Recent election results in the United States and here at
home have got us all wondering where the world is going these days. And with
a provincial election next year, when I say "the world," I mean Ontario.
In some municipal races and the U.S. mid-term elections,
quite a few voters shifted their support to right-wing candidates. At
bottom, these candidates don’t like government. Many of the voters who
backed them blame government for their problems.
What are their problems – their real problems? If you ask
me, the biggest one is economic uncertainty. If you look at Toronto, the
unemployment rate has been too close to 10 per cent for too long. That’s bad
enough, but household income paints an even gloomier picture. In the last
census, 24.5 per cent of Toronto households were low-income households. That
compares to a 14.7 per cent rate for all Ontario households.
Despite the city’s great wealth, many Toronto workers live hand-to-mouth, holding their families together with two or three
low-wage part-time jobs. They don’t even have time to see their kids, let
alone bring them up the way they want to.
Sudbury has had a hard time lately, too. In 2009, mining
giant Vale forced 3,300 nickel miners into a year-long strike until they
accepted the concessions the company demanded. How did Sudbury voters
respond? By booting out progressive John Rodriguez and installing a Vale
official in the mayor’s chair. The gloating comment from one mining
executive: "The city is finally realizing we’re not a labour town, we're a
business community."
In the U.S., once the only economy that mattered, the
working people who bailed out Wall Street are now being beaten down by the
same people they rescued. The job market is worse than here, and American
workers don’t have the supports, like public health care, that Canadian
workers do.
Yet on both sides of the border, many voters opted for
candidates whose policies won’t create jobs or build the public services
people need. In fact, they’ll just make matters worse. So what’s the appeal?
Well, people’s worries are real, and it’s always easy to
exploit the fears of worried people. The Tea Partiers and their Ontario
imitators harnessed fears and worries and anger to create a backlash against
so-called "elites." In their version of reality, these elites a) control
government; b) make a living off the work of real people; and c) don’t
understand the concerns of real people.
The real story is somewhat different: That’s because the
elites aren’t in government at all. They’re in the boardrooms of big
corporations.
Toronto mayor-elect Rob Ford is a millionaire who runs a
business he inherited from his father. His ideology is that of corporations.
They want lower wages for workers. They want lower taxes for corporations
and the wealthy, i.e., themselves. They want a smaller public sector. They
want the public sector to get out of the way so business has more investment
opportunities – and more profits.
In the U.S. the problem is a hundred times worse. Down
there, a recent Supreme Court decision means corporations can spend as much
money as they want on political campaigns, and do it in secret. Contrary to
reports, the Tea Party is no "grassroots" movement. Let’s be clear: It is
funded by billionaires, and it serves the purposes of billionaires. (To
learn more, check out Linda McQuaig’s recent article
)
From David Miller to Barack Obama, politicians who have at
least tried to solve people’s actual problems have taken a beating lately.
Now that the corporations have their puppets in power, it’s their turn to
come up with solutions. They will fail, I guarantee it. And when they do, we
have to be talking about real solutions that will solve real problems of
real people.
OPSEU members are real people. I know we can do it.
Premier Dalton McGuinty has given corporations the tax cuts
they want – billions of dollars worth. Ontario PC leader Tim Hudak, eager
for the next election, would love to go even further with stepped-up attacks
on public employees. Neither approach is good for our province.
The debate in the next election must be about the kind of
Ontario we want to live in. Do we want good jobs and public services that
allow people to live decently, bring their kids up properly, and retire with
dignity? Or do we want a vicious dog-eat-dog world where the biggest,
meanest dogs always have more than they need, and keep on grabbing more?
Let’s make our voices heard for the former. And let’s start
now.