroleum industry and so we were the people in the NDP who really brought the debate about the petroleum sector into the party and I think we had a huge influence on the country and on the creation of Petro Canada in the years following that. So when the Liberals began talking about creating a national petroleum company that was going to be publicly owned that came out of the NDP and came out of the kind of pressure that we created. So I think that we had a lot to do with that.

The third area where I think we played an important role was to take the youth radicalism of the 60s and to channel it and focus it into Canadian concerns, because prior to that the young radicalism, young radicals in Canada, had been very much influenced by the New Left in the United States so to channel their energies and bring to their attention some understanding of what was going on in their own country was extremely important and we played a big role in that. Let me add a fourth thing, which was on the issue of Quebec, the right of Quebec to national self-determination. We made that a very issue in the NDP in the late 60s and then when I ran for the leadership of the party in 1971 just about everybody supporting the Waffle at that convention, was wearing Autodetermination buttons that expressed the right of Quebec to self-determination and the NDP leadership hated that at the time. But we had a big impact in the party and I think we also had an impact in the country during a time when things were very grave, because this was the period of the War Measures Act in the fall of 1970 and kind of followed from that. So those are the areas that I would stake out.

MF: OK, do you want to comment on your tenure as research director in the early 80s?

JL: Yeah in the early 80s when I was the research director of the party what I did was write a report which later became a public document and got a great of national publicity. And in that report, what I was arguing is that there ways for the NDP to update and transform its economic policy, to make Canada a more effective country industrially and in terms of the primary sector and that the key to that, or a key to that, was higher taxation for the rich and the wealthy and corporations in Canada. And that instead of increasing the deficit, which had always sort of been NDP policy up until then…from the mid-50s when the NDP became in a sort of sense Keynesian, the argument I made was that their recipe for the economy wasn’t going to work very well, that it was simply going to lead – although we didn’t have the free trade agreement in effect but because of very low tariffs there would be a huge amount of leakage out of the country if it was simply a matter of deficit financing – so the argument I made in my report was that what you had to do was seriously tax the corporations and the wealthy in the country.

MF: What does social democracy mean in today’s circumstances? Is it still a valid concept?

JL: Yeah, I would argue that yes it is a valid concept, and I would argue that socialism is a valid concept, and I would argue that if you look at the history of the period since social democracy became a national force in Canada in the early 1930s, you can look at its ups and downs over the decades, you can look at the extent to which it became closer to the kind of center of the Canadian political debate or became further from it, became more radical, one can trace it over the courses of those decades…I would argue that at the beginning, if you take the period from 1933, the Regina Manifesto, to the mid-1950s, to the Winnipeg Declaration, that the party then was most pronounced in a kind of radical redefinition of where Canada should go, it actually was an explicitly anti-capitalist, the CCF, political party and talked about a major role for publicly-owned corporations and for planning in the economy. So in that sense it was far from the Canadian political center at that time.

It then moves a great deal closer to the center with the Winnipeg Declaration of 1956 and at that time it adopts a kind of Keynesianism, talking about deficit financing and planning within the economy but with much less of an emphasis on anti-capitalism and on public ownership of sectors of the economy, so it then gets closer to the center. But it does that at a time when two things are very important. One was the Cold War and anti-Communism, so the party strongly wanted to move away from anything that would be seen as tainted by what seemed to be Marxism or Communism in the minds of Canadians. And the other thing is it’s a period of rapid economic growth, when actually the incomes of average Canadians, as a proportion of the total share of incomes, is actually on the rise, during the 50s and during the 60s, it’s one of the rare decades in the last hundred years in which that was true. So the CCF comes closer to the center and then of course the NDP is created during that historical period…that’s the period where the CCF and NDP its greatest impact on the country, the biggest of course single transformation, the most transformative measure that CCF-NDP was responsible for is Medicare and that was a permanent change that they were central in achieving in the country.

But then later as you move into the 70s and 80s and as you move into the period that people talk about as globalization but is really the period in which capitalism moves outside of the sphere of kind of the nation-state system that had existed in the West in the postwar decades and becomes much more dependent on resource extraction and seeking labor all over the world, therefore truly unbalancing the relationship between labor and capital that had existed to some extent to the advantage of labor in the 50s and 60s, I mean obviously labor was always a junior partner, but then in this period the 70s and 80s capital takes off and runs away from labor and turns into a very weakened part of the Canadian economy and Canadian society. What I would argue now…is that capitalism, neoliberal capitalism, is showing enormous weaknesses in the world today, in this part of the 21st century, that it is utterly failing to deal with the challenge of climate change and the environment, that is utterly incapable of creating even in the advanced countries a serious balance between capital and labor and to bring wages and salaries and economic well-being to the large majority of the population, and post-secondary education to the large majority of the population, that the gap between the rich and the rest is the great feature in the advanced countries and that if you move outside the advanced countries, we’ve got a system of what I would call indentured labor that exists all over the world, that can be seen most prominently in the clothing and textile sectors, in all kinds of countries in Asia like Bangladesh.

And when you take all of this into consideration the conclusion that I come to – by no means me alone, there are people around the world, economists now writing about this – that capitalism in this form is a failed system, and so if capitalism is a failed system then in some broad sense I would argue socialism is extremely relevant. Now there all kinds of ways of defining socialism but it seems to me this no time to abandon socialism in the Canadian dialogue, that socialism is more important than ever and that for people like the NDP, people in the NDP proved for a long time were happy to describe themselves as socialists and have now moved away from that, that if there’s going to be a serious left in Canada, that left is going to have contain as very fundamental concepts anti-capitalism and socialism in one form or another.

MF: How did the NDP relate to broader debates that were occurring in social democratic parties during your time of involvement with the party and what were some of these key debates?

JL: I would say that in its early decades the CCF-NDP was very much influenced by the Labour Party in Britain. It kind of saw the Labour Party as kind of its ‘big brother’ party and in terms of its outlook and ideology it was a party that saw the Labour Party as its model and I think there you can go back to the mid-1930s and David Lewis, who becomes Federal Secretary of the CCF is a guy who went to Oxford and studied there and was very much drawn into the Labour Party in Britain and the need to have a party that had that sort of ideology, the kind of ideology of the Labour Party, and also to have a very strong relationship between the trade union movement and the party, I mean that’s his huge contribution if you like in that historical period to the evolution of the CCF. The CCF before that was a party where Social Gospel Protestantism, which had pretty strong radical content, was at the center of the CCF, people like J.S. Woodsworth and to some extent Tommy Douglas, and so the big influence of the Labour Party is immensely important to the NDP. In fact that was true right up to the 1970s and even into the 1970s, every NDP convention always had a speaker who would come from the Labour Party to talk to the convention. The Democratic Party in the United States was seen as a completely other thing, as a capitalist party. It wasn’t seen as a social democratic party in any sense and therefore people didn’t regard it as ‘legitimate’ as a place to draw political ideas. Now that’s changed. And I would argue that in the last several decades that what’s tended to happen is that the NDP has been influenced to some extent by Blairism in Britain, by kind of the concept of New Labour, and which has its links to Clinton in the United States and to the Democratic Party as well, so that what’s happened is that social democracy in Canada, certainly at the federal level, has moved away from its kind of old socialist mooring to a period where basically the party accepts capitalism as a given, that fundamentally the party it’s operating within a capitalist framework, and in a sense it is to place an emphasis on giving people in the country a capacity to compete, by making sure that everybody gets a decent education…education and job training have become very central as ideas for where social democrats want to take the country, in other words what’s happened is that especially since free trade, since the FTA and NAFTA, that the idea is that a party like the NDP if it’s in power is not going to fundamentally try to plan the economy or to have an economic strategy for the country, but is instead going to try to adapt educational policies and social policies in the country so that Canadians can cope with the changes that capitalism, global capitalism, brings to Canadians, which is tremendously different from what came before.

Now I think that today NDPers are perfectly happy, as indeed is the British Labour Party, to draw ideas from the Democratic Party of the United States, from Obama’s campaign managers or campaign people, that that’s seen as a kind of legitimate source for where the party ought to go, and what’s happened is that over time, beginning with – I’m not sure beginning with, but a central episode – was the expulsion or near-expulsion or however you want to call it of the Waffle, from the NDP in the early 1970s, that since then I would argue that the NDP has moved away from being a political party that has a strong process, intellectual process, at its center, there’s very little real debate. During the Waffle period there was very real debate within the NDP. That has, for the most part – there have been a few episodes like the New Politics Initiative for a brief period of time where that’s come back – but mostly the NDP is a kind of professionalized, top-down political party that is run by its leadership and by its full-time staff, in other words the full-time who actually work for the party, and that the party itself is an apparatus for raising money and for campaigning but not really a political party where in which there is much of a movement component and much of an intellectual component in terms of debates about where Canadian society and global society are going and about the kinds of policy responses and intellectual responses the Left and the NDP ought to have to that. So the party has moved – and this process, Stephen Lewis played a very big role in kind of moving the NDP away from socialism, Jack Layton later contributed to that to a very large extent, and that process is continuing today. So I think to describe the NDP now as a socialist party is a kind of anachronistic description.

MF: In your experience in the NDP, what were the most important moments in its evolution that you experienced? And were you aware of it at the time, or did this awareness only come over you later on?

JL: I think that initially in the late 60s when I got very active in the party – 68, 69, 70, that period – to tell you the truth, it seemed to me so logical and important to bring the kind of stream of young radicalism and anti-American imperialism into the NDP that I didn’t know how it would be received by the party leadership because I didn’t know much about them at the time, and so I was to some extent surprised that there was such a virulent response to the Waffle and that they felt so threatened. It seemed possible to me at the time that they could of kind of adopted what were saying, or adopted in a modified form – maybe not as radically as we would have put the ideas forward but take some of the kind of energy of those ideas which were very current in Canadian society at the time. The Waffle was a big force in the country intellectually and culturally, so it wasn’t as though it was kind of operating off in some kind small corner. But people like Stephen Lewis and the leadership of the party, they tended to see the Waffle as though it was some kind of Marxist infiltration, they always talked about it as, you know, creating a cell within the party, which was to me very curious because the Waffle was large and very open. The Waffle always met in public, anybody could come to a Waffle meeting, it was the part of the party that was in fact most open, so to see it as kind of secretive and clandestine and operating like a cell, ironically I would think those descriptions, those terms, applied much more to the leadership of the party and the way they behaved than the Waffle. But that’s not unusual in political conflict, to have people accuse people that they’re up against in a political institution accuse them of the things in fact they’re doing themselves.

So that surprised me, I didn’t know where this would go, it seemed to me it was quite possible that we would just have an influence on where the party went and we would be accepted as a kind of younger, more radical segment of the party. There was a huge generational gap, that is very important in terms of what was going on at the time. When I started working on the Waffle, wrote the first draft of the Waffle Manifesto, I was 28 years old, I ran for the leadership when I was 29. The main leaders of the party were in their late fifties or their sixties by this point, so a kind of 30 year gap – there were people obviously in between but it is true to say that it was a battle going on between two very separate generational cohorts within the party and I didn’t at the time – well it was very obvious that what was going on – but it wasn't necessarily something that I expected to have happen. But you began to learn as time went by that these guys were very tremendously devoted to their conception of Canadian social democracy, they didn’t really want to hear from anybody else much about it, and they were determined to hang to on to their control of the party. So strange things would happen. For example, when I ran for the leadership – even though I was obviously a serious candidate – the party wouldn’t give us a list of trade union delegates to send our material to. We were able to do that with party delegates, elected by riding associations, but when it came to trade union delegates they just wouldn’t provide us with that. I mean it was a quite extraordinary way to sort of trying to hive off a large proportion of the delegates to the 1971 convention and to sort of illegitimately deprive a major campaign, which the Waffle leadership was, from having direct access to those delegates. We did have access to trade union delegates in the bigger, more democratic unions, where actually there was a fair amount of support for the Waffle. But it was in the smaller locals of unions like the United Steelworkers where delegates would be elected, where a tiny group of people would get together at Steelworkers’ headquarters and they would elect one hundred delegates, and just a small number of people would be at the meeting. And we had no access to that.

So those things surprised me. And I would say this: some of the most effective opponents of socialism, and articulate opponents of socialism, that I’ve ever encountered in my life were people in the NDP.

MF: I’d like to talk about the concept of modernization, which was used quite a bit in the [2012] leadership debates. I’m curious what you believe is meant by the term.

JL: It’s a vague term and I’m not sure I’m going to shed a lot of light on it. I’m very suspicious of terms like ‘modernization’ and the reason that I am – obviously it’s a vague concept that can be used in kinds of different ways – but one of the things that I think is most disturbing about the concept is that it’s often used, in the current socioeconomic climate, as a way of arguing for what people would call ‘flexibility’, flexibility in the labor force, flexibility in education, the idea that people aren’t going to have permanent jobs, that there are going to be very large parts of the labor force that are going to be outside of what would have been regarded full employment in the past, that this kind of ‘flexible’ capitalism or ‘modernized’ capitalism is kind of the wave of the future, ‘cause what it tends to amount to is cutting back on the power of labor, cutting back on the influence of labor, and reducing the standard of living of labor. So I do find – you know, some people might say oh, well all we’re talking about is making the party more effective at communicating, using new communications technology to communicate with people and that sort of thing and I don’t have any problem with that. But I think the term ‘modernization’ tends to fit into this notion of where capitalism is going and it tends to be a part of, maybe an echo of, a kind of signing on to neoliberalism and so that’s what I tend to see when I hear the term modernization being used.

I mean…I’m not an Antediluvian trying to live in the distant past. And in fact I see socialism as the future, I think capitalism is a failed system and I see socialism in new forms being created for the future. So I’m very future-oriented, but I just think the term modernization strikes me as being part of the influence of neoliberalism in the NDP.

MF: What are the greatest challenges/weaknesses do you feel the NDP faces currently? And what challenges will it face if it forms the national government?

JL: OK now, faces currently I would say this: I think that historically, if you go all the way back to the 30s and then you trace the evolution since then, that what you had was a kind of balance, not a very effective balance, but there was a kind of balance between movement and party. I mean, we’ve always known, people on the Left have always known, that if you just allow the CCF-NDP to become a professionalized political party that gets its ideas about what it stands for in an election campaign from pollsters, and it’s cut off from any kind of social movement which is driving it forward and is creating aims and goals based on the needs of people, that the party will tend to drift to the center and to the political right.

I would argue that an outstanding example of that now is the Ontario NDP under the leadership of Andrea Horwath. It’s very hard for me to tell - and I do try to figure this out from time to time – it’s not the center of my intellectual life trying to figure out what Andrea Horwath stands for, but it’s pretty unclear what she stands for and what the party now stands for. It looks to me as though the Ontario NDP is trying to make a deal with business in the province, I think they will fail to do that, but I think they are attempting to do that, to reassure business that the interests of public sector workers, the interests of workers in general, the power of unions, will be restrained in favor of a kind of good relationship between the NDP and business in the province.

And it seems to me that we live in an era in which class divisions are sharper than certainly they were in the postwar decades when you actually did have rising living standards for the majority of working people and that’s not the case now, so I think class division and the concept of class are more important today than they were in the 50s and 60s, and I think that the NDP tends to flounder in periods like this, because they are not willing to draw the necessary conclusion that there has to be a sharp response, that the NDP has to decide well, whose side are they on. Are they on the side of the large majority who are wage and salary earners? Are they on the side of the poor? Are they on the side of Aboriginal Canadians? And are they on the side of developing a sustainable economy that is not grotesquely materialistic? Are they on the side of rebuilding the cities in the country and the transportation systems to create a sustainable future? Are they on the side of these kinds of things, or are the simply a kind of progressive edge to liberalism in a neoliberal society, it seems to me that’s the great question that faces the party and would face the party if took power federally or let’s say in Ontario or British Columbia or wherever you want to look, that these are the questions that would immediately leap out. And the Bob Rae example, the formation of the Bob Rae government in 1990 was a government in the biggest province in the country, so therefore you can say it had more potential influence in that government than ever before and what did it do? It ran away from whatever radicalism was in its programs when it first got elected, ideas like public auto insurance were thrown overboard…the party did some useful things, but then it quickly got itself into doing a U-turn and bringing in the so-called Social Contract, which it imposed on labor. And the leader of that party ended up not too long after that joining the Liberal Party and running for the leadership of the Liberal Party, so I think that the experience of Bob Rae and the NDP in the early 1990s tells us a great deal about the contradictions and problems that face the NDP and that’s true, if anything, even more today because the society has moved even more to a division between the rich and the rest of the population. And a lot of people recognize that, you don’t have to be a socialist to recognize that, lots of people recognize that, and therefore for a fundamentally progressive party, you have to grab hold of that and you have to deal with that and you have to deal with the consequences of that, otherwise you’re going to end up looking like, I think, Andrea Horwath looks today in the province.

MF: Yeah that’s interesting…it’s a bit interesting that you mention the sharper class divisions today – you’re often told by the modernizers or whatever you want to call them, they’ll say, oh well those are such old divisions – and you know, ‘the working class has shrunk’ etc., that postwar sociological explanation – in a way you can argue that the potential constituency is larger than ever.

JL: Oh for sure. Oh I think it is larger than ever. I think that the reality is that capitalism is becoming more centralized, more concentrated, more global and that the working class – call it whatever you like, but the term working class is a perfectly good term to describe people who work for a salary or a wage in non-managerial positions and who make the vast majority of the Canadian population. Of course that includes the unemployed and the partially employed, it includes in a society like this Aboriginal Canadians to a very great extent – I mean if you think about things that the Waffle left out in our analysis, we never said a word about Aboriginal Canadians, we didn’t such much about the role of women in Canadian society although the Waffle got into huge debates with the party leadership over the role of women in the party and the party was wildly opposed to ideas like equal number of men and women sitting on executives and that kind of thing, that the Waffle did come up with, we didn’t push forward much on the question of gays and lesbians, transgendered people in the party back then, we didn’t say a word about the environment, so there are a whole lot of things that we didn’t do that are now absolutely central to this discussion. But I think that class has if anything become more central – it was very central in the 30s and 40s, then it to some extent it’s moderated during the 50s and 60s but then it’s come roaring back. And class is absolutely central. And any serious progressive party that doesn’t deal with the issue of class centrally is going to drift to the right, which is happening now to the French government, if you look at Miliband and the British Labour Party, the risks of it going that way are always very great, and those risks are great for the NDP today.

MF: Yeah that’s very true…and the postwar period, the 1950s, 1960s is often referred to as the golden age of capitalism, and in a sense it was also the golden age of social democracy…but part of the reason I think it was stronger then is because the class divisions weren’t so sharp, or they were diluted to some degree, and now that you have a more aggressive capitalism – since these parties are fundamentally reformist, parliamentarist, whatever you want to call them – it’s harder for them to take it on because in a way they have to be more radical now in a sense, just to be in the same place.

JL: Yeah, if go back to that period and look at the people you were dealing with then, there were lots of people in the Liberal Party and even in the Conservative Party that you could have dialogues with at that time in the 60s – I mean they could see us as kind of radical lunatics as they wanted, but they were certainly prepared to talk to us. And there was a kind of dialogue where they recognized that what we were saying had to be taken into account, made some sense…but today what you’re dealing with, you’re dealing with a hard-edged neoliberalism – I mean all you had to do is look at a kind of party like the Conservative Party of Canada or the Republican Party in the United States or the Conservative Party in Britain or the right-wing parties in France – and what you’ve got is an absolutely hard determination to push a class struggle and to win it and to destroy the capacity of working people to resist and to fight back, and to impose on them a kind of implacable capitalist system which as soon as any progressive government rears its head in any part of the world capital can run away effectively and go on strike and leave that kind of government stranded.

And so the Left has to, and the socialists have to adapt to these realities, and have to fight a tougher fight. And that tougher fight is not a fight about sort of marginal questions of how well you’re going to do in the next election, that’s not what that’s about, it’s about much more fundamental realities of getting out there in the day-to-day struggles of working people defined broadly – and I include Aboriginal people when we talk about that, and immigrants, and of course immigrants and people of color are much more important parts of Canadian society than they were in the 1960s – and so all of that, those battles have to be fought on a day-to-day basis.

The Waffle actually did so some of that. Waffle members found themselves out on picket lines, pretty violent picket lines, back in the early 70s and we’d have picket lines with unions whose top leadership wanted to throw us out of the party – those were realities. But those things have to happen again, and the struggle for socialism or socialist ideas is not going to take place in the councils of the NDP, the top councils, or in the House of Commons. I’m not saying the NDP can’t play a useful role in Canada, but it can only play a useful role if it’s tremendously pressured by people on the ground, who are determined to say our priorities are going to be taken into consideration.

I mean say, right now, it’s even to hard to come out and argue that, for instance, the tar sands should not be further developed in the country because it’s such a threat to the environment, it’s hard to even argue that. And obviously that’s a legitimate position – I’m not saying it’s the only legitimate position, but it is a legitimate position – but right now you’re virtually shut down if you try to say that within the NDP.

MF: Do you feel the party is well prepared in the area of policy development? And what role do you think that the Broadbent Institute can play in this regard? 

JL: I don’t know, I’m not going to comment on the Broadbent Institute because I don’t know enough about it…in terms of policy development, I think the problem – there may be some people doing some interesting thinking about what kinds of policies the party ought to have for say, the 2015 election – but the previous comments that I’ve made I think come into play here, and that is that in reality, the party is so constrained by its acceptance to a great extent of kind of neoliberal capitalism, that whatever ideas it comes up are going to be relatively minor in the great scheme of things, that’s my impression.

MF: Gerald Caplan, wrote a column in the Globe and Mail a few years ago, where described what he referred to as an “Ontario coup” – an unrelenting campaign by business and the media to undermine the NDP government in Canada’s industrial and financial heartland that was ultimately successful. Do you see this occurring under an NDP federal government? If so, how should the party prepare for this?

JL: Yeah, I think he’s absolutely right on about what happened in Ontario and I think that if the federal NDP were to take power that what you’d have is similar kinds of pressures – you’d have elements of a capital strike, you’d have all kinds of pressure from the outside, you’d have pressures from Canadian think-tanks and business lobbies to pressure groups like the IMF, to warn Canada against taking any kinds of radical steps – yeah, all of those kinds of things would come into play if an NDP government got elected. And if an NDP government tried to do anything that radically altered the structure of capitalism in the country, you would have that kind of resistance. And the people who basically are, if you like, the permanent rulers of the country would be very effective at undermining an NDP government. And I think that in a serious socialist party, there would be discussions about that, people would be considering these problems and realities, would be considering how to mobilize social forces so that pressures could be created on the other side so some real radical changes can be made. And if you don’t do that, you’re not going to get very far.

MF: You know what Brad Lavigne’s response was when I interviewed him and posed this same question? Basically he said, it shouldn’t happen, it’s completely unavoidable and we haven’t communicated properly with the business community and that’s why this has happened in the past, we can avoid it, and look at Selinger in Manitoba, he’s not being attacked, so we can completely avoid this.

JL: Well, fascinating. But what that means is that basically, if that’s true, the NDP is just becoming another version of the Liberal Party. In other words if you look at Selinger and the Manitoba NDP, basically it is a kind of small-‘l’ liberal party operating in Manitoba, it does some good things but it doesn’t challenge anything fundamentally. And that’s why of course that’s true. And if you’re not interested in challenging anything fundamentally, you may be able to get along. But I would say that in a hard-right world like the one we live in, that even a government like the Bob Rae government which certainly after 1993 was certainly not a radical government at all, you could have put all of the businesspeople in a telephone booth who were prepared to listen to the party. I mean, the rest of them were following Conrad Black’s advice, which is we’re going to starve these people out, have a capital strike, don’t do business with them and destroy them.

MF: Overall, how would you assess the evolution of the NDP over the past two or three decades?

JL: I’d say what’s happened over the last two or three decades is that the party has moved ever further away from socialism or any concept of socialism or any concept of anti-capitalism, it’s become a kind of new small-‘l’ liberal party that has some progressive instincts but is fundamentally unwilling to take on and to challenge the nature of how power is exercised in the country economically, socially and politically, I think that’s what’s happened. All you have to do is look at the last leadership campaign [when Tom Mulcair was elected to the leadership] and look at the economic ideas of all of the last candidates. And if you brought Tommy Douglas back and said “whose political ideas do you think these are?”, even David Lewis, they would have thought that these were debates going on in the Liberal Party. I mean, the Trudeau government in the mid-1970s, reactionary though it was in many ways, or in the early 1980s, was willing to do much more radical things than the NDP is willing to do today, and if you look at the things being said by the leadership candidates, even the people who were supposedly the left-wing candidates, that’s certainly the case.

Matt Fodor is a Toronto-based writer and academic who has written extensively on the NDP, social democracy and Canadian politics.

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See also: James Laxer -- Canadian iconoclast 1941-2018

The Left Chapter Sunday Reading List February 18 - March 4, with a Special Memorial Section for James Laxer

This period's list of articles, news items and opinion pieces that I see as must reads if you are looking for a roundup that should be of interest to The Left Chapter readers. In a departure from our usual weekly format, this post covers two weeks as there was not a post last week.

It also begins with a memorial section with some articles and remembrances about my father, James Laxer, including a few photos and editorial cartoons.

This list covers the period of  February 18 - March 4. It is generally in order of the date of the article's release.

This installment has one entry from before the period. It has been integrated into the post.

In Memoriam: James Laxer 1941 - 2018

James Laxer -- Canadian iconoclast 1941-2018

Michael Laxer, The Left Chapter

James Laxer, my father, died suddenly and unexpectedly in Paris on Friday, February 23, 2018 doing what he loved most -- working on a new book about Canadian history while travelling with his constant companion and spouse, Sandy Price.

Read the full article.


James Laxer, one-time NDP leadership candidate, dead at 76

Alanna Rizzo, The Toronto Star

James Laxer, an author, York University professor and former federal NDP leadership candidate, has died at the age of 76.

Read the full article.




Mel Watkins: Reflections on Jim Laxer

Mel Watkins, Rabble

Let me share with you how I came to know Jim Laxer almost 50 years ago, for he had a powerful effect that has never left me.

Read the full article.



James Laxer and the movement he helped create

Karl Nerenberg, Rabble

Just before the recent NDP convention, this writer harkened back to the 1970s when the Waffle movement within the NDP caused a major rift in the party.

Read the full article.



Remembering Jim Laxer

Barry Weisleder & Bob Lyons, NDP Socialist Caucus

Accolades have been flooding social media since the untimely passing of longtime socialist activist, writer and professor Jim Laxer on Friday. Below are two articles about Brother Jim written by friends who knew him for decades.  The NDP Socialist Caucus wishes Jim’s family and friends heartfelt condolences during this period of great loss.

Read the full article.




The Reading List

1) Prime Minister Trudeau is Still Right, Alberta's Oil Should be Nationalized

Wes Regan

The national interest, we're hearing that term a lot right now from Rachel Notley, Prime Minister Trudeau and those others who are eager to see the Kinder Morgan pipeline twinned. So what is it? And is this controversial pipeline truly reflective of it?

Read the full article.


2) If paying for sex is wrong in Haiti, why do we still tolerate it in the UK?

Catherine Bennett, The Guardian

Finally, something on which we can agree: charity officials ought not to buy sex. No one, so far, seems prominently to have argued, of the Oxfam employees’ misconduct in Haiti and Liberia, that, providing their female purchases were adult, and not coerced, then their prostitution should rightly be called sex work, that is: a perfectly dignified transaction, from which both sides – say, impoverished survivors of a disaster and benevolent male humanitarians – stood to benefit.

Read the full article.

3) The Honduran Election Crisis

Jeff Abbott, Briarpatch

On the morning of December 15, 2017, spontaneous protests erupted across Honduras, and the poor neighbourhood of Villanueva in the capital of Tegucigalpa was at the centre of the actions. Protesters, many of them wearing improvised gas masks, had arrived early that morning to establish a barricade of burning tires on the main road that cuts through the neighbourhood. Black smoke hung thick in the air and chants of “Fuera JOH” – “Down with Juan Orlando Hernández” – rang through the streets.

Read the full article.

4) The Crisis of Social Democracy: From Norway to Europe

 Asbjørn Wahl, Socialist Project Bullet

The crisis of social democracy is being debated throughout Europe. Several of the historically strong labour parties have almost been wiped out in elections while others seem unable to recover from defeat. In the last few years, a number of social democratic parties have ended up with only one-digit election results (Greece, Ireland, Iceland, The Netherlands, France), while others have experienced major setbacks. The Norwegian Labour Party, for example, has experienced two of its worst elections – 2001 and 2017 – since the 1920s. Significant parts of the trade union movement believe that the party made serious blunders in what should have been an easy victory during last year’s parliamentary elections.

Read the full article.

5) From Spain to Germany and Italy, the outflanked centre-left cannot hold

Jon Henley, The Guardian

These are troubling times for Europe’s social democrats. Centre-left parties face fresh threats next Sunday, when Italians will vote in their first general election for five years and Germany will learn whether its centre-left SDP will approve a new coalition with Angela Merkel’s centre-right CDU.

Read the full article.

6) 'The time for reconciliation is over': South Africa votes to confiscate white-owned land

Frank Chung, New Zealand Herald

South Africa's parliament has voted in favour of a motion that will begin the process of amending the country's Constitution to allow for the confiscation of white-owned land without compensation.

Read the full article.

7) ‘This is about begging for our lives’: Parkland students reveal plan to destroy politicians in bed with NRA

David Edwards, Raw Story

Survivors from the mass shooting at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, Florida said on Sunday that they expect students around the country to stand up against and “shame any politicians taking money from NRA and using us for collateral.”

Read the full article.

8) Socialists are Internationalists: A Response to DSA’s Recent Article

Brandy Baker, North Star

The word “socialism” was 2015’s most searched term. This can be attributed to the Bernie Sanders campaign for the Democratic Party nomination for President. With this peak interest in socialism came waves of people becoming politically engaged for the first time.

Read the full article.

9) A less timid version of Justin Trudeau won’t cut it. The NDP must be bolder

Martin Lukacs, The Guardian

At the New Democratic Party’s convention this weekend in Ottawa, their new leader Jagmeet Singh declared “the time to be timid was over.” For a party whose shambling meekness in the last election let Justin Trudeau claim the mantle of progressive champion, such a shift could not come sooner.

Read the full article.

10) UML, Maoist Centre to unify; strike seven point agreement

The Himalayan Times

The ruling coalition partners, CPN-UML and CPN Maoist Centre, have finally reached an agreement on unification of the two parties and signed a seven point agreement on the modality of the unification.

Read the full article.

11) Canada's #MeToo Movement Stretches Limits Of Sexual Assault Support Centres

Emma Paling, The Huffington Post

The #MeToo movement has sparked a surge in demand for sexual assault services across Canada, but organizations that support survivors are struggling to keep up.

Read the full article.

12) How the Maple Leafs can get on the right side of #MeToo

Kate Reddy Taylor, The Globe and Mail

Unbeknownst to those watching the Toronto Maple Leafs on television, each time there is a break in the game, a troupe of beautiful young women take to the rink wearing tight, low-cut hockey sweaters, leggings and leg warmers, and shovel snow from the ice. They are called the "Ice Girls." While they do perform a practical function, these women, with their body-hugging outfits and perfectly styled hair bouncing over their shoulders, are clearly not there because of their shovelling skills.

Read the full article.

13) Two of John Worboys' victims just won a human rights case that reminded me why I came to feminism in the first place

Julie Bindel, The Independent

I came to feminism partly because of police failures. During the 1970s and into 1980, Peter Sutcliffe, known as the Yorkshire Ripper, killed at least 13 women and left seven others for dead. Complacent police officers overlooked vital clues, and inadequate technology was used to collate the thousands of interviews and intelligence reports they gathered.

Read the full article.

14) Protocols needed for care of intoxicated patients: inquest

Michelle McQuigge, Canadian Press

An inquest probing the circumstances surrounding the 2012 death of an Ontario Indigenous woman is recommending stricter protocols for handling intoxicated patients.

Read the full article.

15) A Consensus Emerges: Russia Committed an “Act of War” on Par With Pearl Harbor and 9/11. Should the U.S. Response Be Similar?

Glenn Greenwald, The Intercept

IN THE WAKE of last week’s indictments alleging that 13 Russian nationals and entities created fake social media accounts and sponsored political events to sow political discord in the U.S., something of a consensus has arisen in the political and media class (with some notable exceptions) that these actions not only constitute an “act of war” against the U.S., but one so grave that it is tantamount to Pearl Harbor and 9/11. Indeed, that Russia’s alleged “meddling” is comparable to the two most devastating attacks in U.S. history has, overnight, become a virtual cliché.

Read the full article.

16) Trudeau’s Orwellian logic: We reduce emissions by increasing them

Mark Jaccard, The Globe and Mail

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and Alberta Premier Rachel Notley accuse B.C. Premier John Horgan of sabotaging Canada's climate plan, making him responsible for our continued planet-threatening greenhouse-gas emissions. But what exactly is Mr. Horgan's climate crime? He is resisting the Trans Mountain pipeline expansion, a GHG-increasing fossil-fuel project. George Orwell would have fun unpacking this black-is-white logic.

Read the full article.

17) Polish PM pays respects to Nazi collaborators underground group

Itamar Eichner and AP, YNet News

Photo posted on Morawiecki's Twitter shows him paying his respects to the Holy Cross Mountains Brigade, which collaborated with the Wehrmacht near the end of WWII; spokesman for Polish opposition party: underground force contributed to tarnishing Poland’s international image.

Read the full article.

18) Ontario Minimum Wage Hike Not Behind Job Losses, Scotiabank Study Finds

Daniel Tencer, The Huffington Post

Though the losses were steep, they weren’t where they should have been if they had been caused by a minimum wage hike.

Read the full article.

19) He Became A Celebrity For Putting Science Before God. Now Lawrence Krauss Faces Allegations Of Sexual Misconduct.

Peter Aldhous, Azeen Ghorayshi & Virginia Hughes, BuzzFeed

Lawrence Krauss is a famous atheist and liberal crusader — and, in certain whisper networks, a well-known problem. With women coming forward alleging sexual harassment, will his “skeptic” fanbase believe the evidence?

Read the full article.

20) Here are 6 awful details being omitted from Billy Graham’s fawning obituaries

Martin Cizmar, The Raw Story

Billy Graham, the firebrand evangelical who helped usher in the rise of the evangelical right, is dead at 99.

Read the full article.

21) James and Smith-Pelly both victims of insidious form of racism

Donnovan Bennett, Sportsnet

By now you are probably aware of this past weekend’s incident involving Devante Smith-Pelly. The Washington Capitals forward had racially-motivated taunts of “basketball” yelled at him by Chicago Blackhawks while seated in the penalty box.

Read the full article.

22) 'Science is being ignored:' prominent Alberta professor sides with B.C. on pipeline

Clare Hennig, CBC News

Despite the tough stance from Alberta Premier Rachel Notley about Kinder Morgan Canada's pipeline expansion, a prominent Alberta academic is taking British Columbia's side in the dispute.

Read the full article.

23) Up to us to create justice for Tina

Melissa Martin, Winnipeg Free Press

It was bitterly cold outside the courthouse, which in a way seemed right, as if all the warmth had leached out of the world and vanished into the night. What remained: a gnawing absence, a silence and a cruel and indifferent wind.

Read the full article.

24) Momentum bid for key Labour post exposes tension with Unite

Jessica Elgot, The Guardian

Len McCluskey once joked that Labour MPs were so paranoid about the closeness of Unite and Momentum, they were worried about “a secret tunnel linking Unite HQ to Jon Lansman’s home”.

Read the full article.

25) Jeremy Corbyn supporters launch campaign to bring back Labour's historic Clause IV and 'end capitalism'

Benjamin Kentish, The Independent

Hundreds of supporters of Jeremy Corbyn have launched a campaign to reinstate the historic Clause IV of Labour’s constitution in an attempt to “end capitalism and bring about the socialist transformation of society”

Read the full article.

26) What Italy’s “Potere al Popolo” Can Teach Us About Building a Popular Party of the Left

Valentina Dallona, In These Times

This party is rejecting the false choice between a Europe united under the misery of austerity, or one united under the horrors of racism and bigotry.

Read the full article.

27) ARCTIC TEMPERATURES ARE SO HIGH THEY’RE SHOCKING SCIENTISTS

David Gilbert, Vice News

“Crazy,” “weird,” and “wacky.” That’s how scientists are describing the temperature in the Arctic.

Read the full article.

28) What Could a Left Presidency Look Like in Mexico?

Ryan Mallett-Outtrim, The Socialist Project Bullet

Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador (AMLO) could become Mexico’s first progressive president in generations, but what would such a presidency actually look like? It is not an easy question to answer, though his time as leader of Mexico’s largest city could offer some insights. Between 2000 and 2005, Lopez Obrador headed the government of Mexico City. In a position akin to mayor, AMLO ran a city that today boasts a population of 8.9 million people in the city proper, and 20 million people if the surrounding greater urban area is included. In short, Mexico City is a country within a country.

Read the full article.

29) Canada’s Social Democratic Party Suppress ‘Palestine Resolution’

Yves Engler, The Palestine Chronicle

They came, mostly young people, to fight for justice. They came to support the rule of international law, to help solve a longstanding injustice through non-violent means; they came to tell an oppressed people you have not been forgotten; they came to do what is right for a left wing political party; they came to speak truth to power.

Read the full article.

30) If the Supreme Court rules against unions, conservatives won’t like what happens next

Shaun Richman, The Washington Post

On Monday, the Supreme Court heard the case Janus vs. AFSCME, with the fate of the labor movement seemingly in the balance. At stake are agency fees — public sector unions can collect fees for service from employees who don’t join the union that represents them, which the plaintiff argues is an unconstitutional act of compelled speech.

Read the full article.

31) Budget's second-parent leave not equal: experts

Tara Deschamps, Canadian Press

The federal budget might have been sold on its female-friendly features, but business experts say it still falls short in solving the wage gap because the formula it uses to calculate employment insurance still favours men over women.

Read the full article.

32) Children’s advocates say family courts unfairly favor fathers, even when they’re the abusers

Rebecca Addison, Pittsburgh City Paper

“It’s really the same story of the #metoo movement, just in a much more dire setting where children are at stake.”

Read the full article.

33) BC Liberal MLA: Why Preserve Indigenous Languages When You Can Hire ‘Hundreds’ of Police Instead?

Press Progress

A BC Liberal MLA is doubling-down on his suggestion British Columbia should not invest in “Indigenous language preservation” because the money would be better spent hiring police to crackdown on crime in “First Nations communities” instead.

Read the full article.

34) West Virginia teachers won't back down

Michael Mochaidean, Socialist Worker

Thousands of teachers stunned West Virginia politicians and employers by launching a strike on February 22 in a fight against a miserable pay increase and a freeze on scheduled improvements to health insurance benefits. But they had another surprise in store when the walkout continued into this week in every part of the state.

Read the full article.

35) ‘I Live Paycheck to Paycheck’: A West Virginia Teacher Explains Why She’s on Strike

Jess Bidgood, The New York Times

Public schools in West Virginia were closed for a sixth day on Thursday, as teachers striking over health care costs and pay largely rebuffed a deal this week between Gov. James C. Justice and union leadership aimed at getting them back to school.

Read the full article.

36) Canada’s richest citizens give the least to charity

Bob Ramsey, The Toronto Star

While the rich are growing richer, their generosity is getting poorer — not just compared to those earning much less than them, but compared to what they gave in years past.

Read the full article.

See also: Parkland, Colten Boushie, the NDP, Oxfam and more -- The Left Chapter Sunday Reading List February 11-18